Scramble to shelter animals from Los Angeles wildfires

Scramble to shelter animals from Los Angeles wildfires
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People walk their horses after they were evacuated from the Eaton fires, at the Los Angeles Equestrian Center in Burbank, California, January 10, 2025. (AFP)
Scramble to shelter animals from Los Angeles wildfires
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People arrive with their pets at an evacuation center in the Pasadena Convention Center in Pasadena, California, as they flee wildfires in the Los Angeles area on January 10, 2025. (AFP)
Scramble to shelter animals from Los Angeles wildfires
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Massive wildfires that engulfed whole neighborhoods and displaced thousands in Los Angeles have killed at least 10 people, authorities said, as California's National Guard soldiers readied to hit the streets to help quell disorder. News of the growing toll, announced late Thursday January 9 by the Los Angeles County Medical Examiner, came as swaths of the United States' second-largest city lay in ruins. (AFP)
Scramble to shelter animals from Los Angeles wildfires
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People arrive with their pets at an evacuation center in the Pasadena Convention Center in Pasadena, California, as they flee wildfires in the Los Angeles area on January 10, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 12 January 2025

Scramble to shelter animals from Los Angeles wildfires

Scramble to shelter animals from Los Angeles wildfires

BURBANK, USA: When wildfires roared to life around Los Angeles, Janell Gruss had to leave immediately. But as the manager of a stable with 25 horses and other animals, she knew it was going to be complicated.
While some people just got in their cars and drove out of the danger zone, Gruss had to wrangle more than two dozen frightened horses, as embers swirled in 100-mile (160-kilometer) -an-hour winds.
“The last horse we had to get out of the barn... it was pretty bad,” Gruss told AFP at the Los Angeles Equestrian Center, where hundreds of animals have been brought this week.
“It was very smoky. It was dark. I couldn’t see where I was,” she recalled. “Both the horse and I were tripping over things, branches, whatever was on the ground.”
Gruss said coralling the animals was so challenging, she feared at one point she might not make it out alive.
“I thought I might have been one of those casualties,” she said, as tears rolled down her face.
“You hear about the person that goes in to get the last horse and doesn’t come out.”
More than 150,000 people have been forced from their homes by the huge blazes tearing through the city in a tragedy that has killed at least 16 people and changed the face of Los Angeles forever.
With so many people ordered to get out of the way of the advancing wildfires and needing to take their animals with them, capacity is strained.
“We’ve never seen anything like this,” said Jennie Nevin, director of communications for the Los Angeles Equestrian Center.
“The first night was very busy and chaotic. Lots of people coming from all over.”

Care for Animals
Dozens of people milled around the barns Saturday at the equestrian center, where donkeys, pigs and ponies have also found shelter.
Tarah Paige, a professional stuntwoman, had brought her three-year-old daughter to visit their pony Truffles and her miniature cow Cuddles — a TV star in her own right who has appeared on several programs.
“It’s been a whirlwind,” said Paige, for whom the equestrian center has been an oasis in the midst of an unimaginable catastrophe.
Nevin says there has been an outpouring of support and people offering their services to help care for the menagerie.
“It really takes a village,” she said. “It takes the community.”
Across the Los Angeles sprawl there are activists, veterinarians and volunteers working to rescue and care for animals made homeless in the tragedy, including some that were injured.
The Pasadena Humane Society received about 400 animals from Altadena, where the flames have already consumed more than 14,000 acres (5,600 hectares).
One of their patients is a five-day-old puppy that was found in the ruins of a building, its ears burned.
Annie Harvilicz, founder of the Animal Wellness Center, says she has hardly slept a wink all week.
As the fire spread through the upmarket Pacific Palisades, Harvilicz posted on Facebook that she was happy to take in animals.
The post “exploded,” she said, and dogs, cats and even a rabbit began arriving.
With flames still raging out of control, the calls for help have not stopped.
But, she thinks, even when the firefighters have quelled the blaze, the slow-motion tragedy will roll on.
“There’s gonna be more pets found, more pets injured, with smoke inhalation and burns that we’re gonna start to discover as some of the fire recedes,” she said.
“This is just the beginning.”


