Monday, January 6, 2025

Six In The Morning Monday 6 January 2025

 

Trudeau to resign as prime minister after Liberal leadership race

PM asked Governor General to prorogue Parliament until March 24

Catharine TunneyDavid Cochrane · CBC News · 

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he plans to step down once the Liberal Party has chosen a successor, bringing his time leading the country to a tumultuous end. 

Trudeau, who became Liberal leader in 2013 and prime minister in the fall of 2015, announced his long-awaited decision outside his official residence, Rideau Cottage, on Monday morning.

Trudeau also said he asked Gov. Gen. Mary Simon to prorogue Parliament until March 24, and she granted the request.

The father of three said he told his children that he intended to leave the country's top job over dinner Sunday night.

What is human metapneumovirus, are cases surging in China, and should we be worried?

Surging HMPV cases in northern China have prompted some online alarm but experts say the risk of another Covid-like pandemic is low

 in Taipei
Mon 6 Jan 2025 06.47 GMT

Human metapneumovirus (HMPV) is a respiratory disease that causes flu or cold-like symptoms, but can increase risks or lead to more serious complications like bronchitis or pneumonia, particularly among the elderly, young children, and immunocompromised people.

The disease is in the same family as respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), and has been around since at least 2001 when it was first identified in the Netherlands. Its outbreaks are concentrated during colder seasons.


Austria's far-right Freedom Party asked to form government

FPÖ leader Herbert Kickl formally received a mandate to form a new government, after coalition talks between centrist parties had collapsed.

Austrian President Alexander Van der Bellen on Monday tasked Herbert Kickl, the leader of the far-right Freedom Party of Austria (FPÖ), with the formation of a new government.

Van der Bellen's offer came after Chancellor Karl Nehammer handed in his resignation on Saturday over the collapse of coalition talks that had excluded the FPÖ.


France's Charlie Hebdo unveils special edition marking 10 years since deadly attack

France's Charlie Hebdo newspaper on Monday revealed a special edition to mark 10 years since the shooting that killed 12 of its staff. In January 2015, two French-born brothers of Algerian descent staged an attack at the satirical  newspaper’s office in Paris over a depiction of the Prophet Mohammed.  

French satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo unveiled a special edition Monday to mark 10 years since an attack on its offices by Islamist gunmen that decimated its staff.

The front-page features a cartoon celebrating the atheist paper's existence with the caption "Indestructible!", while four inside pages show the results of a caricature contest to mock God and religious leaders.

Palestinian Authority shuts down several Al Jazeera digital platforms

The decision came after the PA closed Al Jazeera’s office in the occupied West Bank, temporarily suspending its work.

The Magistrate Court of Ramallah in the occupied West Bank has ordered the closure of several Al Jazeera websites for four months, a court document shows – the latest restriction by the Palestinian Authority (PA) on the network.

In a letter dated Sunday, the Attorney General’s Office demanded the Palestinian Ministry of Communication implement the court’s decision by shutting down aljazeera.net, aljazeera.net/live, aljazeera360.com and global.ajplus.net


S Korea's impeached president defiant as arrest deadline passes

Jean Mackenzie and Koh Ewe

BBC News
Reporting fromSeoul and Singapore

South Korea's suspended president Yoon Suk Yeol remains defiant in his newly-fortified residence, as investigators seek to extend the arrest warrant over his short-lived martial law order.

The current warrant - which was due to expire at midnight local time (15:00 GMT) - was issued after Yoon ignored multiple summonses to appear for questioning on insurrection and abuse of power charges.


Anti-corruption investigators tried to carry out the arrest on Friday - only to call it off after a six-hour standoff with the presidential security service at Yoon's residence.



Sunday, January 5, 2025

Late Night Music: DUB TECHNO 2024 // LONELY CITY

How can world powers stop Israel from attacking Gaza's medical facilities?


The United Nations says the health system in Gaza is on the verge of total collapse amid relentless Israeli attacks.

The United Nations says only 16 of the 36 hospitals in Gaza are functional, and even those are only able to offer partial services.

The UN has verified more than 650 Israeli attacks on medical facilities since the Israel-Palestine conflict began in October 2023, and at least 1,054 health workers have been killed.

Six In The Morning Sunday 5 January 2025

 

Kyiv launches fresh Kursk offensive

A new Ukrainian operation appears to be underway in Russia's region of Kursk. Kyiv's forces seeking to take control of a road to the regional capital.

Kyiv says Ukrainian forces have started a new offensive in the western Russian region of Kursk after their surprise incursion into the territory in August.

