Jumat, 05 Juli 2019

Three sisters who killed abusive father charged with murder in Russia. Outrage ensued - USA TODAY

MOSCOW, Russia — One evening last summer, Mikhail Khachaturyan decided that his living room wasn't tidy enough, so he summoned his three teenage daughters one by one and doused each with pepper spray.

There was little unusual about this evening in the Khachaturyan household, according to court records, except for one thing: The sisters decided they couldn't take the violence and abuse anymore. They waited until their father fell asleep in his rocking chair and attacked him with a kitchen knife and a hammer. He put up a fight, but died within minutes.

The Khachaturyan sisters, now aged 18, 19 and 20, were charged last month with premeditated murder, in a case that has drawn outrage and shone a light on the way the Russian justice system handles domestic violence and sexual abuse cases.

More than 200,000 people have signed an online petition urging the prosecutors to drop the murder charges, which could land the sisters in prison for up to 20 years.

Supporters of the sisters have protested outside Russian embassies in more than 20 locations abroad, and a theater has staged a performance in solidarity. They had planned a major rally in central Moscow on Saturday, but said they had to cancel it, citing city hall refusing to provide security for the gathering.

"The Khachaturyan case is quite indicative of the general situation with domestic violence and how the Russian state responds to this problem," says Yulia Gorbunova, who authored an extensive report on domestic violence for Human Rights Watch last year.

'Totally powerless': The startling toll on children who witness domestic violence is just now being understood

Pressured by conservative family groups, President Vladimir Putin in 2017 signed a law decriminalizing some forms of domestic violence, which has no fixed definition in the Russian legislation. Police routinely turn a blind eye to cases of domestic abuse, while preventive measures, such as restraining orders, are either lacking or not in wide use.

Court filings showed that the Khachaturyan sisters were repeatedly beaten by their father, a war veteran, and sexually abused. He had kept a stockpile of knifes, guns and rifles at home despite having been diagnosed with a neurological disorder, and was known to shoot indoors. He repeatedly threatened neighbors and family with violence.

The Khacharutyan sisters' lawyers say the girls were driven to the edge.

"The first day we met," Krestina's lawyer Alexei Liptser said, "she said she's better off here, in jail, than living at home the way she had been."

Going to the police was not an option for Khachaturyan's victims, who feared that life for them would only get worse. The girls had shared some of the horrors they had gone through with school friends but pleaded them not to go to the police. In the year before the attack, the girls attended less than two months of classes in total, but the school administration did not interfere.

Prosecutors acknowledge the extraordinarily violent circumstances that pushed the teenagers to attack and eventually kill their own father, but they insist that Maria, Angelina and Krestina should be tried for murder. The sisters' lawyers argue that they were acting in justified self-defense in circumstances of lasting abuse and life-threatening violence.

Opinion: Why I work the domestic violence helpline: Men have a responsibility to pick up the pieces

The sisters have been released on bail and barred from seeing each other, witnesses in the case or the media. They are reportedly in good spirits. "At least, no one is beating them up," Liptser says.

The case of the three timid teenagers has inspired 29-year-old Zarema Zaudinova to direct a performance at the underground Theater Doc last week, combining the hair-raising experiences of the sisters with performers' own personal stories. Some members of the audience walked out after one of the more graphic accounts of abuse.

For Zaudinova, the Khachaturyan case was the last straw.

"We have no protection," she says. "We will either get raped or we will get thrown into prison if we defend ourselves."

Research on Russian criminal court cases compiled by media outlet Media Zona shows that out of 2,500 women convicted of manslaughter or murder in 2016 to 2018, nearly 2,000 killed a family member in a domestic violence setting.

Human Rights Watch has documented cases where "a very clear case of self-defense" was not recognized as such by prosecutors and led to the victim's imprisonment, according to Gorbunova.

"The choice is not whether you go to the police and get help," she says. "The choice for these women was either to die or they had to protect themselves to the best of their ability."