Sarkozy conviction exposes political divide in crisis-hit France

Updated 2 sec ago

Sarkozy conviction exposes political divide in crisis-hit France

Sarkozy conviction exposes political divide in crisis-hit France
The conviction comes at a deeply sensitive moment, with France in political deadlock and the far-right sensing its best ever chance to come to power
Henri Guaino, a former special adviser to Sarkozy, called the conviction “a humiliation for the state and its institutions“

PARIS: The dramatic decision to send former president Nicolas Sarkozy to prison for criminal conspiracy has laid bare France’s stark political divisions, with the move cheered by the left but slammed by the ascendant right.
Sarkozy, seen as a mentor to many conservative politicians, was convicted on Thursday over a scheme enabling late Libyan dictator Muammar Qaddafi to fund his 2007 presidential run.
He must serve his sentence while awaiting the outcome of his appeal, and will be the first French postwar leader to serve jail time.
The conviction comes at a deeply sensitive moment, with France in political deadlock and the far-right sensing its best ever chance to come to power.
Speaking to broadcaster RTL, Henri Guaino, a former special adviser to Sarkozy, called the conviction “a humiliation for the state and its institutions.”
Guaino urged President Emmanuel Macron to pardon Sarkozy, who was president of France from 2007 to 2012, allowing him to avoid prison.
There was no immediate reaction from Macron’s office.
Despite his legal troubles, Sarkozy still enjoys considerable influence and popularity on the French right and has on occasion had private meetings with Macron.

- ‘It’s Nicolas who pays’ -

In an editorial, conservative French daily Le Figaro denounced the court ruling as “absurd and incomprehensible,” claiming there was no “tangible evidence” of Sarkozy’s wrong-doing.
Left-leaning Liberation featured Sarkozy’s face on its front page, with the words “The slammer” printed over it.
Far-right leader Marine Le Pen, who has herself been convicted of embezzlement and insists she is a target of a “witch hunt,” criticized Thursday’s ruling.
She argued on X that the use of provisional enforcement represented “a great danger, in view of the fundamental principles of our law, foremost among which is the presumption of innocence.”
In France, provisional enforcement means that a judicial decision will be implemented even as the appeals process plays out.
Le Pen drew parallels between her own case — which saw her banned from standing for office for five years, scuppering her chances of running in France’s 2027 presidential election unless she wins her appeal — and that of Sarkozy.
“A number of magistrates have a kind of scorecard where they try to pin down as many politicians as possible,” she told broadcaster LCI.
But some on the left expressed their satisfaction.
“In the end, it’s Nicolas who pays,” quipped hard-left lawmaker Anais Belouassa-Cherifi, referring to a right-wing viral meme denouncing the tax burden on ordinary French people.
But Liberation daily said it did not see the conviction as a cause for celebration.
In an editorial, the newspaper said Sarkozy’s case as well as various other political scandals only serve to widen the gap between the French people and the elites.
There is “only one winner in the long run: the far right.”
The court ordered that Sarkozy should be placed in custody at a later date, with prosecutors to inform him on October 13 when he should go to prison.
He has already been convicted in two separate trials but always avoided jail.

French niece of militant propagandists offers ‘apologies’ to victims

French niece of militant propagandists offers ‘apologies’ to victims
Updated 45 min 31 sec ago

French niece of militant propagandists offers ‘apologies’ to victims

French niece of militant propagandists offers ‘apologies’ to victims
  • Speaking in court on Friday, Jennyfer Clain, a niece of Jean-Michel and Fabien Clain offered her “apologies” to all “direct and indirect victims” of the militants
  • “I am not asking them to forgive me, it is unforgivable, but I offer them my deepest and most sincere apologies,” she said

PARIS: A niece of a notorious militant propagandists on trial for joining the Daesh group and taking her children with her apologized to all victims of the militants as well as her family.
Speaking in court on Friday, Jennyfer Clain, a niece of Jean-Michel and Fabien Clain, who publicly claimed responsibility on behalf of Daesh for the Paris attacks on November 13, 2015, offered her “apologies” to all “direct and indirect victims” of the militants, “in France, Syria, Iraq and elsewhere.”
During the worst attack on Paris since World War II, militant gunmen and suicide bombers killed 130 people at the Bataclan concert hall and elsewhere.
The Clain brothers are presumed to have died during the military campaign launched by US-backed Kurdish groups to defeat IS. In 2022, they were sentenced in absentia to life imprisonment without parole.
“I am not asking them to forgive me, it is unforgivable, but I offer them my deepest and most sincere apologies,” she said, referring to the victims.
Jennyfer Clain and two other French women went on trial in Paris last week, accused of traveling to the Middle East to join the Daesh group.
Jennyfer Clain went to the Middle East with four children, and her fifth baby was born in Raqqa, the Daesh group’s one time capital.
The two other women on trial are Jennyfer Clain’s sister-in-law, Mayalen Duhart, 42, and 67-year-old Christine Allain, the women’s mother-in-law.
Duhart brought her four children with her, and had a baby there, who died at seven months.
Weeping in court, Jennyfer Clain asked her five children, who have been placed in foster care since their return to France in 2019, for “forgiveness.”
“I am sorry for everything they have been through because of me,” she said. “I have failed in my role as a mother,” said the 34-year-old, who is also on trial for abandoning minors.
A representative of the National Anti-Terrorism Prosecutor’s Office has requested a 13-year prison sentence for her.
Duhart also sobbed in court.
Released on parole, she said that a return to prison would be a “disaster” for her children, who have also been placed in foster care.
Prosecutors requested a 10-year prison sentence for Duhart.
“I am not a victim,” she said. “The victims are the others, those who were tortured and massacred by the organization I belonged to. I am responsible.”
Earlier this week the presiding judge had pointed out to the three women that they had not said anything about “the victims of the attacks.”
Allain said that she had been “touched” by her meeting in prison with Georges Salines, the father of Lola Salines, one of the victims killed at the Bataclan.
Prosecutors have requested a 15-year prison sentence for her.
The verdict is expected later Friday.


