Staff

Staff

BANGKOK (Reuters) - Tens of thousands of people took to the streets in a wave of protests across Bangkok and other Thai cities on Saturday in defiance of a government crackdown following three months of demonstrations aimed at the prime minister and monarchy.

Many protesters said they had been stirred into action by the police's use of water cannon on Friday to disperse thousands of youth-led protesters who included many children.

"It was way over the line. We want to show them our power and that we can’t accept this," said Tang, a 27-year-old office worker among thousands of people who gathered at the Lat Phrao station in the capital Bangkok.

 

Police attempts to thwart protesters by shutting down Bangkok's public transport network backfired when it led to localised protests across the city involving three main centres and several other smaller demonstrations. There were demonstrations in at least six cities outside Bangkok too.

Police did not intervene, and the protests dispersed after several hours.

"We will primarily negotiate," police spokesman Yingyos Thepjamnong told a news conference. "Enforcing the law will be step by step, using methods that follow international standards."

Protesters demand the removal of Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha, a former military ruler. They have also become openly critical of King Maha Vajiralongkorn despite lese majeste laws that can mean 15 years in jail for insulting the monarchy.

On Thursday, the government banned all political gatherings of five or more people. Police have arrested more than 50 people - including several protest leaders - in the past week.

'DAMAGE TO THE COUNTRY'

Government spokesman Anucha Burapachaisri told Reuters: "There is no win or lose for any side. It's all damage to the country."

The Royal Palace has made no comment on the protests but the king has said Thailand needs people who love the country and the monarchy.

Protesters say Prayuth engineered last year's election to keep the power he seized in a 2014 coup - an accusation he denies. They say the monarchy has helped perpetuate years of political influence by the army and seek to curb its powers.

The protesters at Lat Phrao chanted "Prayuth get out" as well as coarser refrains.

"I condemn those who cracked down on the protesters and those who ordered it. You all have blood on your hands," protest leader Tattep Ruangprapaikitseree said after being freed on bail following his arrest on Friday.

Bail was also granted to one of two activists charged with trying to harm the queen - rarely used charges that carry a potential life sentence - after protesters shouted at her motorcade on Wednesday.

The king and queen spend most of their time in Europe and are on their longest visit to Thailand this year.

The king is mostly resident in Germany and a German diplomat said the government was closely monitoring political developments in Thailand.

"Further violent clashes should be avoided. Peaceful expression must be possible," the diplomat said.

Human rights groups have condemned the dozens of arrests and the use of force against peaceful protests.

"Concerned governments and the United Nations should speak out publicly to demand an immediate end to political repression by the Prayuth administration," said Brad Adams, Asia director at Human Rights Watch.

The Western United States is enduring yet another devastating fire year, with more than 4.1 million acres already scorched in California alone, at least 31 people dead and hundreds of others forced to flee their homes.

Wildland fires are increasingly following a now-familiar pattern: bigger, hotter and more destructive. A recent Los Angeles Times headline declaring 2020 to be “The worst fire season. Again” illustrated some of the frustration residents feel over the state’s fire strategy.

For decades, federal, state and local agencies have prioritized fire suppression over prevention, pouring billions of dollars into hiring and training firefighters, buying and maintaining firefighting equipment and educating the public on fire safety.

But as climate change continues to fuel dry conditions in the American West, many experts say it’s long past time to shift the focus back to managing healthy forests that can better withstand fire and add to a more sustainable future.

“Fires have always been part of our ecosystem,” said Mike Rogers, a former Angeles National Forest supervisor and board member of the National Association of Forest Service Retirees. “Forest management is a lot like gardening. You have to keep the forest open and thin.”

Federal forest management dates back to the 1870s, when Congress created an office within the U.S. Department of Agriculture tasked with assessing the quality and conditions of forests. In 1905, President Theodore Roosevelt oversaw the birth of the U.S. Forest Service, which manages 193 million acres of public land across the country.

In California, forest management also falls under the purview of the state’s Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, known as Cal Fire.

Since 2011, Cal Fire has spent more than $600 million on fire prevention efforts and removed or felled nearly 2 million dead trees. In 2018, California set the goal of treating — which can include slashing, burning, sawing or thinning trees — 500,000 acres of wildland per year, yet Cal Fire remains far from meeting that target.

“It’s an ongoing process,” said Cal Fire spokeswoman Christine McMorrow. “There is always going to be more work.”

Cal Fire is steadily receiving injections of money to do what it can to reduce wildfire risk, including better land management and training a new generation of foresters. In 2018, former Gov. Jerry Brown signed a bill that will allocate $1 billion over five years to Cal Fire to be used on fire prevention measures. But experts warn that more money is needed.