Almost 2,000 people have recently posted first-person accounts of abuse and victim blaming to social media, after a young woman facing criminal charges for injuring her alleged rapist launched the hashtag #It'snotmyfault.

The bill to replace jail terms with fines in certain cases of domestic violence breezed through the Russian parliament in 2017 and was promptly signed by Putin. Despite its detrimental effect on domestic violence victims, the measure sparked a rare public debate on domestic violence and abuse in a country where a proverb goes: "If he beats you, that means he loves you."

Gorbunova says that public perception of domestic violence has been changing, triggered by the highly publicized court cases like that of the Khachaturyan sisters or the case of Margarita Gracheva, whose husband, previously reported to the police for threats of violence, took her to a forest and chopped off both of her hands. Gracheva endured online bullying and accusations of "provoking" her spouse before her husband was sentenced to 14 years in prison last year, a rare win for a victim of domestic violence in Russia.

The women of Theater Doc say the verdict in the Khachaturyan sisters' case would send a strong message to Russian society.

"We need to fight for it, and talk loud and clear about it," says Zaudinova, who herself told a story onstage of being molested by a male relative at the age of 12. "If the girls get sent to prison and the court doesn't acknowledge that that was self-defense, they will be putting more people in prison and you won't be able to do anything to the person who decided to rape you."

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https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2019/07/05/khachaturyan-sisters-russia-killed-father-charged-murder/1655129001/

2019-07-05 13:07:00Z
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Sudan celebrates end of stand-off between military leaders and opposition - CNN

Sudan's military leadership and the country's pro-democracy movement have agreed to form a rotating, joint sovereign council that will govern "for the next three years or a little longer," Mohamed el-Hassan Labat, the African Union's envoy to Sudan, said early Friday.
Under the agreement, the military council will be in charge of the country's leadership for the first 21 months. A civilian administration will rule the council during the following 18 months.
The joint sovereign council will consist of five members of the military and five civilians, in addition to one civilian chosen by consensus from both sides.
"Today our revolution has won and it waves the flags of victory," the opposition Declaration of Freedom and Change Forces (DFCF) said Friday.
The two sides have also agreed to launch an investigation into street violence committed since the ouster of long-time President Omar al-Bashir in April.
Talks between the military leadership and opposition groups collapsed after security forces broke up a protest camp outside Khartoum's military headquarters on June 3. More than 100 protesters were killed in the crackdown.
Ethiopia's government and the African Union mediated talks that led to Thursday's agreement, Labat said. Tens of thousands of protesters flooded the streets of Sudan's cities in the run-up to the deal.
Under Friday's agreement, a joint council will govern for the next three years.
The Transitional Military Council has been in power since the military overthrew al-Bashir in April. The coup followed months of protests that engulfed the country.
Sudan's pro-democracy movement remained on the streets after Bashir's ouster, demanding a transition to civilian rule.

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https://www.cnn.com/2019/07/05/africa/sudan-celebrates-intl/

2019-07-05 11:00:00Z
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Britain seizes Iranian oil tanker headed to Syria, furious Tehran summons British ambassador over 'destruct... - Fox News

Iranian leaders have summoned the British ambassador as Tehran fumes over Britain's Thursday seizure of an Iranian tanker believed to be violating the European Union sanctions by providing crude oil to the Syrian regime.

British Royal Marines supported the authorities in Gibraltar in taking the vessel amid evidence that it was trying to circumvent the EU sanctions on the Syrian regime. A senior Spanish official said the operation was requested by the United States.

IRAN WARNS EUROPE IT 'WILL TAKE NEXT STEP' TO ENRICH URANIUM TO WEAPONS-GRADE LEVEL IF NEW DEAL ISN'T REACHED

Royal Marine patrol vessel is seen beside the Grace 1 super tanker in the British territory of Gibraltar, Thursday, July 4, 2019. Authorities in Gibraltar said they intercepted Thursday an Iranian supertanker believed to be breaching European Union sanctions by carrying a shipment of Tehran's crude oil to war-ravaged Syria.

