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  • Shane MacGowan, poetic, hard-charging frontman of The Pogues, dies at 65 | Music News

    Shane MacGowan, poetic, hard-charging frontman of The Pogues, dies at 65 | Music News

    Shane MacGowan, poetic, hard-charging frontman of The Pogues, dies at 65 | Music News

    MacGowan won fame for incorporating traditional Irish ballads into Britain’s punk scene in the 1980s and 90s.

    Shane MacGowan, who galvanised Britain’s punk scene with his incorporation of Irish traditional ballads into that genre in the late 1980s, has died at 65.

    MacGowan’s wife Victoria Mary Clarke released a statement announcing his death on Thursday, saying that The Pogues frontman, famous for haunting lyrics and his turbulent relationship with addiction, had died peacefully, surrounded by his loved ones.

    “Thank you for your presence in this world, you made it so very bright and you gave so much joy to so many people with your heart and soul and your music,” Clarke said in an Instagram post, also saying that MacGowan had gone to join “Jesus and Mary, and his beautiful mother Therese”.

    Born in the British county of Kent to Irish parents on Christmas Day in 1957, MacGowan was shaped by summers in the Irish countryside and was known for his innovative use of Irish traditional themes in punk music.

    He won fame for songs like A Pair of Brown Eyes and his bittersweet, expletive-strewn 1987 Christmas anthem Fairytale of New York, before being ejected from The Pogues in 1991 as he struggled with substance abuse that sometimes led to erratic behaviour.

    “So many of his songs would be perfectly crafted poems, if that would not have deprived us of the opportunity to hear him sing them,” Irish President Michael Higgins, who is also a poet, said in a statement.

    “His words have connected Irish people all over the globe to their culture and history, encompassing so many human emotions in the most poetic of ways.”

    Other icons of Britain’s tempestuous punk scene, which raged against the UK’s Thatcherite turn in the late 1970s, also praised MacGowan as a visionary artist.

    Joe Strummer, the punk singer-songwriter who led The Clash and later played with The Pogues and briefly replaced MacGowan, called him “one of the finest writers of the century”.

    Shane MacGowan poses for photographers at an exhibition in London, England, on October 11, 2022 [File: Scott Garfitt/Invision via AP]

    While MacGowan embodied the hard-charging image of Britain’s punk scene — with irreverent songs, missing teeth, and an ear that was allegedly bitten off at a Clash show — his lyrics were noted for their prose and affiliation with the downtrodden.

    “He has a very natural, unadorned, crystalline way with language,” Australian punk singer Nick Cave said of MacGowan, a close friend. “There is a compassion in his words that is always tender, often brutal, and completely his own.”

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    Shane MacGowan, poetic, hard-charging frontman of The Pogues, dies at 65 | Music News

  • Russian court bans ‘LGBTQ movement’ as ‘extremist’ | LGBTQ News

    Russian court bans ‘LGBTQ movement’ as ‘extremist’ | LGBTQ News

    Russian court bans ‘LGBTQ movement’ as ‘extremist’ | LGBTQ News

    Russia’s Supreme Court has issued a ban on the activities of the ‘international LGBTQ movement’ in the latest crackdown on gay, lesbian and transgender rights in the country.

    Russia’s Supreme Court has ruled that LGBTQ activists should be designated as “extremists”, in a move that representatives of gay and transgender people fear will lead to arrests and prosecutions.

    The court ruled on Thursday that “the international LGBT public movement and its subdivisions” were extremist, and issued a “ban on its activities on the territory of Russia”.

    The move is the most drastic step in the decade-long crackdown on LGBTQ rights in Russia unleashed under President Vladimir Putin, who has put “traditional family values” at the cornerstone of his rule.

    The ruling, which the judge said would be effective immediately, did not specify whether certain individuals or organisations would be affected.

    The hearing took place behind closed doors and without any defence present, Russian media reported ahead of the verdict. Reporters were allowed in to hear the decision.

    The Supreme Court took about five hours to issue its ruling, after opening its session at 10am (07:00 GMT).

    Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters before the court decision was announced that the Kremlin was “not following” the case and had no comment on it.

    ‘New low point’

    “One day, it will be over but for now, we need to try to continue to live and save ourselves,” the Feminist Anti-War Resistance, which is critical of Russia’s war in Ukraine, said on social media in response to the verdict.

    Other NGOs, including transgender rights group “Center T”, said they would publish safety guidelines for members of the LGBTQ community.

    Its director, Yan Dvorkin, who fled Russia citing security concerns, called the legal proceeding a “new low point of insanity”.

    Moscow’s crackdown against liberal-leaning groups has intensified since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine last year, which has seen the LBGTQ community in the country face increasing curtailment of their rights.

    The Kremlin has since ramped up its rhetoric about protecting “traditional values” from what it called the West’s “degrading” influence.

    Dvorkin said he believed LGBTQ people were being used as scapegoats by Russian authorities.

    “They’re losing the war. This makes people very frustrated and dissatisfied with the government. It’s very easy to take that anger out on LGBTQ people.”

    In July, lawmakers banned medical intervention and administrative procedures outlawing gender reassignment.

    Lawmaker Pyotr Tolstoy said at the time that the measure was about “erecting a barrier to the penetration of Western anti-family ideology”.

    Last November, lawmakers also approved a bill banning all forms of LGBTQ “propaganda”, a move with far-reaching consequences for book publishing and film distribution.

    Out of 49 European countries, the Rainbow Europe organisation ranked Russia third from bottom in terms of tolerance of LGBTQ people.

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    Russian court bans ‘LGBTQ movement’ as ‘extremist’ | LGBTQ News

  • Climate disaster fund approved at UN’s COP28 climate summit | Climate News

    Climate disaster fund approved at UN’s COP28 climate summit | Climate News

    Climate disaster fund approved at UN’s COP28 climate summit | Climate News

    The United Nation’s annual climate summit is under way in Dubai, with world leaders approving a climate disaster fund that will help vulnerable nations cope with the impact of drought, floods and rising seawater.

    The agreement marked a “positive signal of momentum” at the start of the 2023 conference – known as COP28 – its host UAE’s Sultan al-Jaber said in the opening ceremony on Thursday.

    Al-Jaber, who is the UAE’s minister of industry and also heads the national oil company, is chairing the summit for its 28th meeting. His leading role has drawn backlash from critics who believe his oil ties should disqualify him from the climate post.

    In opening remarks, al-Jaber made the case that the world must “proactively engage” fossil fuel companies in phasing out emissions, pointing to progress by some national oil companies in adopting net-zero targets for 2050.

    “I am grateful that they have stepped up to join this game-changing journey,” al-Jaber said in opening remarks. “But, I must say, it is not enough, and I know that they can do much more.”

    The UN’s climate chief, Simon Stiell, gave a more stark assessment, saying there must be a “terminal decline” to the fossil fuel era if we want to stop “our own terminal decline”.

    People stand for a moment of silence for victims in Gaza during the COP28 opening in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, November 30 [Amr Alfiky/Reuters]

    Who is attending?

    With more than 70,000 attendees, the two-week-long affair is billed as the largest-ever climate gathering.

    Among tts expected attendees are dozens of world leaders, including the heads of state of France, Japan, the UK, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Jordan, and Brazil. Also represented are crowds of activists, lobbyists, and business leaders, including billionaire Bill Gates.

    However, the presidents of the world’s two biggest polluters — the US and China — are not attending.

    The summit comes at a pivotal time, with global emissions still climbing and 2023 projected to be the hottest year on record. Scientists warn the world must commit to accelerating climate action or risk the worst impacts of a warming planet.

    UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said leaders should aim for a complete “phaseout” of fossil fuels, a proposal opposed by some powerful nations that has dogged past negotiations.

    What are the goals?

    On Thursday, nations formally approved the launch of a “loss and damage” fund to compensate climate-vulnerable countries after a year of hard-fought negotiations over how it would work.