“Is it enough? Well, it’s enough for what we’re doing right now, but is that enough to get all the work that needs to be done in one year or five years or 10 years? It’s going to a take lot,” McMorrow said.

Long before the country’s founding, Spanish explorers documented wildland fires in California. In 1542, conquistador Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo sailed along the coast and noticed smoke billowing up from what is now known as the Los Angeles Basin. He called it “la baya de los fumos,” or “the bay of smoke.”

Studies by archaeologists and historians support a theory that Cabrillo might have been witnessing an early form of land management, including the burning of shrubs and chaparral to clear dry brush and promote better conditions for hunting big game.

Prescribed and controlled burns were integral to the American landscape for generations. In 1910, focus started to shift away from forest management and steer toward fire suppression after “The Big Burn” ravaged 3 million acres across Washington, Idaho and Montana, killing at least 85 people and reshaping U.S. fire policy for years to come.

The U.S. Forest Service ordered that all wildland fires be extinguished as soon as possible, eventually settling on the so-called 10 a.m. policy, which emphasized suppressing fires by the morning after they started.

The state’s policy to stop fires as soon as they ignite resulted in a backlog of trees in forests now choked with brush and other dry fuels. According to the U.S. Forest Service, one researcher studying the Stanislaus National Forest in Northern California found records from 1911 showing just 19 trees per acre in one section of the forest. More than a century later, the researcher and his team counted 260 trees per acre.

With denser tree cover comes the danger of bigger fires, Rogers said.

“We have more large trees per acre than we’ve ever had because they have continued to grow, and underneath these large trees are young shrubs that fuel fires in the crown of the trees,” he said. “When a fire starts in there, it’s unstoppable.”

Drought, climate change and bark-beetle infestations have all contributed to the backlog of trees, leaving some experts to push for creative solutions to managing California’s crowded forests.

One potential solution could be turning dead and diseased trees into biomass energy before they start massive wildfires.

Jonathan Kusel founded the nonprofit research organization Sierra Institute for Community and Environment in 1993 in an effort to better understand how state and federal agencies could put leftover organic material to use. The institute is now working with federal and state partners on ways to supply wood chips made from low-value vegetation to biomass facilities that can then burn the organic matter to produce heat and electricity.

Kusel estimates the process, when done correctly in confined barrels, is exponentially cleaner than relying on natural gas for energy. It also facilitates what Kusel calls “the appropriate thinning of forests,” or the clearing of smaller growth, to not only lower the risk of wildfires, but also to contribute to cleaner waterways and lower carbon emissions by promoting healthier forests.

“We aren’t going to be successful if all we do is try to stop fire,” he said. “But we can make it less damaging … and we can try to introduce smaller fires that can maintain habitats in a healthy state.”

But finding buyers for biomass remains a big question for the Sierra Institute. Biomass is considered a dirty word among environmentalists who warn that burning plant material and releasing it into the air can increase carbon emissions.

Removing small growth from forests is also more expensive and not as economically attractive as focusing on large-growth removal that can be turned into timber, Kusel acknowledged. Still, as wildfires threaten to become bigger and more dangerous, Kusel is hopeful that a new locally based biomass market could offset the cost of thinning out the state’s forests by creating smaller, better-maintained facilities that do not release dangerous pollutants into the air.

“Societally we have to think differently about our forests, but we have to invest and manage differently them, too,” he said. “We have to do better.”

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Tens of thousands of people marched through the streets of the Belarusian capital Minsk on Sunday to demand the resignation of veteran president Alexander Lukashenko, despite a threat by officials to use firearms against protesters.

Belarus, a former Soviet republic closely allied with Russia, has been rocked by strikes and weekly street protests since authorities announced that Lukashenko, who has ruled in authoritarian fashion since 1994, had secured re-election on Aug. 9 with 80% of votes.

The Interfax news agency put the number of protesters at over 30,000. It said about 50 had been detained by the police, and that the mobile broadband signal had been disrupted in parts of the city.

It also said loud noises that sounded like stun grenades had been heard close to the march. A senior police official said last week that officers would reserve the right to use firearms against demonstrators.

 

Security forces have detained more than 13,000 people since the election, including all significant opposition leaders who have not left the country, and clamped down on independent media.

Opposition leader Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, who has fled to Lithuania, last week urged Lukashenko to quit by Oct. 25 or face what she said would be nationwide strikes that would paralyse Belarus.

