SOUTH AFRICA
Police robbed, locked in van
Police yesterday admitted that two officers were robbed of their guns and locked in their own van in the middle of the day in an embarrassment that was all caught on camera. The theft occurred on Tuesday afternoon when the officers stopped for lunch at a roadside food stall in a Johannesburg township, a police spokesman said. The robbery was caught on the CCTV camera of a nearby business. The footage shows four men casually walking past the police van and disappearing from view beneath a tarpaulin where the officers were lunching. They re-emerge seconds later with the officers in tow, force them into the back of the vehicle, lock the van and then hurry off — The entire robbery took less than a minute. Police spokesman brigadier Neville Malila said members of the public helped the officers out of the car, after which police called for backup and a chase ensued. “The suspects lost control of their vehicle and fired several shots at the police who returned fire,” Malila said. Three suspects were arrested.
THAILAND
Student jailed for royal snub
A court sentenced a university student to 2.5 years in prison on Tuesday for posting a message on Facebook it said insulted King Bhumibol Adulyadej. A Criminal Court judge found 24-year-old Akkaradet Eiamsuwan guilty of violating the lese majeste law, which punishes people who defame, insult or threaten the monarchy. The ruling said Akkaradet used an alias to post the message on Facebook in March. He was arrested in Bangkok in June and has been in jail since then. The court said it reduced the original sentence of five years’ imprisonment because the defendant had confessed to the offense. The nation’s lese majeste law is the world’s harshest, carrying jail terms of three to 15 years.
ZAMBIA
Scott U-turns after riots
Interim president Guy Scott reversed his dismissal of defense minister and presidential front-runner Edgar Lungu as the ruling party’s secretary-general on Tuesday after the sacking triggered riots. Scott told state-owned ZNBC Radio he had rescinded his order, but did not say why. Scott became Africa’s first white leader in 20 years after the death last week of former president Michael Sata, but is constitutionally barred from running for president because his parents were born abroad, in Scotland. He also gave no reasons for removing Lungu as head of Sata’s Patriotic Front Party. The dismissal led to hundreds of Lungu supporters rampaging overnight in Lusaka, stoning motorists, burning tires and singing anti-Scott songs before being dispersed by police. “Can you believe it that, 50 years after independence, we have a white man as president?” party supporter Willy Phiri said on Monday. “He comes and starts to fire genuine members. Edgar is our member and Guy wants to take us back to colonialism. We won’t accept it, Guy has to go.”
MONGOLIA
Parliament ousts PM
The parliament yesterday voted to remove Prime Minister Norov Altankhuyag amid concerns about a serious economic downturn as gold, copper and coal prices and foreign direct investment slump. Out of 66 members of parliament who voted, 34 were in favor of ousting Altankhuyag, television showed. Ten members of parliament, including eight members of his coalition government, did not show up. It will now be up to the coalition government to select a new candidate, who will have to be approved by the president and confirmed by parliament.
FRANCE
Farmers dump manure
A group of more than 300 farmers dumped about 100 tonnes of manure and rotten vegetables in the center of Chartres on Tuesday in protest at falling food prices. Assisted by about 30 tractors, the farmers dumped the slurry and rotting food in front of the offices of the agriculture department and town hall. The protesters, from the FDSEA union, were “fed up” with the “increasingly crazy constraints and charges” faced by farmers, union leader Jean-Michel Gouache said. He denounced the “collapsing prices of cereals, milk and vegetables, caused in part by the sanctions on Russia,” as well as rising fertilizer prices. Russia imposed a ban on agricultural products from the EU earlier this year in response to European sanctions over the Ukraine crisis. The protest in Chartres, southwest of Paris, comes ahead of widespread farmer strikes due across the country yesterday.
UNITED STATES
Mom allegedly hired hit man
A New York woman is facing charges of trying to hire a hit man to kill her daughter’s ex-boyfriend and feed his body to alligators, according to police and jail officials. Police arrested Melisa Schonfield, 57, who lives in the upstate town of Brownville, on Friday on charges of second-degree conspiracy and second-degree criminal solicitation, said Dave Pustizzi, a detective in the Jefferson County sheriff’s office. Schonfield is suspected of meeting with an undercover detective posing as a hit man and conspiring to kill a Florida man, identified later as the 36-year-old ex-boyfriend of her daughter, Pustizzi said. Schonfield is accused of giving the detective US$5,500 in cash, half of the total amount for the killing, in a Walmart parking lot. When the detective asked how to dispose of the body, Schonfield allegedly suggested throwing it to alligators.
