Connect with us

World

Curfew is lifted in Lanka, but Gotabaya is still in office

Published

on

gotabaya rajapaksa sri lanka

The curfew that had been put in place in the Western province of Sri Lanka following the outbreak of violence in Colombo was removed on Thursday by the country’s authorities, even though President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, who had fled to the Maldives, had not yet turned in his resignation letter.

Hours after leaving the nation on Wednesday, Rajapaksa, a 73-year-old leader who had pledged to step down, named Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe as interim President, exacerbating the political turmoil and sparking new demonstrations.

Since mid-afternoon on Wednesday, when Rajapaksa fled the country, demonstrators have battled with police officers near the prime minister’s office and at the main entry point to Parliament, resulting in at least 84 injuries.

The crowd was attempting to scale barriers and access the restricted area when the police opened fire with tear gas and water cannons.

Nihal Thalduwa, a spokesman for the police, reported that protestors had taken a T56 rifle and 60 bullets from a Sri Lankan Army soldier. The police reported that a complaint had been made.

ALSO READ:  India talks tough on terror as Bhutto attends SCO summit

Following the outbreak of unrest, authorities had to impose a curfew throughout the Western province.

The demonstrations on Wednesday focused mainly on Wickremesinghe. After he was named interim president, calls for his resignation got louder.

In order for Speaker Mahinda Yapa Abeywardena to assume the role of acting president, political party leaders are pleading with him to resign.

In a statement, Wickremesinghe requested that the Speaker identify a deserving candidate to lead an interim all-party government as prime minister.

However, the demonstrators have requested that the temporary administration only include politicians who they can support.

As previously promised, President Rajapaksa did not submit his resignation on Wednesday.

The Morning news portal in Sri Lanka said that he would probably mail his resignation letter only after arriving at his destination on Wednesday night.

According to reports in the Maldives reported by the media, Rajapaksa was unable to board the flight from Male to Singapore on Wednesday night because of security concerns.

ALSO READ:  Will discuss credit ratings, anti-money laundering platform in BRICS: Russian central bank governor

Rajapaksa reportedly asked the Maldives government for a private plane to land in Singapore and voiced security worries about boarding a commercial trip.

Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

World

Indian-origin barrister Varun Ghosh appointed to Australian Senate

Published

on

By

Melbourne, Feb 3 (IANS) Indian-origin barrister Varun Ghosh will take his position in the Australian Senate next week with the Labour Party officially confirming him as their pick to represent Western Australia (WA).

A joint sitting of WA Parliament on Thursday selected the 38-year-old Ghosh, a barrister at Francis Burt Chambers, to replace present senator Patrick Dodson.

“The Legislative Assembly and the Legislative Council have chosen Senator Varun Ghosh to represent Western Australia in the Senate of the Federal Parliament,” the Legislative Assembly of Western Australia announced on X.

Ghosh joined the Labor party in Perth at the age of 17 after his parents moved from India in the 1980s and began working as neurologists, news website WAToday reported.

He said his preselection was an honour he won’t take for granted. “I have had the privilege of a good education and believe strongly that high-quality education and training should be available to everyone,” he said in a statement.

ALSO READ:  Nepalese Army discovers the crash site of a plane

“Varun has spent the last few years working as a barrister with both WA business & on the international stage with the World Bank. I look forward to working with him as part of our

@walabor Senate team in CBR (Canberra),” Minister for Veterans’ Affairs, Matt Keogh, wrote on X platform.

At the 2019 federal election, Ghosh was placed in fifth position on the Australian Labour Party’s Senate ticket in Western Australia but was not elected.

He received degrees in Arts and Law from the University of Western Australia and was a Commonwealth Scholar in Law at the University of Cambridge.

He previously worked as a finance attorney in New York and as a consultant for the World Bank in Washington, DC.

Ghosh returned to Australia in 2015 as a senior associate with King & Wood Mallesons, representing banks, resource companies, and construction companies in dispute resolution.

Continue Reading

World

Trump’s federal trial on election interference postponed from March 4

Published

on

By

Washington, Feb 3 (IANS) Former US President Donald Trump’s federal trial set for March 4 on charges of election interference has been postponed — confirmed after it was dropped from the Washinton DC District Court’s calendar — as an appeals court has to dispose of his claim of immunity from the charges.

