Category: Security

  • 10 killed, dozens injured as vehicle drives into New Orleans crowd

    Investigators believe a driver intentionally struck several people early Wednesday on a crowded street in the French Quarter of New Orleans.

    Ten people were killed and at least 30 injured in the incident, which happened shortly after 3 a.m. while revelers will still celebrating the New Year. In addition to local and state police, the FBI was investigating the incident, officials said shortly before 8 a.m.

    During a press conference outside a precinct, New Orleans police Superintendent Anne Kirkpatrick said it did not appear to be a DUI incident.

    “It did involve a man driving a pickup truck down Bourbon Street at a very fast pace, and it was very intentional behavior,” Kirkpatrick said. “This man was trying to run over as many people as he possibly could.”

    The man exchanged gunfire with officers, striking two who were in stable condition, police said. No details were released about whether the suspect was in custody.

    Those injured were taken to several local hospitals and their conditions were not immediately known. Kirkpatrick said the majority of the victims were local residents, rather than tourists in town for the holiday or Wednesday night’s Sugar Bowl between the University of Georgia and Notre Dame.

    “Last night, we had over 300 officers out here, and because of the intentional mindset of this perpetrator – who went around our barricades in order to conduct this,” Kirkpatrick said. “He was hell bent on creating the carnage and the damage that he did.”

    The city’s mayor LaToya Cantrell called the event a terrorist attack, but an FBI special agent said that was not yet known and remains under investigation.

    “We do know that the city of New Orleans was impacted by a terrorist attack,” Cantrell said.

    Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry called the incident a “horrific act of violence” in a social media post.

    Investigators planned to hold another press conference at 11 a.m. to provide updated details.

    — Please return to The Atlanta Journal-Constitution for updates.

    ©2025 The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Visit at ajc.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.




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  • Nigerian Forest Security Service To Partner Soludo Against Insecurity

    Nigerian Forest Security Service To Partner Soludo Against Insecurity

    By Ovat Abeng

    Weeks after the kidnap of Anambra lawmaker coupled with the abduction of an Anglican clergy and the killing of a Catholic priest as well as the most recent brutal massacre of eight persons in Chigbonu village Umuike Ubahuekwem Ihiala on 30th December 2024 by daredevil gunmen alongside other heinous crimes being perpetrated across Ànambra, the Nigerian Forest Security Service (NFSS) has declared that it is ready to partner and collaborate with the government of Professor Chukwuma Charles Soludo to comb all the forests in Anambra State where killers and kidnappers of innocent citizens have their camps and territories.

    Anambra commander of the Nigerian Forest Security Service (NFSS) Destiny Jonas who spoke to Journalists about the exploits of the organization, said that NFSS is ever willing and ready to offer its expertise in securing the forests and bushes both for economic reasons and security purposes, adding that their operations are mostly in the forests and bushes because they know the terrain very well.

    The NFSS state commander noted that NFSS would be most obliged to join forces with other security agencies to ensure the success of the Operation Udo Ga Di Na Anambra Security Initiative of the state government intended to rid the hinterlands off criminal elements unleashing terror and mayhem on the people.

    Read Also: Anambra 2025: APC Aspirant, Paul Chukwuma, Meets With Campaign Council, Others

    He said that NFSS can gather intelligence to demobilize any kind of force in the forest. That all that is needed is the collaboration of government agencies and government itself including recognition of the Nigerian Forest Security Service.

    The security expert maintained that officers of the NFSS are ready to rescue Anambra forests from unknown gunmen and other criminal elements but the need for recognition and roundtable discussions are of paramount importance.

    He was worried and concerned that investors are fleeing from Anambra to invest in other states  because of insecurity In the land. Although he pointed out that officers and men of the Nigerian Forest Security Service (NFSS) assisted the Police and other security agents to ensure safety of those who returned to Anambra State for the festive season but still emphasized that a lot more have to be done to redeem Anambra forests from the tutelage of daredevil gunmen and other criminal minds.