CANADA
Teen forced teens to sell sex
A teenage girl was jailed for six-and-a-half years on Tuesday for drugging and beating girls as young as 13 into prostitution in the capital, Ottawa, after luring them through social media. The 18-year-old ring leader was only 15 when she was arrested along with two other girls in 2012. Acting on their own without adult guidance, the girls used social media to lure victims to a suburban Ottawa home where they would be encouraged or forced to take drugs, and then delivered up to adult clients. The court heard that one of the accused would send photographs of a new recruit to prospective clients from her cellphone and if they agreed, she would send the girl by taxi to the man’s home to sell sex. Police broke up the prostitution ring in June 2012 after one of the victims complained to her mother, who informed authorities.
UNITED KINGDOM
Sex assaults halt training
The defense ministry said on Tuesday it was cutting short a training program for Libyan troops after reported sexual assaults allegedly involving five of the servicemen. About 300 members of the troubled north African country’s armed forces have been based at the Bassingbourn Barracks in Cambridgeshire, eastern England, since July. Three of the Libyan soldiers — Ibrahim El Maarfi, Mohammed Abdalsalam and Khaled El Azibi — were due in court in Cambridge on Tuesday. Maarfi and Abdalsalam have each admitted two counts of sexual assault. Azibi has been charged with three counts of sexual assault, but has yet to enter a plea, media reported. Two other servicemen, Moktar Ali Saad Mahmoud and Ibrahim Abogutila, have been charged with raping a man, the Cambridge News’ Web site reported.
Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) is to visit Russia next month for a summit of the BRICS bloc of developing economies, Chinese Minister of Foreign Affairs Wang Yi (王毅) said on Thursday, a move that comes as Moscow and Beijing seek to counter the West’s global influence. Xi’s visit to Russia would be his second since the Kremlin sent troops into Ukraine in February 2022. China claims to take a neutral position in the conflict, but it has backed the Kremlin’s contentions that Russia’s action was provoked by the West, and it continues to supply key components needed by Moscow for
Japan scrambled fighter jets after Russian aircraft flew around the archipelago for the first time in five years, Tokyo said yesterday. From Thursday morning to afternoon, the Russian Tu-142 aircraft flew from the sea between Japan and South Korea toward the southern Okinawa region, the Japanese Ministry of Defense said in a statement. They then traveled north over the Pacific Ocean and finished their journey off the northern island of Hokkaido, it added. The planes did not enter Japanese airspace, but flew over an area subject to a territorial dispute between Japan and Russia, a ministry official said. “In response, we mobilized Air Self-Defense
CRITICISM: ‘One has to choose the lesser of two evils,’ Pope Francis said, as he criticized Trump’s anti-immigrant policies and Harris’ pro-choice position Pope Francis on Friday accused both former US president Donald Trump and US Vice President Kamala Harris of being “against life” as he returned to Rome from a 12-day tour of the Asia-Pacific region. The 87-year-old pontiff’s comments on the US presidential hopefuls came as he defied health concerns to connect with believers from the jungle of Papua New Guinea to the skyscrapers of Singapore. It was Francis’ longest trip in duration and distance since becoming head of the world’s nearly 1.4 billion Roman Catholics more than 11 years ago. Despite the marathon visit, he held a long and spirited
The pitch is a classic: A young celebrity with no climbing experience spends a year in hard training and scales Mount Everest, succeeding against some — if not all — odds. French YouTuber Ines Benazzouz, known as Inoxtag, brought the story to life with a two-hour-plus documentary about his year preparing for the ultimate challenge. The film, titled Kaizen, proved a smash hit on its release last weekend. Young fans queued around the block to get into a preview screening in Paris, with Inoxtag’s management on Monday saying the film had smashed the box office record for a special cinema