Loud explosions in Kyiv as Russia launches missiles

Loud explosions in Kyiv as Russia launches missiles
A firefighter works at a site of a warehouse heavily damaged during a Russian missile strike, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine December 29, 2023. (REUTERS)
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Updated 02 January 2024
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Loud explosions in Kyiv as Russia launches missiles

Loud explosions in Kyiv as Russia launches missiles
  • The city’s military administration said fragments of downed rockets had fallen in several districts including on residential buildings

KYIV: Ukraine’s air force said multiple missiles were flying toward the capital Kyiv on Tuesday, shortly after nationwide air alerts were raised due to a threat from Russian bombers.
A series of more than 10 loud explosions were heard by AFP journalists in Kyiv on Tuesday morning, shaking buildings in the center.
The city’s military administration said fragments of downed rockets had fallen in several districts including on residential buildings.
Mayor Vitali Klitschko said power had gone out in several areas of the capital.
“Kyiv — stay in shelters. Many missiles heading in your direction,” the air force said on Telegram.
The air force said Russians were launching Kinzhal missiles and more were heading toward the capital.
Strikes have hit the northeastern city of Kharkiv, said the head of the military administration, Oleg Sinegubov.


Bangladesh, India hold talks aimed at defusing tensions over alleged attacks

Bangladesh, India hold talks aimed at defusing tensions over alleged attacks
Updated 8 sec ago
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Bangladesh, India hold talks aimed at defusing tensions over alleged attacks

Bangladesh, India hold talks aimed at defusing tensions over alleged attacks
  • Tensions have grown over the recent arrest in Bangladesh of a Hindu spiritual leader under the interim government led by Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus
  • Alleged attacks on minority Hindus in Bangladesh and on a Bangladesh diplomatic mission in India were expected to feature prominently in the talks

DHAKA: The foreign secretaries of Bangladesh and India met Monday in Bangladesh’s capital to discuss relations between the neighbors, including growing tensions since the fall of former Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, who fled into exile in India in August.
The tensions have grown over the recent arrest in Bangladesh of a Hindu spiritual leader under the interim government led by Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus. Alleged attacks on minority Hindus in Bangladesh and on a Bangladesh diplomatic mission in India were expected to feature prominently in the talks. India stopped issuing visas for Bangladeshis except emergency medical visas after Hasina’s ouster.
Indian Foreign Secretary Vikram Misra was holding the daylong talks with his Bangladeshi counterpart, Mohammad Jashim Uddin, in the first high-level visit by an Indian official since massive protests ended Hasina’s 15-year rule.
Hasina is thought to be a trusted friend of Hindu-majority India, which has raised concerns over allegation of attacks on religious minorities, especially Hindus, in Muslim-majority Bangladesh, since Hasina’s ouster. Most Bangladeshi Hindus are thought to be supporters of Hasina’s secular Awami League party.
Hindus recently attacked a Bangladeshi diplomatic office in Agartala, the capital of the northeastern Indian state of Tripura, in reaction to the arrest of Hindu leader Chinmoy Das Prabhu, who had led large rallies in recent months demanding better security for Hindus. Late last month, Hindu protesters also burned Bangladeshi flags in Kolkata, the capital of India’s eastern state of West Bengal, triggering protests by the Yunus-led government.
Other political parties including the Bangladesh Nationalist Party headed by Khaleda Zia, Hasina’s main political foe, and Islamist groups have protested against the attacks in Tripura.
Hindus also protested in parts of India against alleged attacks on Hindus in Bangladesh and the jailing of Prabhu.
Misri is to pay courtesy calls on Yunus and Foreign Adviser Touhid Hossain before leaving for New Delhi later Monday.


India envoy in Bangladesh to smooth months of tensions

India envoy in Bangladesh to smooth months of tensions
Updated 36 min 7 sec ago
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India envoy in Bangladesh to smooth months of tensions

India envoy in Bangladesh to smooth months of tensions
  • Hasina’s iron-fisted rule was strongly backed by India and the 77-year-old remains in New Delhi where she took refuge after her ouster

