Tag: convoy

  • U.S. convoy fired on in Sudan, Blinken says

    U.S. convoy fired on in Sudan, Blinken says

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    During a call Tuesday morning, Blinken told Gen. Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, who leads Sudan’s military, and Gen. Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, the commander of the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces, that the attack was “totally unacceptable.”

    He also underscored the need for a ceasefire, and, following the call, the RSF issued a temporary ceasefire “to open safe paths for the passage of civilians,” the group wrote in a tweet.

    While the incident is under investigation, initial reports show that the RSF was responsible for the attack, the secretary of state said.

    When asked whether Americans in Sudan were safe, National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby told reporters Monday that all U.S. government personnel are accounted for and sheltering in place, refusing to provide further details.

    “We are staying in close touch with them right now, and we expect those communications to continue,” Kirby said. “But I don’t want to get ahead of where we are.”

    Blinken said he’s in contact with Americans on the ground in Sudan, refusing to elaborate other than saying that the U.S. “will continue to take every responsible measure to make sure that our people are safe and secure.”

    The U.S. has also been in “close coordination” with counterparts from the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia and the United Kingdom to deal with the deepening violence in Sudan, he said. The ultimate goal is to “put Sudan back on the track of talks, negotiations, again, to restore civilian-led government.”

    Alex Ward contributed to this report.



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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Atiq Ahmed’s convoy halts briefly in MP’s Shivpuri on way to Prayagraj

    Atiq Ahmed’s convoy halts briefly in MP’s Shivpuri on way to Prayagraj

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    Bhopal: The convoy of gangster-turned-politician Atiq Ahmed being escorted by the Uttar Pradesh police halted briefly in Shivpuri district of Madhya Pradesh on early Monday morning on its way to Prayagraj, a senior official said.

    The carcade entered MP from the Rajasthan border, he said.

    “The convoy halted briefly in Shivpuri district (more than 300 km from Bhopal) at around 8 AM. It will reach Jhansi, bordering Shivpuri district, in Uttar Pradesh soon,” the official said.

    The gangster is being taken to Prayagraj from Sabarmati central jail in Ahmedabad by the Uttar Pradesh police for a court case.

    On Sunday, a team of Uttar Pradesh police reached the Sabarmati jail and left the premises with Ahmed amid tight security at around 6 pm after completing the necessary formalities, officials had said.

    Ahmed, a former Samajwadi Party MP, has been lodged in the Sabarmati central jail since June 2019. He was shifted there following a Supreme Court after he was accused of orchestrating the kidnapping and assault on a real estate businessman Mohit Jaiswal while in prison in UP.

    He is named in more than 100 criminal cases, including the recent Umesh Pal murder case, police said.

    After stepping out of Sabarmati central jail, Ahmed on Sunday expressed fear that he might be murdered.

    “Hatya, hatya (murder, murder),” Ahmed had told reporters outside the prison while being whisked away in a police vehicle by security personnel

    BJP Lok Sabha MP Subrat Pathak had said he would not be surprised if mafia Atiq Ahmed’s vehicle overturns like that of gangster Vikas Dubey.

    Dubey was gunned down in July 2020 by the Special Task Force of Uttar Pradesh police shortly after a police SUV in which he was being brought to Kanpur from Ujjain in Madhya Pradesh overturned under mysterious circumstances on a highway. Police claimed that he had tried to flee.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Pak: Imran Khan’s convoy meets with accident en route Islamabad, says report

    Pak: Imran Khan’s convoy meets with accident en route Islamabad, says report

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    A car in former Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan’s escort was involved in an accident on his way to Islamabad for the hearing into the Toshakhana case.

    The hearing in Imran Khan’s Toshakhana case is slated to resume. Despite Pakistan government’s efforts, the former prime minister has escaped arrest thus far.

    Ahead of the hearing, Imran Khan tweeted, “It is now clear that, despite my having gotten bail in all my cases, the PDM govt intends to arrest me. Despite knowing their malafide intentions, I am proceeding to Islamabad & the court bec I believe in rule of law. But ill intent of this cabal of crooks shd be clear to all.”

    “It is also obvious now that the entire siege of Lahore was not about ensuring I appear before the court in a case but was intended to take me away to prison so that I am unable to lead our election campaign,” he said in another tweet.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Trudeau’s ‘Freedom Convoy’ shutdown was justified, inquiry rules

    Trudeau’s ‘Freedom Convoy’ shutdown was justified, inquiry rules

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    The commissioner highlighted lapses in policing, intelligence and federalism, as well as “the failure to anticipate such a moment and to properly manage the legitimate protests that emerged, especially the protest in Ottawa.”

