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Harris and Trump push for every vote with just 14 days to go

Update Harris and Trump push for every vote with just 14 days to go
More than 15 million Americans have already voted by mail or in person, representing around 10 percent of the total turnout in 2020. (Reuters)
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Updated 22 October 2024

Harris and Trump push for every vote with just 14 days to go

Harris and Trump push for every vote with just 14 days to go
  • Both campaigns pumping hundreds of millions of dollars into a final push for any wavering, undecided voters who could tilt the balance in their favor
  • Polls appear to be giving Trump a slight edge recently, but all within the margin of error

WASHINGTON: One of the tightest US election races of modern times enters its final, two-week stretch Tuesday, with Republican Donald Trump making a special pitch to Latino voters as Democratic rival Kamala Harris sits down for a national network interview.

Both campaigns are pumping hundreds of millions of dollars into a final push for any wavering, undecided voters who could tilt the balance in their favor, with polls consistently showing their candidates in a dead heat ahead of Election Day.

Whatever the outcome, Americans will make history on November 5: they will either elect the first woman president in the world’s leading superpower — or they will put the first convicted felon into the White House.

Polls appear to be giving Trump, who at 78 is the oldest nominee from a major party in US history, a slight edge recently — but all within the margin of error, making them little comfort for a former president making his third consecutive White House run.

Vice President Harris — who only threw herself into the race in July, when President Joe Biden made the stunning decision to drop out and endorse her instead — will give a television interview to NBC on Tuesday.

The 60-year-old, who celebrated her birthday over the weekend, will also deploy one of her party’s most popular emissaries back into the field: Barack Obama.

The former Democratic president will hold a series of rallies in Wisconsin and Michigan, two of the seven most hotly contested swing states in the election which, under the US system of indirect universal suffrage, are likely to decide the outcome.

Trump, whose anti-migrant rhetoric is becoming coarser and more extreme by the day, will take part in a roundtable discussion with Latino voters at one of his Florida properties.

The Republican will then fly to North Carolina, another swing state where he also campaigned on Monday, for an event that is supposed to be devoted to the economy.

He rarely sticks to the topic at his rallies, however — instead, he has been criticized for a tumultuous few weeks that have featured rambling monologues and threats about weaponizing the military against Democrats who he calls “the enemy from within.”

One recent televised town hall veered into a surreal, impromptu music session as Trump abandoned discussion of the election to play his favorite hits while swaying on stage.

The Harris campaign has begun to hammer at his mental and physical fitness to serve.

But a tide of MAGA-capped supporters continue to flock to his rallies, convinced that he is the victim of political persecution, or that Democrats are instigating threats against him.

Democrats are also seeking to woo moderate Republicans turned off by Trump’s ominous rhetoric and scandals.

Harris has sought to frame herself as a “joyful warrior” seeking to turn the page on Trump’s years of outrage and move into a new generation of American political leadership.

More than 15 million Americans have already voted by mail or in person, according to the independent organization Elections Project, representing around 10 percent of the total turnout in 2020.


Fleeing Maduro then Trump, Venezuelans seek refuge in Spain

Fleeing Maduro then Trump, Venezuelans seek refuge in Spain
Updated 11 sec ago

Fleeing Maduro then Trump, Venezuelans seek refuge in Spain

Fleeing Maduro then Trump, Venezuelans seek refuge in Spain
  • Venezuelans facing US expulsion under Trump
  • Migrants face housing, job challenges rebuilding lives in Spain
MADRID: After surviving the perilous trek through the jungle of Panama’s Darien Gap with his wife and three daughters to reach the United States, Venezuelan policeman Alberto Peña thought he had found a haven from the persecution he says he fled from back home.
But two years later, President Donald Trump’s drive to end temporary protected status for hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans in the US forced Peña and his family to move once again — this time to Spain.
“Migrating twice is difficult, both for oneself and for one’s children,” Peña said from Madrid. “But peace of mind is priceless.”
He is among a growing number of Venezuelans who have become the new drivers of migration to Europe.
Venezuelans were for the first time the largest group applying for asylum in the EU in the first quarter after Germany received fewer Syrians following the toppling of Bashar Assad last year and migration controls in the Mediterranean reduced arrivals via Tunisia and Libya.
For years, the US was a haven for Venezuelans fleeing President Nicolas Maduro’s leftist government, but in Trump’s second term many are being branded criminals and forced to seek refuge elsewhere.
Spain, which has pursued a more flexible migration policy to address labor shortages even as European peers take a tougher approach, also shares language and cultural values that make it the natural alternative for many of the 1 million Venezuelans living in the US who fear deportation, said Tomás Paez, head of the Venezuelan Diaspora Observatory.
Fear of being sent to prisons such as the notorious Alligator Alcatraz in Florida is driving many Venezuelans to “self-deport,” said Paez.
“People are even afraid to go to school or work for fear of being raided and arrested,” he said. “They don’t know what to do, so there’s an exodus.”
Spanish NGOs have observed an increase in Venezuelans arriving or seeking guidance on how to relocate to Spain.
At least three of every 10 appointments are with Venezuelans living in the US, said Jesús Alemán, leader of the Madrid-based NGO Talento 58, which advises Venezuelan migrants such as Meliana Bruguera.

