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Opinion - EditorialPoliticsTop HeadlinesTrending NewsUS and World News

Fired Ukrainian Prosecutor Viktor Shokin Says He ‘Would Gladly’ Sue Certain Media Outlets For Calling Him Corrupt

by The Daily Caller August 26, 2023
By The Daily Caller

Fired Ukrainian Prosecutor Viktor Shokin Says He ‘Would Gladly’ Sue Certain Media Outlets For Calling Him Corrupt

Arjun Singh on August 26, 2023

Former Ukrainian prosecutor Viktor Shokin, who was fired at the behest of then-Vice President Joe Biden in 2016, has said that he would like to sue media outlets for defamation against him, but cannot do so because he lacks the funds, according to an interview which aired on Saturday.

Shokin served as Ukraine’s prosecutor general until 2016 when he was fired by Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko due to political pressure from Biden, who claimed that Shokin was corrupt. After American newspapers parroted this allegation despite his denials, Shokin said that he would like to sue them for defamation, but is unable to do so, according to an interview with Brian Kilmeade on Fox News’ “One Nation.”

“What do you say to people who say that you are corrupt and that Joe Biden did the right thing by making sure you were fired?” asked Kilmeade, after quoting from stories written about Shokin by The New York Times, The Washington Post and The Wall Street Journal. Shokin responded by saying, “I would appreciate it if any of these highly respectable publications could come up with a single example or a single offense committed by me.”

Viktor Shokin – The Ukrainian Prosecutor Joe Biden BRAGGED about getting FIRED speaks out

SHOKIN: “The fact that Joe Biden gave away one billion dollars – in exchange for my dismissal, my firing. – Is that alone a case of corruption?” pic.twitter.com/gy3VCc6JqE

— Daily Caller (@DailyCaller) August 25, 2023

“Then why don’t you sue them?” asked Kilmeade. “Why don’t you sue these publications for defamation?”

“I would gladly do that, but suing somebody costs money, and I don’t have the money to do that because I am a retiree and my monthly pension constitutes the equivalent of $800,” Shokin said, claiming that he lacks the funds to pursue a defamation lawsuit in the United States against the newspapers.

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“Fox is giving a platform for these lies to a former Ukrainian prosecutor general whose office his own deputy called a hotbed of corruption,” said White House spokesperson Ian Sams in a statement to Fox News regarding Shokin’s interview with Kilmeade. Sams claimed that Shokin’s leadership as a prosecutor “[drew] demands for reform not only from then-Vice President Biden but also from U.S. diplomats, international partners, and Republican senators like Ron Johnson.”

Shokin has received attention in the United States following investigations into Hunter Biden, who served on the board of  Burisma Holdings that Shokin’s office was investigating at the time he was fired. Congressional Republicans have suggested that Shokin was fired because Biden wanted to protect his son’s business interests in Burisma.

All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter’s byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contact [email protected].

August 26, 2023 0 comments
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Mugshot, Indictments Net Former President $7.5 Million in Fundraising

by Conservative Times August 26, 2023
By Conservative Times

BEDMINSTER, NJ – Former U.S. President Donald J. Trump is turning dirty politics by Democrats into profit for his own political campaign.

Former President Donald Trump raised nearly $20 million in the past three weeks, a timeframe that aligns with his recent federal and state indictments related to his claims about the 2020 election, according to Trump’s campaign spokesman Steven Cheung. Since taking his mug shot for a racketeering and fraud case in Atlanta, Georgia, Trump has raised $7.1 million. On Friday alone, his campaign collected $4.18 million, marking the highest-grossing day so far.

The mug shot, released by a Georgia courthouse, has been transformed into various merchandise items such as T-shirts, shot glasses, and bobblehead dolls. The photo was taken when Trump was arrested on multiple felony charges connected to his efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election.

Trump, who lost to Joe Biden in the 2020 election, is seeking the Republican Party’s nomination for president once again. He faces four indictments, two of which are related to his claims about the 2020 election and the January 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol.

On August 15, a Georgia grand jury indicted Trump following an investigation by Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis into his activities in the state relating to the 2020 election. On August 3, he pleaded not guilty to federal charges, brought by Special Counsel Jack Smith, alleging that he conspired to defraud the United States.

Additionally, Trump has pleaded not guilty to charges of unlawfully retaining classified documents after leaving office and to falsifying business records in a New York case involving hush money payments to [censored] star Stormy Daniels prior to the 2016 election. Trump has denied all charges.

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Bad News for New Jersey Chocolate Lovers as Cocoa Prices Soar

by Conservative Times August 26, 2023
By Conservative Times

There’s some bad news for chocolate lovers in the New Jersey tri-state area. The price of cocoa is on the rise and that means your favorite locally made chocolates from companies like Hershey’s and Mars could soon be increasing too.

Major chocolate manufacturers like Hershey and Mondelez face increasingly difficult trading conditions in the coming year as they try to offset rising cocoa costs by raising prices for consumers who are starting to cut back.

Data from market researchers Nielsen IQ reveals that over the past two years, chocolate prices have increased by 13% in Europe and 20% in the United States, causing some consumers to buy less chocolate.

The industry previously enjoyed strong profits even as prices rose, but that trend may be reversing. Current cocoa prices have reached a 46-year high, while sugar prices are near their highest in over a decade. Mondelez CEO Dirk Van de Put said consumers are “shopping around more, hoping to find deals.”

Mondelez, maker of Cadbury chocolates, expects the upward trend in cocoa and sugar prices to persist. In preparation, the company has significantly hedged and is working to increase productivity. Retailers are starting to resist higher prices, putting the profit margins of chocolate companies at risk. For instance, Mondelez had to remove Cadbury and Milka bars from Belgian supermarket chain Colruyt’s shelves due to pricing disagreements.

Although chocolate makers are counting on their products’ traditional resilience to price hikes, recent data indicate weakening sales growth. A Bernstein analysis of Nielsen IQ data showed Mondelez’ chocolate sales volume growth has slowed substantially this year, and Hershey’s sales volumes are declining as well.

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Lower-priced ‘private label’ chocolates are gaining market share, with sales volumes growing nearly 9% in the U.S. in the year to mid-June despite significant price increases. Hershey plans to rely on automation to reduce production costs, as it anticipates ongoing cost pressures from climate-related issues in West Africa, a major cocoa-producing region.

Rabobank suggests these cost pressures could extend into next year due to the El Nino weather event in West Africa and a lack of alternative cocoa producers. Top cocoa producers Ivory Coast and Ghana are already grappling with droughts, excessive rains, and diseases, adding to the challenges for the chocolate industry.

Based on a report by Reuters.

August 26, 2023 0 comments
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Fired Ukrainian Prosecutor Says Joe Biden Acted Like Ukraine Was His ‘Own Backyard’

by The Daily Caller August 26, 2023
By The Daily Caller

Fired Ukrainian Prosecutor Says Joe Biden Acted Like Ukraine Was His ‘Own Backyard’

Arjun Singh on August 26, 2023

The former Ukrainian prosecutor who was fired at the insistence of then-Vice President Joe Biden in 2016 after investigating Burisma, claimed that Biden treated Ukraine like his “own backyard,” according to comments made during an interview with Fox News’ Brian Kilmeade on Saturday.

Viktor Shokin was fired by Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko in 2016 after Biden — who was in charge of Ukrainian policy during the Obama administration — gave him an ultimatum, saying that Ukraine would not receive $1 billion dollars in aid until Shokin was dismissed. In an interview with Brian Kilmeade on “One Nation” on Saturday, Shokin claimed that Biden treated Ukraine as if it were his “own backyard.”