    Jonas stated that impassible remote areas like Achala, Igbariam, Nsugbe and some others were hitch free because men of the NFSS were stationed in those places. He also disclosed that NFSS has identified some flashpoints (bushes)  across Ànambra State where it will declare total war on criminal camps from January 2025.

    He said all that is required now is permission from the authorities to enable them launch massive operations in the identified black spots even as he stated that some kidnapped victims were rescued by the operatives of the Nigerian Forest Security Service (NFSS) this yuletide season.That the plan of NFSS is to make sure that Anambra forests are free from criminal activities like deforestation, kidnappings and all manner of criminalities.

    The Anambra State NFSS commander however expressed gratitude profound to the Deputy Commander-General (Intelligence) of the Nigerian Forest Security Service (NFSS) Amb. Dr. John Metchie for his monumental supports to the service describing him as an enigma.

    He said that Dr. John Metchie is not only interested in the security and safety of Anambra citizens but also interested in the protection of lives and property of Nigerians across the federation, adding that if there are more John Metchies in Anambra, the state will definitely turn around for good.

    He also extolled the efforts and giant strides of the Commander-General of the Nigerian Forest Security Service (NFSS) Amb. Dr. Joshua Osatimehin for ensuring unity of purpose and cohesion in the service.

  • USA, France, Germany and Great Britain call for de-escalation in Syria

    The United States, Germany, France and the United Kingdom have called for an immediate de-escalation in Syria. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights yesterday reported at least 412 dead, including 61 civilians, since the start of the offensive by HTS jihadists and the armed opposition in the northwest of the country. According to the NGO, the offensive has claimed the lives of 214 rebels, 137 members of pro-government forces and 61 civilians, including 17 killed today.

    “We are closely monitoring developments in Syria and urge de-escalation by all parties and the protection of civilians and infrastructure,” the four NATO nations said in a joint statement released late Sunday. “The current escalation only underscores the urgent need for a political solution to the conflict”, in line with UN Security Council Resolution 2254. Adopted in 2015, the resolution calls for peace talks between the Syrian government and opposition forces.

    US Secretary of State Antony Blinken also spoke with his Turkish counterpart Hakan Fidan and “discussed the “need for de-escalation and the protection of civilian lives and infrastructure” in Syria, against the backdrop of rebel attacks on Idlib, Aleppo and Hama in the northwest of the country. According to the State Department announcement, the two also discussed “ongoing humanitarian efforts in Gaza and the need to end the war and secure the release of all hostages.”

    Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has meanwhile promised that ”force will be used to eradicate terrorism”, the Sana news agency reported. “

    According to Arab media reports, the Syrian president’s palace in Damascus has been occupied by Syrian rebels. The occupation of the palace came after Islamic rebels Hayat Tahrir al-Sham stormed the city of Aleppo on Saturday.

    “Terrorism only understands the language of force and that is the language with which we will break it and eliminate it, whoever its supporters and sponsors may be”, Assad was quoted as saying by Sana.

    The Russian military said it was helping the Syrian army “repel” rebel forces in three northern provinces, in an attempt to support the government led by Moscow’s ally Bashar al-Assad. “The Syrian Arab Army, with the assistance of Russian air force forces, is continuing its operations to repel the terrorist aggression in the provinces of Idlib, Hama and Aleppo,” the Russian military said on its website.

    The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights says Russia has stepped up air strikes against jihadists and the armed opposition to Bashar al-Assad’s regime in areas of Syria where they are advancing. And they explained that on Sunday morning Russian air raids hit the towns and villages conquered.

    Similar airstrikes were also recorded in the northern city of Aleppo, captured by rebel forces in a surprise operation against Assad’s military. ”Last night the Russians did not stop bombing on all fronts”, the director of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, Abdel-Rahman, told Dpa.

    The rebels, he explained, are now in control of Aleppo, Syria’s second largest city, with the exception of some Kurdish-held suburbs on the northwestern outskirts.

    ___

    © 2024 GMC S.A.P.A. di G. P. Marra

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC




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  • Filmmaker apologizes after falsely accusing Georgia man of election fraud

    The producer of a documentary that falsely accused a metro Atlanta man of committing election fraud during the 2020 election has issued an apology saying his depiction was based on “inaccurate information.”