    Trudeau said his government didn’t want to invoke the Emergencies Act a year ago, but the longer the protests dragged on, concerns about violence, potentially spurred by ideologically motivated violent extremism, grew.

    “It was unfortunate, it was undesirable, we didn’t want to do it,” he told reporters Friday afternoon on Parliament Hill. “But we’d gotten to a place where there was no other choice.”

    Rouleau’s government-friendly conclusion wasn’t a slam dunk.

    “I do not come to this conclusion easily, as I do not consider the factual basis for it to be overwhelming and I acknowledge that there is significant strength to the arguments against reaching it,” he wrote.

    Still, Rouleau agreed with the federal government’s arguments on most points of contention that arose during six weeks of public hearings.

    The government shielded the legal opinion that guided Cabinet’s decision to invoke by citing solicitor-client privilege. Lawyers who represented civil rights groups at the commission insisted Cabinet should waive that privilege and reveal that key legal guidance.

    Rouleau sided with the government. “I do not need to see the legal advice itself in order to accept the evidence that [Cabinet] believed their conclusion to be justified in law.”

    Convoy organizers have always maintained that protests were largely peaceful. Rouleau accepted that reports of “serious, widespread violence” never materialized at protest sites, and acknowledged violent acts “might have been avoided” without a declaration of emergency.

    “That it might have been avoided does not, however, make the decision wrong,” Rouleau countered, writing that “substantial grounds” supported Cabinet’s concern based on “compelling and credible” information.

    Trudeau’s Cabinet also took heat for its interpretation of a national security threat.

    At the height of the protests, the Canadian Security Intelligence Service did not conclude the protests posed a threat to the security of Canada, according to the threshold set out in the CSIS Act that guides the agency.

    Cabinet came to a different conclusion, even though the same definition of a national security threat appears in the Emergencies Act. CSIS director David Vigneault testified at the hearings that he agreed with Cabinet’s invocation of emergency powers.

    In his own testimony, Trudeau insisted the same definition appears in two places — but what matters most is “who is doing the interpretation, what inputs come in, and what is the purpose of it?”

    Rouleau agreed with the prime minister’s view. “Two different decision makers, each interpreting the same words in the context of different statutes, can reasonably come to different conclusions as to whether the threshold is met,” he wrote.

    The commissioner also agreed that most of the powers invoked were appropriate and effective, including most of the controversial measures that allowed financial institutions to freeze protesters’ assets.

    Trudeau said his government would respond to Rouleau’s report, and its 56 recommendations, within six months.

    Here are six takeaways from Rouleau’s landmark report:

    There were communication failures

    In a televised address ahead of the convoy’s arrival, Trudeau referenced a “small fringe minority,” comments that energized protesters, Rouleau says.

    Opposition Conservatives have accused the prime minister of using the pandemic to divide Canadians.

    On Friday, Trudeau expressed rare contrition. “I wish I had phrased it differently,” he said, reflecting on how protesters were a “small subset of people who were just hurting and worried and wanting to be heard.”

    Government leaders at all levels should have worked harder to acknowledge that most protesters were exercising their democratic rights, the report concludes.

    “Messaging by politicians, public officials and, to some extent, the media, should have been more balanced, and drawn a clearer distinction between those who were protesting peacefully and those who were not.”

    Ottawa’s police chief was scapegoated

    Although the inquiry spotlight was on Ottawa Police Chief Peter Sloly, Rouleau says it would be inconsistent with evidence to blame him alone for policing failures.

    “Some errors on Chief Sloly’s part were unduly enlarged by others to a degree that suggests scapegoating,” the report concludes. “He was rarely given the benefit of the doubt as to his intentions.”

    Sloly’s decision to resign during the occupation did remove an obstacle to resolution, Rouleau notes.

    Ontario was missing in action

    Ontario Premier Doug Ford and his government did not fully engage during the crisis, the report concludes. “Many witnesses saw the province as trying to avoid responsibility for responding to a crisis within its borders,” Rouleau writes.

    The justice notes that it was the blockade of the Ambassador Bridge in Windsor — “the single most important commercial land crossing in Canada” — that spurred the province to action. Only after a Feb. 9 conversation between Trudeau and Ford did collaboration “become the name of the game,” he says.

    Ford and his solicitor general, Sylvia Jones, refused to be interviewed by the Commission counsel.

    Asset freezing had pros and cons

    Rouleau concludes the emergency measures that allowed the assets of protesters to be frozen was an effective measure that helped to shorten their stay in Ottawa.

    “The absence of a delisting mechanism is more troubling,” Rouleau writes, criticizing the absence of one for sowing confusion among the financial institutions tasked with freezing the assets.