KABUL (Reuters) - The U.S. military on Sunday defended its air strikes against Taliban fighters last week as the insurgent group accused Washington of violating their signed agreement and warned of consequences if such actions continued.

The Taliban launched a major offensive in the southern province of Helmand in a bid to take the provincial capital, prompting U.S. air strikes in support of Afghan security forces, which were being overrun.

"American forces have violated the Doha agreement in various forms by carrying out excessive air strikes following the new developments in Helmand province," Taliban spokesman Qari Muhammad Yousuf Ahmadi said in a statement on Sunday.

The U.S.-Taliban agreement, signed in Doha, provides for foreign forces to leave Afghanistan in exchange for security guarantees and a pledge from the insurgents to sit down with the Kabul administration to find a peaceful settlement to decades of war.

 

"Responsibility and consequences from continuation of such actions shall fall squarely on the shoulders of the American side," Ahmadi warned, adding that air and drone strikes had also been carried out in other provinces.

Col. Sonny Leggett, spokesman for the U.S. forces, denied that the strikes violated the agreement.

"The entire world has witnessed the Taliban's offensive operations in Helmand - attacks which injured and displaced thousands of innocent Afghan civilians," Leggett tweeted, reiterating a call for "all sides" to reduce violence.

Talks between Taliban and Afghan government negotiators began last month in Doha, but the process has only moved slowly, while violence has continued. Diplomats and officials have said this is sapping the trust required for the talks to succeed.

After the Helmand fighting, U.S. special envoy to Afghanistan Zalmay Khalilzad said on Thursday that the Taliban had agreed to "reset" their commitments and reduce the number of casualties.

Earlier this month, the Taliban welcomed U.S. President Donald Trump's tweet that all American troops should be "home by Christmas" - well before the May 2021 timeline agreed in Doha.

ANKARA

This September saw a host of global environmental disasters, including floods in Bangladesh and Pakistan and heavy rains triggering landslides in both Central Africa and Nepal. 

Here is a timeline compiled by Anadolu Agency

Sept. 2:

- At least 24 people are killed and more than 30 others injured in flash floods and landslides in northern and northwest Pakistan.

Sept. 3:

- At least 12 people are killed, with 41 missing after monsoon rains triggered floods and landslides in a mountain village in midwestern Nepal.

Sept. 4:

- Death toll from flooding in Turkey's Black Sea province of Giresun rises to 11.

- A landslide in an artisan mine in the Democratic Republic of Congo claims three lives, leaving one injured and one missing.

Sept. 5:

- Death toll from floods in Bangladesh reaches 257, with residents facing difficulties amid coronavirus pandemic, including losses to agriculture and fish farming.

Sept. 7:

- A landslide in northwest Pakistan kills at least nine people and injures six.

Sept. 8:

- Death toll of laborers from a marble mine collapse caused by landslides in northwestern Pakistan rises to 18.

Sept. 12:

- At least 50 artisanal miners are killed when a gold mine collapses in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo due to landslides caused by heavy rains.

Sept. 14:

- Nearly 1,500 homes are flooded and one person is killed by heavy rains in Indonesia’s West Kalimantan province.

Sept. 16:

- Hurricane Sally makes landfall on the US Gulf Coast, bringing life-threatening flooding to parts of the Florida panhandle and Alabama.

Sept. 17:

- At least two people are killed in Indonesia’s West Java province in a landslide caused by heavy rains.

Sept. 19:

- At least two people go missing after torrential rains trigger flash flooding in southern France.

Sept. 20:

- At least three people die in hurricane-like "medicane" (Mediterranean hurricane) storm that hits Greece.

Sept. 21:

- More than 240,000 people are affected and 144,000 displaced by floods in Afar, Ethiopia.

Sept. 22:

- At least 49 neighborhoods in Indonesia's capital are flooded.

Sept. 29:

- Death toll from flooding in Sudan caused by months of heavy rains rises to 138.

- Turkey's largest city, Istanbul, hit by hail and heavy rain, causing floods and disrupting traffic./aa

Growing intolerance despite the Covid-19 pandemic is hitting France which has experienced an alarming spike in Islamophobia since January 2020 and has closed 73 mosques and private Islamic schools. According to the French Minister of the Interior Gerald Darmanin, it was a question of fighting against “radical Islamism”, however, this seems to be a step in the footsteps of China in violation of cultural and religious rights.

During a recent press conference, Darmanin affirmed that “in September, 12 places of radicalization were closed (shops, schools outside contracts, places of worship, etc.) or 73 places closed since the beginning of the year (sic) ”. If the structures “having an affiliation to” radical Islam “remain questionable,” an undeclared mosque, an Islamic cultural and associative establishment, an Islamic school without a contract, five stores and four outlets “are among the places targeted by authorities.

