السيناتور الأمريكي مينينديز يطلب تأجيل محاكمته بشأن تلقي رشوة من الحكومة المصرية
السيناتور الأمريكي مينينديز يطلب تأجيل محاكمته بشأن تلقي رشوة من الحكومة المصرية
(CNN) — طلب السيناتور الأمريكي روبرت مينينديز، الخميس، من القاضي المشرف على القضية التي يواجه فيها اتهامات بتلقي الرشوة والتآمر للعمل كعميل أجنبي للحكومة المصرية، تأجيل المحاكمة لمدة شهرين لمنحه وقتا إضافيا للطعن في لائحة الاتهام.
وقال محامو مينينديز، في رسالة إلى القاضي، إن هناك حاجة لمزيد من الوقت لمراجعة البيانات التي سلمها المدعون، بما في ذلك أكثر من 20 أمر تفتيش، ولإجراء تحقيقاتهم الخاصة، والتي من المتوقع أن تشمل شهودا في مصر، وأضافوا أنهم سيطعنون في”دستورية التهمة غير…
للمرة الرابعة.. مجلس الأمن يؤجل التصويت على مشروع قرار بشأن وقف القتال في غزة
للمرة الرابعة.. مجلس الأمن يؤجل التصويت على مشروع قرار بشأن وقف القتال في غزة
(CNN) — قال مصدر دبلوماسي، لشبكة CNN، الخميس، إن مجلس الأمن الدولي أرجأ مرة أخرى التصويت على مشروع قرار يدعو إلى وقف القتال بين إسرائيل وحركة “حماس” وزيادة المساعدات الإنسانية لقطاع غزة.
وهذه هي المرة الرابعة التي يؤجل فيها المجلس التصويت حيث لا تزال المفاوضات جارية.
وكانت مصادر أشارت في وقت سابق إلى أن إحدى النقاط الشائكة الرئيسية لا تزال تدور حول اقتراح للأمم المتحدة بإنشاء آلية مراقبة للمساعدات التي تذهب إلى قطاع غزة.
ومن المتوقع أن يتم التصويت، الجمعة، على الرغم من أن…
مصادر توضح لـCNN الخلافات بين إسرائيل و"حماس" حول صفقة الرهائن الجديدة
مصادر توضح لـCNN الخلافات بين إسرائيل و"حماس" حول صفقة الرهائن الجديدة
(CNN) — قال مسؤول أمريكي، لشبكة CNN، إن الاقتراح الأخير الذي قدمته الحكومة الإسرائيلية لحركة “حماس” الذي يقضي بوقف الحرب لمدة أسبوع من أجل إعادة حوالي 35 رهينة محتجزين في غزة سيشمل بقية النساء المحتجزات لدى الحركة، بالإضافة إلى كبار السن والجرحى والمرضى.
وأضاف المسؤول أن هذه المجموعة تشمل الرجال المسنين الثلاثة ظهروا مؤخرا في فيديو نشرته “كتائب القسام”، الجناح العسكري لـ”حماس”، والذي يطالبون فيه بإطلاق سراحهم.
ولم تتمكن CNN من التحقق بشكل مستقل من متى أو مكان تصوير…
Embers of a dying fire: Surprise and relief as Iceland volcano simmers down | World News
Embers of a dying fire: Surprise and relief as Iceland volcano simmers down | World News
It’s eight in the morning and pitch dark as we climb into the Iceland coastguard helicopter. This far north, it won’t be light for hours.
The darkness may make the pilots’ jobs harder – relying on night vision helmets to navigate – but it helps the rest of us.
For as we approach the site of the eruption, all we can make out is faint orange smudges of light.
Image: The eruption has died down quicker than many expected
Just 72 hours ago we would have been flying over a two-mile-long curtain of fire: Lava being forced 40-50 metres into the air by a vast chamber of magma less than a kilometre below the surface.
Only a few hours before we took off, webcams showed a few cones of lava were still sputtering away in the darkness.
But it’s now like looking into the embers of a dying fire.
We come in for a precarious landing on a hilltop next to the lava field, guided by a spotlight to search for even ground.
Image: Dr Kristin Jonsdottir says it’s a ‘huge surprise’ the lava has stopped
The idea is to give seismologist Dr Kristin Jonsdottir, from Iceland‘s meteorological office, a more stable view of the lava – not that it changes what was obvious from the air.
“It’s a huge surprise the lava activity has stopped,” she tells me, as we peer down at the almost dark lava field.
The activity of the eruption has been slowing, but few expected it to stop so quickly given the initial surge of lava: at one point, equivalent to four times the flow of water down the Thames in London.
But it’s good news for the first responders and emergency planners who it now looks like will get a break for Christmas after all.
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Volcano produces stunning lava flows
It’s also some relief for the 4,000 evacuated residents of Grindavik, who were allowed back to their homes for a few hours today.
Huge cracks appeared in the town last month as rising magma lifted up the ground below. There were concerns it could be consumed by a river of lava.
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The eruption stopped a few kilometres away, sparing the town’s power plant and the hugely popular Blue Lagoon hydrothermal spa.
But there’s little prospect of residents being back in their home before Christmas.
Image: Evacuated resident Sigridur Jonasdottir is unsure if she’ll return to Grindavik
Some aren’t sure they even want to return. We met Sigridur Jonasdottir packing up her last remaining possessions.
“I don’t think I’ll come back,” she tells me.
After earthquake damage, seven weeks of evacuation, and the threat of rivers of fire running down the hill into town, she doesn’t believe she’ll be able to stay in her house – or sell it.
The volcano may go silent for centuries once again but for her the future is simply too uncertain.
Prague shooting: Footage shows people cowering on ledge of university building as police hunt gunman | World News
Prague shooting: Footage shows people cowering on ledge of university building as police hunt gunman | World News
Footage has emerged showing people hiding on the ledge of a university building amid a mass shooting in central Prague.
At least 15 people have been killed, according to Czech emergency services, while 24 others have been wounded, according to rescue services.
Police previously said the gunman – a 24-year-old student at the Faculty of Arts at Charles University in Prague – had been “eliminated”.
His body was found in the university’s philosophy building, according to officials.
Police said the gunman’s father was also found dead earlier today.
Officers are still sweeping the area, including the building’s balconies, for possible explosives.
Image: Police vehicles at the scene. Pic: AP Photo/Petr David Josek
The mass shooting is the deadliest in the Czech Republic in recent times – the last being in 2019, when seven people were killed by a gunman who later took his own life, in the Ostrava hospital attack.
Prague Mayor Bohuslav Svoboda told Czech television: “We always thought that this was a thing that did not concern us.
“Now it turns out that, unfortunately, our world is also changing and the problem of the individual shooter is emerging here as well.”
Image: A police officer secures the area following the shooting
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The incident took place in the area of Jan Palach Square, in the city’s Old Town district.
The area is home to The Philosophical Faculty of Charles University and the Academy of Arts, Architecture, and Design.
Klara, a student at the university, told local media that she was among those who police evacuated from the building.
“It was terribly scary,” she told iDnes.cz.
“There were a lot of policemen everywhere, who were shouting at us with submachine guns, telling us to run outside.”
Prague mayor Bohuslav Svoboda said both the Philosophical Faculty of Charles University and the Academy of Arts, Architecture and Design, had been evacuated during the shooting.