NATO’s Rutte: North Korea sending troops to Ukraine would escalate conflict

Update NATO’s Rutte: North Korea sending troops to Ukraine would escalate conflict
NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte adresses a press conference during a NATO Defence Ministers meeting in Brussels, Belgium. (File/AFP)
Short Url
Updated 21 October 2024

NATO’s Rutte: North Korea sending troops to Ukraine would escalate conflict

NATO’s Rutte: North Korea sending troops to Ukraine would escalate conflict
  • South Korea summons Russian envoy to protest North Korea troop dispatch

BRUSSELS: If North Korea were to send troops to Ukraine to fight on Russia’s behalf it would significantly escalate the conflict, NATO Chief Mark Rutte said on social media platform X on Monday.
Rutte, who took office at NATO at the start of the month, said he had a discussion with South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol about the alliance’s close partnership with Seoul, focusing on defense industrial cooperation and the interconnected security of the Euro-Atlantic and Indo-Pacific regions.
South Korea’s foreign ministry summoned on Monday the Russian ambassador in Seoul in protest over what it has called the dispatch of North Korean troops to Russia for deployment in Ukraine and pledged a joint international response.
South Korea’s first vice foreign minister Kim Hong-kyun called in Georgy Zinoviev, the top Russian envoy to Seoul, and urged the immediate withdrawal of North Korean soldiers from Russia, the ministry said in a statement.
Kim said the participation of North Korean troops in the war in Ukraine violated UN resolutions and the UN charter and posed serious threats to the security of South Korea and beyond.
“We condemn North Korea’s illegal military cooperation, including its dispatch of troops to Russia, in the strongest terms,” the ministry quoted Kim as saying.
“We will respond jointly with the international community by mobilizing all available means against acts that threaten our core security interests.”
Phone calls to the Russian embassy went unanswered. The ministry said Zinoviev told Kim that he would relay the message to Moscow.

Meanwhile Russia on Monday vowed to maintain cooperation with North Korea after reports of Pyongyang’s troops being trained to fight for Moscow in Ukraine.
“North Korea is our close neighbor and partner and we develop relations in all areas and it’s our sovereign right. We will continue developing this cooperation further,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told journalists, while declining to answer a question on whether Russia is using North Korean troops.

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky said last week that North Korea was preparing to send 10,000 soldiers to help Moscow’s war effort, and that some North Korean officers were already deployed on Russian-occupied Ukrainian territory.
The West has long accused North Korea of supplying weapons to Russia. Rutte and the Pentagon both said last week that they have found no evidence yet of a North Korean military presence on the ground in Ukraine.