“I developed a very firm understanding of the fact that the vice president was only acting in his own interest. He, generally speaking, handled Ukraine like it was his own backyard,” Shokin told Kilmeade. “The office of Poroshenko, the president, was humiliated, but the entire country was humiliated,” Shokin added, describing Biden’s ultimatum that he be dismissed, which Biden publicly boasted about at a Council on Foreign Relations event on Jan. 23, 2018.

“I’m going to be leaving here in six hours. If the prosecutor is not fired, you’re not getting the money. Well, son of a bitch, he got fired and they put in place someone who was solid,” Biden said at the event.

At the time of Shokin’s firing, his office was investigating Burisma, a Ukrainian energy company that had hired Biden’s son, Hunter, to join its board. FBI documents released by Congress in July suggested that Hunter was hired to enable Burisma to utilize his father’s political influence and avoid threats to the company.

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Shokin also suggested that Biden was personally engaged in corruption in Ukraine, citing his firing as one instance. “They were being bribed. The fact that Joe Biden gave away $1 billion in U.S. money in exchange for my dismissal, my firing, isn’t that alone a case of corruption?” he said.

The White House did not immediately respond to the Daily Caller News Foundation’s request for comment.

All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter’s byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contact [email protected].

August 26, 2023 0 comments
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Wall Street Businesses Fleeing NYC; Hochul to Blame Says GOP Leader

by Adam Devine August 26, 2023
By Adam Devine

NEW YORK, NY – NYGOP Chair Ed Cox released a statement today following the release of two significant reports earlier this week. A comprehensive study by Bloomberg News revealed that New York has lost nearly $1 trillion in assets under management to states with more business-friendly climates. Additionally, a Siena Poll showed that Governor Kathy Hochul’s favorability rating has dropped to a low of 40%.

According to data compiled by Bloomberg from 17,000 companies, 158 financial firms have moved their headquarters out of New York since the end of 2019. These firms took nearly $1 trillion in assets under management and thousands of high-paying jobs with them. The data suggests that concerns over crime, high taxes, and the rising cost of living have led these companies to relocate.

In his statement, Cox criticized the Democratic governance in Albany and New York City, stating, “Under one-party Democrat rule in Albany and in the Big Apple, New York is a state in decline. Their tax hikes and burdensome regulations drive businesses away, taking with them high-paying jobs and tax revenues.”

He further pointed to the Democrats’ “failure to address our declining economy, mismanagement of their immigration crisis, failed crime policies, and disastrous cannabis licensing rollout” as factors contributing to Governor Hochul’s low favorability rating.

August 26, 2023 0 comments
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Jersey Shore Weather Report: Another Sunny Beach Day Today

by Daily Weather Report August 26, 2023
By Daily Weather Report

ATLANTIC CITY, NJ – Today’s Jersey Shore beach and weather report is short and sweet. It’s going to be a great day at the Jersey Shore, so hit the bays, beaches and boardwalks and enjoy the last two weekends of summer before it’s over.

On Sunday at the Jersey Shore, the weather will be partly sunny with a high near 81 degrees and a northeast wind around 10 mph. Sunday night is expected to be mostly cloudy, with a low temperature around 70 degrees and an east wind at about 5 mph.

For Monday, there is a 30% chance of showers mainly after 2 p.m., with mostly cloudy skies and a high temperature near 78 degrees. East winds will be between 10 and 15 mph.

August 26, 2023 0 comments
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One Shot Saturday Night in Alexandria

by Jeff Jones August 26, 2023
By Jeff Jones

ALEXANDRIA, VA – Police are investigating a shooting that took place Saturday night in Alexandria.

There was a moderate police presence in the 3800 block of Florence Drive in response to a shooting.

The Alexandria Police Department confirmed that one person was injured and suffered life-threatening injuries. Authorities were on the scene and conducted an investigation.

August 26, 2023 0 comments
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Bob Barker, long-time US TV game show host, dies at age 99

by Op-ed Contributor August 26, 2023
By Op-ed Contributor

By Will Dunham

(Reuters) -Bob Barker, an affable fixture on U.S. television for half a century who hosted the popular game show “The Price Is Right” for 35 years and was a committed animal rights activist, has died at age 99, his publicist said.

The silver-haired Barker, host of “The Price Is Right” from 1972 to 2007, won 19 Daytime Emmy awards, the top U.S. television honors, and also was known for a memorable comic turn playing himself in the hit 1996 film “Happy Gilmore,” beating up a character played by Adam Sandler.

Barker died on Saturday morning of natural causes at his longtime Hollywood Hills, California, home, his publicist Roger Neal said.

Barker gave millions of dollars to pro-animal causes, including donating $5 million for a 1,200-ton ship named the Bob Barker that was operated by the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society to stop Japanese whaling ships from killing whales off Antarctica.

“The Price Is Right,” in which contestants tried to guess the price of various consumer products and played a slew of games to win prizes, became a U.S. pop culture institution on daytime TV with the smooth-talking Barker at the helm for 6,586 episodes.

A studio announcer would bray “Come on down!” as one by one excited contestants would trot out of a studio audience down to the stage. Exuberant contestants occasionally would bear-hug and even tackle Barker.

“Can I kiss you?” a woman once inquired during a show.

“No, I’m working,” deadpanned Barker, known for his good-natured humor. “Meet me in the parking lot later.”

Over the years, he handed out more than $300 million in cash and prizes like cars, appliances and trips.

“I think TV hosts are like pies and some people like apple and some cherry and some chocolate,” Barker told the Hartford Courant in 2009. “I’m just very fortunate that they liked me well enough to invite me into their homes for 50 years.”

“The Price Is Right” became the longest-running game show on U.S. television. Barker returned to the show in 2013 to mark his 90th birthday and again in 2015 for an April Fools’ Day episode.

Barker was known for pro-animal causes and campaigned for them into his 90s. He would end episodes of “The Price Is Right” by urging viewers to get their pets spayed and neutered to control the animal population and began a foundation to subsidize the practices. He also spoke out against the treatment of animals in zoos, rodeos and circuses.

Barker stopped eating meat in 1979. His hair abruptly became silver when he quit using hair dye because it is tested on animals. In 1987, Barker quit as longtime host of the Miss USA and Miss Universe beauty pageants when pageant officials refused to stop draping contestants in fur coats.

In the film “Happy Gilmore,” Barker played himself in a memorable scene in which he was playing in a golf pro-am tournament with Sandler’s character, an excitable failed hockey player turned golfer. The two come to blows in a wild, extended comic brawl that ended with Barker thrashing Sandler.

They staged another fight for a promotional video in 2015 when Barker, who studied karate with tough-guy actor Chuck Norris, was 91.

In 1994, a woman who worked as a model on “The Price is Right” sued him for sexual harassment but Barker said it was a consensual intimate relationship. The suit later was dropped.

Barker, born on Dec. 12, 1923, in Darrington, Washington, began his career in radio. In 1956, he was hired to host a TV version of the radio quiz show “Truth or Consequences” on NBC, and stayed with the program until 1975. Even before his stint on that show wrapped up, Barker began hosting “The Price Is Right” on CBS.

Barker did not remarry after his wife, Dorothy, died of cancer in 1981.

(Reporting and writing by Will Dunham; Additional reporting by Paul Grant and Timothy Gardner; Editing by Bill Trott and Diane Craft)

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August 26, 2023 0 comments
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Suspect On The Loose After Kensington Shooting

by Ryan Dickinson August 26, 2023
By Ryan Dickinson

PHILADELPHIA, PA – A 25-year-old male was shot once in the right shoulder at 24XX Kensington Avenue.

The shooter, described as an unknown black male wearing a green raincoat, remains at large.

The victim was transported to a local hospital by an ambulance and is in stable condition.