Royal Marine patrol vessel is seen beside the Grace 1 super tanker in the British territory of Gibraltar, Thursday, July 4, 2019. Authorities in Gibraltar said they intercepted Thursday an Iranian supertanker believed to be breaching European Union sanctions by carrying a shipment of Tehran's crude oil to war-ravaged Syria. (AP Photo/Marcos Moreno)

The Iranian vessel was believed to be headed to the Baniyas Refinery in Syria, a government-owned facility under the control of Syrian President Bashar Assad and subject to the EU’s Syrian Sanctions Regime.

The Iranian state-run news agency called the situation “an illegal seizure of an Iranian oil tanker” while an Iranian foreign ministry spokesman called the actions a “form of piracy” – prompting the UK’s foreign office to dismiss the claims as “nonsense.”

Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Abbas Mousavi wrote in a tweet that British Ambassador Rob Macaire was summoned over the “illegal interception” of the ship and later said that the seizure was “odd and destructive.”

A Royal Marines vessel sails toward the Grace 1 super tanker in the British territory of Gibraltar, Thursday, July 4, 2019. Spain's acting foreign minister says a tanker stopped off Gibraltar and suspected of taking oil to Syria was intercepted by British authorities after a request from the United States.

A Royal Marines vessel sails toward the Grace 1 super tanker in the British territory of Gibraltar, Thursday, July 4, 2019. Spain's acting foreign minister says a tanker stopped off Gibraltar and suspected of taking oil to Syria was intercepted by British authorities after a request from the United States. (AP Photo/Marcos Moreno)

“It can cause an increase in tensions in the region,” he said in a live telephone interview on state television Thursday night.

U.S. National Security Adviser John Bolton, meanwhile, welcomed Britain's move, saying the seizure was “excellent news.”

IRAN SAYS ALLEGED US SPIES MIGHT FACE DEATH PENALTY

“America & our allies will continue to prevent regimes in Tehran & Damascus from profiting off this illicit trade,” Bolton said in a tweet.

The vessel carrying Iranian oil likely had over just over 2 million barrels of Iranian crude oil, according to the data firm Refinitv.

The seizure of the tanker comes amid heightened tensions in the Middle East, particularly between Washington and Tehran, with the latter officially violating the 2015 nuclear deal this week by breaking through the deal put on its stockpile of low-enriched uranium – and has pledged to boost its enrichment on Sunday.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

The Iranian regime also shot down an American drone, prompting the Trump administration to consider military strikes on the country. The strikes were scrapped last minute by President Trump.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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https://www.foxnews.com/world/britain-seizes-iranian-tanker-syria-tehran-summons-ambassador-seizure

2019-07-05 09:13:03Z
52780326163946

Sudan military council, opposition reach power-sharing agreement - Aljazeera.com

Sudan's ruling generals and a coalition of protest and opposition groups have reached an agreement to share power during a transition period until elections, in a deal that could break weeks of political deadlock since the overthrowing of autocratic President Omar al-Bashir in April.

Both sides agreed to establish a joint military-civilian sovereign council that will rule the country by rotation "for a period of three years or slightly more", Mohamed Hassan Lebatt, African Union (AU) mediator, said at a news conference on Friday.

Under the agreementfive seats would go to the military and five to civilians, with an additional seat given to a civilian agreed upon by both sides

The ruling Transitional Military Council (TMC) and the civilian leaders also agreed to launch a "transparent and independent investigation" into the violence that began on June 3 when scores of pro-democracy demonstrators were killed in a brutal military crackdown on a protest camp in the capital, Khartoum.

TMC deputy head General Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, who is widely known as Hemeti, welcomed Friday's deal, which, he said, would be inclusive.

"We would like to reassure all political forces, armed movements and all those who participated in the change from young men and women … that this agreement will be comprehensive and will not exclude anyone," added Dagalo, who also heads the feared paramilitary unit Rapid Support Forces (RSF) accused by the demonstrators of crushing the sit-in outside the military headquarters.