RESIDENCE PERMIT
Bruguera, 41, arrived in the US saying she was fleeing threats back in Venezuela. She was pregnant and carrying her five-year-old daughter and a temporary humanitarian visa that Trump canceled for nearly 350,000 Venezuelans when she was in the process of renewing it.
Fearing deportation, she chose to leave her job as a kindergarten teacher to migrate again, this time to Spain.
“I couldn’t stop crying at work. I kept saying: â€This is inhumane. Why are they kicking me out of the United States too?’,” she said in Madrid.
Spanish official data shows Venezuelan arrivals overall are accelerating. About 59 percent of all 77,251 asylum applications received in the first half of 2025 were by Venezuelans compared with 38 percent of all applications a year ago.
An unknown number of Venezuelans also have EU passports through family links and are applying for residency in Spain via that route.
Overall, there has been a 14 percent drop in asylum applications to Spain in the first half of the year compared with the same period last year. Total asylum applications to the EU are also down in the first quarter this year, compared with the same period in 2024, with fewer Syrians and Afghans arriving, while applications from Venezuelans are up.
According to an internal European Commission report seen by Reuters, 52,943 Venezuelans had applied for asylum in the EU to July 27 this year.

Venezuela’s economy has experienced a prolonged crisis marked by triple-digit inflation and the exodus of more than 9 million migrants seeking better opportunities abroad, according to the Venezuelan Diaspora Observatory. The government has blamed the economic collapse on sanctions by the United States and others, which it brands an “economic war.”
Most Venezuelan migrants have stayed in Latin America, overburdening already struggling public services in places like Colombia, where they get 10-year visas and access to public education and health care.
But Spain offers Venezuelans a relatively easy migration path, since they receive an automatic residence permit for humanitarian reasons if their asylum request is rejected.
That is better treatment than that received by thousands of migrants from West Africa to Spain each year, said Juan Carlos Lorenzo, a coordinator at the Spanish Commission for Refugee Aid in the Canary Islands.
“It is a privileged treatment that is almost only applied to Venezuelans,” he said.
But resettling is not easy. At least four Venezuelans who had moved from the US to Spain told Reuters it was harder to find a house to rent and a job than in the US
Bruguera and her children are staying in a Red Cross refuge while they wait for their application to be approved. Her husband, who joined them in Madrid from Venezuela, has found it difficult to rent an apartment and is living in a garage.
“Migrating a second time is doubly devastating, because you achieve stability ... and then you find that dream vanishing,” she said.
(Reporting by Corina Pons and Charlie Devereux in Madrid and Layli Foroudi in Paris; Additional reporting by Joan Faus in Barcelona; Editing by Alison Williams)

Australian and Philippine defense chiefs to talk as disputes simmer over the South China Sea

Australian and Philippine defense chiefs to talk as disputes simmer over the South China Sea
Updated 5 min 48 sec ago

Australian and Philippine defense chiefs to talk as disputes simmer over the South China Sea

Australian and Philippine defense chiefs to talk as disputes simmer over the South China Sea
  • Australian forces engage in their largest combat exercises with the Philippine military, involving more than 3,600 military personnel
  • China has raised alarm over such combat exercises in or near the disputed waters, which it claims almost in its entirety