    The statement by right-wing commentator Dinesh D’Souza came months after Salem Media Group issued a similar apology to Mark Andrews about “2000 Mules,” the 2022 film that purported to expose illegal ballot harvesting in Georgia and other swing states.

    “I make this apology not under the terms of a settlement agreement or other duress, but because it is the right thing to do, given what we have now learned,” D’Souza wrote on his website over the weekend.

    The film showed Andrews — face blurred — depositing five ballots in a drop box before the 2020 presidential election. D’Souza, the film’s narrator, falsely claimed viewers were seeing “a crime” and fraudulent votes.

    But a 2022 investigation by the Georgia secretary of state’s office found the ballots were not fraudulent. Andrews was delivering ballots for himself and members of his family, which is not illegal. Investigators also debunked other Georgia claims made in the film.

    Andrews filed a still-pending defamation lawsuit against Salem and the film’s producers in 2022 saying he did nothing wrong.

    The allegations in “2000 Mules,” which was watched by more than a million people in the first weeks after it was released, are among several claims hailed by election deniers as proof of fraud but didn’t hold up under scrutiny.

    That includes allegations of widespread fraud captured on video at State Farm Arena, counterfeit ballots and other claims.

    D’Souza pleaded guilty to violating campaign finance laws in 2014. President Donald Trump pardoned him in 2018.

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    © 2024 The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC




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  • Russian defense chief leaves North Korea after high-level talks

    Russian Defense Minister Andrei Belousov left Pyongyang on Saturday after holding talks with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un and his North Korean counterpart, No Kwang-chol, in the latest show of deepening cooperation between the two countries.

    The Russian delegation led by Belousov departed from the North Korean capital at the end of his two-day visit laden with meetings with the country’s political and military leaders, the North’s Korean Central News Agency reported Sunday.

    The Russian defense minister received a send-off ceremony attended by high-level North Korean officials, including Noh, photos released by the KCNA showed.

    Kim expressed his “unwavering support” for Russia’s policy on the war in Ukraine during a meeting with Belousov on Friday, the North Korean state media said.

    “The government, military and the people of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea will continue to support Russia’s policy of defending the country’s sovereignty and territorial integrity against the hegemonic drive of imperialists,” the North Korean leader was quoted as telling the Russian defense minister.

    Democratic People’s Republic of Korea is North Korea’s official name.

    Kim also told Belousov the “anti-Russian measures” taken by the US were worthy of international criticism as they seek to not only prolong the conflict, but threaten all of humanity.

    The North Korean leader accused the US and the West of rallying around Ukraine to strike Russian territories with long-range weapons. The attacks using Western weapons amounted to a direct military intervention, he claimed.

    The Pyongyang visit by the Russian defense chief comes as Seoul’s Minister of National Defense Kim Yong-hyun confirmed South Korean agents were in Ukraine for monitoring activities.

    The South Korean defense minister added none of the agents in Ukraine were members of the military.

    The National Intelligence Service said it was unable to confirm the presence of South Korean agents in Ukraine suggested by the minister.

    ___

    (c) 2024 the Asia News Network

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.




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  • Taiwan’s president begins first Pacific tour in Hawaii

    Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te arrived in Hawaii Saturday to begin his first trip overseas since his inauguration, and is expected to spend two nights at the Kahala Hotel before continuing on to visit the three Pacific island nations with which his country still has direct diplomatic ties.

    Upon arrival at Daniel K. Inouye International Airport, he was greeted on the tarmac by Gov. Josh Green, Mayor Rick Blangiardi, Honolulu Police Chief Arthur “Joe ” Logan and Ingrid Larson, the D.C. office managing director of the American Institute in Taiwan, the organization that serves as the unofficial U.S. embassy in Taiwan.

    Green in a statement called the meeting “a momentous occasion, ” highlighting Hawaii’s “shared values of resilience and collaboration with Taiwan.”

    After checking into the hotel, Lai visited the Bishop Museum and met with Green at the Hawaii Emergency Management Agency to discuss disaster response.