No weapon has been recovered.

The scene remains under investigation.

August 26, 2023 0 comments
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Trump raised $7.1 million since he was booked Thursday at an Atlanta jail

by Reuters August 26, 2023
By Reuters

(Reuters) -Former President Donald Trump has raised nearly $20 million in the past three weeks, a period that roughly coincides with his indictment in federal and state cases connected to his false claims that the 2020 election was stolen from him, Trump’s campaign spokesman said on Saturday.

Since appearing Thursday to have his mug shot taken in a racketeering and fraud case in Atlanta, Georgia, the former president brought in $7.1 million, Trump spokesman Steven Cheung said on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter.

On Friday alone, Trump brought in $4.18 million, making it the highest-grossing day of his campaign so far, Cheung said.

His mug shot, posted by a Georgia courthouse on Thursday evening, has been turned into T-shirts, shot glasses, mugs, posters and even bobblehead dolls by friends and foes alike.

The shot of Trump with a red tie, glistening hair, and an icy scowl was taken as the Republican presidential front-runner was arrested on more than a dozen felony charges, part of a criminal case stemming from his attempts to overturn the 2020 election.

Trump, who was elected president in 2016 but defeated by Democrat Joe Biden in 2020, is again seeking the Republican Party’s nomination for president.

Trump is currently facing four indictments, including two related to his false claims that the election was stolen and the Jan. 6, 2021 attack by his followers on the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C.

He has denied all charges.

On Aug. 15, Trump was indicted by a Georgia grand jury after an investigation by Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis into his efforts to overturn his 2020 election loss to Biden in the state.

On Aug. 3, he pleaded not guilty to charges brought by Special Counsel Jack Smith in federal court in Washington that he conspired to defraud the United States by preventing Congress from certifying Biden’s 2020 election victory over him and to deprive voters of their right to a fair election.

He has also pleaded not guilty to charges of unlawfully keeping classified documents after leaving office, and of falsifying business records in a case in New York related to the payment of so-called hush money to [censored] star Stormy Daniels before the 2016 presidential election.

(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein; Editing by Andrea Ricci)

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Analysis-Trump allies’ push to move Georgia subversion trial could mean delays

by Reuters August 26, 2023
By Reuters

By Tom Hals

(Reuters) – Efforts by Donald Trump allies to move Georgia’s criminal case charging the former U.S. president with trying to overturn an election to federal court is raising legal questions that could delay a trial, which may be a key part of their strategy.

On Aug. 28, Trump’s former chief of staff, Mark Meadows, who was charged alongside the former president with trying to subvert the results of the 2020 election, will argue his case should be heard in federal court rather than in Fulton County Superior Court, where it was filed.

If Meadows succeeds, he would be tried before a broader jury pool that includes the Congressional district of conservative firebrand Marjorie Taylor Greene, rather than jurors solely from Fulton County, which voted for Joe Biden in 2020 by nearly a 3-1 margin.

Two other defendants, former Department of Justice official Jeffrey Clark and David Shafer, who was a Republican presidential elector nominee, have also filed papers citing a law known as the Federal Officer Removal Statute in a bid to transfer their cases.

Trump, the front-runner for the Republican presidential nomination, is likely to do so as well, legal experts said.

A spokesperson for the Fulton County district attorney declined to comment and attorneys for Meadows, Shafer and Trump did not respond to a request for comment.

The removal cases will be heard by a federal judge in the Northern District of Georgia and could tie up the case in appeals if denied, legal experts said.

“The request for removal is definitely going to delay this trial and be complicated and messy,” said Eric Segall, a professor at Georgia State College of Law.

The removal question is just one of many that are likely to be litigated before a trial, adding to uncertainty about prosecutors’ request for a trial date as soon as Oct. 23.

DELAY AS A TACTIC

Trump, who has a history of using delay as a legal tactic, is also trying to move upcoming criminal trials in New York and Washington to other courts. He is also defending a criminal indictment in Miami.

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis charged Trump and 18 others with racketeering in a scheme to overturn the 2020 presidential election in Georgia, which was won by President Joe Biden. No defendants have entered a plea in the Georgia case.

Willis accused Meadows of furthering a conspiracy by, among other things, joining Trump in urging Georgia’s secretary of state to change vote totals.

The federal officer removal law protects people from state prosecution for carrying out official federal duties.

The statute requires a defendant to prove they were an officer of the United States or acting at an officer’s direction, that the alleged acts were part of their official duties and that they have a federal legal defense.

Meadows argued in federal court papers filed last week that the acts described in the indictment fall squarely within the duties of a chief of staff: assisting the president by arranging meetings and making phone calls.

Prosecutors countered that Meadows was carrying out political activities – which U.S. government employees are barred from doing under a federal law known as the Hatch Act. Meadows in his court papers also said his political activity was protected speech under the U.S. Constitution.

“NOT RELATED” TO OFFICIAL ACTS

The removal issue has come up before in a Trump criminal case.

The former president failed to remove a case by Manhattan’s district attorney that accused Trump of falsifying business records to cover up a sex scandal on the eve of the 2016 election.

U.S. District Judge Alvin Hellerstein in July found that “hush money paid to an adult film star is not related to a president’s official acts” and sent the case back to state court. Trump has pleaded not guilty to the charges and appealed the ruling to the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Legal experts said the accused acts in the Georgia case are more plausibly related to official duties than the hush money payments in the New York case. If U.S. District Judge Steve Jones in Atlanta agrees, he would next examine if Meadows has a federal defense.

Meadows argued as a defense that he is immune under the Supremacy Clause of the Constitution, which is similar to the removal law. It says that if a person were carrying out duties placed on them by federal law, they cannot be prosecuted for committing a state crime.

“In other words, if you actually successfully remove the case, then it probably gets dismissed,” said Josh Blackman, a law professor at the South Texas College of Law.

However, just because Meadows has a defense, that does not mean it would necessarily apply to the specific actions cited in the indictment.

Legal experts said Jones could allow the case to proceed in federal court and address immunity at a later hearing. If he determines immunity did not apply to the accused actions, the jury trial would take place in federal court, with the broader jury pool.

(Reporting by Tom Hals in Wilmington, Delaware; editing by Noeleen Walder, Amy Stevens and Stephen Coates)

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Evacuation order lifted for West Maui

by Reuters August 26, 2023
By Reuters

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The Hawaii Emergency Management Agency on Saturday briefly issued an evacuation order for West Maui due to brush fire.

The order was in place for Anapuni Loop to West Mahipulu, the agency said in a post on X, formerly known as Twitter.

The order was subsequently lifted after firefighters stopped forward movement of the fire, the agency said in a follow-up post.

“Evacuate your family and pets now, do not delay. Expect conditions that may make driving difficult and watch for public safety personnel operating in the area,” the order said.

The island of Maui was devastated earlier this month after the deadliest U.S. wildfire in more than a century swept through the resort town of Lahaina, leaving 115 people dead and 338 missing.

Search teams are still sifting through Lahaina’s blackened ruins, although officials said on Friday that process was nearly complete.

(Reporting by Jasper Ward, Editing by Nick Zieminski and Andrea Ricci)

August 26, 2023 0 comments
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Old video sparks wild theories on fate of Russia’s Prigozhin

by Reuters August 26, 2023
By Reuters

(Reuters) – A 40-second clip of an old interview in which Russian mercenary boss Yevgeny Prigozhin said he would rather be killed than lie to his country, and talked about a plane disintegrating in the sky, unleashed a flood of online theorizing on Sunday about his presumed death.

Russia’s aviation authority said the Wagner group chief was on a private jet that crashed northwest of Moscow with no survivors on Wednesday, exactly two months after he led a failed mutiny against army chiefs. The Kremlin said Western suggestions he had been killed on its orders were an “absolute lie.”