MANILA: Australia’s defense minister and his Philippine counterpart are meeting in Manila on Friday for talks spotlighting their concern over Beijing’s actions in the South China Sea, where Filipino forces were on alert after China deployed a larger number of coast guard forces closer to Manila’s military ship outpost in a fiercely disputed atoll.
Australian Defense Minister Richard Marles is visiting while Australian forces engage in their largest combat exercises with the Philippine military, involving more than 3,600 military personnel in live-fire drills and battle maneuvers.
Marles has been invited to witness a mock amphibious beach assault by Australian and Filipino naval forces over the weekend in a western Philippine town facing the South China Sea, Philippine military officials said.
After their meeting, Marles and Philippine Defense Secretary Gilberto Teodoro Jr. will sign a joint statement of intent to further boost defense cooperation and affirm “their resolve to enhance interoperability, collective deterrence and long-term military readiness ... to promote regional security and stability,” according to Philippine defense officials.
The exercises called Alon, Tagalog for wave, will showcase Australia’s growing firepower. The drills will involve an Australian guided-missile navy destroyer, F/A-18 supersonic fighter jets, a C-130 troop and cargo aircraft, Javelin anti-tank weapons and special forces sniper weapons.
China has raised alarm over such combat exercises in or near the disputed waters, which it claims almost in its entirety, but where the United States and its treaty allies, Australia and the Philippines, have staged joint naval patrols and drills with other countries to boost deterrence against threats to freedom of navigation and overflight.
China’s military have separately confronted US, Australian and Philippine ships and aircraft in alarmingly close calls to assert what Beijing calls its sovereignty and sovereign rights in the strategic waterway, a key global trade route, sparking fear of a larger conflict that may involve American forces and their allies in what has long been regarded as an Asian flashpoint.
New faceoff at Second Thomas Shoal
The large combat drills between Australia and the Philippines, from Aug. 15-29, coincide with a new territorial faceoff between Chinese and Philippine forces in the Second Thomas Shoal. The Philippine navy deliberately grounded a warship in 1999 at the shoal to serve as its territorial outpost. China deployed ships keeping continuous watch at the shoal after Manila refused its demand to withdraw the BRP Sierra Madre.
The Philippine military said Thursday night that China has deployed several coast guard and suspected militia ships, along with a swarm of speedboats, some fitted with high-caliber machine guns and backed by a helicopter and a drone, closer to the grounded warship.
A Chinese boat came as close as 50 meters (164 feet) to the Sierra Madre, and two boatloads of Filipino forces were deployed from the ship to prevent the Chinese from coming closer.
Chinese officials did not immediately comment on the Philippine military statement.
A Philippine security official said the Chinese actions at Second Thomas shoal were being closely monitored by the US military through aerial surveillance.
The Philippine official did not elaborate and spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the situation.
“This is concerning because of the surge in their actions and number,” Philippine navy spokesperson Rear Adm. Roy Trinidad said by telephone. “We have a contingency plan in case this escalates.”
“Amidst all these coercive and aggressive actions, the guidance from the commander in chief is very clear: We will not back down from any threat against our territory, sovereignty and sovereign rights,” Trinidad said without elaborating when asked how the Philippine military would respond.
One of the five Chinese coast guard ships at the scene used its water cannon without any target in an apparent drill, and smaller boats were seen dropping a net across an entrance to the shallows of the shoal where Philippine ships have passed in the past to deliver supplies to the Sierra Madre, Trinidad said.
“China coast guard vessels have been seen conducting maneuvers and drills involving the use of water cannons at sea while a number of smaller craft such as rigid-hulled inflatable boats and fast boats were also deployed inside the shoal,” the Philippine military said in a statement. “Some of the Chinese coast guard’s fast boats were also observed to have been upgraded with mounted weapons, including heavy crew-served weapons.”
The new face-off in the Second Thomas Shoal came after an accidental collision between Chinese ships Aug. 11 in another disputed fishing atoll, the Scarborough Shoal. The Chinese navy and coast guard ships that collided were trying to block a Philippine coast guard ship from sailing closer to the shoal.
The collision smashed the Chinese coast guard ship’s bow area and may have seriously injured or thrown overboard a number of Chinese personnel seen standing on the deck shortly before the crash, Philippine officials said, based on coast guard video. Chinese officials have refused to comment on the collision.
The Philippine coast guard ship, which narrowly missed being hit by the Chinese navy ship, offered by two-way radio to provide medical help but the Chinese coast guard did not respond, the Philippine coast guard said.


