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  • الكويت.. القبض على شخص "تطاول وأساء للقيادة السياسية" في مقاطع فيديو

    الكويت.. القبض على شخص "تطاول وأساء للقيادة السياسية" في مقاطع فيديو

    الكويت.. القبض على شخص "تطاول وأساء للقيادة السياسية" في مقاطع فيديو

    الكويت.. القبض على شخص "تطاول وأساء للقيادة السياسية" في مقاطع فيديو

    دبي، الإمارات العربية المتحدة (CNN) – أعلنت وزارة الداخلية الكويتية ضبط شخص ظهر في مقاطع فيديو تم نشرها على وسائل التواصل الاجتماعي وتضمنت “تطاولا وإساءة للقيادة السياسية” في البلاد، مساء الأحد.

    ونشرت الداخلية الكويتية بيانا نقلا عن الإعلام الأمني جاء فيه: “رصدت الأجهزة الأمنية المختصة، حسابا قام بنشر عدة مقاطع فيديو تم تداولها في بعض مواقع التواصل الاجتماعي وتتضمن قيام أحد الأشخاص بالتطاول والإساءة للقيادة السياسية مما يعد جريمة وفقاً لقانون أمن الدولة الداخلي”.

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    الكويت.. القبض على شخص "تطاول وأساء للقيادة السياسية" في مقاطع فيديو

  • تعليق الحفلات الغنائية حدادا على أمير الكويت.. تفاعل على قرار موسم الرياض

    تعليق الحفلات الغنائية حدادا على أمير الكويت.. تفاعل على قرار موسم الرياض

    تعليق الحفلات الغنائية حدادا على أمير الكويت.. تفاعل على قرار موسم الرياض

    تعليق الحفلات الغنائية حدادا على أمير الكويت.. تفاعل على قرار موسم الرياض

    دبي، الإمارات العربية المتحدة (CNN) – تفاعل مستخدمو منصة “إكس”، تويتر سابقا، مع خبر إعلان “موسم الرياض” تعليق الحفلات الغنائية لمدة 3 أيام حدادا على رحيل أمير الكويت، الشيخ نواف الأحمد الجابر الصباح، مساء الأحد.

    وكتب الحساب الرسمي لموسم الرياض عبر “إكس”: “بناءً على التوجيه الكريم؛ نعلن عن تعليق الحفلات الغنائية ثلاثة أيام، نظرًا لوفاة سمو أمير الكويت الشيخ نواف الأحمد الجابر الصباح -رحمه الله”.

    وتفاعل مستخدمو “إكس” مع الخبر، إذ كتب أحدهم: “شكراً للمملكة العربية السعودية على…

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    تعليق الحفلات الغنائية حدادا على أمير الكويت.. تفاعل على قرار موسم الرياض

  • The billionaire demanding slavery reparations from Britain | World News

    The billionaire demanding slavery reparations from Britain | World News

    The billionaire demanding slavery reparations from Britain | World News

    The billionaire demanding slavery reparations from Britain | World News

    Denis O’Brien is one of Ireland’s richest men – thanks to his international telecoms business, Digicel.

    He’s 65, white, a regular at Davos, apparently a friend of the Clintons, and a minority shareholder in Celtic FC.

    He’s also the perhaps unlikely middleman in the campaign to get Britain and the European Union to pay reparations to Caribbean nations for their role in the transatlantic slave trade.

    “It is the single biggest issue in the Caribbean for the entire population,” Mr O’Brien told Kamali Melbourne on the Sky News Daily podcast.

    Click to subscribe to the Sky News Daily wherever you get your podcasts

    It’s significant enough to Mr O’Brien that his campaign is funding a lobbyist on a salary of £50,000 to work with a Labour MP to get reparations paid, according to the Irish Independent.

    Mr O’Brien set up Digicel in 2001, with the company operating in 25 Caribbean and Central American countries, including Haiti, Jamaica, and Trinidad and Tobago, having previously owned other media and tech companies in Ireland.

    ‘A Holocaust that went on for 300 years’

    He’s demanding that Britain and other European governments pay reparations to Caribbean nations for their role in the transatlantic slave trade – which saw some 12.5 million captured people taken from Africa to the Americas and Europe over an almost 400-year period.

    “This was a Holocaust that went on for 300 years. Millions of people lost their lives. Nobody has ever apologised to these countries,” Mr O’Brien said.

    “I think the British government and the European Union cannot ignore this now because the Dutch government have already apologised. They’ve set aside 1 million. They’re the first country to apologise,” he continued.

    “The reason why Great Britain and many other countries that were involved in the chattel slave trade didn’t apologise is because they didn’t want to have a liability.”

    Reparatory justice

    Over his 25 years working in the region, he’s had many conversations about reparations. “The biggest thing on their minds is reparatory justice, because they feel that when these countries got their independence, the cupboards were bare.