Melbourne man charged over synagogue arson linked to Iran

Updated 21 sec ago

Melbourne man charged over synagogue arson linked to Iran

Melbourne man charged over synagogue arson linked to Iran
MELBOURNE: A man charged with torching a Melbourne synagogue, in an antisemitic attack that Australia accuses Iran of directing, was remanded in custody when he appeared in court Wednesday.
Ali Younes, 20, became the second suspect last week to be charged for the December arson attack on the Adass Israel Synagogue. Police allege three masked arsonists dowsed the building’s interior with a liquid accelerant before igniting it, causing extensive damage and injuring a worshipper.
Younes, who lives in Melbourne’s northern suburbs, appeared in the Melbourne Magistrates’ Court on Wednesday by video link from jail.
His first court appearance came a day after Prime Minister Anthony Albanese accused Iran’s Revolutionary Guard of directing arson attacks on the synagogue and a Sydney kosher eatery, Lewis’ Continental Kitchen, two months earlier.
Iran denied Australia’s allegations Tuesday through its Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baghaei, who tried to connect the attacks to the challenges the government faced with Israel after announcing Australia would recognize a Palestinian state.
No links to Iran have been reported from the court appearances of those charged so far over the Sydney and Melbourne blazes that the Australian Security Intelligence Organization (ASIO) says it has “credible evidence” Iran orchestrated.
Younes, who spoke only twice during the brief hearing, was remanded in custody and ordered to appear again in court on Dec. 4.
Alleged arsonist’s co-accused remains behind bars
Younes’ co-accused, Giovanni Laulu, a 21-year-old man from Melbourne’s western outskirts, will also appear in court on Dec. 4.
Laulu was arrested last month and remains behind bars. Both are charged with arson, reckless conduct endangering life and car theft. Arson carries a potential sentence of 15 years in prison. The other two charges are each punishable by 10 years in prison.
The crime was declared a terrorist act early in the investigation. Such a declaration increases resources available to the investigators.
No terrorism charges, which can carry longer prison sentences, have yet been laid.
Both suspects were charged by the Victorian Joint Counter Terrorism Team that brings together law enforcement officials from the state’s Victoria Police, the Australian Federal Police and ASIO, the nation’s main domestic spy agency.
ASIO director-general Mike Burgess said Tuesday the Revolutionary Guard used a “complex web of proxies to hide its involvement” in the two antisemitic attacks in Australia.
Benjamin Klein, a board member of the damaged synagogue, said he had been warned by an official in the prime minister’s office that Iran would be blamed.
“It is quite shocking and traumatic to think that a peaceful, loving shule (synagogue) in Melbourne is targeted and attacked by terrorists from overseas,” Klein said.
Klein said state and federal authorities had been supportive with increased security at a temporary location where the synagogue’s congregation now gathers.
Advocate says Jewish Australians ‘fearful they could be next’
Alex Ryvchin, co-chief executive officer of the Executive Council of Australian Jewry, an advocacy group, said the owner of the targeted restaurant in Sydney was still processing news that the Revolutionary Guard had been accused of the arson.
“The fact that a business is targeted makes every Jewish Australian fearful that they could be next,” Ryvchin said.
Two Sydney men, Wayne Dean Ogden, 40, and Juon Amuoi, 26, have been charged with executing that attack and remain in custody.
Sayed Mohammed Moosawi, a 32-year-old Sydney-based former chapter president of the Nomads biker gang, has been charged with directing the fire bombing. He has been released on bail.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese on Wednesday continued to refuse to make public the specifics of how Iran had allegedly directed the two crimes, citing ongoing investigations into other antisemitic attacks. Authorities say they also didn’t want to jeopardize the fair trials of suspects already charged by making public evidence that might not be admissible in court.
“It’s very clear from the advice that we received from ASIO that both the Lewis’ Continental Kitchen in Sydney and the Adass Israel Synagogue there in Melbourne were arisen from Iran, from the Iran Revolutionary Guard. And that is them working in concert with criminal elements both overseas and here domestically,” Albanese told Australian Broadcasting Corp.
Expelled Iranian ambassador remains in Australia
Australia is severing diplomatic ties with Iran over what Albanese described as an Iranian “attack on our social fabric and who we are.”
Iranian Ambassador Ahmad Sadeghi, the first ambassador to be expelled by Australia since World War II, was given 72 hours from Tuesday morning to leave Australia. Three of his fellow expelled Iranian diplomats were given a week to leave.
Sadeghi was seen leaving and returning to the embassy by car Wednesday. The Associated Press’ call to the embassy on Wednesday was automatically placed on hold but never answered.
Australia’s Foreign Minister Penny Wong on Wednesday urged all Australians in Iran to leave immediately and warned travelers not to go there because Australia no longer had an embassy in Tehran. Australian diplomats had been moved to an unnamed third country for their own safety, she said.
“The Iranian regime is an unpredictable regime, a regime which we have seen is capable of aggression and violence,” Wong said.

Father of slain Colombian candidate Miguel Uribe launches presidential bid

Father of slain Colombian candidate Miguel Uribe launches presidential bid
Updated 27 August 2025

Father of slain Colombian candidate Miguel Uribe launches presidential bid

Father of slain Colombian candidate Miguel Uribe launches presidential bid
  • Miguel Uribe Londoño, 72, announced his candidacy with a speech outside the congressional building in the capital where his son became a well known senator