In the clip, taken from an interview originally published on April 29 with Russian military blogger Semyon Pegov, Prigozhin said Russia was on the brink of disaster because the defence establishment was gradually kicking out truth-tellers who refused to suck up to upper management.

“Today we have reached the boiling point,” he said in the clip published on Grey Zone, Wagner’s Telegram channel. “Why am I speaking so honestly? Because I don’t have the right, before those people who will live on in this country. They are now being lied to. Better kill me.”

He added, “But I will not lie, I must say honestly that Russia is on the brink of disaster. And if these cogs are not adjusted today, then the plane will fall apart in the air.”

Hundreds of responses had been posted on Grey Zone within a few hours.

“But he knew,” a Telegram user whose name translates to “outpost” wrote in the first response.

Some posts speculated Prigozhin was alive. One said he would “soon jump out of a snuffbox and make the devils crap themselves.”

Another said it would be cool if Prigozhin and Sergei Surovikin, the former commander of Russia’s war effort, reportedly removed as head of the air force the day of the crash, “are sitting in Jamaica, drinking pina colada and taking a drag on a huge joint.”

Some posts pointed to the Kremlin, with one comment saying the crash was the handiwork of President Vladimir Putin, adding, “You have to be an amoeba not to understand this.”

Some posts blamed France, others Ukraine. One post said Ukraine had killed Prigozhin by order of US special services “and the Anglo-Saxons” and added, “it is inconvenient for us to lose such a hero,” to which someone responded with three crying-laughing emojis.

(Reporting, writing by Elaine Monaghan)

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Biden Releases Statement On The Two-Year Anniversary Of Afghan Evacuation Attack

by The Daily Caller August 26, 2023
By The Daily Caller

Biden Releases Statement On The Two-Year Anniversary Of Afghan Evacuation Attack

Arjun Singh on August 26, 2023

President Joe Biden released a statement on the two-year anniversary of a terrorist attack on U.S. military personnel in Afghanistan during their withdrawal from the country, according to a White House press release.

On Aug. 26, 2021, 13 American servicemembers were killed when a suicide bomber  detonated his explosive vest outside Kabul International Airport, which was the hub for evacuating Americans, allied nationals and eligible Afghans. Biden, who was widely criticized at the time for his decision making in the midst of the withdrawal, released a statement on Saturday commemorating the fallen, according to a White House press release.

“Today, Jill and I remember and mourn these 13 brave American service members and the more than 100 innocent Afghan civilians who were killed in the horrific terrorist attack at Abbey Gate,” the press release stated. “Many more were injured and will carry the impacts of their wounds and the horrors of that day for the rest of their lives.”

Biden has been criticized by the families of the servicemembers who were killed, who claim that his leadership was the reason for their deaths.

“The administration failed us,” Paula Knauss Selph, the mother of U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Ryan Christian Knauss, who was killed in the attack, according to NewsNation. “Words are not enough. Action, such as what my son and others were doing on the field, is what we expect in Congress and this executive administration,” she added.

“Our leaders, including the Secretary of Defense and our Commander in Chief, called this evacuation a success as if there should be a celebration,” said Christy Shamblin, the mother-in-law of U.S. Marine Corps Sgt. Nicole Gee, who also died in the attack, NewsNation reported.

“It is like a knife in the heart for our families,” she said. “I would say he needs to resign,” said Carol Briseno, the mother of Marine Corps Cpl. Humberto Sanchez, who was killed, to The Daily Caller.

One of the victims was Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Rylee McCollum, aged 20. McCollum’s death attracted particular attention as his wife was eight months pregnant at the time, with his daughter being born less than one month after his death, the Marine Corps Times reported.

Biden has continued to be criticized for the bombing and his response to it. Republican Rep. Darrell Issa of California, who wrote a letter to Biden asking him to meet with the families of the victims, claims he has not received a response, according to Fox News.

Some commentators have also criticized Biden for not having read out the names, in public, of the servicemembers killed.

“We will forever honor the memory of the 13 service members,” the press release read. “We can never repay the incredible sacrifice of any of the 2,461 U.S. service members who lost their lives … in Afghanistan or the 20,744 who were wounded.”

Issa did not immediately respond to the Daily Caller News Foundation’s request for comment.

All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter’s byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contact [email protected].

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Factbox-Who is Emmerson Mnangagwa, Zimbabwe’s ‘Crocodile’ president?

by Reuters August 26, 2023
By Reuters

HARARE (Reuters) – Zimbabwe’s elections commission late on Saturday declared incumbent Emmerson Mnangagwa the winner of this week’s presidential election, saying he had secured roughly 53% of the vote versus his main challenger’s 44% share.

Mnangagwa was expected to secure re-election for a second term as analysts said the contest was heavily skewed in favour of the ruling ZANU-PF party, in power for more than four decades.

Many Zimbabweans voting at this election were desperate for change after two decades of relentless economic chaos but sceptical that ZANU-PF would allow any loosening of its stranglehold on power.

HOW DID MNANGAGWA COME TO POWER?

80-year-old Mnangagwa took charge after a 2017 military coup toppled Zimbabwe’s longtime leader Robert Mugabe, who had been in power since independence in 1980.

Until their fall-out in the months leading up to the coup, Mnangagwa was one of Mugabe’s closest lieutenants and served in top government positions including vice president and minister of state security.

WHAT IS HE KNOWN FOR?

Mnangagwa is nicknamed “The Crocodile”, an animal famed in Zimbabwean lore for its stealth and ruthlessness.

He has been accused by opponents of being Mugabe’s political enforcer as the late ruler cracked down on dissent.

He was in charge of internal security in the mid-1980s when Mugabe deployed a North Korean-trained brigade against rebels loyal to his rival Joshua Nkomo.

Rights groups say 20,000 civilians, mostly from the Ndebele tribe, were killed in what has become known as the massacres of Gukurahundi, meaning “the early rain which washes away the chaff before the spring rains”.

Mnangagwa denies responsibility but as president engaged traditional leaders of communities affected by the massacres on matters including compensation, reconciliation and healing.

WHAT ARE HIS ECONOMIC VIEWS AND HAVE THEY WORKED?

Mnangagwa fashions himself as pro-business and, within months of coming to power, scrapped a local business ownership law championed by Mugabe.

The law, which required foreign-owned businesses including mines to sell majority stakes to locals, unsettled investors who held back investment.

However, the economic turnaround Mnangagwa promised when he took over has not materialised.

Zimbabweans still suffer from rampant inflation and sky-high unemployment as they did at the end of the Mugabe era, with many people dependent on dollar remittances from relatives abroad to make ends meet.

(Editing by Alexander Winning and Nick Zieminski)

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‘They Will Not Be Able To Turn The Clock Back’: Al Sharpton Trashes Republicans At March On Washington Anniversary

by The Daily Caller August 26, 2023
By The Daily Caller

‘They Will Not Be Able To Turn The Clock Back’: Al Sharpton Trashes Republicans At March On Washington Anniversary

Arjun Singh on August 26, 2023

Former Democratic presidential candidate and MSNBC host Al Sharpton implicitly attacked Republicans Saturday during a speech commemorating the 60th anniversary of the March on Washington.

Sharpton, who leads the National Action Network, spoke last at the event meant to commemorate the March on Washington organized on Aug. 28, 1963, in support of civil rights, and famously featured Dr. Martin Luther King’s “I Have A Dream” speech. In his speech, Sharpton criticized Republican’s position on transgender issues, diversity and voting laws, as well as former President Donald Trump, by referring to them as “schemers.”

