Georgian court sentences former president Saakashvili to 9 more years in prison

Georgian court sentences former president Saakashvili to 9 more years in prison
Supporters of Georgia’s jailed former president Mikheil Saakashvili rally to demand his liberation in Tbilisi on July 4, 2023. (AFP file photo)
Short Url
Updated 1 min 31 sec ago
Follow

Georgian court sentences former president Saakashvili to 9 more years in prison

Georgian court sentences former president Saakashvili to 9 more years in prison
  • Mikheil Saakashvili, who was president from 2004 to 2013, was jailed for six years for abuse of power after he returned to Georgia in 2021
  • A deeply polarizing figure in Georgia today, Saakashvili rose to power on a tide of popular acclaim in the 2003 Rose Revolution

TBILISI: Former Georgian president Mikheil Saakashvili was sentenced on Wednesday to nine more years in prison after being found guilty of embezzlement, the Interpress news agency reported.
Saakashvili, who was president from 2004 to 2013, was jailed for six years for abuse of power after he returned to Georgia in 2021 after a spell abroad. He has spent much of that sentence in a prison hospital.
Georgian television showed scenes of commotion in the courtroom after the verdict was announced, with Saakashvili supporters calling the judge a “slave” of the present government.
A deeply polarizing figure in Georgia today, Saakashvili rose to power on a tide of popular acclaim in the 2003 Rose Revolution.
In power, he reorientated Georgia toward the West and embarked on an ambitious public sector reform program that delivered rapid improvements in the South Caucasus country of 3.7 million.
However, the latter part of his tenure was marked by authoritarianism, police brutality, and a disastrous 2008 war with Russia.
In 2012, his United National Movement party lost an election to a coalition headed by
Bidzina Ivanishvili, a billionaire businessman who remains Georgia’s de facto leader to this day.
After leaving office, Saakashvili moved to Ukraine, where he briefly served as governor of the southern Odesa region.
In 2021, he returned to Georgia, despite having been convicted in absentia of abuse of power. He was arrested and jailed on arrival.


US, Russia spy chiefs agree to hold regular contacts

Updated 13 sec ago
Follow

US, Russia spy chiefs agree to hold regular contacts

US, Russia spy chiefs agree to hold regular contacts
  • The call was the first such contact since US President Donald Trump assumed office vowing to end the three-year Ukraine conflict
Moscow: The heads of US and Russian spy agencies have have spoken by phone and agreed to keep up regular contacts to lower the temperature in US-Russia relations, news reports said on Wednesday.
In the first such contact in several years, CIA chief John Ratcliffe and the head of Russia’s external intelligence agency SVR Sergei Naryshkin spoke by phone on Tuesday, the state TASS agency said.
They “agreed on regular contact” between their agencies “in order to contribute to the international stability and security, as well as a decrease in confrontation in relations between Moscow and Washington.”
The call was the first such contact since US President Donald Trump assumed office vowing to end the three-year Ukraine conflict.
It took place on the same day that Ukraine backed a US proposal for a 30-day ceasefire and agreed to immediate negotiations with Russia in crunch talks in Saudi Arabia.
The last reported contacts between the heads of the CIA and SVR came in November 2022, when Naryshkin spoke with then CIA chief William Burns in Ankara.

EU to impose counter tariffs on $28 billion in US goods

EU to impose counter tariffs on $28 billion in US goods
Updated 29 min 30 sec ago
Follow

EU to impose counter tariffs on $28 billion in US goods

EU to impose counter tariffs on $28 billion in US goods
  • The European Commission will also put forward a new package of countermeasures on US goods by mid-April
  • The proposed target products include industrial and agricultural products such as steel and aluminum, textiles