    Later in the summit attendees are due to review and calibrate the implementation of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change’s (UNFCC’s) terms, Paris Agreement, and Kyoto Protocol, a binding treaty agreed in 1997 for industrialised nations to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

    This year, UNFCC members will also face their first Global Stocktake (GST) – a scorecard analysing countries’ progress towards the Paris Agreement – so they can adapt their next climate action plans which are due in 2025.

    At the same time, host UAE aims to marshal an agreement on the tripling of renewable energy and doubling the annual rate of energy efficiency improvements by 2030.

    Rallying a common position on these points will be challenging, as COP requires all nations – whether dependent on oil, sinking beneath rising seas or locked in geopolitical rivalry – to act unanimously.

    Questions about the UAE’s role

    The UAE sees itself as a bridge between the rich developed nations most responsible for historic emissions and the rest of the world, which has contributed less to global warming but suffers its worst consequences.

    But the decision for it to host has attracted a firestorm of criticism, particularly as the man appointed to steer the talks, al-Jaber, is also head of UAE state oil giant ADNOC.

    Al-Jaber, who also chairs a clean energy company, has defended his record, and strenuously denied this week that he used the COP presidency to pursue new fossil fuel deals after allegations reported by the BBC.

    On Thursday, al-Jaber said the “role of fossil fuels” must be considered in any deal at the climate talks, saying “it is essential that no issue is left off the table”.

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    Climate disaster fund approved at UN’s COP28 climate summit | Climate News

  • Henry Kissinger: 10 conflicts, countries that define a blood-stained legacy | News

    Henry Kissinger: 10 conflicts, countries that define a blood-stained legacy | News

    Henry Kissinger: 10 conflicts, countries that define a blood-stained legacy | News

    To some, he was a titan of foreign policy, the Holocaust survivor who built a glittering career as the top diplomat of the United States and national security adviser during Presidents Richard Nixon’s and Gerald Ford’s administrations, leaving an enduring mark on history.

    But to others, Henry Kissinger was a war criminal, whose brutal exercise of realpolitik left a trail of blood around the world – an estimated 3 million bodies in far flung places from Argentina to East Timor.

    As the late British author and journalist Christopher Hitchens once wrote: “Henry Kissinger should have the door shut in his face by every decent person and should be shamed, ostracised, and excluded.”

    Here are 10 nations, regions and conflicts that Kissinger intervened in, leaving an often blood-stained legacy that in many cases still lives on.

    Vietnam

    Kissinger won a Nobel Peace Prize for negotiating a ceasefire in Vietnam in 1973. But that war might actually have ended four years earlier had he not enabled Nixon’s plan to “monkey wrench” President Lyndon B Johnson’s peace negotiations. In 1969, Nixon was elected president, and Kissinger was promoted to the role of national security adviser. The prolonged war cost the lives of millions of Vietnamese, Cambodians and Laotians.

    Cambodia

    Kissinger’s expansion of the war set the scene for the genocidal rule of the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia, which seized power from a US-backed military regime and went on to kill a fifth of the population – two million people. Cambodians had been driven into the hands of the communist movement by Kissinger and Nixon’s carpet-bombing campaign, which killed hundreds of thousands of people. To this day, people are still dying from unexploded US ordinance.

    Bangladesh

    In 1970, Bengali nationalists in what was then known as East Pakistan won elections. Fearing a loss of control, the military government in West Pakistan launched a murderous crackdown. Kissinger and Nixon stood staunchly behind the slaughter, choosing not to warn the generals to hold back. Motivated by Pakistan’s usefulness as a counterweight to China and to Soviet-leaning India, Kissinger was unmoved by the killing of 300,000 to three million people. Captured in a secret recording, he voiced disdain for people who “bleed” for “the dying Bengalis”.