“Sixty years later we are facing affirmative action that has been suspended, and there are people that are trying to go after businesses. They’re going after diversity in large corporations. They’re going after firms. I want to announce today that we are going to fight back,” Sharpton began in his speech. He referred to diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) policies that some corporations have adopted, which many Republican leaders have claimed harm meritocracy and unfairly treat white employees due to the color of their skin.

LIVE: #MarchOnWashington 2023 https://t.co/eXjM2FUCR9

— Martin Luther King III (@OfficialMLK3) August 26, 2023

“I’m like a doctor. I make house calls. We will march on the homes and the companies that if you think you can take money out of our communities, and cut us off, we are not going to allow that,” Sharpton vowed. “We are going to have a fall of economic sanctions against those that bow to this,” he threatened, without specifying what sanctions would be imposed, and by whom.

“They will not be able to turn back the clock. They have stopped blacks from voting. We are going to vote anyhow,” Sharpton said. Republican-led state governments in the south have been sued by civil rights groups who claim violations of the Voting Rights Act by accusing the GOP of drawing districts to prevent majority-black voting districts.

Sharpton then drew a contrast between “dreamers,” referring to left-wing activists, and “schemers,” referring to Republicans.

“The dreamers are standing up for women’s rights to choose. The schemers are thinking whether they’re gonna stop you at six weeks or 15 weeks,” he said, referring to abortion week limits imposed by some GOP-led states. “The dreamers are saying that if you’re LGBTQ or trans, you have a right to your life. The schemers are saying that we’re going to make you look like you’re not tolerated in human society.”

Sharpton implicitly criticized Trump, saying, “The dreamers are [here] in Washington, D.C. The schemers are being booked in Atlanta, Georgia, in the Fulton County Jail,” referring to Trump’s surrender at that facility on Thursday on charges regarding his efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election in the Peach State.

“The dreamers will win,” Sharpton said in closing. “The dreamers will march. Black, White, Jewish, LGBTQ. We are the dreamers. Let us march in the name of the dreamers … It’s time to march.” “Everybody march. It’s the dreamers against the schemers.”

Trump’s presidential campaign did not immediately respond to the Daily Caller News Foundation’s request for comment.

All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter’s byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contact [email protected].

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Court Rules Biological Man Allowed In Sorority

by The Daily Caller August 26, 2023
By The Daily Caller

Court Rules Biological Man Allowed In Sorority

Brandon Poulter on August 26, 2023

A federal district court ruled Friday that a national sorority organization did not violate its own bylaws by allowing a biological man to live in a sorority house and dismissed the complaint from sorority sisters, according to court documents.

Kappa Kappa Gamma (KKG) sorority sisters sued the national organization in March for admitting a biological male into the University of Wyoming chapter, alleging that the national organization violated its bylaws and that 6 foot 2 biological male Artemis Langford, who identifies as trans, watched women in the house get undressed. Judge Alan B. Johnson of the United States District Court for the District of Wyoming, appointed by Republican President Ronald Reagan, ruled that the national organization can interpret its own definitions as it wants to and didn’t breach its housing contracts by allowing a biological man to board with women, according to court documents.

The sorority sisters argued that KKG must enact new bylaws to define what a woman is and allow that into the sorority house, but the court disagreed. “Defining ‘woman’ is Kappa Kappa Gamma’s bedrock right as a private, voluntary organization- and one this Court may not invade,” the decision reads.

“Plaintiffs allege that KKG breached their housing contracts by allowing transgender women to live in the chapter house in violation of KKG’s governing documents.”

The court argued that since there was no explicit break in any of the language of the contracts, this allegation by the sorority sisters was false.

A sorority in New York kicked out a biological male from the Chi Omega sorority in July, saying the man did not fit within the definition of a woman by its guidelines.

KKG did not immediately respond to the Daily Caller News Foundation’s request for comment.

All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter’s byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contact [email protected].

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Toronto program encourages hijab-wearing women to get on two wheels

by Reuters August 26, 2023
By Reuters

By Anna Mehler Paperny

TORONTO (Reuters) – For Tagreed Elhassan it’s the feeling of the wind in her face.

Cycling gives her a sense of independence and a way to exercise. She learned the basics growing up in Saudi Arabia and Egypt, and now a program in her new home of Toronto has taught the 24-year-old Eritrean refugee how to steer and basic bike mechanics, giving her the confidence to teach others.

“I learned it here,” she said, sitting in a park in Toronto’s east end. “Small things that grow into something big.”

Hijabs and Helmets aims to provide education and a welcoming environment toward people new to cycling and the city – especially to Muslim women who may come from backgrounds where cycling was not the norm.

The program was created three years ago to meet a community need, said Menna Badawi, a community health worker at Access Alliance Multicultural Health & Community Services and program lead for Hijabs and Helmets.

It gets most of its funding from Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment, which owns Toronto sports teams including the Maple Leafs ice hockey team and the Raptors basketball team.

The group realized “there was a gap in services for Muslim women in the community … who are interested in cycling and kind of don’t know where to go,” Badawi said.

Badawi, who has been part of an all-women Muslim running club, said she understood the feeling.

“As a Muslim hijabi I did find there was a gap in recreational sports for women who look like me,” she said.

The group serves Toronto’s Taylor Creek area, which has a high proportion of newcomers, Badawi said.

Elhassan said she got involved in the program last year with her sisters. Soon she felt comfortable enough to bike to the supermarket, bags balanced on handlebars.

The deliberate inclusion of hijab-wearing women “means a lot,” Elhassan said. “I felt like, oh, we are recognized.”

(Reporting by Anna Mehler Paperny, Editing by Rosalba O’Brien)

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State Supreme Court To Weigh AG’s Request To Execute Man By Breathing In Pure Nitrogen

by The Daily Caller August 26, 2023
By The Daily Caller

State Supreme Court To Weigh AG’s Request To Execute Man By Breathing In Pure Nitrogen

Kate Anderson on August 26, 2023

Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall filed a motion with the state Supreme Court Friday asking for an execution date for Kenneth Eugene Smith, who was convicted of murdering Elizabeth Sennett in 1988, according to court documents.

Smith is set to be executed via nitrogen hypoxia, which is legal in Oklahoma and Mississippi, but Alabama would be the first state to use it, according to the Associated Press. Smith’s execution was stopped on Nov. 17, 2022, due to issues with inserting an IV but Marshall noted in his motion to the court that it is now the “appropriate time” for the execution to be carried out.

“It is a travesty that Kenneth Smith has been able to avoid his death sentence for nearly 35 years after being convicted of the heinous murder-for-hire slaying of an innocent woman, Elizabeth Sennett,” Marshall said in a press release.

Nitrogen hypoxia happens when an individual exclusively breathes in nitrogen, which makes up 78% of the air, depriving the inmate of needed oxygen, according to the AP. Some have argued that this method of execution is a relatively painless way to die while others like Angie Setzer, a senior attorney with the Equal Justice Initiative, claim that it is a “completely unproven and unused method for executing someone.”

Smith murdered Sennett after her husband Charles Sennett, a local pastor who was in debt and having an affair, paid him and Smith’s friend John Parker $1,000 to kill her in order to obtain her life insurance policy, according to the press release. Smith and Parker ambushed Elizabeth Sennett and brutally beat and stabbed her to death and her husband killed himself a week after her death after police began to investigate him, according to CBS News.

Law enforcement quickly discovered the murder-for-hire scheme and Smith was tried and convicted in 1989 and again in 1996 after an appeal, according to the press release. The jury sentenced him to death in both cases.

Smith’s attorney did not immediately respond to the Daily Caller News Foundation’s request for comment.

All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter’s byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contact [email protected].