    “People said, this money will be used by governments, and it will be corrupt, and they won’t use the money properly. Now, that is a form of racism in my mind because they’re being judgmental on the ability of these countries and these governments to properly use reparative justice money.”

    Mr O’Brien believes it is possible – but with collective support. “I think when we go and explain to the British public what this is all about and what we’re trying to achieve that opinion will change dramatically.

    “From our point of view, we have to rally public opinion here in the United Kingdom for us to be successful in achieving reparative justice.”

    Image:
    Denis O’Brien, at Communicorp’s HQ in Dublin, Ireland

    The call for reparations from nations in which chattel slavery operated is not new – intellectually it is as old as the end of the trade itself in the 19th century.

    Reparatory justice was given a framework in 2014 when Caribbean nations – collectively known as CARICOM – adopted a 10-point plan to laying out what is needed for the victims of transatlantic slavery, and their descendants.

    That plan includes a sincere formal apology by the governments of Europe, debt cancellation as well as calling for European governments to participate in the alleviation of illiteracy and health.

    Mr O’Brien founded the Repair Campaign, which seeks to push former colonial powers to acknowledge their role in the transatlantic trafficking of enslaved Africans.

    The organisation is working with researchers at the University of the West Indies and CARICOM to produce socioeconomic reparatory justice plans for 15 Caribbean countries.

    “We’re not asking for a cheque upfront for each country of compensation. We’re saying that should be paid out over 25 years. Then that money can be used as supplementary money in the budgets of each of these countries with a proper plan,” Mr O’Brien said.

    ‘I feel part of the Caribbean’

    When asked about why – as a billionaire who is white – he had taken on this campaign, Mr O’Brien said: “My ancestors didn’t benefit from slavery or economically in any way. I feel part of the Caribbean.

    “I have so many friendships all over the Caribbean. I don’t see just because I’m white, why I shouldn’t put a campaign together for reparatory justice.”

    Dr Angelique Nixon, from the University of the West Indies, said she was “all for” billionaires like Mr O’Brien campaigning for reparations, as long as “communities are at the heart of these decisions”.

    She spoke more to the Sky News Daily about the ongoing impact of the slave trade’s legacies on Caribbean communities, and remaining exploitation of islands through unsustainable tourism.

    ‘There is a clear line of money’

    “It’s so, so infuriating that programmes have spent the last 30 years telling Caribbean governments that they can’t invest in people. We have to invest in our people. We have to deal with the historical injustices of a lack of education and the lack of investment in our own societies, our own culture,” she said.

    “There have been so many studies on the legacies of British slave ownership, the monies that were paid out by British taxpayer dollars to British slave owners and plantation owners,” she said. “There is a clear line of money.

    “Those monies were invested in what has created the United Kingdom, what has continued to sustain British power. And so, there’s no longer this question of, oh, we can’t figure it out. We can absolutely figure it out.

    “The heart of reparations is that investment.”

    At a PMQs in April this year, Bell Ribeiro-Addy, a Labour MP and chair of the APPG on Afrikan Reparations, asked Rishi Sunak if he would offer “a full and meaningful apology for our country’s role in slavery and colonialism, and committing to reparatory justice”.

    “No,” was the prime minister’s response. “I think our focus should now be on doing, while of course understanding our history in all its parts and not running away from it, is making sure that we have a society that is inclusive and tolerant of people from all backgrounds,” he told the House of Commons.

    “That is something that we on the government benches are committed to doing and will continue to deliver, but trying to unpick our history is not the right way forward and is not something we will focus our energies on,” he added.

    Click to subscribe to the Sky News Daily wherever you get your podcasts

    Producer: Soila Apparicio
    Interviews producer and additional production: Melissa Tutesigensi-Charles
    Promotions producer: Jada-Kai Meosa John
    Editor: Philly Beaumont

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    The billionaire demanding slavery reparations from Britain | World News

  • Israel claims to have discovered biggest Hamas tunnel yet in Gaza | World News

    Israel claims to have discovered biggest Hamas tunnel yet in Gaza | World News

    Israel claims to have discovered biggest Hamas tunnel yet in Gaza | World News

    Israel claims to have discovered biggest Hamas tunnel yet in Gaza | World News

    Israeli forces battling Hamas claim to have uncovered the largest Hamas tunnel found in Gaza, designed to carry carloads of Hamas fighters up to the border with Israel.

    Neutralising the hundreds of kilometres of underground tunnels and bunkers in Gaza is among the aims of the Israeli offensive, launched after Hamas fighters went on a killing and kidnapping spree after entering Israeli territory on 7 October.

    Israel-Gaza war latest: Hostages killed by IDF used food to create SOS sign

    Among the sites Hamas overran in the attack was the Erez border crossing between Gaza and Israel.