BOGOTA: The father of Miguel Uribe, the Colombian presidential candidate fatally shot at a political rally earlier this year, launched a presidential campaign Tuesday in what he called an effort keep his son’s legacy alive and build a safer and more prosperous Colombia.
Miguel Uribe Londoño, 72, announced his candidacy with a speech outside the congressional building in the capital where his son became a well-known senator, and spoke behind a podium fitted with the campaign logo used by his deceased son.
“Together we can build a secure Colombia where people will not fear going out into the streets, and where business owners will not have to make extortion payments” to gangs, Uribe Londoño said in Bogota. “A democratic Colombia, where the government does not foment divisions between the rich and the poor, whites or Blacks, or those who are on the left or on the right.”
Uribe Londoño was a member of Bogota’s city council in the late 80s and a senator for Colombia’s Conservative Party in the early 90s. But he had no plans to run for the presidency before his son’s death, and was not widely known by the public.
He gained new prominence during his son’s nationally televised funeral, when he delivered a speech decrying what he called the country’s descent into “madness” under the administration of left-wing President Gustavo Petro and urging Colombians to vote in next year’s elections.
Uribe Londoño is one of five candidates that are running for the Democratic Center, the conservative party that Miguel Uribe belonged to. The party has said that later this year, it will use opinion polls to decide on its final candidate.
Sergio Guzman, a political analyst in Bogota, said that Uribe Londoño’s decision to enter the presidential race “reinvigorates” the Democratic Center, which has struggled to find a popular candidate while its leader, former President Alvaro Uribe, fights corruption allegations in Colombian courts. The former president is no relation to Uribe Londoño
Guzman said that Uribe Londoño, whose wife was murdered in the 1990s, “symbolizes the pain of many victims, especially those who are conservatives.”
Uribe Londoño’s entry into the presidential race comes as Colombia faces a new wave of violence, caused largely by rebel groups and drug gangs that are trying to take over territory abandoned by the FARC, the guerrilla army that made peace with the government in 2016.
Last week, seven people were killed as a FARC hold-out group set off a car bomb outside a military base in Colombia’s third largest city. While in the province of Antioquia, rebels took down a helicopter that was conducting anti-narcotics operations, killing 13 police officers.
Petro has attempted to broker peace deals with the nation’s remaining rebel groups, and granted many of them ceasefires in an effort to boost negotiations. But these peace talks have yielded few results, and critics of the president say they have helped the rebel groups to become stronger.
“I am not the only father who has lost that which he loved the most” Uribe Londoño said on Tuesday. “But I would like to be voice of the latest father, who has had to accept the cruel destiny that they want to impose on us with violence and terror.”


Latest launch of SpaceX’s Starship deploys 8 dummy satellites, then splashes down into Indian Ocean

Latest launch of SpaceX’s Starship deploys 8 dummy satellites, then splashes down into Indian Ocean
Updated 27 August 2025

Latest launch of SpaceX’s Starship deploys 8 dummy satellites, then splashes down into Indian Ocean

Latest launch of SpaceX’s Starship deploys 8 dummy satellites, then splashes down into Indian Ocean
  • NASA has ordered two Starships to land astronauts on the moon later this decade
  • No crew members were aboard the demo launch

SpaceX launched the latest test of its mega rocket Starship on Tuesday night and completed the first-ever deployment of a test payload — eight dummy satellites — into space. After just over an hour coasting through space, Starship splashed down as planned in the Indian Ocean.
Starship blasted off from Starbase, SpaceX’s launch site in South Texas, just after 6:30 p.m. It was the 10th test for the world’s biggest and most powerful rocket, which SpaceX and NASA hope to use to get astronauts back on the moon.
NASA has ordered two Starships to land astronauts on the moon later this decade, and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk’s ultimate goal is Mars.
No crew members were aboard the demo launch.
The test also included the successful return of the craft’s Super Heavy Booster, which splashed down in the Atlantic after testing a landing-burn engine sequence.
The Starship itself continued to orbit the Earth — passing from daylight in Texas through night and back into daytime again — ahead of the planned splashdown. Before the craft hit the waves, its engines fired, flipping its position so it entered the water upright with the nose cone pointed upward.
The successful demo came after a year of mishaps. Back-to-back tests in January and March ended just minutes after liftoff, raining wreckage into the ocean. The most recent test in May — the ninth try — ended when the spacecraft tumbled out of control and broke apart.
SpaceX later redesigned the Super Heavy booster with larger and stronger fins for greater stability, according to a company post on the social platform X this month.
The first Starship exploded minutes into its inaugural test flight in 2023.
SpaceX’s first batch of Starlink satellites were launched in 2019 from a Falcon rocket that lifted off from Cape Canaveral.


Australian school bus crashes, killing girl and injuring 11 others

Australian school bus crashes, killing girl and injuring 11 others
Updated 27 August 2025

Australian school bus crashes, killing girl and injuring 11 others

Australian school bus crashes, killing girl and injuring 11 others

SYDNEY: An Australian school bus veered off the road and crashed on Wednesday, killing a girl and injuring 11 others, Victorian state emergency services said.
The bus was carrying 28 students from Christian College Geelong when it failed to negotiate a left-hand turn on a rural road near the city of Geelong and rolled over, police said.
The crash scene was “incredibly confronting” for emergency workers, said Paul Lineham, a senior officer with Victoria Police, at a news conference.
“One loss of life is one loss too many and when it comes to children, as a parent myself, it really does hit home and my heart goes out to the parents when they first found out their kids were involved,” he said.
One child was flown by air ambulance to hospital with serious injuries, while a further 10 people including the driver were taken to hospital by road, said David Shearer, from Victoria’s ambulance service.
The 76-year-old driver has since been discharged from hospital and is currently assisting police with their investigation into the crash, Lineham said.
“The exact circumstances are unknown and we will take into consideration everything from the bus to the conditions at the time,” he said.