    “This exchange underscored our mutual dedication to building stronger, more resilient systems to protect lives in the face of natural disasters, ” Green said. “Taiwan’s commitment to learning from Hawai ‘i’s emergency operations framework reflects the global importance of collaboration in addressing shared challenges.”

    A Taiwanese official said Lai also visited the USS Arizona Memorial at Pearl Harbor before returning to Kahala for a banquet with local elected officials and prominent members of the Taiwanese community in Hawaii.

    In an address to banquet attendees, Lai reflected on visiting the memorial.

    “Peace is priceless, and war has no winner, ” he said. “We have to fight, fight together to prevent war.”

    The Chinese military has stepped up operations around Taiwan since Lai’s election. China regards the self-ruled island democracy as a rogue province, and Chinese leader Xi Jinping has vowed to bring it under control—by force if necessary.

    During the banquet, Hawaii officials thanked Lai for his country’s $500, 000 donation to Maui wildfire relief in the days after the Aug. 8, 2023, disaster that killed 102 people and displaced thousands.

    “Taiwan, our friends, were among the first not just to offer condolences and resources for support but to embrace all of our Maui ohana in each and every way possible, ” said U.S. Rep. Jill Tokuda. “At the same time you were doing this, China spread disinformation about the fires online to undermine our government and exploit our people’s fear and pain in their darkest moments. Taiwan on the other hand was there for us.”

    The American relationship with Taiwan has been an ongoing sore spot for relations between the U.S. and China.

    After the Chinese Civil War ended in 1949 with the defeat of nationalist leader Chiang Kai-shek, he and his supporters fled across the Taiwan Strait to set up a government-in-exile and imposed repressive martial law over the island. In 1987, martial law was lifted, and since then the island has democratized, developed a high-tech economy and become a key trade partner for the United States.

    Officially, the U.S. has not diplomatically recognized Taiwan since normalizing relations with the People’s Republic of China in 1979. But the Taiwan Relations Act of 1979 maintained de facto ties and requires the U.S. to provide Taiwan with weapons “of a defensive nature ” and “resist any resort to force or other forms of coercion that would jeopardize the security, or the social or economic system, of the people on Taiwan.”

    Hawaii plays a central role in the relationship.

    The islands have served as key transit points in arms transfers, with F-16 fighters stopping at the Honolulu airport on their way to Taiwan. In 2022, a Taiwanese F-16 fighter jet made international headlines when its landing gear failed as it landed and temporarily shut down the runway.

    But perhaps more importantly, Oahu is home to the U.S. Indo-Pacific Command, the nerve center for all U.S. military operations in the region.

    The Taiwanese government has maintained a detachment of military officers at the Taipei Economic &Cultural Office in Hono ­lulu, Taipei’s de facto consulate in the islands, who hold regular meetings with American officials and military attaches from other countries.

    Recent iterations of Congress’ annual National Defense Appropriations Act have included calls for increased cooperation, including inviting Taiwanese forces to participate in the biennial Rim of the Pacific naval war games held around Hawaii.

    Tokuda has visited Taiwan twice as a member of a bipartisan congressional delegations, most recently in August.

    “Let there be no ambiguity, ” Tokuda said at Saturday’s banquet in Kahala. “The United States must continue to stand by Taiwan, promote peace and stability and ensure that Taiwan’s future is decided only by its people.”

    The administration of outgoing President Joe Biden has voiced strong support for Taiwan and sought to bolster relations, but has also been working to ease tensions with China and reopen dialogues.

    In September, Gen. Wu Yanan, the Chinese military commander responsible for operations in the South China Sea, attended a meeting in Hawaii of top military leaders from across the region and met with Adm. Samuel Paparo, commander of all U.S. forces in the Pacific.

    Leaders across the world are still working out what the reelection of former President Donald Trump will mean for them, especially in Asia and the Pacific.