Dhaka: India’s top career diplomat was in Bangladesh on Monday to defuse tensions between the two neighbors arising from the August overthrow of autocratic ex-premier Sheikh Hasina in a student-led revolution.
Hasina’s iron-fisted rule was strongly backed by India and the 77-year-old remains in New Delhi where she took refuge after her ouster, despite Bangladesh announcing it would seek her extradition.
Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus, leader of an interim government tasked with implementing democratic reforms, has condemned acts of “Indian aggression” that he alleged were intended to destabilize his administration.
Vikram Misra, the secretary of India’s foreign ministry, arrived in the Bangladeshi capital Dhaka on Monday for the first in-person meeting between top officials of both countries since Hasina’s ouster.
“It needs to be recognized that there has been a qualitative shift in the relationship between the two countries,” Bangladesh’s de facto foreign minister Touhid Hossain said Sunday, ahead of Misra’s visit.
“Acknowledging this reality, the relationship must be carried forward.”
Misra was slated to meet with Touhid and Yunus while in Dhaka.
Yunus, 84, faced numerous criminal proceedings during Hasina’s regime that her critics say were concocted to sideline one of her most high-profile potential rivals.
He has been a vocal critic of India for backing Hasina’s rule to the hilt despite the mounting rights abuses seen over her 15-year tenure.
India, for its part, has accused Muslim-majority Bangladesh of failing to adequately protect its minority Hindu community from reprisal attacks after Hasina’s toppling.
The arrest of a prominent Hindu priest in Bangladesh on sedition charges last month further added to tensions, with Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s right-wing supporters urging his government to take a more hard-line stance on Dhaka.
Yunus’s administration has repeatedly acknowledged and condemned attacks on Hindus, but also insists that in many cases they were motivated by politics rather than religion.
Yunus has accused India of exaggerating the scale of the violence and running a “propaganda campaign” against his government.
Numerous anti-India street demonstrations have been staged in Bangladesh since Hasina’s ouster.
On Sunday hundreds of activists from the opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) marched to the Indian High Commission (embassy) in Dhaka but dispersed peacefully after their route was blocked by police.
They were protesting against the attempted storming of a Bangladeshi consulate in India by Hindu activists some days earlier, which prompted Dhaka to lodge a formal protest and recall two of its diplomats.


Thai police detain 124 people in ‘drug party’ bust

Thai police detain 124 people in ‘drug party’ bust
Updated 39 min 1 sec ago
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Thai police detain 124 people in ‘drug party’ bust

Thai police detain 124 people in ‘drug party’ bust
  • Police are seeking the courts’ permission to hold those suspected of drug possession for questioning beyond the 48-hour window
  • Possession of category one drugs, which include ecstasy and methamphetamine, can bring jail sentences of up to 10 years

BANGKOK: Police in Thailand detained more than 120 people found in their underwear at a drug-fueled party in Bangkok, officers said Monday.
Police Col. Pansa Amarapitak said that they were tipped off about a “drug party” in a room at a hotel in central Bangkok early on Sunday morning.
Police photos showed a room full of mostly male suspects in handcuffs and wearing nothing but underpants as officers searched them for drugs.
They found 31 of the 124 people arrested were in possession of illegal narcotics such as crystal methamphetamine, ecstasy and ketamine, Pansa said.
He added that all of them tested for the substances and 66 were found with traces in their system.
He said all except two were men, and around five were foreigners.
Police are seeking the courts’ permission to hold those suspected of drug possession for questioning beyond the 48-hour window, Pansa said Monday.
The rest have been released, Pansa said.
Thailand is a major hub for illegal drug trafficking in Southeast Asia, and police raids and seizures of hard narcotics like heroin and methamphetamine are common.
The UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) said a record 190 tons of methamphetamine were seized in East and Southeast Asia last year.
Thailand has tough anti-drugs laws.
Possession of category one drugs, which include ecstasy and methamphetamine, can bring jail sentences of up to 10 years.


Pressure grows on France’s Macron to name new prime minister

Pressure grows on France’s Macron to name new prime minister
Updated 53 min 8 sec ago
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Pressure grows on France’s Macron to name new prime minister

Pressure grows on France’s Macron to name new prime minister
  • Far-right and hard-left lawmakers joined efforts to oust the minority government of Prime Minister Michel Barnier last week
  • The successful parliamentary no-confidence vote deepened a political crisis and sparked calls for Macron to step down