England flags spark pride and concern amid anti-immigration protests

England flags spark pride and concern amid anti-immigration protests
Updated 27 August 2025

England flags spark pride and concern amid anti-immigration protests

England flags spark pride and concern amid anti-immigration protests
  • Asked about the flag movement, a spokesperson for Starmer said the prime minister views flags as symbols of the nation’s heritage and values but has recognized that some want to use it to cause conflict

LONDON: The red and white St. George’s Cross and the Union Jack flags have proliferated along streets across England in recent weeks in what supporters say is a campaign to show national pride, but others fear is part of growing anti-immigration sentiment. The flags have emerged during a politically charged summer in Britain that has been dominated by the subject of migration, with the YouGov monthly sentiment tracker showing that since the end of June immigration has overtaken the economy as voters’ biggest concern.
“It’s our flag, we should be able to feel proud to fly it,” said Livvy McCarthy, a 32-year-old bartender, as she walked past a pedestrian crossing in the Isle of Dogs, London, painted to resemble the English flag. “Every other country can do the same, so what’s the problem?“
National flags often hang from public buildings in Britain, but it is rare for them to appear in the streets outside of sporting, royal or military events. The appearance of flags has coincided with a wave of protests in recent weeks outside hotels sheltering asylum seekers. Fuelled by social media, the movement appears to have originated with the Birmingham-based Weoley Warriors, with several groups now encouraging the display of more flags.
The Warriors call themselves a group of “proud English men” on their fundraising page, which says they want to show how “proud we are of our history, freedoms and achievements.” They did not give any further details as to their motives for hanging the flags, which have appeared in several English cities, predominantly in the West Midlands.
In the 1970s, the Union flag was adopted as a symbol by the far-right National Front party, which openly promoted white supremacist views, while the Cross of St. George, the patron saint of England, likewise was brandished by English soccer hooligans and extreme right-wing groups.
As a result, while some regard displaying the flag as showing patriotism, others, including those from migrant communities or ethnically diverse backgrounds, are concerned they are being targeted.
Stanley Oronsaye, a 52-year-old hospitality worker from Nigeria and a resident of the Isle of Dogs, said people should be free to express their views on migration policy, so long as it remains within the law.
Yet he felt uneasy. The Tower Hamlets borough, which is home to the Isle of Dogs, is one of the most diverse areas in Britain, with nearly half of residents born outside the UK.
“The worry is from the fact that if it escalates it can turn into something else,” Oronsaye said. “It’s worrisome when... nationalism is allowed to take a different tone.” Jason, 25, who declined to give his last name, said the flags were about “getting English culture back.” “We are seeing more of other cultures than we are of our own now,” he said on the streets of Tower Hamlets.

WAVES OF PROTEST
The protests outside hotels housing asylum seekers in recent weeks were triggered in part after an Ethiopian asylum seeker staying in a hotel north of London was charged last month with sexual assault. He denies the charge. It follows a wave of riots last summer targeting asylum seekers and ethnic minorities in several British cities, after three young girls were murdered at a Taylor Swift-themed dance event, with social media falsely attributing the attack to a radical Islamist immigrant.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer said at the time the violence was the result of “far-right thuggery.” Asked about the flag movement, a spokesperson for Starmer said the prime minister views flags as symbols of the nation’s heritage and values but has recognized that some want to use it to cause conflict. The prime minister, the spokesperson said on Tuesday, recognizes people’s frustrations with the economy and the pressures illegal migration is putting on local communities,
Some councils have removed flags, citing safety reasons.
Tower Hamlets council said flags may be displayed on private property but that any flag attached to council infrastructure would be removed.
“We are aware that some individuals putting up flags are not from our borough and that there have been wider attempts by some coming from outside our borough to sow division,” it said in a statement, without providing further details.
The display of flags has been endorsed by several politicians, including Nigel Farage, the former Brexit campaigner whose Reform UK tops opinion polls and the opposition Conservative Party.
Robert Jenrick, a leading Conservative politician, described councils removing the flags as “Britain-hating councils” and said on X: “We must be one country, under the Union Flag.”
US billionaire Elon Musk, who has promoted far-right politicians across Europe, including in the UK, posted a picture of the English flag on his X platform on Tuesday.
In the Isle of Dogs, a peninsula in east London near to the Canary Wharf financial district, many of the flags were displayed near the Britannia Hotel, a government-designated hotel for asylum seekers that has been the site of protests.
Local resident Shriya Joshi, a 26-year-old from India, said she remained unsure about the flags’ true purpose.
“If it’s a message to the immigrant community or anything of that sort, then it’s not that pleasant,” she said.