    Trump has been skeptical of the value of alliances, but has also been nominating several appointees to his incoming administration who have been sympathetic toward Taiwan. During his first presidency Trump was known for his confrontational approach to relations with China and has promised to impose new tariffs on Chinese goods when he returns to office Last month, U.S. officials announced a potential $2 billion arms sale package to Taiwan, including the delivery for the first time to the island of an advanced air defense missile system that has seen effective use on battlefields in Ukraine. Just before Lai’s departure from Taiwan for Hawaii, the U.S. announced a $385 million arms sale package for Taiwan of spare parts for F-16 jets and radars.

    Mao Ning, a spokesperson for China’s foreign ministry, told reporters in Beijing on Friday that if the U.S. wants to maintain peace it should “handle the Taiwan issue with utmost caution, unequivocally oppose independence of Taiwan, and support the peaceful reunification of China.”

    After leaving Hawaii, Lai is scheduled to visit the the Pacific nations of the Marshall Islands, Tuvalu and Palau. They are three of the 12 countries that still maintain direct diplomatic recognition of Taiwan. China does not have diplomatic relations with any country that officially recognizes Taiwanese independence and has been investing heavily in countries that agree to sever ties.

    In 2019, two Pacific island countries—Kiribati and the Solomon Islands—cut ties with Taiwan and opened Chinese embassies. Just after Lai won the Taiwanese election in January, Beijing announced that Nauru had agreed to sever its ties with Taipei to align with China.

    But despite many Pacific countries officially cutting diplomatic ties with Taiwan, several still maintain robust trade relations, and Taiwan still maintains a presence at the Pacific Islands Forum, the region’s main diplomatic gathering, as a “development partner.” China, which also participates in the forum, has called for the expulsion of Taiwanese officials.

    Lai is also due to stop in Guam, which is home to some of the U.S. forces closest to Taiwan and would likely become a front line if the U.S. were to intervene to stop a Chinese invasion.

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    (c) 2024 The Honolulu Star-Advertiser

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.




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  • Walmart worker goes in for an extra shift and walks out a millionaire

    Rebeca Gonzalez got the call no retail worker wants on a weekend they’re scheduled off — the store was short-staffed and her manager needed her to come in for a few hours.

    It would be a shift that would change Gonzalez’s life.

    Overwhelmed with customers during the Labor Day weekend, Gonzalez was unable to keep to her plan to buy a lottery scratcher on her lunch break, she told The Times in an interview. Instead, she bought it at the end of her shift after almost forgetting to purchase one in the first place.

    When she scratched it — it revealed she’d won $1 million.

    “I’ve only told one person at work, and it was the manager who wanted me to stay late on a holiday,” she said. “He couldn’t believe it.”

    Gonzalez had been purchasing Scratchers twice a month, and the most she’s ever won was $50.

    It’s a gamble that her dad had always taken and Gonzales started doing the same just for the thrill of the “what if.” She never dreamed she would win $1 million.

    And to think she almost didn’t buy a scratcher that day.

    “I wanted to, obviously, be home with my family because we planned to barbecue,” Gonzalez told the California Lottery.

    In fact, the only reason Gonzalez was motivated to buy a scratcher that particular day was because she found a $10 bill in her pocket, leftover change from a raspado, or shaved ice, that her daughter had purchased. After her find, she resolved to put it toward buying a scratcher during her lunch break.

    But with the store busy, she’d nearly forgotten her plan until she felt the $10 burning a hole in her pocket on the walk back to her car at the end of the night.

    She walked back into the store, purchased the Scratcher and started revealing the game spots, uncovering the $1 million prize.

    Before her win, Gonzalez’s life as a working mother was a grind that required getting up early to take her two children — who share a room — to school before going to work in the day and attending night classes at Mt. San Antonio College to become a radiologist.

    Now, the family has an offer in on a five-bedroom home, much of their debt is paid off and Gonzalez has put in her two weeks’ notice at work so she can focus on her schooling. It’s a far cry from her low-income upbringing, where the family struggled to make ends meet, she said.

    When she shared the news of her win with her family, Gonzalez said they cried.

    There’s a verification process a winner undergoes, and Gonzalez said she was told by California Lottery staff there’s a video recording of her jumping up and down in celebration outside the local liquor store where she verified her scratcher card.