India bans vast online gambling industry

India bans vast online gambling industry
Updated 22 August 2025

India bans vast online gambling industry

India bans vast online gambling industry
  • Up to 450 million people lost a combined $2.3 billion annually on apps
  • Online gambling platforms linked to fraud, money laundering and terrorism financing

NEW DELHI: India’s parliament has passed a sweeping law banning online gambling, after government figures showed 450 million people lost a combined $2.3 billion annually on apps.
The ban impacts platforms for card games, poker and fantasy sports, including India’s wildly popular homegrown fantasy cricket apps.
The government said roughly a third of the world’s most populous country had lost money gambling online.
The Promotion and Regulation of Online Gaming Bill was passed by both houses of parliament late on Thursday, and criminalizes the offering, promotion and financing of such games, with offenders facing up to five years in prison.
“This legislation is designed to curb addiction, financial ruin and social distress caused by predatory gaming platforms that thrive on misleading promises of quick wealth,” a government statement said.
India’s wider gaming industry is one of the largest markets in the world, but the new law carves out exceptions for e-sports and educational games, which the government says will be promoted as part of the digital economy.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi said the new law will “encourage e-sports and online social games” while “at the same time, it will save our society from the harmful effects of online money games.”
Industry groups had urged regulation and taxation rather than a blanket ban, warning the move could drive players to illegal offshore platforms.
But supporters of the bill argue the social costs are too high to allow.
Officials said the rapid spread of gambling platforms had caused widespread financial distress, addiction and even suicide.
The government said it had also been linked to fraud, money laundering and terrorism financing.
Ashwini Vaishnaw, minister of technology, noted the law differentiates between online “social” games and those played for money.
“It encourages e-sports, which are organized competitive video games, and promotes safe online social and educational games,” a government briefing note read.
“It clearly separates constructive digital recreation from betting, gambling and fantasy money games that exploit users with false promises of profit.”


South Sudan’s president fires finance minister, seventh since 2020

South Sudan’s president fires finance minister, seventh since 2020
Updated 22 August 2025

South Sudan’s president fires finance minister, seventh since 2020

South Sudan’s president fires finance minister, seventh since 2020
  • South Sudan’s economic performance has faced hurdles in recent years amid communal violence, with crude oil export revenue having dwindled since the 2013-2018 civil war

NAIROBI, Aug 22 : South Sudan’s President Salva Kiir has fired the country’s finance minister, state-owned radio announced, the seventh replacement to the position since 2020.
Kiir gave no reason for firing Marial Dongrin Ater, who had held the post since July 2024. State radio said late on Thursday that Athian Ding Athian would take up the position, which he previously held between 2020 and 2021.
Kiir also fired the minister in charge of investment, the radio reported.
South Sudan’s economic performance has faced hurdles in recent years amid communal violence, with crude oil export revenue having dwindled since a 2013-2018 civil war and more recently export disruptions due to war in neighboring Sudan.
The International Monetary Fund forecasts a 4.3 percent contraction of the economy for 2025, and inflation of 65.7 percent for the same period.
Kiir became South Sudan’s first president in 2011 when it gained independence from Sudan.
In March, First Vice President Riek Machar was put under house arrest, eliciting fears of renewed conflict.
Information Minister Michael Makuei said the arrest was due to Machar contacting his supporters and “agitating them to rebel against the government with the aim of disrupting peace so that elections are not held and South Sudan goes back to war.”
Machar’s party denies the accusations.


India’s top court modifies earlier order to move stray dogs to shelters

India’s top court modifies earlier order to move stray dogs to shelters
Updated 22 August 2025

India’s top court modifies earlier order to move stray dogs to shelters

India’s top court modifies earlier order to move stray dogs to shelters
  • Animal lovers had filed an appeal against the Supreme Court’s earlier order
  • The court’s decision to relocate them had drawn criticism over its implementation

NEW DELHI: India’s top court modified its earlier ruling in a case involving stray dogs on Friday, ordering authorities in capital Delhi and its suburbs to release picked-up dogs in the same area after sterilization and immunization.
Animal lovers had filed an appeal against the Supreme Court’s earlier order to authorities to relocate all stray dogs to shelters after media reports of a rise in cases of rabies, especially among children.
The decision to relocate them had drawn criticism over its implementation, citing lack of infrastructure and medical treatment. Many animal lovers took to the streets to protest against the order.