    Chile

    Nixon and Kissinger disapproved of Salvador Allende, a self-proclaimed Marxist, who was democratically elected as Chile’s president in 1970. Over the ensuing three years, they invested millions of dollars into fomenting a coup. Then-CIA chief William Colby told a secret 1974 hearing of the Armed Services Special Subcommittee on Intelligence in the House of Representatives that the US government had spent $11m to “destabilise” Allende’s government. That included $1.5m that the CIA funnelled into Santiago newspaper El Mercurio, which was opposed to Allende. CIA operatives also forged links with the Chilean military. In 1973, General Augusto Pinochet came to power in a military coup. During his 17-year-long rule, more than 3,000 people were disappeared or killed, and tens of thousands of opponents were imprisoned. As Kissinger told Nixon: “We didn’t do it. I mean we helped them.” More than three decades after Pinochet was finally forced out of office, Chile is still grappling with the former dictator’s US-enabled legacy.

    Cyprus

    Home to Greek and Turkish populations, Cyprus had seen ethnic violence throughout the 1960s. In 1974, after a coup by Greece’s ruling military government, Turkish troops moved in. Kissinger effectively encouraged a crisis between the two NATO allies, advising newly installed President Ford to appease Turkey. “The Turkish tactics are right – grab what they want and then negotiate on the basis of possession,” he is reported to have said. Together, the Greek coup and the Turkish invasion resulted in thousands of casualties.

    East Timor

    In 1975, Kissinger greenlit President Suharto of Indonesia’s invasion of East Timor, a former Portuguese colony moving towards independence. During a visit to Jakarta, Kissinger and Ford told Suharto, a brutal dictator and close ally in the battle against communism, that they understood his reasons, advising him to get it over and done with quickly. The next day, Suharto moved in with his US-equipped army, killing 200,000 East Timorese.

    Israel

    When the October War in 1973 broke out when a coalition of Arab nations led by Egypt and Syria attacked Israel, Kissinger led the Nixon administration’s response. He pushed back against the Pentagon’s attempts to delay the shipment of arms to Israel, rushing through weapons that helped the Israeli army reverse early losses and reach within 100km (62 miles) of Cairo. A ceasefire followed. His shuttle diplomacy between Egypt, other Arab nations and Israel is often credited with paving the way for the eventual signing of the Camp David Accords in 1978. By then, Kissinger was out of office, but in 1981, he explained that at the heart of his diplomacy in the Middle East was a simple policy objective — to “isolate the Palestinians” from their Arab neighbours and friends.

    Argentina

    No longer in office after Jimmy Carter succeeded Ford as president in 1976, Kissinger continued to endorse murder, giving his seal of approval to the neo-fascist Argentinian military, which had overthrown the government of President Isabel Peron that same year. The military government waged a dirty war against leftists, branding dissidents as “terrorists”. During a visit to Argentina in 1978, Kissinger flattered dictator Jorge Rafael Videla, lauding him for his efforts in combatting “terrorism”. Videla would oversee the disappearance of up to 30,000 opponents. About 10,000 people died during the military’s rule, which lasted until 1983.

    Southern Africa

    During most of his time in the Nixon and Ford administrations, Kissinger didn’t appear to have given Africa much thought. But in 1976, as his time in office drew to a close, he visited South Africa, bestowing political legitimacy on the apartheid government shortly after the Soweto uprising, which saw Black schoolchildren and others gunned down by police. While he did force Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian Smith into accepting majority Black rule, he cleaved close to South Africa’s apartheid government in its support for Unita rebels fighting the Marxist-Leninist People’s Movement for the Liberation of Angola. That war lasted 27 years, one of the longest and most brutal of the past century.

    China

    Kissinger is often praised for brokering the US-China detente. After an initial visit to Beijing in 1972, he helped re-establish diplomatic ties in 1979. Chinese President Xi Jinping has described him as an “old friend”. However, the protesters who camped out at Tiananmen Square in 1989 remember him less fondly. In the immediate aftermath of the massacre – which killed anywhere between several hundred and several thousand people – he offered a glimpse of the cold, hard realpolitik that characterised his approach to diplomacy. The crackdown, he said, was “inevitable”. “No government in the world would have tolerated having the main square of its capital occupied for eight weeks by tens of thousands of demonstrators,” he said. China, he said, needed the US, and the US needed China.