    “I was doing that and looking up at the sky and thanking God, because this is a blessing,” she said.

    ___

    © 2024 Los Angeles Times

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.




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  • Russian warplanes bomb Aleppo rebels; Iran says consulate attacked

    This article was originally published by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty and is reprinted with permission.

    Russian warplanes have joined Syrian air forces to bomb Islamist-led rebels who had taken much of the northwestern city of Aleppo in the biggest challenge to President Bashar al-Assad’s rule in the battle-torn Middle East nation in several years.

    Iran, meanwhile, said on November 30 that the rebels had attacked its consulate in Aleppo, calling it “aggression by terrorist elements,” although it said there were no injuries and provided few details about the incident.

    The Russian and Iranian foreign ministers expressed support for longtime ally Syria, according to Iranian state media, which quoted Iran’s Abbas Araqchi as telling Russia’s Sergei Lavrov in a call that the attacks were part of an Israeli-U.S. plan to destabilize the region.

    The air strikes came a day after Islamists and their Turkish-backed allies breached Syria’s Aleppo in a surprise offensive against forces of the Assad government. Reports on the ground said the rebels had captured much of the city, although details remained sketchy.

    The Syrian military confirmed that rebels had entered Aleppo. It did not confirm the air attacks, but Russia’s Defense Ministry said its air force carried out strikes on the rebels.

    Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on November 29 that Russia regarded the rebels’ actions as a violation of Syria’s sovereignty.

    “We are in favor of the Syrian authorities bringing order to the area and restoring constitutional order as soon as possible,” he said.

    Reuters quoted two Syrian military sources as saying that Russian and Syrian warplanes had targeted rebel sites in an Aleppo suburb on November 30. The sources said the Kremlin has promised Syria extra military aid, expected to arrive within two to three days.

    The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a war monitor, said the fighters, led by the Islamist extremist Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) movement, took control of “half of the city of Aleppo,” forcing government forces to pull back.

    HTS in the past has had links to the Al-Qaeda and Islamic State (IS) extremist groups, although many leaders reportedly split off from those organizations. It was formerly known as Jabhat al-Nusrah and the Al-Nusrah Front, which was Al-Qaeda’s affiliate in Syria and has been deemed a terrorist organization by the UN and the United States.

    In May 2018, the U.S. State Department added HTS to the Al-Nusrah Front’s existing December 2012 designation as a foreign terrorist organization.

    The rebels’ offensive began on November 27, prompting the Syrian military to close all main roads in and out of the city.

    Rami Abdel Rahman, director of the Syrian Observatory, told RFE/RL’s Radio Farda that the armed rebels had been preparing for the operation since September, but Turkey had so far prevented it from taking place.

    The Aleppo violence breaks a pause in the Syrian civil war, which has been mainly quiet over the past four years.

    The conflict involved the Assad government backed by Moscow and Tehran against Syrian-Kurdish rebels supported by the United States, while Turkey aided separate rebel groups. The U.S. military still has a number of troops deployed in Kurdish-held areas of Syria.

    Terror organizations, including Islamic State, also were involved in fighting.

    Russia, Turkey, and Iran signed an agreement in 2019 to freeze the conflict at then current positions.

    The Syrian Observatory said at least 16 civilians were killed on November 30 when an air strike, likely carried out by Russian warplanes, hit Aleppo. It said the attack “targeted civilian vehicles” at an intersection, leaving an additional 20 people wounded.

    This incident brings the total number of fatalities in the city over the past four days to 327.

    The British-based observatory compiles its information from battlefield sources and has been influential throughout the Syrian civil war.

    Syria’s army command acknowledged that rebels had entered Aleppo. Rebels had previously controlled the city before being driven out by Russia-backed forces eight years ago.

    “The large numbers of terrorists and the multiplicity of battlefronts prompted our armed forces to carry out a redeployment operation aimed at strengthening the defense lines in order to absorb the attack, preserve the lives of civilians and soldiers, and prepare for a counterattack,” the Syrian Army said.