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Three Ukrainian military pilots die in mid-air collision

by Reuters August 26, 2023
By Reuters

By Max Hunder

KYIV (Reuters) -Three Ukrainian military pilots including a “mega talent” who yearned to fly F-16s were killed on Friday when two L-39 combat training aircraft collided over a region west of Kyiv on Friday, the air force said on Saturday.

President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, who is counting on swift training of crews to fly up to 61 F-16 fighter jets promised by his Western allies, said in his nightly video address that the three men included Andriy Pilshchykov, callsign Juice, “a Ukrainian officer, one of those who greatly helped our state.”

Air force spokesperson Yuriy Ihnat described Pilshchykov — who was fluent in English and aged 29 when Reuters interviewed him in December — as a “mega talent” and leader of reforms.

“You can’t even imagine how much he wanted to fly an F-16,” Ihnat wrote on his Facebook page. “But now that American planes are actually on the horizon, he will not fly them.”

Ukraine’s prosecutor general’s office announced a criminal investigation had been opened into whether flight preparation rules were violated.

“It is too early to discuss details. Certainly, all circumstances will be clarified,” Zelenskiy said.

The air force announced the crash on its Telegram app. “We express our condolences to the families of the victims. This is a painful and irreparable loss for all of us,” it said.

Zelenskiy noted that the third Saturday in August is also when Ukrainian military and civilian aviation celebrate their professional day, and said the introduction of F-16s would mark a “new level” for military aviation.

“This will also bring civil aviation back to the Ukrainian skies, as it will move us closer to victory and provide Ukraine with greater security,” he said.

Radio Svoboda shared video of blackened, mangled aircraft remains being removed from a field far from the frontlines at the village of Sinhury, about 10 kms (6 miles) south of Zhytomyr and about 150 kms (90 miles) west of Kyiv.

In the video, an unnamed man said he heard an explosion in the air above the school building and then two planes falling in smoke and flames. A woman described seeing two planes flying at a distance from one another then coming closer and closer to each other before the crash.

Military analyst and former pilot Roman Svitan, in an interview posted by online outlet Espreso TV, said the crash was “most likely” related to formation flying. He said the standard distance was 50-70 meters but that sometimes planes flew practically on top of each other at a distance of 3 to 4 meters.

He said the L-39 was at once a fighter, an attack aircraft, a bomber and a training plane but that in formation flying, especially at low altitudes, “there’s no time for ejection.”

Zelenskiy offered condolences to the pilots’ families and added, “Ukraine will never forget anyone who defended the free skies of Ukraine.”

(Reporting by Max Hunder and Oleksandr Kozhukhar in Kyiv and Elaine Monaghan in Washington; Writing by Elaine Monaghan; Editing by David Holmes, Nick Zieminski and Daniel Wallis)

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FIFA suspends Spain’s soccer chief Luis Rubiales over kiss

by Reuters August 26, 2023
By Reuters

MADRID (Reuters) -Soccer’s world governing body FIFA suspended Spanish federation chief Luis Rubiales from all football-related activities for three months on Saturday as it investigates allegations he gave a player an unwanted kiss on the lips after Spain’s women won the World Cup.

FIFA had opened disciplinary proceedings against Rubiales two days ago over the incident with player Jenni Hermoso last Sunday in Sydney that has caused an uproar among players and fans. Rubiales’ suspension from national and international activities takes immediate effect, it said on Saturday.

Rubiales said he would use the probe to show his innocence.

The Royal Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) issued a statement for him, saying Rubiales “will defend himself legally in the competent bodies, has full confidence in the FIFA bodies and reiterates that, in this way, he is being given the opportunity to begin his defence so that the truth prevails and his complete innocence is proven”.

Jorge Vilda, the coach of the Spanish Women’s soccer team, said on Saturday that he regretted the “inappropriate behaviour” of Rubiales.

Victor Francos, head of Spain’s state-run National Sports Council, said the government supported FIFA’s decision.

Rubiales, 46, has been defiant over the kiss – which has been condemned as unwanted by Hermoso, her team mates and the Spanish government – arguing it was consensual.

Earlier on Saturday the RFEF had said it would stick by Rubiales as he sought to stay on, but a federation spokesperson said after the FIFA announcement: “We respect all the pronouncements of FIFA.”

Gary Lineker, a former England and Barcelona player, summed up much of the public reaction to the FIFA move, posting in Spanish on X, formerly known as Twitter: “Por fin! (At last).”

Rubiales played mainly in Spain’s second division in a career spanning 12 years. When he was elected to lead the RFEF in 2018, he promised to modernise its structure, increase turnover and make the federation more transparent.

Feminist groups staged demonstrations in Madrid, Santander and Logrono on Saturday calling for his resignation.

At a federation meeting on Friday where he had been widely expected to step down, Rubiales instead refused to quit, seeking to defend his behaviour and calling the kiss “spontaneous, mutual, euphoric and consensual”.

Hermoso said she did not consent to the kiss and felt “vulnerable and the victim of an aggression”.

In a statement hours before FIFA’s move on Saturday, the federation said it would show there had been lies told about what happened by Hermoso or people speaking for her and that it would “initiate the corresponding legal actions” to defend Rubiales’ honour, without specifying what that would entail.

The Spanish government cannot fire Rubiales but has strongly denounced his actions and said on Friday it was seeking to get him suspended using a legal procedure before a sports tribunal.

“Impunity for macho actions is over. Rubiales cannot continue in office,” acting Labour Minister Yolanda Diaz wrote on social media on Friday.

Gender issues have become a prominent topic in Spain in recent years. Tens of thousands of women have taken part in street marches protesting against sexual abuse and violence, and the Socialist-led coalition government has presided over legal reforms including around equal pay or abortion rights.

PLAYERS’ REVOLT

It was not clear how the FIFA action would affect a players’ revolt against Rubiales that expanded to include coaching staff on Saturday.

In a joint statement sent via their FUTPRO union on Friday evening, all 23 of Spain’s cup-winning squad including Hermoso, as well as dozens of other squad members, said they would not play internationals while Rubiales remained head of the federation.

In the same statement, Hermoso denied Rubiales’ contention that the kiss was consensual, writing: “I want to clarify that, as was seen in the images, at no time did I consent to the kiss he gave me and, of course, in no case did I seek to lift the president.”

On Saturday evening, Vilda said in a statement to the Spanish news agency EFE: “I am deeply sorry that the victory of Spanish women’s football team has been harmed by the inappropriate behavior that our until now top manager, Luis Rubiales.”

Earlier on Saturday, 11 members of the national women’s team’s coaching staff offered their resignations to the RFEF in a statement where they supported Hermoso and condemned Rubiales.

They complained of “the discomfort” of having been required to attend the federation assembly on Friday and said “several female members of the technical staff were forced to sit in the front row … to create the impression that they shared the RFEF president’s line”.

The RFEF statement early on Saturday was accompanied by four photos of the event last Sunday that it said illustrated Rubiales’ contention that Hermoso had lifted him in the air before the kiss.

Reuters could not immediately reach an official from FUTPRO for comment.

At the federation’s emergency meeting on Friday, Rubiales repeatedly said he would not quit and complained that “false feminists” were “trying to kill me”, drawing applause for the predominantly male audience.

Luis de La Fuente, the men’s national team manager who could be seen applauding Rubiales on Friday, issued a statement on Saturday condemning “the actions of Luis Rubiales that did not respect the minimum protocol for such (World Cup) celebrations and are not constructive nor appropriate for someone representing all of Spanish soccer”.