    Just 100m south of the checkpoint, concealed in a sand dune, the Israeli military on Sunday showed reporters the exit point of what it called a flagship Hamas project.

    Image:
    Pic: IDF

    The tunnel ran down diagonally to a depth of 50m, where it expanded to 3m in height and width, and appeared equipped with ventilation and electricity systems.

    The Israel Defence Forces’ (IDF) chief military spokesman, Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari, put the full length of the tunnel at 4km – enough to reach into northern Gaza City, once the heart of Hamas governance and now a devastated combat zone.

    Image:
    Pic: IDF

    It was “the biggest tunnel we found in Gaza… meant to target the (Erez) crossing,” Rear Admiral Hagari said, without specifying whether it was used by Hamas for the 7 October attack.

    “Millions of dollars were invested in this tunnel. It took years to build this tunnel… Vehicles could drive through.”

    Hamas has not yet commented on the IDF’s claims.

    Generally, other tunnels shown to journalists by Hamas, or by the Israeli military after their discovery, have been narrow and low – designed for single-file movement of gunmen on foot.

    Image:
    Pic: IDF

    Read more:
    Netanyahu is openly defying US – and they want him gone
    Hostages holding white cloth when IDF shot them
    Israelis urge government ‘act now’ over hostages

    The latest tunnel shown by Rear Admiral Hagari had shafts plunging vertically downward that, he said, suggested it was part of a wider network.

    Rear Admiral Hagari also showed reporters a video of Mohammed Sinwar, brother of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar and himself a senior operative in the group, sitting in the passenger seat of a vehicle that he said was driving inside the tunnel.

    Image:
    A video released by the Israeli army claims to show Mohammed Sinwar, brother of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, travelling in a car through the tunnel

    On 29 October, Israel’s Ynet news site reported that troops killed several gunmen who attacked Erez after accessing the area from a tunnel.

    Rear Admiral Hagari’s office did not respond to a question about whether that referred to the tunnel he showed.

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    Israel claims to have discovered biggest Hamas tunnel yet in Gaza | World News

  • Former Vatican official Angelo Becciu jailed for five-and-a-half years over corruption scandal | World News

    Former Vatican official Angelo Becciu jailed for five-and-a-half years over corruption scandal | World News

    Former Vatican official Angelo Becciu jailed for five-and-a-half years over corruption scandal | World News

    Former Vatican official Angelo Becciu jailed for five-and-a-half years over corruption scandal | World News

    The pope’s former deputy secretary of state and nine others have been found guilty in the Vatican’s biggest financial corruption scandal.

    Cardinal Angelo Becciu was convicted of embezzlement on Saturday and sentenced to five-and-a-half years in prison.

    Becciu, the first cardinal prosecuted by the Vatican criminal court, was absolved of several other charges and nine other defendants received a combination of guilty verdicts and acquittals among the nearly 50 charges brought against them during a two-and-a-half-year trial.

    The charges against the defendants included embezzlement, corruption, abuse of office, fraud, witness tampering and extortion – with the trial revolving mostly around a luxury building in Chelsea.

    Becciu was the pope’s chief of staff, serving as a key diplomat between 2011 and 2018.

    His lawyer, Fabio Viglione, said he respected the sentence but would appeal against it.

    The two-year-long trial, led by jury president and former anti-mafia prosecutor Giuseppe Pignatone, centered on the management of the funds of the secretariat of state and the sale of a property on London’s Sloane Avenue paid for with donation funds.

    The former Harrods showroom was bought for €350m (£300m), while the real value was just €210m (£180m). The botched real estate deal defrauded the Vatican and caused a €140m loss (£120m).

    This landmark probe exposed the Vatican’s financial dysfunction and was considered an indication of Pope Francis’ desire to fix the money mismanagement.

    Read more:
    Pope postpones events to undergo lung inflammation treatment
    Pope calls for international regulation of artificial intelligence

    Image:
    Cardinal Angelo Becciu with the pope in 2021. Pic: AP

    Italian journalist Massimiliano Coccia, who first discovered the scandal which led Pope Francis to fire Becciu in 2020, told Sky News this is an unprecedented verdict in Vatican’s history.

    Becciu filed a defamation suit against Mr Coccia claiming that his ruined reputation has eliminated his chances of becoming pope.

    However, an Italian civil court recently rejected it. Becciu was then forced to pay Coccia’s legal costs.

    Becciu is also being probed for conspiracy to commit crime in relation to a social cooperative run by his brother in the cardinal’s native Sardinia.

    According to messages intercepted by Italy’s Guardia di Finanza police, Becciu told his family in a chat that Pope Francis wanted him dead days before this trial started.

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    Former Vatican official Angelo Becciu jailed for five-and-a-half years over corruption scandal | World News