Russia has ill intentions toward the whole world, Polish PM says

Russia has ill intentions toward the whole world, Polish PM says
Updated 26 September 2025

Russia has ill intentions toward the whole world, Polish PM says

Russia has ill intentions toward the whole world, Polish PM says
  • “European allies have never been so united... we need to be vigilant,” Tusk said

WARSAW: Russia has ill intentions toward the whole world and Europe is finally more united in its views on the threat from Moscow, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said on Friday.
“European allies have never been so united... we need to be vigilant. Russia has ill intentions toward the whole world, and those who border with it are the first to feel it,” Tusk told reporters when asked about recent drone incidents.


Germany’s Merz says Europe still far too dependent on software from US

Germany’s Merz says Europe still far too dependent on software from US
Updated 26 September 2025

Germany’s Merz says Europe still far too dependent on software from US

Germany’s Merz says Europe still far too dependent on software from US
  • Merz said rules are no longer being observed in the United States

BERLIN: Germany still depends far too much on software from the United States, Chancellor Friedrich Merz said on Friday, calling for Europe to focus more on digital sovereignty and its own data centers.
“I want us in Europe, not just us in Germany, but we in Europe as a whole, to become more independent, more sovereign, and to develop some of our strengths ourselves,” he told an audience at a summit in Berlin.
He said rules are no longer being observed in the United States, which has fundamentally transformed over the last few years so that changes will not revert after the next election.


Bangladesh, Oman to boost cooperation in diplomatic training

Bangladesh, Oman to boost cooperation in diplomatic training
Updated 26 September 2025

Bangladesh, Oman to boost cooperation in diplomatic training

Bangladesh, Oman to boost cooperation in diplomatic training
  • New agreement offers master degree-equivalent program for foreign service officials
  • Dhaka, Muscat agree to strengthen bilateral cooperation during FMs meeting in New York

DHAKA: Bangladesh and Oman have signed an agreement to increase diplomatic cooperation following a meeting between their foreign ministers on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York this week, the Bangladeshi foreign ministry said on Friday.

Bangladesh’s Foreign Affairs Adviser Touhid Hossain and Omani Foreign Minister Sayyid Badr Al-Busaidi signed a memorandum of understanding on diplomatic studies and training, which is expected to boost collaboration in capacity-building, training and exchange of expertise.

“Under this MoU, foreign service officials from both countries will get opportunities for academic training and education. This will offer a master degree-equivalent program for foreign service officials,” Mostofa Jamil Khan, West Asia director at the Bangladeshi Ministry of Foreign Affairs, told Arab News.

“Oman (places great importance) on career diplomats for maintaining international relations. They are (more highly) trained … It will be a good thing for our foreign service officials. We hope that, in the coming days, this agreement will also expand for other civil service officials.”

During their meeting in New York, Hossain and his counterpart also “reaffirmed their commitment to further deepen bilateral cooperation in areas of mutual interest,” according to the Bangladeshi foreign ministry.

Around 700,000 Bangladeshis live and work in Oman — one of the largest populations of Bangladeshi migrant workers abroad.

Bangladesh is optimistic about the new area of cooperation, which Khan said has the potential to further expand in the future.

“We hope that, in the first batch, we will be able to send 20 to 25 students to Oman. This is just the beginning, and there are opportunities to increase,” he said.

“In the long run, it will help our foreign service officials to have a better understanding (of) Oman, which will eventually boost the bilateral relationship.”