Trump’s March 4 trial date on federal charges that he conspired to overturn the 2020 election has disappeared from the district court’s calendar, confirming that his fight over whether he is immune to the charges will delay the case, media reports said.

The delay could have a domino effect on other cases pending against the former President.

Trump, as it stands today, will first face criminal trial in New York, where he is charged with falsifying business records on a scheme to pay hush money to an adult film star and a former Playboy model. That trial’s tentatively set for March 25.

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg has said that the judge was waiting to see what was happening in other jurisdictions. He said he would have a better idea of the schedule after the next hearing in the case on February 15.

ALSO READ:  Indian guy identified in accident involving White House barrier

In the federal case in Washington, US District Judge Tanya Chutkan set the tentative trial date in August, weeks after the former President was indicted on three conspiracy charges and one obstruction charge. But the case has dropped off the court’s calendar and hasn’t been rescheduled before the November election. Chutkan hasn’t explained the change in the court docket, USA TODAY reported.

The trial dropping off the schedule appears to result from the legal wrangle over whether Trump is immune to charges as he has invoked executive privilege not to testify in a court on grounds of having been the President of the US.

Trump, the front-runner in Republican presidential nominations, has sought to delay four criminal cases until after the election. He has also argued he is immune to the federal election charges because he was President when the alleged criminality took place.

The Washington DC Circuit Court of Appeals is considering his argument and its decision has no deadline, so it does not appear to be time-bound but could come at any time. Whatever the decision, the case is likely to go to the US Supreme Court, which could take weeks or months longer to decide.

ALSO READ:  India talks tough on terror as Bhutto attends SCO summit

Chutkan had sought to stick to her schedule. But other issues must also be debated before trial, such as what evidence might be excluded and what questions will be asked of potential jurors. She had said that postponing those decisions “will not serve the interests of justice”.

The delay might provide an opening for a New York trial on 34 counts of falsifying business records to cover up hush money payments before the 2016 election. Trump has pleaded not guilty.

New York Justice Juan Merchan tentatively set the trial to start on March 25. A hearing is scheduled for February 15.

When the New York trial is held, Trump’s federal trial in Florida on charges he hoarded national security documents after leaving the White House could also be postponed. The documents trial is tentatively scheduled for May 20. But prosecutors and defence lawyers are in a legal tussle over how to handle classified documents in that case.

ALSO READ:  PM Wickremesinghe is named Lanka's new Finance Minister by GOTA

A Georgia trial on charges that Trump and others conspired to interfere with the 2020 election hasn’t been scheduled yet. Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis has asked for an August 5 trial date but that would mean the expected five-month trial could overlap with the election. Fulton County Superior Judge Scott McAfee hasn’t set a date yet.

Continue Reading

World

3 Indo-Canadians to be extradited to US for drug trafficking

Published

on

By

Toronto, Feb 1 (IANS) Three Indian-origin men have been arrested in Canada and will be extradited for trial in the US for their alleged links with a network trafficking drugs between Mexico and the North American nations.

A joint operation between the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), dubbed “Operation Dead Hand”, saw 19 people charged in two US federal indictments for their alleged roles in the organized crime ring.

Ayush Sharma, 25, and Guramrit Sandhu, 60, both from Brampton, and Subham Kumar, 29, from Calgary, were arrested under an international arrest warrant, the RCMP said in a release on Tuesday.

“Drug trafficking is a global problem being driven by sophisticated, organised crime groups who put profits over people’s lives. Motivated by greed, these criminals destroy lives, devastate families, and wreak havoc in our community,” said US Attorney Martin Estrada for the Central District of California.

Investigators developed information indicating the organised crime group used Canadian “handlers’ and “dispatchers” who travelled from Canada to Los Angeles for short amounts of time, a Department of Justice release noted.

ALSO READ:  China is upset with Pakistan about the CPEC projects' delays

The handlers coordinated the pick-up and delivery of large shipments of cocaine and methamphetamine, which were loaded onto long-haul semi-trucks destined for Canada. Wholesale quantities of fentanyl were seized as a result of the investigation.