Omar al-Degair, a leader of the Forces for Freedom and Change (FFC), an umbrella organisation of opposition groups, said the agreement "opens the way for the formation of the institutions of the transitional authority, and we hope that this is the beginning of a new era". 

In a statement on Friday morning, the Sudanese Professionals Association (SPA), which is part of the FFC, said the transition period would last three years and three months.

Sudan

Mohamed al-Hacen Lebatt (left), AU envoy to Sudan, sits next to General Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo as he shakes hands with an army general following a press conference in Khartoum [Ebrahim Hamid/ AFP]

The military would lead the sovereign council for the first 21 months, and a civilian would take over for the remaining 18 months, it said. The FFC would appoint a cabinet of ministers, the SPA said, adding that a legislative council would be formed after the appointment of the sovereign council and the cabinet. 

The two sides also agreed to set up a committee of lawyers, including jurists from the AU, to finalise the agreement within 48 hours. 

Sudan protesters demand accountability for killing of civilians (2:16)

Mass protests

The deal came after two days of talks following the collapse of the previous round of negotiations in the wake of the crackdown on the protest camp. Opposition medics say more than 100 people were killed in the dispersal and subsequent violence on June 3. Officials put the death toll at 62.

The TMC and the opposition coalition have been wrangling for weeks over what form Sudan's transitional government should take after the military deposed al-Bashir on April 11 after months of mass protests against his 30-year rule.

Protesters had remained in the streets following al-Bashir's toppling, fearing the generals intended to cling to power or preserve some form of authoritarian rule.

The AU and neighbouring Ethiopia stepped up mediation efforts to end the crisis and negotiations resumed earlier this week, following massive protests last weekend in which tens of thousands of demonstrators filled the streets of Sudan's main cities in the biggest show of numbers since the June 3 crackdown.

Sudan

Sudanese protestors celebrate in the streets of Khartoum after ruling generals and protest leaders announced they have reached an agreement on the disputed issue of a new governing body [Ashraf Shazly/ AFP] 

'More guarantees'

In Khartoum, thousands of people took to the streets to celebrate the breakthrough. But many called for continued protests and pressure on the military to implement its side of the deal. 

"We would like to see many more guarantees from the TMC because they've made many promises on handing over power only to backtrack later on," said Mohamed Ismail, a 34-year-old engineer who was part of a crowd in Khartoum's al-Sahafa area.   

190701190837656

Ashraf Mohamed Ali, another protester, called the agreement a "good move for Sudan". 

"It is important to see the implementation of the deal on the ground because the TMC's actions over the past month proves this council is not serious about giving up power to civilians," he told Al Jazeera via telephone. 

"And so to have an agreement is in itself a good thing. I am happy but we want to see the deal being implemented." 

Welcoming the two sides' decision to launch an investigation into the June 3 killings, Ali said "any deal that doesn't include a real investigation isn't going to be satisfying for the majority of the civilians." 

The protesters were not happy about the possibility of Hemeti "being part of a new government", Ali said, referring to the RSF's role in dispersing the Khartoum protest camp.

"But this is the reality," he said. "The RSF control everything in Sudan. So if you want to make a deal or if you want to have a civilian government, you need to know how to deal with them, in a way that could serve your agenda and without dragging the country into war."

The United Arab Emirates, which backs the TMC, congratulated the two sides on the power-sharing deal.

"We hope that the next phase will witness the foundation of a constitutional system that will strengthen the role of institutions with broad national and popular support," UAE's Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Anwar Gargash said in a post on Twitter. 

Abu Dhabi will stand with Khartoum in "good times and bad times", he added. 