The European Union will impose counter tariffs on $28 billion (€26 billion) worth of US goods from next month, the European Commission said on Wednesday, ramping up a global trade war in response to blanket US tariffs on steel and aluminum.
US President Donald Trump’s increased tariffs of 25 percent on all steel and aluminum imports took effect on Wednesday as prior exemptions, duty free quotas and product exclusions expired.
The European Commission said it will end the current suspension of tariffs on US products on April 1 and will also put forward a new package of countermeasures on US goods by mid-April.
The suspended tariffs apply to products ranging from boats to bourbon to motorbikes, and the EU said it would now start a two-week consultation to pick other product categories.
The new measures will target around €18 billion in goods, with the overall objective to ensure that the total value of the EU measures corresponds to the increased value of trade impacted by the new US tariffs, the EU said.
The proposed target products include industrial and agricultural products, such as steel and aluminum, textiles, home appliances, plastics, poultry, beef, eggs, dairy, sugar and vegetables.
“Our countermeasures will be introduced in two steps. Starting with 1 April and fully in place as of 13 April,” Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European Commission, said in a statement.
“We are ready to engage in meaningful dialogue. I have entrusted Trade Commissioner Maros Sefcovic to resume his talks to explore better solutions with the US,” von der Leyen added.


Thailand sacks senior cop over illicit gambling, fraud

Thailand sacks senior cop over illicit gambling, fraud
Updated 54 min 25 sec ago
Follow

Thailand sacks senior cop over illicit gambling, fraud

Thailand sacks senior cop over illicit gambling, fraud
  • Surachate Hakparn, who served as the kingdom’s deputy police chief, was formally dismissed on Tuesday
  • Widely known by his nickname ‘Big Joke,’ Surachate was snared in a series of raids in 2023

BANGKOK: Thailand has sacked one of its most high-profile police officers over his alleged involvement in illegal gambling and financial fraud.
Surachate Hakparn, who served as the kingdom’s deputy police chief, was formally dismissed on Tuesday, police said in a statement.
Surachate, widely known by his nickname “Big Joke,” was snared in a series of raids in 2023 targeting an illegal online gambling network dubbed “Betflix.”
He was charged with money laundering, which he has denied, and suspended from the force while an investigation was under way.
Thai police said on Tuesday his dismissal was in line with “disciplinary procedures for officers under investigation.”
Most forms of betting are illegal in Thailand, with authorities striving to shut down illicit gambling dens and websites, which are often foreign-owned.
Long-serving Surachate has been linked to powerful figures in the previous army-aligned government.
He was appointed by then-deputy prime minister Prawit Wongsuwan as chief of the Immigration Bureau in September 2018.
He disappeared in 2019 over unclear reasons, before then-prime minister Prayut Chan-o-Cha made him a special adviser on strategy to police in 2021.
Surachate has 30 days to appeal against his dismissal.
“He has the right to fight the case and appeal,” Aek Angsananont, a former deputy police chief and now a member of the national police committee, told public broadcaster Thai PBS.
Surachate’s sacking comes days after the death of ex-policeman Thitisan Utthanaphon, nicknamed “Joe Ferrari” for his taste in flash cars, who was serving life in jail for the murder of a suspect during a brutal interrogation.
Last month, Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra urged the Royal Thai police to step up efforts to combat human trafficking and drug-related crimes.


155 hostages freed, 27 militants killed in Pakistan train siege: security sources

155 hostages freed, 27 militants killed in Pakistan train siege: security sources
Updated 12 March 2025
Follow

155 hostages freed, 27 militants killed in Pakistan train siege: security sources

155 hostages freed, 27 militants killed in Pakistan train siege: security sources
  • Security official says 27 militants killed, gunbattle ongoing while militants using women and children as human shields
  • Baloch Liberation Army group says holding 214 people hostage including military, paramilitary, police, intelligence officers

QUETTA/KARACHI: Pakistani security officials said on Tuesday 155 hostages had been freed after separatist militants hijacked a train carrying more than 400 passengers in Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan province, with a gunbattle raging on hours after the assault began.
A low-level separatist insurgency in Balochistan is one of the chronic security problems undermining stability in Pakistan. The separatists accuse the government of stripping the province’s natural resources and leaving its people mired in poverty. They say security forces routinely abduct, torture and execute ethnic Baloch, accusations echoed by human rights campaigners. Government officials and security forces strongly deny violating human rights and say they are uplifting the province through development projects, including multi-billion-dollar schemes funded by China. Insurgents in the province also target civilians, especially Pakistanis from other ethnic groups who have settled in Balochistan.