    “If one of the objectives of the freezing regime was to convince people to leave protests sites, the regime should have had a mechanism to unfreeze accounts once people complied,” he wrote.

    Rouleau called one aspect of the asset-freezing regime — the suspension of vehicle insurance — “inappropriate in principle.” Though it wasn’t enforced, the report raised alarm over its safety implications if protesters had their insurance suspended and were to get in an accident after leaving Ottawa in an uninsured vehicle.

    Concerns about American involvement were “reasonable”

    The protests found an audience in the United States willing to donate to the Canadian cause.

    Roughly 59 percent of the donors who gave money to the Freedom Convoy’s campaign on GiveSendGo, a Christian fundraising site, came from the United States, with 35 percent of the donations originating from Canada.

    Americans also joined from afar with interference campaigns to jam essential services.

    “Calls originating from the United States had flooded emergency 911 call centres in Ottawa,” Rouleau writes in his report. The situation came up during calls between Trudeau and President Joe Biden.

    “It was reasonable to consider that individuals would come to Canada to physically join the protests, and it was appropriate to take measures to prevent this.”

    Misinformation and disinformation played a complicated role

    The report says social media played a critical role in shaping the Freedom Convoy.

    “False beliefs that Covid-19 vaccines manipulate DNA, social media feeds rife with homophobic or racist content, and inaccurate reporting of important events all features in the evidence before me,” Rouleau writes. “Some views were outright conspiratorial.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Telangana: ABVP activists halt KTR’s convoy in Karimnagar, detained

    Telangana: ABVP activists halt KTR’s convoy in Karimnagar, detained

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    Hyderabad: ABVP (Akhil Bhartiya Vidya Parishad) students flagged a protest against Telangana IT minister K T Rama Rao on Tuesday at Karimnagar.

    KTR visited Karimnagar to inaugurate the Karimnagar circuit guest house built at a cost of 12 crores and the MLA camp office built at a cost of 3 crores in the Karimnagar district.

    ABVP students tried to stop KTR’s convoy and demanded to solve the issues that students are facing in the state. The police reached the spot and detained the workers.

    A few days back, The Congress student wing NSUI ( National Student’s Union of India) tried to stop the convoy of K T Rama Rao on Saturday at Nizamabad when he visited to inaugurate a few projects.

    The students waved the “Black flag” in front of the convoy in order to mark their protest against the government’s action towards neglecting the future of the students in the state.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Drones reportedly attack convoy in east Syria coming from Iraq

    Drones reportedly attack convoy in east Syria coming from Iraq

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    iraq syria 84472

    The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, an opposition war monitor, said the drones appear to have been from the U.S.-led coalition, adding that they targeted six refrigerated trucks. The group said there were casualties and ambulances rushed to the area.

    Another activist said the strike hit a convoy of trucks of Iran-backed militiamen. Omar Abu Layla, a Europe-based activist from Deir el-Zour who runs a group that monitors developments, tweeted that there was no immediate word on casualties.

    The pro-government Sham FM radio station also reported that six refrigerated trucks were hit.

    In Baghdad, an official with an Iran-backed militia confirmed there was a strike saying it only targeted one truck. He gave no word on casualties.

    The attack in eastern Syria came hours after bomb-carrying drones targeted an Iranian defense factory in the central city of Isfahan causing some damage at the plant.

    Last month, Israel’s military chief of staff strongly suggested that Israel was behind a strike on a truck convoy in Syria in November, giving a rare glimpse of Israel’s shadow war against Iran and its proxies across the region.

    Lt. Gen. Aviv Kochavi, who finished his military service earlier this month, said Israeli military and intelligence capabilities made it possible to strike specific targets that pose a threat.

    Israeli leaders have in the past acknowledged striking hundreds of targets in Syria and elsewhere in what it says is a campaign to thwart Iranian attempts to smuggle weapons to proxies like Lebanon’s Hezbollah militant group or to destroy weapons caches.

    The November strike hit tanker trucks carrying fuel and other trucks carrying weapons for the militias in Syria’s eastern province of Deir el-Zour, the Observatory reported at the time. It said at least 14 people, most of them militiamen, were killed in the strike.

    The strike, along the border with Iraq, targeted Iran-backed militiamen, Syrian opposition activists said at the time. Some of those killed in the attack were Iranian nationals, according to two paramilitary officers in Iraq.

    At the time, Israel declined to comment on the strike.

    Iran is a main backer of Syrian President Bashar Assad and has sent thousands of Iran-backed fighters to help Syrian troops during the country’s 11-year civil war. Both Iran and Assad’s government are also allied with Hezbollah, which has fought alongside Assad’s forces in the war.

    Israel consider Iran to be its chief enemy and has warned against what it views as its hostile activities in the region.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )