London Mayor Sadiq Khan named in Britain’s New Year honors

London Mayor Sadiq Khan is among the hundreds named in King Charles’s New Year honors list published on Monday. (@SadiqKhan)
London Mayor Sadiq Khan is among the hundreds named in King Charles’s New Year honors list published on Monday. (@SadiqKhan)
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Updated 31 December 2024

London Mayor Sadiq Khan named in Britain’s New Year honors

London Mayor Sadiq Khan is among the hundreds named in King Charles’s New Year honors list published on Monday. (@SadiqKhan)
  • Khan said he was “truly humbled to have received a knighthood”
  • He was elected mayor of the capital for the third time this year

LONDON: London Mayor Sadiq Khan is among the hundreds named in King Charles’s New Year honors list published on Monday.
Khan, a member of Britain’s governing Labour Party, will receive a knighthood. He was elected mayor of the capital for the third time this year but has faced criticism for crime levels and a housing crisis in the city.
Khan said he was “truly humbled to have received a knighthood.”
“I couldn’t have dreamed when growing up on a council estate in south London that I’d one day be Mayor of London.
“It’s the honor of my life to serve the city I love,” he wrote on X, formerly Twitter. 
The full list includes more than 1,200 people in politics, sport, the arts or community service to be awarded honors ranging from Member, Commander or Officer of the Order of the British Empire (MBE, CBE or OBE) up to knighthoods and damehoods.
Former England soccer boss Gareth Southgate and Paris Olympics gold medallist Keely Hodgkinson also featured on the list. 
Southgate, who led England to two straight European Championship finals before stepping down as the national side’s manager in July, receives a knighthood.
MI5’s Ken McCallum, who has served as the domestic intelligence service’s director general since 2020, was also set to receive a knighthood.
Among business executives, ex-Rolls-Royce boss Warren East and former HSBC chief executive Noel Quinn will be knighted, while Ruth Cairnie, chair of defense group Babcock , receives a damehood.
Andy Street, a former boss of retailer John Lewis who failed to win re-election as a regional mayor this year, will also receive a knighthood.
Among those receiving a CBE are actors Sarah Lancashire and Carey Mulligan and TV gardener Alan Titchmarsh.
The New Year honors, which have been awarded since at least 1890, aim to recognize not just well-known figures but people who have contributed to national life through often unsung work over many years.
Children’s author Jacqueline Wilson was awarded a Dame Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire, while Nobel laureate novelist Kazuo Ishiguro was given a Companion of Honour, of which there are only 65 recipients at any time.
In sport, Paris 800 meters gold medallist Hodgkinson receives an MBE while Olympic champion rower Helen Glover is recognized with an OBE.
For his work on mental health awareness, actor Stephen Fry will receive a knighthood.


Starmer says UK protects free speech ‘jealously’ and ‘fiercely’

Starmer says UK protects free speech ‘jealously’ and ‘fiercely’
Updated 3 sec ago

Starmer says UK protects free speech ‘jealously’ and ‘fiercely’

Starmer says UK protects free speech ‘jealously’ and ‘fiercely’
  • The British leader said the killing of US conservative influencer Charlie Kirk last week was “shocking”
  • US Vice President JD Vance claimed free speech is “in retreat” across Europe

CHEQUERS: UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer said Thursday that Britain protects freedom of speech “jealously” and “fiercely” after US criticism and several cases have focused attention on British laws.
“Free speech, it’s one of the founding values of the United Kingdom, and we protect it jealously and fiercely and always will,” Starmer told a press conference with US President Donald Trump at the end of a state visit to the UK.
“We will bear down on any limits of free speech,” Starmer vowed, but warned that “I draw a limit between free speech and the speech of those that want to peddle paedophilia and suicide (on) social media to children.”
The British leader added the killing of US conservative influencer Charlie Kirk last week was “shocking ... to everybody who believes in free speech and in democracy.”
Free speech has recently hit the headlines in the UK over various cases, which have drawn criticism from US figures.
Debate also swirled around last year’s sentencing of a woman to 31 months in prison for writing on X “Set fire to all the... hotels (housing asylum seekers)... for all I care,” as anti-immigration, far-right riots spread across England.
US Vice President JD Vance has been particularly vocal about the issue, raising it with Starmer during a White House meeting in February.
Vance previously claimed free speech is “in retreat” across Europe, and doubled down on the remarks during Starmer’s visit, claiming that “infringements on free speech” had affected British people.
British politician and leader of the hard-right Reform party Nigel Farage asked before a US congressional committee: “At what point did we become North Korea?“
He was speaking after award-winning comedy writer Graham Linehan was arrested and charged earlier in September over three social media posts against a transgender person.
Tech billionaire and X owner Elon Musk has also accused Britain of being a “police state.”
When asked by a reporter whether the cancellation of Jimmy Kimmel’s late-night show over the comedian’s comments about Kirk on Wednesday was a case of free speech being threatened, Trump replied: “Jimmy Kimmel was fired because he had bad ratings... so you can call that free speech, or not, he was fired for lack of talent.”


Ukraine pushes back some Russian advances, Zelensky says

Ukraine pushes back some Russian advances, Zelensky says
Updated 39 min 17 sec ago

Ukraine pushes back some Russian advances, Zelensky says

Ukraine pushes back some Russian advances, Zelensky says
  • Zelensky said his troops had reclaimed 160 square kilometers of land near the eastern coal mining town of Dobropillia
  • He did not say when Ukraine made the gains, but said Russia had “suffered thousands of losses“

KYIV: Ukrainian forces have pushed back some of the advances Russia made over the summer, President Volodymyr Zelensky said Thursday, calling the operation an “important success” after months of battlefield setbacks.
Zelensky said his troops had reclaimed 160 square kilometers (62 square miles) of land near the eastern coal mining town of Dobropillia, where Russia pierced Ukraine’s defenses in August.
US President Donald Trump, meanwhile, expressed mounting frustration at his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin for not halting the invasion.
Russia, which has been chipping away at Ukrainian territory for months, did not immediately comment on Ukraine’s claims but announced Thursday that more than 700,000 of its soldiers were fighting on the front line.
Diplomatic efforts to end the three-and-a-half year war have fallen apart in recent months, with Russia last week announcing peace talks were on “pause” and Zelensky warning Russia still wanted to occupy “all of Ukraine.”


Following a meeting with troops in the eastern Donetsk region on Thursday, Zelensky said his army was “achieving results” in an ongoing counteroffensive there.
“Since the start of the operation, our warriors have already liberated 160 square kilometers,” he said in a video address.
He said Ukrainian forces had “cleared” Russian troops from an additional 170 square kilometers of land, but had not yet formally taken the territory.
Zelensky did not say when Ukraine made the gains, but said Russia had “suffered thousands of losses.”
“Ukraine is quite rightly defending its positions, defending its land,” he added.
DeepState, an online battlefield tracker linked to the Ukrainian army, showed Russian troops made rapid advances near Dobropillia last month but that some of their gains had evaporated in recent weeks.

- Putin ‘let me down’ -

Ukraine and its Western allies say Russian troops are making huge losses for comparatively small territorial gains, while leaving towns and villages destroyed in their wake.
Trump, who has been seeking to broker an end to the war, said Thursday he was disappointed in Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin’s apparent refusal to accept a peace deal.
“He’s let me down. He’s really let me down,” Trump said at a press conference with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer in Britain.
Trump promised to end the war quickly after taking office in January, but has failed to extract concessions from the Kremlin, despite a landmark summit with Putin in Alaska in August.
Russia accuses European countries of frustrating the peace process, but Kyiv and its European allies say Putin is deliberately stalling to buy time and seize more Ukrainian territory.
Russia, which currently occupies around a fifth of Ukraine, accelerated its advances over the summer and has indicated it will achieve its war goals via military means if a peace deal is not possible.
Moscow claims five Ukrainian regions as its own, including Crimea, which it annexed in 2014.
Tens of thousands of people — including civilians — have been killed since Russia invaded, with towns and cities across the east and south of Ukraine left in ruins.
Millions of people have been forced to flee their homes in the biggest war in Europe since World War II.
A Russian air strike on the Donetsk region town of Kostiantynivka earlier Thursday killed five people, Ukrainian police said.
The town lies about eight kilometers (five miles) from the front line and is surrounded by Russian troops on three sides, according to DeepState.
Kyiv has been trying to hit back with long-range strikes on Russia’s vital oil sector, with the latest attack on Thursday morning triggering a fire at a refinery in the central Bashkortostan region, some 1,400 kilometers (870 miles) behind the front line.


Indonesian court sentences Ukrainian man to life for producing illegal drugs in Bali

Indonesian court sentences Ukrainian man to life for producing illegal drugs in Bali
Updated 56 min ago

Indonesian court sentences Ukrainian man to life for producing illegal drugs in Bali

Indonesian court sentences Ukrainian man to life for producing illegal drugs in Bali
“There is no reason to forgive or justify the defendant, he deserves to be punished commensurate with what he has done,” presiding Judge Eni Martiningrum said
A Russian man identified by prosecutors as the overall mastermind of the drug ring, Oleg Tkachuck, remains at large

DENPASAR, Indonesia: A Ukrainian man arrested in Thailand and extradited to Indonesia after seven months on the run was convicted Thursday of producing illegal drugs on the Indonesian tourist island of Bali and sentenced to life in prison.
Roman Nazarenko, 40, became a suspect after police raided a villa in Bali in May 2024 and found a lab in the basement to grow marijuana and produce a precursor of the synthetic drug ecstasy. As a fugitive listed by Interpol, he was arrested in December at Bangkok’s international airport while he tried to flee to Dubai.
Nazarenko, who argued during the trial that he was tricked into joining the drug ring but who prosecutors said was one of the masterminds, sat silently as a panel of three judges at Denpasar District Court handed down the verdict Thursday.
“There is no reason to forgive or justify the defendant, he deserves to be punished commensurate with what he has done,” presiding Judge Eni Martiningrum said. “His crime could damage the mental state of the young generation.”
A Russian man identified by prosecutors as the overall mastermind of the drug ring, Oleg Tkachuck, remains at large.
The same court in January sentenced two Ukrainian brothers, Mykyta Volovod and Ivan Volovod, and a Russian man, Konstantin Krutz, to 20 years in prison each. They had been arrested during the raid on the villa. The Volovod brothers were accused of being drugmakers and Krutz was accused of selling the drugs.
The Volovod brothers admitted during their trial that Tkachuck had paid them $30,000 in Sep. 2023 to install equipment at the villa to produce hydroponic marijuana and mephedrone, which is used to make ecstasy pills.
Tkachuck also paid them $3,000 for 10 kilograms (22 pounds) of dried marijuana and $10,000 for 1 kilogram (2 pounds) of mephedrone that they had produced for sale to users via couriers and ride-hailing services. All transactions were made through the Telegram messaging app and payment was made using cryptocurrency.
Prosecutors said that Nazarenko had recruited the others for Tkachuck, provided equipment, brought marijuana seeds from abroad and oversaw operations of the drug lab.
Nazarenko expressed his remorse during his trial, and argued that he had been tricked by Tkachuck into providing the necessary equipment, and that he had no idea how the lab worked.
Bali has long been popular with Russians and Ukrainians, but since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022 it has become a magnet for thousands of people from those two countries who are seeking to escape the horrors of war. Visitors from Russia especially have surged.
Despite their home countries being at war, Russians and Ukrainians have collaborated in crime rings on Indonesia’s most famous holiday island, said Marthinus Hukom, the head of Indonesia’s National Narcotics Agency.
“This is a very unique phenomenon,” Hukom said, “Two countries that are at war, but here in Bali, their citizens are partners in crime, engaging in illicit drug trafficking.”
Government data shows that the number of Russian tourists visiting the Southeast Asian idyll in 2022 was 57,860. The figure rose significantly each year, reaching 180,215 by the end of 2024.
Bali Police Chief Daniel Adityajaya said the number of Russians accused of committing crimes in Bali in 2023 was 28, a nearly five-fold increase over 2022, including offenses such as kidnapping, extortion, drug trafficking and disrespecting Balinese culture.

Sanders becomes first US senator to say Israel committing genocide in Gaza

Sanders becomes first US senator to say Israel committing genocide in Gaza
Updated 18 September 2025

Sanders becomes first US senator to say Israel committing genocide in Gaza

Sanders becomes first US senator to say Israel committing genocide in Gaza
  • ‘It has waged an all-out war against the entire Palestinian people’
  • UN report earlier this week said there are reasonable grounds to believe genocide taking place

LONDON: Bernie Sanders has become the first US senator to say Israel is committing genocide in Gaza.

“Over the last two years, Israel has not simply defended itself against Hamas,” he wrote on his Senate webpage. “Instead, it has waged an all-out war against the entire Palestinian people.”

A UN report earlier this week said there are reasonable grounds to believe genocide is taking place in Gaza.

Posting on his webpage, in response to the report’s statement that Israel’s activities “meet the criteria set forth in the Genocide convention,” he said: “I agree.”

Sanders, who has led efforts in Congress to curb weapons exports to Israel, has long advocated the country’s right to self-defense in the aftermath of the Hamas attack of Oct. 7, 2023, and previously said use of the word genocide made him “queasy” in relation to Gaza.

But he cited casualty figures in the enclave — with more than 65,000 people believed to have been killed and at least 164,000 wounded — as well as the rhetoric of Israeli politicians toward Palestinians — including former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant’s suggestion that they are “human animals,” and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich’s call to “entirely” destroy Gaza — as evidence of genocide.

“We, as Americans, must end our complicity in the slaughter of the Palestinian people,” Sanders wrote. “Having named it a genocide, we must use every ounce of our leverage to demand an immediate ceasefire, a massive surge of humanitarian aid facilitated by the UN, and initial steps to provide Palestinians with a state of their own.”

He added: “The very term genocide is a reminder of what can happen if we fail. That word emerged from the Holocaust — the murder of 6 million Jews — one of the darkest chapters in human history.

“Make no mistake. If there is no accountability for (Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin) Netanyahu and his fellow war criminals, other demagogues will do the same.”

The same day, Rep. Becca Balint also called the war a genocide, writing in online news outlet The Courier: “Today, I believe the Israeli government is committing a genocide against the Palestinian people. As the granddaughter of a man murdered in the Holocaust, it is not easy for me to say that.”

Fellow congresswomen Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Rashida Tlaib and Marjorie Taylor Greene have all previously said a genocide is taking place, while two Democratic senators, Chris Van Hollen and Jeff Merkley, last week said ethnic cleansing is being committed.


'I don't cry anymore': In US jail, Russian dissidents fear deportation

'I don't cry anymore': In US jail, Russian dissidents fear deportation
Updated 18 September 2025

'I don't cry anymore': In US jail, Russian dissidents fear deportation

'I don't cry anymore': In US jail, Russian dissidents fear deportation
  • Clad in an orange prison uniform, Natalia shares a dormitory with about 60 other women sleeping in bunk beds
  • Thousands of Russians have applied for political asylum in the US, many by crossing the border from Mexico, since Russia's invasion of Ukraine in 2022

WASHINGTON: Natalia fled Russia fearing imminent arrest for her family's opposition activism and sought political asylum in the United States. But instead of refuge, she found herself locked in jail for over a year, separated from her husband and children and dreading deportation.
With the Trump administration stepping up removals as part of its sweeping anti-immigration crackdown, rights activists warn that deporting Russian dissidents puts them at risk of prison and persecution back home.
"I supported the opposition, I supported opposition activists who were against (Russian President Vladimir) Putin's regime," Natalia told AFP in a phone interview from an immigration detention center in the southern state of Louisiana. "If I return to Russia, I will be arrested."
Clad in an orange prison uniform, Natalia shares a dormitory with about 60 other women sleeping in bunk beds. Showers and toilets are in the same room, behind curtains that don't offer privacy or respite from the foul smell.
Tens of thousands of Russians have applied for political asylum in the United States, many by crossing the border from Mexico, since Russia's invasion of Ukraine in 2022 and Moscow's ensuing suppression of dissent.
About 85 percent of Russian asylum claims adjudicated last year were approved, according to official data, but detainees, lawyers and rights groups say denials have increased in recent months, while detainees are subjected to arbitrary detention and not given a fair chance to defend themselves in court.
Nearly 900 Russians, many of them asylum seekers, have been deported back home since 2022, official data shows.
They include some 100 who were sent back under convoy over the summer on two specially chartered flights, precluding them from seeking refuge in a third country, according to the Russian America for Democracy in Russia (RADR) group and the Russian Antiwar Committee.
The deportees faced lengthy interrogations on arrival and at least two of them were arrested, including a serviceman who deserted following the Ukraine invasion and an opposition activist, the groups said.
"It's a catastrophe," said Dmitry Valuev, RADR's president. "It cannot be done. They are deporting people who face real danger in Russia."

- 'Deep sense of disappointment' -

Long-time political activists, Natalia and her husband campaigned for the late opposition leader Alexei Navalny, whose organization has since been outlawed and declared "extremist" in Russia, while his supporters were persecuted.
After police searched their apartment outside Moscow in 2023, Natalia's husband and their pre-teen son flew to Mexico and crossed the US border.
In the United States, they surrendered themselves to immigration authorities and were released on parole to await their political asylum hearing in a midwestern state.
Natalia followed them a year later, but ended up detained.
She has spent nearly 1.5 years in jail, one of an estimated 1,000 Russian citizens held in immigration jails across the country, according to RADR.
Lawyers say married couples are often sent to prison in different states, often depriving one of the spouses of a strong asylum case.
In April, a judge denied Natalia's request for political asylum, despite the family's prior arrests for anti-government protests and a history of involvement with a banned opposition group. She has filed an appeal.
"I have a deep sense of disappointment, I thought there is some kind of justice and reason here," Natalia said. "I could never believe that I would be treated in court the same way as in Russia."

- 'Completely inhumane' -

Another Russian asylum seeker held with Natalia has also lost her case and is awaiting removal.
Her husband Yuri was deported on a commercial flight over the summer, after a year in detention, but was able to get off the plane in Morocco and buy a plane ticket to a third country.
He worries, however, that his wife will not have that chance, as was the case with the two mass deportation flights.
"It's completely inhumane not to give people an opportunity to get off the flight," Yuri told AFP from a South Asian country where he is currently staying. "Fine, you want to kick them out of America, but to do this?"
US officials declined to comment on recent deportations of Russian citizens.
At the Louisiana detention center, the days are long and grim.
Natalia says security guards can throw away their meager belongings or forbid them to use a towel to keep warm during a walk outside. Some say they are going hungry and are not receiving proper medical care.
"I don't cry anymore, I know I need to live to see the appeal," Natalia said. "My biggest sorrow is not being able to take part in my children's lives. I know they need me."