The transportation was coordinated by a network of drivers working with dozens of trucking companies who made numerous border crossings from the US to Canada via the Detroit Windsor Tunnel, the Buffalo Peace Bridge, and the Blue Water Bridge.

Sidhu, also known as King, is alleged to have orchestrated the trafficking and exportation of large-scale quantities of controlled substances to Canada working with several co-defendants described as suppliers.

According to the indictment, Sidhu occupied the position of an organiser, supervisor, and manager, and in this role obtained substantial income and resources.

He has been charged with one count of engaging in a continuing criminal enterprise, and if convicted, he faces a mandatory minimum penalty of 20 years in prison.

ALSO READ:  Defending its wheat export ban at the UN, India criticizes the West

Sharma and Kumar were identified in the indictment as semi-truck drivers involved in exporting drugs to Canada.

Both the indictments allege illicit drug trafficking activity cumulatively involving approximately 845 kgs of methamphetamine, 951 kgs of cocaine, 20 kgs of fentanyl, and 4 kgs of heroin.

Over $900,000 in cash was seized during the investigation. The estimated wholesale value of the narcotics seized was between $16-28 million.

Arrest and search warrants were executed on Tuesday morning by a coalition of international law enforcement partners in various cities, including Los Angeles; Sacramento, California; Miami; Odessa, Texas; Montreal; Toronto; and Calgary, Canada.

Continue Reading

World

Will discuss credit ratings, anti-money laundering platform in BRICS: Russian central bank governor

Published

on

By

elvira nabiullina

Moscow, Jan 30 (IANS) Russia central bank governor Elvira Nabiullina on Tuesday said that the country will propose key initiatives to enhance cooperation among the BRICS countries in 2024 when it assumes the chairmanship of the bloc.

Nabiullina said the country would like to promote the topic of mutual recognition of ratings which is very important for mutual trade and investment, Xinhua news agency reported.

The country will also be putting forward an initiative to check money laundering of illicit funds as it has an experience in creating an anti-money laundering platform called “Know Your Customer,” which it is willing to share.

Russia, which took over the rotating chairmanship of BRICS for 2024 on January 1, also plans to build a settlement-depository infrastructure and create a common platform for training and exchange of experience for the BRICS countries.

The idea of creating supranational rating agencies that has been discussed both within BRICS and within the Eurasian Economic Union, is promising but involves “a lot of complex issues,” including who should be the founder, how to ensure the financing, and how to guarantee the independence and professionalism of the agency, Nabiullina said.

ALSO READ:  India talks tough on terror as Bhutto attends SCO summit

Nabiullina said that the mutual recognition of ratings will be faster and more practical.

Continue Reading

World

Japan may face 10th wave of Covid-19 infection: Experts

Published

on

By

Tokyo, Jan 29 (IANS) As reported infection cases have risen for continuous nine weeks in Japan, infectious disease expert believes that the country is probably in the midst of a 10th wave of Covid-19 infections.

The new JN.1 variant, which is extremely contagious, is driving the spread, reports the Japan Times.

The Japanese Health Ministry noted that in the week ending January 21, there were 12.23 infected persons reported per organisation, which is 1.4 times more than the previous week. The growth continued from late November last year.

Visiting professor of infectious diseases at Keio University — Norio Sugaya has warned the public to take precautions.

As per the report, rising JN.1 infections, which resulted from a mutation from the BA.2.86 omicron variation, are the cause of the coronavirus comeback.

“JN.1 seems to be better able to evade immunity. The current situation can be described as the 10th wave of infections, and the number of infected people is feared to rise further due to the spread of JN.1,” Sugaya was quoted as saying.

ALSO READ:  India talks tough on terror as Bhutto attends SCO summit

Moreover, the report said that the new variant is rapidly replacing others in Japan.

The majority, or almost 20 per cent, of the 194 Covid-19 samples that private testing companies looked at between January 1 and January 7 were JN.1, according to the National Institute of Infectious Diseases.

Early next month, the share is expected to hit 43 per cent, the report mentioned.

As per the World Health Organisation (WHO), there is no evidence that JN.1 causes more severe symptoms than other variants. However, JN.1 probably spreads faster because it evades the human immune system more readily.

Continue Reading

Trending