     

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    Henry Kissinger: 10 conflicts, countries that define a blood-stained legacy | News

  • Conor McGregor accuses Irish authorities of making him a ‘scapegoat’ for Dublin riots | World News

    Conor McGregor accuses Irish authorities of making him a ‘scapegoat’ for Dublin riots | World News

    Conor McGregor accuses Irish authorities of making him a ‘scapegoat’ for Dublin riots | World News

    Conor McGregor accuses Irish authorities of making him a 'scapegoat' for Dublin riots | World News

    Conor McGregor has accused Irish authorities of making him a “scapegoat” for last week’s riots in Dublin.

    According to local media reports, gardai are investigating the MMA fighter’s posts for alleged incitement to hatred in relation to the riots in Dublin city centre.

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    1:00

    Dublin rioters were ‘radicalised’

    Gardai have not publicly confirmed whether he is under investigation – but told Sky News it was “aware of a large volume of commentary and posts on a variety of social media platforms and messaging apps by a number of different individual accounts”.

    It added it “is investigating such comments, posts and messages to identify any potential breaches of criminal legislation”.

    Posting on X on Wednesday, McGregor said: “Attempt to scapegoat me all you wish. If it makes you feel better, I will take it.

    “The truth of the many failed policies of this government however, will never stop being the reason we have innocent children in hospital on life support after being stabbed by a deranged criminal, and whose current conditions are being hid from the public.

    “Shame on government and those harbouring this and trying to avert from the causes of this. Shame!”

    What happened in Dublin?

    Riots broke out in Ireland’s capital Dublin, with “huge destruction by a riotous mob” leading to the arrests of 34 people, Irish police have said.

    The protest was triggered by a stabbing outside a primary school which has left a five-year-old schoolgirl in critical condition and a female teacher in her 30s in a very serious condition.

    Here’s everything we know about the attack, the riots and how the events unfolded.

    On 22 November, the former UFC champion posted on X: “Ireland, we are at war.”

    On the day of the riots, McGregor wrote a series of posts on X appearing to blame immigration for the incidents.

    “There is grave danger among us in Ireland that should never be here in the first place,” McGregor said. “Make change or make way. Ireland for the victory.”

    In a separate post he wrote: “You reap what you sow.”

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    1:59

    Hero nurse recalls Dublin stabbing

    The day after the riots, he posted: “I do not condone last nights riots. I do not condone any attacks on our first responders in their line of duty.

    “I do not condone looting and the damaging of shops. Last nights scenes achieved nothing toward fixing the issues we face.

    “I do understand frustrations however, and I do understand a move must be made to ensure the change we need is ushered in.”

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    0:11

    Tram set on fire during Dublin rioting

    Labour justice spokesperson Aodhan O Riordain, speaking in the Irish parliament this week, criticised McGregor over his statements about the riots in Dublin.

    He also told RTE News: “I think these tweets are incredibly irresponsible for someone who has 10 million followers on Twitter alone to be whipping up this level of poison and hate.

    “He knows what he is doing, he is not stupid and for him to say on Wednesday that ‘Ireland is at war’ to his following is incredibly irresponsible.”

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    2:28

    Ireland: Dubliners reflect on riots

    Read more:
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    ‘Like slow motion,’ says Filipino nurse who provided first aid

    After Taoiseach Leo Varadkar urged people to “try and avoid connecting crime with migration”, McGregor replied to a video of the politician’s comments on X, posting: “I do not connect crime with migration.

    “I connect crime to your governments many failed policies in protecting and securing the inhabitants of Ireland. There is a real lapse in national security.

    “We need a brand new task force founded to assess all entrants into Ireland. Our natives and our visitors will all benefit with this peace of mind. We need deportation of those here illegally or that have committed a crime here.”

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    Conor McGregor accuses Irish authorities of making him a ‘scapegoat’ for Dublin riots | World News