    The fighting comes amid fears of a wider war in the Middle East.

    Israeli forces in Gaza are battling extremists from Hamas – deemed a terrorist organization by the United States and the EU – and a cease-fire hangs in the balance in Lebanon, where Israel has struck the leadership of Hezbollah, also designated a terrorist group by Washington. The EU blacklists Hezbollah’s military arm but not its political wing.

    Israeli attacks have also taken place against Iran-backed Huthi rebels in Yemen.




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  • South Korea paid nearly $10K to bring Massachusetts veterans services secretary to conference, documents show

    The South Korean government shelled out nearly $10,000 for Veterans Services Secretary Jon Santiago to stay at two five-star hotels and travel roundtrip in business class to the country for a conference last month on veterans affairs, according to documents reviewed by the Herald.

    The Healey administration pitched the trip as a way to showcase the state’s first-ever cabinet-level office dedicated to veterans services led by Santiago, a major in the Army Reserve and an emergency room doctor at Boston Medical Center.

    The new office apparently caught the eye of South Korean Minister of Patriots and Veterans Affairs Kang Jung-ai, who invited Santiago as the only representative of a state-level veterans department to attend the 2024 International Conference on Veterans Affairs alongside delegates from 10 other countries, according to documents detailing the trip.

    An ethics disclosure form signed by Santiago shows the South Korean government paid an estimated $9,620 — including $8,000 for airfare, $1,500 for lodging, and $120 for meals — to bring Santiago to the country.

    Assistant Secretary for Engagement and Outreach Cory Ahonen also traveled with Santiago but his ethics disclosure form does not detail how much the South Korean government paid for him to travel and stay in the country, according to the version reviewed by the Herald.

    A spokesperson for the Executive Office of Veterans Services said Ahonen’s travel expenses likely came in lower than what South Korea spent on Santiago, but because Massachusetts officials did not directly book the flights or hotels the costs are only an estimate.

    The spokesperson, Jacqueline Manning, said the trip came at no cost to the Executive Office of Veterans Services or Massachusetts taxpayers and Santiago was “honored to represent Massachusetts and the United States on the global stage.”

    “Invited by the Republic of Korea and the Ministry of Patriots and Veterans Affairs, he was the only state-level representative at the conference, a distinction that recognized the transformative reforms in veterans services achieved by the Healey-Driscoll administration,” Manning said in a statement.

    Like other dignitaries invited to the conference, Santiago was offered premium lodging and airfare options, which he took advantage of, according to a memorandum of understanding drawn up by South Korea’s Ministry of Patriots and Veterans Affairs.

    The South Korean government booked rooms for Santiago and Ahonen at two five-star hotels — the Signiel Busan in Busan and Sofitel Ambassador Seoul Hotel in Seoul, according to the travel documents.

    Santiago stayed in a “premier double” room in Busan and a “luxury lake” room in Seoul, the memorandum of understanding said.

    The Sofitel Ambassador Seoul Hotel describes its rooms as having “an opulent gold and glass bathroom that has to be seen to be believed.”

    “Panoramic lake views or sparkling city views. Whether you choose one of our chic rooms or suites, we invite you to unwind with best-in-class hospitality,” the hotel’s website said.

    The Signiel Busan said it offers “signature elegance … delivered at a new level of value never been seen in Busan,” according to its website.

    The former lawmaker from Boston’s South End also received a “round-trip e-ticket in business class” while Ahonen flew in “economy class” and stayed in lower-tier rooms at both hotels, according to travel documents.

    Santiago, alongside all the other dignitaries invited to the conference, had the option to stay in lower-tier rooms at both hotels and fly in economy like Ahonen but instead chose the higher-class accommodations, the Executive Office of Veterans Affairs confirmed.

    In his ethics disclosure form, Santiago said the conference presented an opportunity to share the work Massachusetts is doing to care for veterans and “learn from other nations and veterans specialists on the best practices for the care of veterans.”

    “I will learn from experts on other ways to ensure veterans receive benefits which will have a positive impact on their lives and reintegration into civilian life,” he wrote in the form.