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https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/07/sudan-military-council-opposition-reach-power-sharing-agreement-190705013332385.html

2019-07-05 08:58:00Z
CBMie2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmFsamF6ZWVyYS5jb20vbmV3cy8yMDE5LzA3L3N1ZGFuLW1pbGl0YXJ5LWNvdW5jaWwtb3Bwb3NpdGlvbi1yZWFjaC1wb3dlci1zaGFyaW5nLWFncmVlbWVudC0xOTA3MDUwMTMzMzIzODUuaHRtbNIBf2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmFsamF6ZWVyYS5jb20vYW1wL25ld3MvMjAxOS8wNy9zdWRhbi1taWxpdGFyeS1jb3VuY2lsLW9wcG9zaXRpb24tcmVhY2gtcG93ZXItc2hhcmluZy1hZ3JlZW1lbnQtMTkwNzA1MDEzMzMyMzg1Lmh0bWw

Sudan military council, opposition reach power-sharing agreement - Aljazeera.com

Sudan's ruling generals and a coalition of protest and opposition groups have reached an agreement to share power during a transition period until elections, in a deal that could break weeks of political deadlock since the overthrowing of autocratic President Omar al-Bashir in April.

Both sides agreed to establish a joint military-civilian sovereign council that will rule the country by rotation "for a period of three years or slightly more", Mohamed Hassan Lebatt, African Union (AU) mediator, said at a news conference on Friday.

Under the agreementfive seats would go to the military and five to civilians, with an additional seat given to a civilian agreed upon by both sides

The ruling Transitional Military Council (TMC) and the civilian leaders also agreed to launch a "transparent and independent investigation" into the violence that began on June 3 when scores of pro-democracy demonstrators were killed in a brutal military crackdown on a protest camp in the capital, Khartoum.

TMC deputy head General Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, who is widely known as Hemeti, welcomed Friday's deal, which, he said, would be inclusive.

"We would like to reassure all political forces, armed movements and all those who participated in the change from young men and women … that this agreement will be comprehensive and will not exclude anyone," added Dagalo, who also heads the feared paramilitary unit Rapid Support Forces (RSF) accused by the demonstrators of crushing the sit-in outside the military headquarters.

Omar al-Degair, a leader of the Forces for Freedom and Change (FFC), an umbrella organisation of opposition groups, said the agreement "opens the way for the formation of the institutions of the transitional authority, and we hope that this is the beginning of a new era". 

In a statement on Friday morning, the Sudanese Professionals Association (SPA), which is part of the FFC, said the transition period would last three years and three months.

Sudan

Mohamed al-Hacen Lebatt (left), AU envoy to Sudan, sits next to General Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo as he shakes hands with an army general following a press conference in Khartoum [Ebrahim Hamid/ AFP]

The military would lead the sovereign council for the first 21 months, and a civilian would take over for the remaining 18 months, it said. The FFC would appoint a cabinet of ministers, the SPA said, adding that a legislative council would be formed after the appointment of the sovereign council and the cabinet. 

The two sides also agreed to set up a committee of lawyers, including jurists from the AU, to finalise the agreement within 48 hours. 

Sudan protesters demand accountability for killing of civilians (2:16)

Mass protests

The deal came after two days of talks following the collapse of the previous round of negotiations in the wake of the crackdown on the protest camp. Opposition medics say more than 100 people were killed in the dispersal and subsequent violence on June 3. Officials put the death toll at 62.

The TMC and the opposition coalition have been wrangling for weeks over what form Sudan's transitional government should take after the military deposed al-Bashir on April 11 after months of mass protests against his 30-year rule.

Protesters had remained in the streets following al-Bashir's toppling, fearing the generals intended to cling to power or preserve some form of authoritarian rule.

The AU and neighbouring Ethiopia stepped up mediation efforts to end the crisis and negotiations resumed earlier this week, following massive protests last weekend in which tens of thousands of demonstrators filled the streets of Sudan's main cities in the biggest show of numbers since the June 3 crackdown.