He revealed that due to their alleged connection to “radical Islam”, several outlets have been closed, which is ironic since these outlets sell alcohol and their consumption is prohibited in the city. Islam. In one of his tweets, Darmanin said: “One of the essential roles of the state is to ensure that illegal schools do not replace schools in the Republic (sic).”

As French President Emmanuel Macron earlier this month unveiled a plan to defend France’s secular values against Islamist radicalism, describing Islam as a religion “in crisis” around the world, Darmanin said: “We must expel 231 foreigners from French territory, who are residing here illegally, and are being prosecuted for extremism, including 180 in prison. ”

This is not the first time that such a measure has been put in place to curb the spread of Islam, which is the second most professed religion in France behind Christianity. Former French leaders have also attacked the free choice and rights of young Muslim women by implementing measures such as banning students wearing the hijab or headscarf at school and banning masks.

However, none in the modern era of France has directly criticized Islam as a religion or violated cultural rights like those of Macron and Darmanin.

A 12-year-old wannabe palaeontologist showed the professionals how to do it when he discovered a dinosaur skeleton dating back 69 million years while out hiking.

Nathan Hrushkin saw the fossils sticking out of a rock while walking through Horseshoe Canyon in Canada’s Alberta province with his dad.

And after the pair sent photos of their find to authorities, experts have since excavated some 50 different bones from the area – all belonging to the same young duck-billed Hadrosaur.

"When I looked at it, it was very, very obviously a bone,” the youngster said. “It looked like a bone you'd see in a TV show.

"I was basically just breathless. I was so excited that I didn't feel that excited, I was just so in shock."

The youngster, who wants to be a paleontologist when he’s older, first realised the area may be rich-pickings for dino-hunters a year ago after stumbling on small fragments of fossils while there with dad Dion.

So, this summer the duo went back to see what they could discover – and found the fossilised bones poking out of the side of a hill.

They logged the find with the Royal Tyrrell Museum, in the nearby town of Drumheller, which then asked for photos and GPS coordinates, before sending a team to inspect further.

It was then the full significance of what Nathan had discovered became clear.

Palaeontologists have since told him that, while they knew dinosaurs were common in this area, they were, until now, unsure what lived there in the period the Hadrosaur is from.

"This young Hadrosaur is a very important discovery because it comes from a time interval for which we know very little about what kind of dinosaurs or animals lived in Alberta,” said François Therrien, palaeo-ecology curator at the RTM. “The discovery that Nathan made is of great significance because it fills those gaps."

Reflecting on the find, Nathan told the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation: "Every year we've come here, we've found something a little bit better than the last year. Now we have to try to outdo ourselves from the skeleton.”/

The Independent

ANKARA

History will never forgive those who remain silent over Armenia’s brutality and war crimes against Azerbaijani civilians, Turkey’s defense minister said on Saturday.

Hulusi Akar strongly condemned Armenia’s actions and reiterated Turkey’s support for Baku in a phone conversation with his Azerbaijani counterpart Zakir Hasanov.

“Those who call for cease-fire and negotiations are now watching from afar as Armenia continues to commit war crimes,” Akar said.

Slamming Armenia’s missile attack on Azerbaijani civilians in the city of Ganja, he said: “Armenia again massacred our Azerbaijani brothers and sisters, including children, women and elderly.”

“Those who order the attacks on civilians with ballistic missiles will definitely be held accountable, and history will never forgive those who remain silent over this brutality.”

Akar and Hasanov also discussed Azerbaijan’s ongoing operations to liberate its occupied territories, a Defense Ministry statement said.

‘Turkey stands with Azerbaijan’

“We will continue to stand by our Azerbaijani Turkic brothers and sisters in the struggle to preserve their territorial integrity and regain their territories, and to support them with all our means in their just cause,” Akar said.

The minister congratulated Azerbaijan on the liberation of Fuzuli city and the downing of “two [Armenian] SU-25 fighter jets.”

Akar wished Allah’s mercy for the Azerbaijanis martyred in Armenian attacks and prayed for the fast recovery of the wounded, the statement said.

The Turkish Defense Ministry also slammed Armenia’s “cowardly” actions in a series of tweets.

“Armenia, having run away from the Heroic Army of Azerbaijan on the front line, once again hit civilian settlements in Ganja with missiles in cowardly fashion. Brotherly Azerbaijan is responding to this heinous act, on the front lines,” the ministry said.