    The trip was initially scheduled to run from Nov. 10 through Nov. 14 but Santiago extended his stay until Nov. 22 to take a personal vacation in the country, according to an itinerary of the event and travel documents.

    Santiago and Ahonen attended an annual event at the United Nations Memorial Cemetery in South Korea on Nov. 11 before heading to the International Conference on Veterans Affairs, which took place in both Busan and Seoul and started on Nov. 13, according to Manning.

    During the conference, Santiago spoke about “the importance of collaborative international support for veterans” immediately following a keynote address from Jung-ai, according to his office.

    He also presented alongside Ahonen on the Executive Office of Veterans Services and the “comprehensive reforms in Massachusetts veterans’ services” alongside Ahonen, his office said.

    Gov. Maura Healey touted the trip at the end of October, saying in a statement that Massachusetts was “setting a new standard in veterans’ care, driven by our commitment to transform services and restore trust.”

    “Secretary Santiago’s leadership exemplifies the values of our administration — innovation and compassion — and his presence at this international conference is a testament to the progress we’re making together. We’re incredibly proud to see Massachusetts represented on the global stage,” Healey said.

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  • Russia accidentally shot Azerbaijan Airlines plane, Azeri leader says

    Russia shot at an Azerbaijan Airlines passenger plane “by accident” on Dec. 25, leading to the aircraft’s fatal crash, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev told state TV on Sunday, calling on Moscow to take responsibility for the incident.

    Aliyev spoke to AZTV a day after he had a phone call with Russian President Vladimir Putin, who apologized for the incident without specifically saying that Russia had been at fault. The pair spoke again on Sunday about “various issues related to the crash,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told Interfax. No further details were provided.

    “Part of the fuselage didn’t burn, thanks to which today we can say openly that the plane was shot by Russia,” Aliyev told AZTV. “We aren’t saying that it was done intentionally, but it was done.”

    The Embraer SA 190, which had been en route from Baku to Grozny, crashed about 3 kilometers (1.9 miles) from Aktau, Kazakhstan, after flying hundreds of kilometers over the Caspian Sea in its damaged state. Thirty-eight people were killed while 29 survived, some with serious injuries.

    Azerbaijan Airlines said on Thursday that the crash of its plane was caused by “external interference,” and Aliyev previously referenced numerous holes in the plane’s hull as well as statements from survivors.

    Putin on Saturday told Aliyev that as the plane was trying to land, Grozny, Mozdok and Vladikavkaz were under fire from Ukrainian combat drones, and that Russian air defenses were repelling these attacks, according to a Kremlin readout.

    Azerbaijan’s government backed Caliber news website reported on Thursday that the aircraft had been damaged by Russian air defense while approaching Grozny.

    While Russia has apologized, it also needs to acknowledge its fault, punish those guilty, and pay compensation to the Azerbaijani state as well as the passengers and crew members compensation, Aliyev said on Sunday.

    The crisis created by the incident risks damaging the relationship between Russia and Azerbaijan, which are strategic partners. Aliyev, president of the former Soviet republic since 2003, is on good terms with Putin and frequently visits him in Moscow. Putin is a welcome guest in Azerbaijan, a close ally of NATO-member Turkey.

    Azerbaijan demanded an independent investigation as some circles in Russia attempted to cover up the incident with “nonsense” explanations, such as a bird strike or a possible explosion of an oxygen canister inside the plane, the Azeri president said.

    “It openly showed that the Russian side wants to hush up the issue, and this, of course, reflects no honor on anyone,” he added.

    On Saturday Aliyev said that a team of international experts had been assembled to investigate the causes of the crash.

    Russia has launched a criminal probe into the incident along with the Azerbaijani prosecutor general’s office, and ballistic and explosive examinations have started in Kazakhstan, the doomed plane’s final resting place.

    Aliyev signed a decree on Sunday, posthumously decorating both of the plane’s pilots and one flight attendant with the country’s highest title, National Hero of Azerbaijan.

    The passengers and crew members killed in the crash were buried in Baku on Sunday, and the president attended a farewell ceremony at Baku’s main airport.

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