Sudan

Sudanese protestors celebrate in the streets of Khartoum after ruling generals and protest leaders announced they have reached an agreement on the disputed issue of a new governing body [Ashraf Shazly/ AFP] 

'More guarantees'

In Khartoum, thousands of people took to the streets to celebrate the breakthrough. But many called for continued protests and pressure on the military to implement its side of the deal. 

"We would like to see many more guarantees from the TMC because they've made many promises on handing over power only to backtrack later on," said Mohamed Ismail, a 34-year-old engineer who was part of a crowd in Khartoum's al-Sahafa area.   

190701190837656

Ashraf Mohamed Ali, another protester, called the agreement a "good move for Sudan". 

"It is important to see the implementation of the deal on the ground because the TMC's actions over the past month proves this council is not serious about giving up power to civilians," he told Al Jazeera via telephone. 

"And so to have an agreement is in itself a good thing. I am happy but we want to see the deal being implemented." 

Welcoming the two sides' decision to launch an investigation into the June 3 killings, Ali said "any deal that doesn't include a real investigation isn't going to be satisfying for the majority of the civilians." 

The protesters were not happy about the possibility of Hemeti "being part of a new government", Ali said, referring to the RSF's role in dispersing the Khartoum protest camp.

"But this is the reality," he said. "The RSF control everything in Sudan. So if you want to make a deal or if you want to have a civilian government, you need to know how to deal with them, in a way that could serve your agenda and without dragging the country into war."

The United Arab Emirates, which backs the TMC, congratulated the two sides on the power-sharing deal.

"We hope that the next phase will witness the foundation of a constitutional system that will strengthen the role of institutions with broad national and popular support," UAE's Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Anwar Gargash said in a post on Twitter. 

Abu Dhabi will stand with Khartoum in "good times and bad times", he added. 

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https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/07/sudan-military-council-opposition-reach-power-sharing-agreement-190705013332385.html

2019-07-05 08:36:00Z
CBMie2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmFsamF6ZWVyYS5jb20vbmV3cy8yMDE5LzA3L3N1ZGFuLW1pbGl0YXJ5LWNvdW5jaWwtb3Bwb3NpdGlvbi1yZWFjaC1wb3dlci1zaGFyaW5nLWFncmVlbWVudC0xOTA3MDUwMTMzMzIzODUuaHRtbNIBf2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmFsamF6ZWVyYS5jb20vYW1wL25ld3MvMjAxOS8wNy9zdWRhbi1taWxpdGFyeS1jb3VuY2lsLW9wcG9zaXRpb24tcmVhY2gtcG93ZXItc2hhcmluZy1hZ3JlZW1lbnQtMTkwNzA1MDEzMzMyMzg1Lmh0bWw

Sudan military council, opposition reach power-sharing agreement - Aljazeera.com

Sudan's ruling generals and a coalition of protest and opposition groups have reached an agreement to share power during a transition period until elections, in a deal that could break weeks of political deadlock since the overthrowing of autocratic President Omar al-Bashir in April.

Both sides agreed to establish a joint military-civilian sovereign council that will rule the country by rotation "for a period of three years or slightly more", Mohamed Hassan Lebatt, African Union (AU) mediator, said at a news conference on Friday.

Under the agreementfive seats would go to the military and five to civilians, with an additional seat given to a civilian agreed upon by both sides

The ruling Transitional Military Council (TMC) and the civilian leaders also agreed to launch a "transparent and independent investigation" into the violence that began on June 3 when scores of pro-democracy demonstrators were killed in a brutal military crackdown on a protest camp in the capital, Khartoum.

Omar al-Degair, a leader of the Forces for Freedom and Change (FFC), an umbrella organisation of opposition groups, said the agreement "opens the way for the formation of the institutions of the transitional authority, and we hope that this is the beginning of a new era". 

In a statement on Friday morning, the Sudanese Professionals Association (SPA), which is part of the FFC, said the transition period would last three years and three months.