The latest attack on the Quetta-Peshawar bound Jaffar Express occurred in Mushkaaf, an area in the mountainous Bolan range of Balochistan. The Baloch Liberation Army, the most prominent among separatist outfits operating in the province, accepted responsibility in a statement sent to the media and said it was holding 214 people hostage.
The Jaffar Express train was hijacked while it was en route to the northwestern city of Peshawar from the provincial capital of Quetta, carrying 425 passengers, according to Muhammad Kashif, a spokesman for Pakistan Railways Quetta Division.

“Security forces have safely rescued 104 passengers from the terrorists,” a security official with direct knowledge of the matter said, requesting anonymity and adding that the released people included 58 men, 31 women and 115 children.
He said troops had surrounded the militants and an exchange of fire was ongoing, with 16 insurgents killed.
“The complex operation is being carried out with utmost caution due to the use of women and children as shields and the difficult terrain,” the official added.

“RULES OF WAR”
Balochistan is Pakistan’s largest province by area, covering 347,190 square kilometers and constituting 44 percent of the country’s total landmass. However, the remote province bordering Afghanistan and Iran is the country’s most backward region in terms of nearly all social and economic indicators. There are no Internet and mobile services in nearly 60 percent of the province, according to independent monitors, and areas which have such services often see shutdowns and months-long disruptions due to security reasons.
Speaking to Arab News, Imran Hayat, the divisional superintendent of Pakistan Railways in Quetta, said the department was unable to gather too many details of the attack or communicate with staff aboard the train as militants had carried out the assault in a “no-signal zone.”
“We haven’t retrieved a single body or injured from the area yet due to the communication blackout,” he said.

The BLA said it had blown up the railway track and taken control of the train.
“Under the rules of war, these 214 hostages are considered prisoners of war and BLA is prepared for a prisoner exchange,” the group said. “The occupying state of Pakistan is given 48 hours to immediately and unconditionally release Baloch political prisoners, forcibly disappeared persons and national resistance activists.”

The group warned that the hostages included military, paramilitary, police and intelligence officers, who would be killed if the BLA’s demands were not met within the stipulated period “or if the occupying state attempts any military action during this time.”
The separatists have also recently attacked projects being developed as part of the $65-billion China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), part of President Xi Jinping’s Belt and Road Initiative, in Balochistan. The program is also developing a deep-water port close to the new $200-million airport in Gwadar, a joint venture between Pakistan, Oman and China.


Al Shabab gunmen attack hotel in central Somalia, seven dead

Al Shabab gunmen attack hotel in central Somalia, seven dead
Updated 12 March 2025
Follow

Al Shabab gunmen attack hotel in central Somalia, seven dead

Al Shabab gunmen attack hotel in central Somalia, seven dead
  • Hours after the initial attack, government forces were trying to flush out Al Shabab fighters, some of whom had been killed in nearby alleys, said Dahir Amin Jesow, a federal lawmaker from the town, the capital of Hiraan region

MOGADISHU: Al Shabab gunmen killed at least seven people in an attack on Tuesday at a hotel in a central Somali town where local elders and government officials were meeting to discuss how to act against the Islamist militant group, an elder said.
The Al-Qaeda-linked group claimed responsibility for the attack in Beledweyne and said it had killed over 10 people. The attackers forced their way in by setting off explosives at the entrance, said a witness, shopkeeper Ali Suleiman.
Al Shabab frequently launches bombings and gun attacks in the fragile Horn of Africa nation as it tries to topple the government and establish its own rule based on its strict interpretation of Islamic Sharia law.
“So far seven people, including clan elders and their guards, all of them my relatives, died in the hotel. Parts of the hotel are ablaze now and it is not clear if the operation is concluded or not,” clan elder Abdullahi Fidow told Reuters.
“Some say the fighters are still fighting in nearby buildings. The death toll may rise because of the blasts and shooting by the fighters,” he said.
Hours after the initial attack, government forces were trying to flush out Al Shabab fighters, some of whom had been killed in nearby alleys, said Dahir Amin Jesow, a federal lawmaker from the town, the capital of Hiraan region.
In a separate incident, at least 10 people, including eight Al Shabab fighters, were killed in fighting in a village in the Middle Shabelle region in southern Somalia, Ali Farah, a military officer in the village, told Reuters.
State-owned Somali National News Agency reported that President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud was at the airport in Mogadishu to receive the soldiers wounded in the fighting.