SOUTH KOREA
Swimmers dispute islands
A team yesterday began a 230km relay swim from an eastern port to the Dokdo islands, in Seoul’s latest assertion of its sovereignty over the outcrops claimed by Japan. The team led by singer Kim Jang-hoon plans to complete the swim on Liberation Day tomorrow, which marks the ending in 1945 of Japan’s 35-year colonial rule over Korea. The territorial row over the Seoul-controlled islands, known as Dokdo in Korean and Takeshima in Japan, has simmered for decades. Kim jumped in the sea off Uljin in a full-body swimsuit after a ceremony with about 40 university students and dozens of others, Yonhap news agency reported. The students, all members of a swimming club at the Korea National Sport University, will take part in the 55-hour-long relay led by Kim, it said.
SOUTH KOREA
Fire near historic site
Fire officials in Seoul say a large blaze at a construction site near a 600-year-old palace has killed at least four workers and injured about 20. They say Gyeongbok palace was not damaged by yesterday’s fire, which filled Seoul’s central district with smoke. Seoul Metropolitan Fire and Disaster official Kim Byung-ro says the workers died after inhaling toxic smoke. One of the injured is in critical condition. Kim says the blaze started when a spark from construction at the site of a national art museum landed in combustible material. About 170 firefighters extinguished the fire in about an hour.
CHINA
Police hunt for killer
Beijing has launched a huge manhunt for a fugitive armed robber accused of killing nine people, most recently a police officer, an official and state media said yesterday. The 42-year-old suspect, dubbed the “most dangerous man in China” by the country’s state-run media, targets people withdrawing money from banks and is reported to have been on the run since 2004. The China Daily said he shot a woman dead outside a bank in Chongqing on Friday morning, injuring another two people, before killing a police officer later that day. “Large numbers” of police were combing a mountain in Chongqing where the suspect, Zhou Kehua, was believed to be hiding after the Friday killings, the paper said. Zhou’s crime spree began when he shot and killed a woman during a 70,000 yuan (US$11,000) bank heist in Chongqing in 2004, Xinhua news agency reported. Police believe he is also responsible for shootings in Changsha, Hunan Province, and, Nanjing.
SOUTH KOREA
Ban tries to ease tensions
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said yesterday he is seeking a way to ease tensions between North Korea and the South, and promised more help to Pyongyang to recover from deadly floods. Ban, a former South Korean foreign minister, said inter-Korean relations had soured recently. The North is grappling with the after-effects of floods that killed 169 people and left 400 missing, according to Pyongyang’s official figures. Its state media said floods and torrential rain between late June and the end of last month also made 212,200 people homeless.
UAE
US Navy ship hiuts tanker
A US Navy guided missile destroyer was left with a gaping hole on one side after it collided with an oil tanker early on Sunday just outside the strategic Strait of Hormuz. The collision left a 3m-by-3m breach in the starboard side of USS Porter. No one was injured on either vessel, the US Navy said in a statement.
FRANCE
Pedophile charged
Prosecutors on Sunday charged a pedophile who has admitted to five serious sexual assaults on girls at campsites this summer. The 32-year-old man, who was convicted of a similar offense 12 years ago, according to the interior ministry, was charged on counts including rape of a minor under 15 years of age and sexual assault of a minor causing injury or mutilation, Avignon deputy prosecutor Olivier Couvignou said in a statement. The charges concerned alleged sexual assaults on five girls ranging in age from six to 17 and carried out between late June and last Wednesday, he said.
IRAQ
Gunmen kill eight Shiites
Gunmen allegedly affiliated with al-Qaeda on Sunday executed eight young Shiites near a northern town hit by shootings a day earlier. The gunmen rounded up 25 men on the road between the towns of Amerli and Suleiman Bek in the afternoon, allowed those who were Sunnis to leave, but gathered the Shiites and shot them execution-style, killing eight, police Lieutenant Colonel Jassim al-Bayati said. Four policemen were later wounded by a roadside bomb that exploded when they went to investigate the scene of the killings at about 4:30pm, said Bayati, who was among those hurt. The victims were aged between 16 and 20, he said.
MEXICO
Mayor-elect shot dead
A mayor-elect from the Institutional Revolutionary Party that scored a comeback in recent elections was found shot dead on Sunday with an aide, officials said. “The lifeless body of mayor-elect Edgar Morales was found in a van this morning” in the town of Matehuala in San Luis Potosi state, a spokeswoman for the local prosecutor’s office said by telephone. The second body was identified as Juan Francisco Hernandez, Morales’ campaign manager. A man who survived the attack with no injuries told police that unidentified assailants attacked the three men as they left a party. San Luis Potosi has been rocked in recent days by a wave of violence attributed to drug cartels, including the discovery of 14 bodies inside a van on Thursday.
SPAIN
Firefighter died in wildfire
One person was killed and three injured on Sunday as firefighters battled wildfires across the nation, authorities said. The victim died fighting a blaze in woods near the southeastern city of Alicante. As the fires on the Canaries raged along with smaller blazes around the country, the latest major blaze broke out north of Alicante in the Torre de les Macanes pine woods where the firefighter died, the regional government said. The flames have charred more than 600 hectares on La Gomera and about 370 hectares on Tenerife since they revived on Friday after devastating 3,000 hectares earlier in the week, the regional government said.
VENEZUELA
Guerrilla army planned
The government is training a “guerrilla army” aiming to be a million strong by next year to fight off a possible US invasion, an opposition lawmaker said on Sunday. “Plan Sucre” — apparently crafted with input from close ally Cuba — covers the legal, logistical and other angles necessary to “transform a professional army into a guerrilla army,” Representative Maria Corina Machado told El Universal newspaper. The former presidential candidate said she had obtained a copy of the plan, printed by an institution affiliated with the national army. “This is clearly a proposal with Cuban inspiration and advice,” she said.
MONEY MATTERS: Xi was to highlight projects such as a new high-speed railway between Belgrade and Budapest, as Serbia is entirely open to Chinese trade and investment Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic yesterday said that “Taiwan is China” as he made a speech welcoming Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) to Belgrade, state broadcaster Radio Television of Serbia (RTS) said. “We have a clear and simple position regarding Chinese territorial integrity,” he told a crowd outside the government offices while Xi applauded him. “Yes, Taiwan is China.” Xi landed in Belgrade on Tuesday night on the second leg of his European tour, and was greeted by Vucic and most government ministers. Xi had just completed a two-day trip to France, where he held talks with French President Emmanuel Macron as the
With the midday sun blazing, an experimental orange and white F-16 fighter jet launched with a familiar roar that is a hallmark of US airpower, but the aerial combat that followed was unlike any other: This F-16 was controlled by artificial intelligence (AI), not a human pilot, and riding in the front seat was US Secretary of the Air Force Frank Kendall. AI marks one of the biggest advances in military aviation since the introduction of stealth in the early 1990s, and the US Air Force has aggressively leaned in. Even though the technology is not fully developed, the service is planning
INTERNATIONAL PROBE: Australian and US authorities were helping coordinate the investigation of the case, which follows the 2015 murder of Australian surfers in Mexico Three bodies were found in Mexico’s Baja California state, the FBI said on Friday, days after two Australians and an American went missing during a surfing trip in an area hit by cartel violence. Authorities used a pulley system to hoist what appeared to be lifeless bodies covered in mud from a shaft on a cliff high above the Pacific. “We confirm there were three individuals found deceased in Santo Tomas, Baja California,” a statement from the FBI’s office in San Diego, California, said without providing the identities of the victims. Australian brothers Jake and Callum Robinson and their American friend Jack Carter
CUSTOMS DUTIES: France’s cognac industry was closely watching the talks, fearing that an anti-dumping investigation opened by China is retaliation for trade tensions French President Emmanuel Macron yesterday hosted Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) at one of his beloved childhood haunts in the Pyrenees, seeking to press a message to Beijing not to support Russia’s war against Ukraine and to accept fairer trade. The first day of Xi’s state visit to France, his first to Europe since 2019, saw respectful, but sometimes robust exchanges between the two men during a succession of talks on Monday. Macron, joined initially by EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, urged Xi not to allow the export of any technology that could be used by Russia in its invasion