Sudan

Mohamed al-Hacen Lebatt (left), AU envoy to Sudan, sits next to General Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo as he shakes hands with an army general following a press conference in Khartoum [Ebrahim Hamid/ AFP]

The military would lead the sovereign council for the first 21 months, and a civilian would take over for the remaining 18 months, it said. The FFC would appoint a cabinet of ministers, the SPA said, adding that a legislative council will be formed after the appointment of the sovereign council and the cabinet. 

The two sides also agreed to set up a committee of lawyers, including jurists from the AU, to finalise the agreement within 48 hours. 

Sudan protesters demand accountability for killing of civilians (2:16)

Mass protests

The deal came after two days of talks following the collapse of the previous round of negotiations following  the crackdown on the protest camp. Opposition medics say more than 100 people were killed in the dispersal and subsequent violence on June 3. Officials put the death toll at 62.

The TMC and the opposition coalition have been wrangling for weeks over what form Sudan's transitional government should take after the military deposed al-Bashir on April 11 in the wake of mass protests against his 30-year rule.

Protesters had remained in the streets following al-Bashir's toppling, fearing the generals intended to cling to power or preserve some form of authoritarian rule.

The AU and neighbouring Ethiopia stepped up mediation efforts to end the crisis and n egotiations resumed earlier this week, following massive protests last weekend in which tens of thousands of demonstrators filled the streets of Sudan's main cities in the biggest show of numbers since the June 3 crackdown.

Sudan

Sudanese protestors celebrate in the streets of Khartoum after ruling generals and protest leaders announced they have reached an agreement on the disputed issue of a new governing body [Ashraf Shazly/ AFP] 

TMC deputy head General Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, who is widely known as Hemeti, welcomed Friday's deal, which, he said, would be inclusive.

"We would like to reassure all political forces, armed movements and all those who participated in the change from young men and women … that this agreement will be comprehensive and will not exclude anyone," added Dagalo, who also heads the feared paramilitary unit Rapid Support Forces (RSF) accused by the demonstrators of crushing the sit-in outside the military headquarters.

'More guarantees'

In Khartoum, thousands of people took to the streets to celebrate the breakthrough. But many called for continued protests and pressure on the military to implement its side of the deal. 

"We would like to see many more guarantees from the TMC because they've made many promises on handing over power only to backtrack later on," said Mohamed Ismail, a 34-year-old engineer who was part of a crowd in Khartoum's al-Sahafa area.   

190701190837656

Ashraf Mohamed Ali, another protester, called the agreement a "good move for Sudan". 

"It is important to see the implementation of the deal on the ground because the TMC's actions over the past month proves this council is not serious about giving up power to civilians," he told Al Jazeera via telephone. 

"And so to have an agreement is in itself a good thing. I am happy but we want to see the deal being implemented." 

Welcoming the two sides' decision to launch an investigation into the June 3 killings, Ali said "any deal that doesn't include a real investigation isn't going to be satisfying for the majority of the civilians". 

The protesters were not happy about the possibility of Hemeti "being part of a new government," Ali said, referring to the RSF's role in dispersing the Khartoum protest camp.

"But this is the reality," he said. "The RSF control everything in Sudan. So if you want to make a deal or if you want to have a civilian government, you need to know how to deal with them, in a way that could serve your agenda and without dragging the country into war."

The United Arab Emirates, which backs Sudan's military, congratulated the TMC and protest leaders on the power-sharing deal.

"We hope that the next phase will witness the foundation of a constitutional system that will strengthen the role of institutions with broad national and popular support," UAE's Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Anwar Gargash said in a post on Twitter. 

Abu Dhabi will stand with Khartoum in "good times and bad times", he added. 