"Kursk region, good news: Russia is getting what it deserves," the head of the Ukrainian presidential office, Andriy Yermak, wrote on Telegram. 

His comments appeared to confirm reports by military bloggers that the new advance in Kursk was taking place.

Social order in Gaza will collapse if Israel ends cooperation with UN aid agency, official says

Unrwa senior officer describes 60,000 people sheltering in school buildings sharing 12 bathrooms, but says without aid things will get worse

 Diplomatic editor
Sun 5 Jan 2025 15.46 GMT


Social order in Gaza is likely to collapse further if Israel goes ahead with its threat this month to end all cooperation with the UN refugee agency for Palestinians, Louise Wateridge, its senior emergency officer, has warned.

Wateridge – who has just returned from Gaza – described the territory as increasingly fractured and said the two Knesset bills due to come into force at the end of the month blocking cooperation with the agency will make it impossible for Unrwa to operate or to distribute aid in a war zone.

“If we’re no longer able to communicate to the Israeli authorities, we no longer have a deconfliction process in place, so none of our buildings will be de-conflicted or protected any more, and we simply won’t be able to be there,” she said.


We Know Where You ParkedMassive Data Breach at VW Raises Questions about Vehicle Privacy

Already facing significant headwinds, VW has now been hit by a data protection nightmare. Location data from 800,000 electric vehicles and contact info from owners was accessible unprotected on the internet. And the company didn't even know about it.


When Nadja Weippert began operating her brand-new VW ID.3 last September, she immediately downloaded the Volkswagen app. It allows drivers to preheat their cars, see the battery level and check the remaining range. The app is necessary to take advantage of all of the car’s amenities.

The 41-year-old likely took a closer look at the app’s data protection provisions than many others. After all, she isn’t just a Green Party member of the Lower Saxony state parliament, she is also her group’s spokesperson for data protection issues. Beyond that, she is also mayor of Tostedt, a community between Hamburg and Bremen.


South Korean protesters face off in snowstorm over fate of impeached president

Thousands of South Koreans on Sunday braved heavy snow to rally for or against the country’s impeached leader Yoon Suk Yeol, who is resisting arrest over his botched attempt to declare martial law. A warrant for his detenton expires on Monday.

Thousands of South Koreans braved a snowstorm Sunday to rally in support or opposition of President Yoon Suk Yeol, suspended over a failed martial law bid and resisting arrest a day before the warrant expires.

Yoon plunged the country into political chaos last month with the bungled martial law declaration and has since holed up in the presidential residence, surrounded by hundreds of loyal security officers.

An attempt to arrest him by investigators Friday failed when a tense six-hour standoff with his presidential security service ended over security fears, with his supporters also camped outside.

Eighth Gaza baby freezes to death as Israel kills 88 people in a day

  • Israeli forces have killed at least 88 Palestinians in a day across Gaza. They bombed the enclave more than 100 times in just three days, killing more than 200 Palestinians, with women and children making up a majority of the victims.
  • Meanwhile, another baby in Gaza has died of hypothermia – the eighth such death amid the Israeli genocide in the enclave.
  • US President Joe Biden proposes an $8bn arms sale for Israel, just two weeks before leaving office, ignoring widespread criticism over the mounting death toll in Gaza.
  • Israel’s Defense Minister Israel Katz confirms that indirect negotiations with Hamas have resumed in Qatar for the return of captives held in Gaza.
  • Israel’s war on Gaza has killed at least 45,805 Palestinians and wounded 109,064 since October 7, 2023. At least 1,139 people were killed in Israel during the Hamas-led attacks that day and more than 200 were taken captive.

Biden's decision to block Nippon Steel takeover creates uncertainty for U.S. Steel workers

By PAUL WISEMAN and MARC LEVY

By blocking a Japanese company’s takeover of U.S. Steel, President Joe Biden said he was protecting good jobs in the American heartland. He may be putting them at risk instead.

In making its nearly $15 billion bid for the storied Pittsburgh-based steelmaker, Nippon Steel had promised to invest $2.7 billion in U.S. Steel’s aging blast furnace operations in Gary, Indiana, and Pennsylvania’s Mon Valley. It also vowed not to reduce production capacity in the United States over the next decade without first getting U.S. government approval.

“They were going to invest in the Valley,’’ said Jason Zugai, an operating technician and vice president of the United Steelworkers union local at a U.S. Steel plant in the Mon Valley. “They committed to 10 years of no layoffs. We won’t have those commitments from anybody.’’





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