(Reporting by Graham KeeleyAdditional reporting by Rohith Nair and Andrei KhalipEditing by Alison Williams, Frances Kerry and Daniel Wallis)

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Gabon cuts internet, imposes curfew amid election voting delays

by Reuters August 26, 2023
By Reuters

By Gerauds Wilfried Obangome

LIBREVILLE (Reuters) -Gabon’s government blocked internet access and imposed a curfew on Saturday after an election marked by major voting delays, as the opposition cried foul over a poll they hoped would halt President Ali Bongo’s bid to extend his family’s 56-year grip on power.

The Central African nation was holding presidential, legislative, and local polls simultaneously for the first time, with tensions running high amid fears electoral system changes could sow doubt about the legitimacy of the result and provoke unrest.

Bongo, 64, who succeeded his father Omar in 2009, is seeking a third term against 18 challengers, six of whom backed a joint nominee in an effort to narrow the race. Bongo’s team rejected allegations of fraud.

Voting was due to start at 0700 GMT, but at least five polling stations in the capital Libreville saw voters waiting hours for polls to open, a Reuters reporter said.

“This election is very tense because I don’t think a vote in our country has ever started so late,” said voter Jeff Mbou at a polling station in Libreville’s Martine Oulabou school, where voting started nearly four hours late.

It was not immediately clear how many areas were affected by the delays or if all voters were able to cast their votes. The election commission did not immediately reply to a request for comment.

Any irregularities will add to concerns about the post-electoral period, which in Gabon has previously seen violent protests linked to the opposition disputing the result.

There is no fixed deadline for the announcement of results, but joint opposition candidate Albert Ondo Ossa, 69, and his alliance on Saturday were already questioning the legitimacy of the outcome.

Citing the threat of online disinformation, the Gabonese government cut the internet until further notice and imposed a night-time curfew from Sunday “in order to prevent any misbehaviour and to preserve the security of the entire population”, according to a statement read on national television on Saturday evening.

The Netblocks internet observatory confirmed that a nation-scale internet shutdown was in effect across Gabon – a move it said was “likely to severely limit the public’s ability to communicate during the election period”.

Gabon shut down internet access for several days in 2016 when violent street protests erupted against Bongo’s contested re-election for his second term that saw the parliament building torched.

FRAUD ALLEGATION

The vote is a much-anticipated test of support for Bongo, whose detractors say has done too little to funnel Gabon’s oil wealth towards the third of its 2.3 million population living in poverty and question his fitness to govern after a stroke in 2018.

Bongo has sought to disprove this image on a wide-ranging campaign trail. He has promised to create more jobs, boost micro-loan programmes and cut public school fees.

“We are voting and we are winning,” he said in an online post on Saturday, sharing a video of his supporters wearing T-shirts with his campaign slogan “Ali for Everyone”.

The run-up to the election has been smooth, but many fear the post-election period could see turmoil like the 2016 protests. The opposition has disputed both his previous election wins, saying he won fraudulently.

“I am perfectly informed about the fraud orchestrated by Ali Bongo and his supporters,” Ondo Ossa told reporters at the polling station at Ba Oumar High School, in Libreville, without detailing the exact allegations.

“Ali Bongo still has time to negotiate. The only negotiation that is necessary is his departure; 60 years in power is too much,” he said.

In online posts, his opposition alliance Alternance 2023 and Bongo’s spokesperson said some polling stations had not received ballot slips for their respective candidates. Reuters could not independently verify the comments.

“The vote hasn’t even finished yet, and already the opposition is losing its nerve and its composure. This attempt to sow discord, because defeat is near, will not work,” Bongo’s campaign spokesperson Freddhy Koula said in an online post.

Recent changes to the voting system could further complicate the aftermath, said Remadji Hoinathy, a researcher at the Africa-focused Institute for Security Studies. These include the introduction of a ballot that requires voters to pick a presidential candidate and lawmaker from the same party.

The opposition has also voiced concern about a recent constitutional change to abolish two rounds of voting for the president.

Bongo’s camp has positioned him as the firm favourite to win the race, although there has been no reliable polling.

His main threat comes from Ondo Ossa, an economics and management professor who has campaigned on the need for change and better economic opportunities.

The pitch could resonate in a country where one in three young people are unemployed and the vast majority of the population has only known Bongo’s rule.

(Additional reporting and writing by Alessandra Prentice; Editing by David Gregorio, David Holmes and Mike Harrison)

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Here’s Why Trump May Follow Co-Defendants In Attempting To Move His Georgia Case To Federal Court

by The Daily Caller August 26, 2023
By The Daily Caller

Here’s Why Trump May Follow Co-Defendants In Attempting To Move His Georgia Case To Federal Court

Katelynn Richardson on August 26, 2023

  • Several of former President Donald Trump’s co-defendants in his Georgia indictment have filed motions to remove their cases to federal court, and the former president may soon do the same.
  • Removing the case to federal court would provide access to a different judge and jury, providing some distance from Fulton County politics, legal experts told the Daily Caller News Foundation.
  • “If he wants to remove the case, he almost certainly will be successful in doing so, even if the Fulton County prosecutor claims Trump’s crimes were committed as a candidate, not as President,” Cornell Law School Professor William A. Jacobson told the DCNF.

Former President Donald Trump could follow the co-defendants in his case who have sought to remove their Georgia charges to federal court, a move that legal experts explained would create some distance from Fulton County politics.

Former White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, former Justice Department official Jeff Clark and former Georgia Republican Party Chairman David Shafer, all indicted in District Attorney Fani Willis’ probe into Trump’s alleged interference in the 2020 election in Georgia, are among the defendants who have filed motions to remove their cases to federal court. Trump may soon seek to make a similar move, which would provide access to a different judge and jury, legal experts told the Daily Caller News Foundation.

“The federal judge might be a judge named to be the bench by President Trump, or at least by another Republican President,” Emory University School of Law Professor Jonathan Nash told the DCNF. “Trump and his lawyer might think that would be beneficial, and that surely wouldn’t be the case in state court.”

“More importantly, a federal court would feature a different, larger jury pool: The state court jury would be drawn entirely from Fulton County, whereas the jury for a federal court trial would be drawn from ten counties in the Atlanta Division of the Northern District of Georgia,” he explained, noting that this would include jurors from counties with vote totals that were more favorable to the former president during the past two elections.

Cornell Law School Professor William A. Jacobson similarly noted the move would “add some distance from Fulton county politics.”

Meadows’ lawyers argue in his filing that the charges he was indicted for all “occurred during his tenure and as part of his service as Chief of Staff.” They cite a law that allows criminal prosecutions commenced in state court against a federal official operating “under color of [his] office” to be removed to a federal district court.

“Nothing Mr. Meadows is alleged in the indictment to have done is criminal per se: arranging Oval Office meetings, contacting state officials on the President’s behalf, visiting a state government building, and setting up a phone call for the President,” Meadows’ lawyers wrote in an Aug. 15 court filing. “One would expect a Chief of Staff to the President of the United States to do these sorts of things. And they have far less to do with the interests of state law than, for example, murder charges that have been successfully removed.”

In a Friday filing, Meadows’ lawyers countered the prosecutors’ claim that his actions were outside the scope of his official duties, writing that he “did not stop assisting the President just because the President was doing something personal or political.”

Trump could assert similar immunity from state prosecution on the grounds that the actions were taken while in federal office, Jacobson said, adding that he anticipates such an effort would likely be successful.

“If he wants to remove the case, he almost certainly will be successful in doing so, even if the Fulton County prosecutor claims Trump’s crimes were committed as a candidate, not as President,” Jacobson told the DCNF. “The fact is that almost all of the actions taken were while he was President, and that should be enough to remove the case to federal court.”

Former Trump attorney and New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani signaled on his radio show that he also may make the move, arguing that the law Meadows cited in his notice provides “almost an automatic removal,” according to CNN.