It said the Armenian army is “in great despair” and committing a “new crime against humanity” every day.

“Those who remain silent to such massacres will take their place in the tainted pages of history. We wish Allah’s mercy upon our martyrs and swift recovery to our injured brothers and sisters,” read the tweet.

Armenian attacks

At least 13 civilians, including two children, were killed and 40 more injured in Armenia’s early Saturday missile attack on Ganja, Azerbaijan’s second-largest city.

More than 20 houses were also destroyed, according to preliminary reports.

It was Armenia’s second deadly assault in less than a week on Ganja, an area far from the front line with a population of half a million.

Since new clashes erupted between the two countries on Sept. 27, Armenia has continued its attacks on civilians and Azerbaijani forces.

As of midday Saturday, Armenia has killed at least 60 Azerbaijani civilians and injured 270 more since Sept. 27, according to Azerbaijani officials.

The number of houses damaged in Armenian attacks has reached 1,704, along with 90 residential buildings and 327 civil facilities, according to Azerbaijan’s Prosecutor General's Office.

Nagorno-Karabakh conflict

Relations between the two former Soviet republics have been tense since 1991, when the Armenian military occupied Upper Karabakh, or Nagorno-Karabakh, an internationally recognized territory of Azerbaijan.

Some 20% of Azerbaijan's territory has remained under illegal Armenian occupation for nearly three decades.

The OSCE Minsk Group -- co-chaired by France, Russia, and the US -- was formed in 1992 to find a peaceful solution to the conflict, but to no avail. A cease-fire, however, was agreed to in 1994.

Multiple UN resolutions, as well as international organizations, demand the withdrawal of the occupying forces.

World powers, including Russia, France, and the US, have urged a new cease-fire.

Turkey has supported Baku’s right to self-defense and demanded the withdrawal of Armenia's occupying forces./aa

ISTANBUL

Amnesty International on Saturday urged Lebanese authorities to investigate and hold accountable officers involved in the suppression of protesters during October 2019 demonstrations.

"The [Lebanese] authorities have not only failed to address people’s legitimate demands for their social and economic rights, but have also increasingly resorted to repressing the rights to peaceful assembly and freedom of expression,” the London-based rights group said in a report on the first anniversary of the Oct. 17, 2019 Lebanese protests over the deterioration of the country's economic situation.

Amnesty accused Lebanese security forces of resorting to excessive use of force against peaceful protesters, adding that the most brutal crackdown took place following the Aug. 4 explosion at Beirut’s port when the Lebanese army and unknown gunmen opened fire at protesters leading to the injury of 230 people.

"Instead of focusing on addressing the legitimate demands that sparked the protests, the authorities have sought to intimidate and silence activists and critics,” the watchdog said.

The announcement of additional taxes on Oct. 17, 2019 sparked mass demonstrations across Lebanon in protest of the deterioration of living conditions and widespread corruption among the country's ruling elites./aa

WASHINGTON

The mainstream US media disregarded Saturday the Armenian strike on Azerbaijani civilians, which killed more than a dozen including children.

Prominent outlets such as The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and CNN have failed to carry the attack either on their main pages or world section.

Only The Washington Post shared a story of The Associated Press (AP) on Europe page, which says "Azerbaijan accused Armenia of striking its second-largest city" in the lede, falling short of blaming Armenia.

Reuters only covered a story headlined "Azerbaijan and Armenia allege truce violations, accuse each other in shelling" while the attack was blatantly from the Armenian side.

Early Saturday, at least 13 civilians were killed, including four women and three minors, and nearly 50 others were injured, when Armenian missiles struck Ganja, the second largest city of Azerbaijan.

Some 20 women and five minors were also among the injured, while two children are still missing, the Prosecutor General’s Office of Azerbaijan said.

More than 20 houses were also destroyed in the attack.

It was Armenia’s second deadly assault on Ganja in less than a week, an area far from the front line with a population of half a million.

Along with Ganja, a hydroelectric power plant in Mingachevir was also targeted by the Armenian army at around 1 a.m. local time Saturday (2100GMT Friday), but its missiles were neutralized by Azerbaijan’s air defense.

Since new clashes erupted between the two countries on Sept. 27, Armenia has continued its attacks on civilians and Azerbaijani forces.

As of midday Saturday, Armenia has killed at least 60 Azerbaijani civilians and injured 270 more, according to Azerbaijani officials.

The number of houses damaged in Armenian attacks has reached 1,704, along with 90 residential buildings and 327 civil facilities, according to the Prosecutor General’s Office of Azerbaijan./aa

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