PARIS: French President Emmanuel Macron was on Monday set to hold a series of consultations with party bosses as pressure grew on him to name a new prime minister and defuse a political crisis.
Last week far-right and hard-left lawmakers joined efforts to oust the minority government of Prime Minister Michel Barnier in a historic no-confidence vote following a standoff over an austerity budget.
Macron was on Monday morning to receive independent MPs from the centrist Liot group, Green party bosses led by Marine Tondelier and the Communists.
Parliamentary speaker Yael Braun-Pivet said a new head of government should be appointed “within the next few hours.”
She urged the president’s centrist camp to join forces with the right-wing Republicans (LR), independent MPs and the Socialists.
“You would have a majority, so there is no longer any possibility of censure,” she said on Sunday.
The successful parliamentary no-confidence vote, a first in more than six decades, deepened a political crisis and sparked calls for Macron, 46, to step down and call early elections.
A defiant Macron said last week he planned to serve out the remainder of his term, vowing “30 months of useful action” and promising to name a new prime minister in the “coming days.”
At the weekend he had a brief respite from the domestic political upheaval, hosting world leaders including US president-elect Donald Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky for the re-opening of Notre Dame cathedral in Paris after a devastating fire in 2019.
Macron is now under huge pressure to form a government that can survive a no-confidence vote and pass a budget for next year in a bid to limit political and economic turmoil.
It took the French president more than 50 days to choose Barnier, from the Republican party, following inconclusive legislative elections in the summer that resulted in a hung parliament.
Allies have urged Macron to move quickly this time.
“We can’t go on like this,” Macron’s centrist ally Francois Bayrou said on Sunday, warning the French did not want uncertainty to continue.
Bayrou heads the MoDem party, which is allied to, but not part of, Macron’s centrist force.
He has been tipped as a possible contender for prime minister. “If I can help us get through this, I will,” he said.
However many do not support his candidacy.
“Mr Bayrou’s political line did not win the legislative elections,” Tondelier told broadcaster RTL ahead of Monday’s meeting with Macron.
“We need a personality who is compatible with the left,” added Raphael Glucksmann, founder of progressive left-wing movement Place Publique, adding he was hoping to bring on board Communist and Green MPs.
The left-wing New Popular Front (NFP), which was put together to prevent the far-right from coming to power, emerged as the largest bloc in the National Assembly after the summer elections.
The broad alliance includes the hard-left France Unbowed (LFI), the Socialists, Communists and Greens.
Its leaders have long insisted Macron should appoint a prime minister from their ranks. The president earlier ruled that out.
Macron — who has hoped to prise the Socialists away from their pact with the LFI — received a boost when Socialist Party leader Olivier Faure said he was ready to negotiate with the president’s centrists and the right.
LFI’s veteran leader Jean-Luc Melenchon said his party had given the Socialists “no mandate” to negotiate a deal with Macron.
On Friday, Macron met leaders of the parliamentary factions of his own centrist forces, the Socialist Party and the Republicans.
The far-right National Rally (RN) has not so far been invited to talks.
Nevertheless RN head Jordan Bardella has already demanded a meeting with the future prime minister.
“You can’t pretend we’re not here,” he said.
Barnier, prime minister for only three months, remains in charge on a caretaker basis until a new government is appointed.


India antitrust body seeks Supreme Court hearing to expedite Amazon, Flipkart cases

India antitrust body seeks Supreme Court hearing to expedite Amazon, Flipkart cases
Updated 09 December 2024
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India antitrust body seeks Supreme Court hearing to expedite Amazon, Flipkart cases

India antitrust body seeks Supreme Court hearing to expedite Amazon, Flipkart cases
  • India’s competition commission said in August that Amazon and Flipkart breached antitrust laws by favoring selected sellers on their websites
  • Since the findings, almost two dozen lawsuits across five Indian high courts have been filed by some Amazon and Flipkart vendors

NEW DELHI: India’s antitrust body has asked the Supreme Court to hear legal challenges to an investigation of Amazon and Walmart’s Flipkart e-commerce platforms, saying those challenges, filed by Samsung, Vivo and others at Indian high courts, were aiming to scuttle the probe.
In a filing on Dec. 3, reviewed by Reuters and not released publicly, the Competition Commission of India asked the court to hear 23 challenges, filed by Samsung, Vivo, and several vendors on the Amazon and Flipkart platforms, to enable the case to be decided quickly.
Amazon declined to comment, while Flipkart, Samsung, Vivo and the competition commission did not respond to requests for comment.
The investigation is a major regulatory challenge for Amazon and Flipkart in a market where e-commerce sales are set to exceed $160 billion by 2028, up from $57 billion to $60 billion in 2023.
The commission’s investigation unit concluded in August that Amazon and Flipkart breached India’s antitrust laws by favoring selected sellers on their websites. It also found that smartphone companies such as Samsung and Vivo broke those laws by colluding with the two e-commerce companies to exclusively launch products online.
Since the findings, almost two dozen lawsuits across five Indian high courts have been filed by some Amazon and Flipkart vendors, as well as by Samsung and Vivo, to block the investigation as they want to “debilitate and scuttle” the process, the commission said.
The separate lawsuits, if allowed, “will lead to absurdity since it will interfere with the flexibility of the (commission’s) Director General to carry out investigation in any matter.”
Amazon and Flipkart have faced criticism from smaller retailers for years over their business practices, saying they have suffered due to deep discounts and preferential treatment meted out by the platforms.
Amazon and Flipkart deny any wrongdoing.
A Reuters investigation in 2021, based on Amazon internal documents, found the company gave preferential treatment for years to a small group of sellers and used them to bypass Indian laws.
The current commission investigation started back in 2020 but has faced many delays.
Most of the 23 lawsuits filed across India in the latest challenge to the case accuse the commission of not following due process during its investigation.
The commission’s filing asking for the 23 cases to be transferred to the Supreme Court is likely to be heard this week, a lawyer familiar with the proceedings said.