“As a person acting as (Trump’s) agent – that’s what a lawyer is, his agent – I have a right to remove it to federal court,” Giuliani said, per CNN.

The hearing to consider Meadows’ notice of removal is Monday, and Clark’s hearing is scheduled for Sept. 18.

Another defendant, Kenneth Chesebro, chose instead to file a demand for a speedy trial in state court, leading Willis to propose an Oct. 23 start date. Trump quickly moved to sever his case from Chesebro’s on Thursday, and the judge later approved the October date for Chesebro’s trial.

The House Judiciary Committee has launched investigation into Willis questioning whether she coordinated with the Justice Department in charging Trump.

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August 26, 2023 0 comments
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Putin orders Wagner fighters to sign oath of allegiance after Prigozhin’s demise

by Reuters August 26, 2023
By Reuters

By Andrew Osborn

MOSCOW (Reuters) -President Vladimir Putin has ordered Wagner fighters to sign an oath of allegiance to the Russian state after a deadly plane crash believed to have killed Yevgeny Prigozhin, the volatile chief of the mercenary group.

Putin signed the decree bringing in the change with immediate effect on Friday after the Kremlin said that Western suggestions that Prigozhin had been killed on its orders were an “absolute lie”. The Kremlin declined to definitively confirm his death, citing the need to wait for test results.

Russia’s aviation authority has said that Prigozhin was on board a private jet which crashed on Wednesday evening northwest of Moscow with no survivors exactly two months after he led a failed mutiny against army chiefs.

President Vladimir Putin sent his condolences to the families of those killed in the crash on Thursday and spoke of Prigozhin in the past tense.

He cited “preliminary information” as indicating that Prigozhin and his top Wagner associates had all been killed and, while praising Prigozhin, said he had also made some “serious mistakes.”

Putin’s introduction of a mandatory oath for employees of Wagner and other private military contractors was a clear move to bring such groups under tighter state control.

The decree, published on the Kremlin website, obliges anyone carrying out work on behalf of the military or supporting what Moscow calls its “special military operation” in Ukraine to swear a formal oath of allegiance to Russia.

Described in the decree as a step to forge the spiritual and moral foundations of the defence of Russia, the wording of the oath includes a line in which those who take it promise to strictly follow the orders of commanders and senior leaders.

Western politicians and commentators have suggested, without presenting evidence, that Putin ordered Prigozhin to be killed to punish him for launching the June 23-34 mutiny against the army’s leadership which also represented the biggest challenge to Putin’s own rule since he came to power in 1999.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Friday that the accusation and many others like it were false.

“There is now a great deal of speculation surrounding this plane crash and the tragic deaths of the plane’s passengers, including Yevgeny Prigozhin. Of course, in the West, all this speculation is presented from a well-known angle,” Peskov told reporters.

“All of this is an absolute lie, and here, when covering this issue, it is necessary to base yourself on facts. There are not many facts yet. They need to be established in the course of investigative actions,” he said.

‘WAIT FOR TEST RESULTS’

Russian investigators have opened a probe into what happened, but have not yet said what they suspect caused the plane to suddenly fall from the sky.

Nor have they officially confirmed the identities of the 10 bodies recovered from the wreckage.

Asked if the Kremlin had received official confirmation of Prigozhin’s death, Peskov said on Friday: “If you listened carefully to the Russian president’s statement, he said that all the necessary tests, including genetic tests, will now be carried out. The official results – as soon as they are ready to be published, will be published.”

Peskov, who said Putin had not met Prigozhin recently, also said it was unclear how long the tests and investigative work would take.

It was therefore impossible to start talking about whether Putin would attend Prigozhin’s funeral, Peskov said in answer to a question on the subject.

“There are no dates for the funeral yet, it is impossible to talk about it at all. The only thing I can say is that the president has a rather busy schedule at the moment.”

Nigel Gould-Davies, a former British ambassador to Belarus who is now a senior fellow at the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS), said the funeral would be significant.

“If Putin wishes to emphasise that Prigozhin died as a traitor, he will ignore it,” said Gould-Davies.

“(While) Prigozhin’s supporters may use it as an opportunity to eulogise him and his critique of the Kremlin’s conduct of the war — and could strengthen the hostility of a core of Wagner loyalists towards the Kremlin,” he said.

British military intelligence said on Friday there was not yet definitive proof that Prigozhin had been onboard but that it was “highly likely” he was dead.

The Pentagon has said its own initial assessment is that Prigozhin was killed.

Russia’s Baza news outlet, which has good sources among law enforcement agencies, has reported that investigators are focusing on a theory that one or two bombs may have been planted on board the plane.

Asked about the future of the Wagner Group, which has a series of lucrative contracts across Africa and a contingent in Belarus training the army there but now appears leaderless, Kremlin spokesman Peskov was concise.

“I can’t tell you anything now, I don’t know,” he said.

(Reporting by ReutersWriting by Andrew Osborn Editing by Guy Faulconbridge, Kirsten Donovan)

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August 26, 2023 0 comments
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US and World News

Haitians shelter in sports center as fresh attacks displace nearly 9,000

by Reuters August 26, 2023
By Reuters

By Jean Loobentz Cesar

PORT-AU-PRINCE (Reuters) – Hundreds of people are crammed into small white tents in the courtyard of a sports center in the Haitian capital, Port-au-Prince, drying clothes on the access ramps and washing their children in small, plastic tubs.

Some 8,730 people have been displaced around the heavily populated neighborhood of Carrefour-Feuilles, according to U.N. estimates on Saturday, more than half due to a fresh outbreak of violence two days earlier.

Residents began moving out of the area en masse from Aug. 12, when armed gangs mounted their attacks on the area.

Under-resourced police have struggled to fight off the armed groups which now control large parts of the capital, their turf wars driving a devastating humanitarian crisis that has displaced around 200,000 nationwide.

Ariel Henry, Haiti’s unelected prime minister, called for urgent international security assistance last October.

Though countries were wary of backing Henry and repeating the serious abuses committed by past interventions, Kenyan delegates met with Henry and top police chiefs this week to assess leading such a force.

The motion is eventually expected to go to a U.N. Security Council vote.

“Even if order was restored to the area, I would not come back,” said Orisca Marie Youseline, who grew up in Carrefour-Feuilles and is now one of some 930 people the U.N. estimates is sheltering at the Gymnasium Vincent sports center.

“We are running too much, we are tired of always being victims.”

SEVERELY UNDER-EQUIPPED

Meanwhile outside the French Embassy, protected by high walls, caged security cameras and barbed wire, protesters set a tire on fire as people patrolled with machetes.

Many Haitians have joined civilian self-defense groups known as “Bwa Kale,” a movement which has inspired hope but also sparked retaliation against civilians and stirred fears the groups are spurring on the violence.

After Thursday’s escalation, thousands of people who had taken refuge at the Lycee Carrefour-Feuilles moved to other sites, including other schools and the square outside a cinema.

“These places are not made to handle the situation of displaced people,” said Gedeon Jean, director at local rights group CARDH, which raised the alarm about the displaced residents -including people who are elderly, disabled, pregnant or with young children- going a week without aid.

Many families living in outdoor tents suffered from rains brought by Tropical Storm Franklin, now a hurricane.

Civil protection, social services and French NGO Medecins du Monde are helping supply the sites, Jean said, adding police were severely under-equipped and “the needs are huge.”

“Even if this foreign force comes, when it leaves we will be in the same situation,” said Youseline. “They will come for a few months, help us, push the gangs back, and when they leave we will be back here. I don’t want to live like this anymore.”

(Reporting by Jean Loobentz Cesar in Port-au-Prince and Sarah Morland in Mexico City; Editing by Andrea Ricci)

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August 26, 2023 0 comments
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