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https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/07/sudan-military-council-opposition-reach-power-sharing-agreement-190705013332385.html

2019-07-05 08:25:00Z
CBMie2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmFsamF6ZWVyYS5jb20vbmV3cy8yMDE5LzA3L3N1ZGFuLW1pbGl0YXJ5LWNvdW5jaWwtb3Bwb3NpdGlvbi1yZWFjaC1wb3dlci1zaGFyaW5nLWFncmVlbWVudC0xOTA3MDUwMTMzMzIzODUuaHRtbNIBf2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmFsamF6ZWVyYS5jb20vYW1wL25ld3MvMjAxOS8wNy9zdWRhbi1taWxpdGFyeS1jb3VuY2lsLW9wcG9zaXRpb24tcmVhY2gtcG93ZXItc2hhcmluZy1hZ3JlZW1lbnQtMTkwNzA1MDEzMzMyMzg1Lmh0bWw

Kamis, 04 Juli 2019

Hong Kong Police Make First Wave of Protest Arrests - Wall Street Journal

Graffiti and umbrellas are seen outside the main chamber of the Legislative Council in Hong Kong on July 3. Photo: anthony wallace/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

HONG KONG—Police arrested and charged a dozen protesters suspected of involvement in antigovernment clashes and widened a hunt for others who joined a rampage through the city’s legislature.

The arrests signal that the government is pressing a newfound advantage, after it was caught off-guard by a wave of popular rallies that scotched its attempt to drive through an unpopular extradition law. Officials were forced to suspend the bill, which would have moved the semiautonomous city closer within Beijing’s legal jurisdiction. The concession emboldened younger activists to challenge the government more strongly.

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But Monday’s violent storming of the legislature, broadcast blow by blow on live television, shocked swaths of the city. Though many still say they understand that protesters were driven to frustration by the government’s intransigence, the mayhem handed an opening to Hong Kong’s government to take a tougher approach.

Beijing on Tuesday voiced its displeasure with the protests, calling the occupation of the legislature a challenge to the political arrangement that gives Hong Kong its limited autonomy—a suggestion that China would directly intervene if events spiral beyond Hong Kong’s control.

Police said Thursday that the 12 people who were arrested range in age from 14 to 36. They were charged with offenses including possession of offensive weapons, unlawful assembly and assaulting and obstructing a police officer. The charges relate to a confrontation between hundreds of protesters and police outside a flag-raising ceremony Monday morning to commemorate Hong Kong’s return to Chinese rule from the British in 1997.

The charges against the 12 people relate to a confrontation between protesters and police outside a flag-raising ceremony Monday. Photo: tyrone siu/Reuters

Hong Kong’s handling of the unrest, and the Chinese government’s tightening grip on the city, have fueled a diplomatic spat between Beijing and London.

British Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt, one of two candidates to become the next prime minister, earlier this week called on Beijing not to use the protests as a “pretext for repression,” and urged the Chinese government to honor a 1984 agreement between the two countries to uphold the city’s autonomy.

“He seems to be basking in the faded glory of British colonialism,” China’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said at a media briefing Wednesday. “The U.K. considers itself as a guardian, which is nothing but a delusion.”

The barbs continued as China’s ambassador to London, Liu Xiaoming, called a press conference to extend Beijing’s criticism of Mr. Hunt’s comments. In response, Britain’s Foreign Office summoned Mr. Liu for a dressing down.

The Chinese government has for years regarded the 1984 Sino-British Joint Declaration as “a historic document without realistic meaning,” state-run Xinhua News Agency said.

Two weeks ago in Hong Kong, police took an almost entirely hands-off approach as thousands of mostly young protesters surrounded and barricaded its headquarters, pelting the building with eggs and defacing its walls.

On Wednesday, police said officers had collected a large amount of evidence from the legislature building and were preparing to track down protesters involved in the storming of the Legislative Council on Monday.

“We will follow up on all illegal and violent acts,” the police statement said.

Protesters are planning another march on Sunday in a shopping area in Hong Kong frequented by mainland Chinese tourists, aimed at raising awareness among Chinese people of the recent events in Hong Kong.

Write to Chuin-Wei Yap at chuin-wei.yap@wsj.com

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https://www.wsj.com/articles/hong-kong-police-make-first-wave-of-arrests-after-protests-11562240165

2019-07-04 16:56:00Z
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