Category Archives: headline

Guatemala Welcomes End of Trump Asylum Seeker Policy

GUATEMALA CITY (AP) — Guatemala said Friday the U.S. government is ending an arrangement that sent asylum-seekers who reached U.S. borders back to the Central American nation with an opportunity to seek protection there instead.

The Guatemalan government said in a statement it welcomed the decision to end the accord, known as a safe third country agreement.

“The Guatemalan government welcomes the statements of President Joe Biden regarding his administration’s commitment to our country and the region,” according to the statement.

As of December, only 20 of 939 Hondurans and El Salvadorans who have been turned back from the U.S. and flown to Guatemala decided to seek asylum there, and none of those have gained final approval. With so many returning to their home countries instead, the policy instituted by former president Donald Trump became known as “deportation with a layover.”

Similar arrangements were reached between the U.S. and El Salvador and Honduras. It was unclear if they were also ending. Biden’s team had earlier said he would work quickly to undo those deals.

Flights to Guatemala began in late 2019 and were halted when the coronavirus struck.

Ursula Roldan, a research director at Guatemala’s Rafael Landívar University, said the accords had long been viewed as illegitimate, and were reached in some cases with corrupt governments under the implicit assumption that in exchange, the U.S. would ignore allegations of corruption.

“What President Biden is doing is restoring the asylum and refuge system, is equivalent to once again providing transparency and clarity on these issues, and clarity in negotiations with other countries on immigration and asylum,” Roldan said.

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Haiti: 23 Arrested in Moise Murder-Coup Plot, Opposition Names New Pres.

The president of Haiti says an attempt to kill him and overthrow the government has been foiled, amid a dispute over when his term ends.

At least 23 people were arrested, including a top judge and a senior police officer, the authorities said.

President Jovenal Moïse insists his term in office ends in February 2022.

But opponents say it finished on Sunday. Protesters took to the streets of the capital Port-au-Prince and other towns over his refusal to step down.

There were clashes with police, who responded with tear gas.

“We cannot accept that Jovenel Moïse violates the constitution of the country,” said one protester, Etienne Jean Daniel. “We demand that the constitution be respected.”

Another accused the authorities of “kidnapping” those accused of carrying out the coup. “I am demanding the release of these people quickly,” said Jean Reynold.

Armed police in Port au Prince, Haiti, on 7 February 2021image copyrightReuters

Security officials said there had been an “attempted coup d’etat” and cash and weapons – including assault rifles, machine guns and machetes – were seized as the arrests were made.

“I thank my head of security at the palace. The goal of these people was to make an attempt on my life,” President Moïse said. “That plan was aborted.”

The BBC’s Will Grant says Haiti’s political crisis comes down to two different interpretations of the constitution and the length of the president’s current term.

Opponents of President Moïse say it ends now after a volatile period in office following a disputed vote in 2016. Mr Moïse disagrees, arguing that he has one year left of his term and has no intention of stepping down before that date.

To punctuate its stance, Haitian opposition parties have named a top judge as interim leader overnight Sunday, the latest attempt to oust President Jovenel Moise, whose term they say has expired.

In a video statement sent to AFP, Judge Joseph Mecene Jean-Louis, 72, said he “accepted the choice of the opposition and civil society, to serve (his) country as interim president for the transition.”

After legislative elections were suspended in 2019, President Moïse is now in his second year of ruling by decree. Even if he manages to avoid being ousted, there are likely to be further protests ahead, our correspondent notes.

Haiti is the poorest country in Latin America with some 60% of the population living below the poverty line.

A group of US senators, in a letter to new Secretary of State Antony Blinken, has called on the Biden administration to withdraw Washington’s support for President Moïse..

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Pres. Biden Brings Order & Normality Back to White House

The first weeks of President Biden’s administration have been a striking contrast with the chaos and turmoil of the Trump administration, bringing a sense of normality back to the White House and government.

Biden, along with Vice President Harris, begins each day receiving the President’s Daily Brief, usually before 10 a.m. His administration has revived the White House daily briefings every weekday.

And when he has signed executive actions, they have usually been paired with events where the president delivers scripted remarks on policy, and he has rarely answered shouted questions from reporters.

The White House also routinely sends out press releases that seem familiar. In the early days of the presidency, it issued a statement recognizing National Teen Dating Violence Awareness Month — a day that had been routinely marked by previous administrations but ignored under Trump.

The White House is returning to making visitor logs public on a quarterly basis, a practice that was held under the Obama administration but jettisoned under Trump. Former Obama officials have described Biden’s Cabinet as an extended family of sorts, filled with people whom he has worked with for years and trusts.

“I think one of the main objectives here was giving the presidency a sense of normalcy,” said one longtime Biden aide. “Enough of the crazy shit we experienced for four years.”

After a two-hour meeting on Monday with 10 GOP senators, there were no reports of anyone insulting one another — something that happened frequently when Democrats and Trump got together — though there was no deal either. Sen. Susan Collins (R-Me.) described the meeting as “cordial” and expressed gratitude to Biden for hosting them.

Biden’s tweets, written in lowercase letters, are frequently mundane policy missives. It’s a striking contrast with Trump’s hourly 280-character megaphone, where he often picked fights or criticized and mocked opponents.

“It’s so funny – I hear from friends on both sides of the aisle how cleansing it is to wake up in the morning without feeling that the day will be inflamed by a crazy tweet,” said former Rep. Steve Israel, who served as the chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee in the Obama era. “Even people who disagree with President Biden say that at least we’re back to normal.”

Biden’s life outside of the bubble also echoes a time before the Trump era.

He went to church on his first Sunday in office — a routine White House aides expect to continue — at Holy Trinity in Georgetown and made a run for bagels afterward, with Secret Service agents placing the order at the window of the popular “Call Your Mother” deli.

The Bidens have brought their two German shepherds, Champ and Major, to the White House with them and they intend to get a cat. First lady Jill Biden, who has spent most of her career as a community college teacher, is continuing to hold a teaching position at Northern Virginia Community College.

When he was vice president, Biden sought to keep some normalcy in his life, too. He and Jill Biden slipped out of the Naval Observatory occasionally to catch a movie. He made headlines for getting pizza with one of his granddaughters.

He surprised a staffer when it was her birthday by stopping by the Italian restaurant where colleagues had gathered. He was also known to frequent Brooks Brothers on his way home from work at 1600 Pennsylvania.

The difference from the Trump years is stark — even those who worked in his White House acknowledge it.

“If you think about the first weeks of the Trump presidency, and even back in the transition, it was defined by disarray and jockeying for power,” said Anthony Scaramucci, who served as Trump’s communications director for 11 days.

From the beginning, Trump’s White House was marked by loud firings, tweets and fights that generated intense and constant press coverage. Trump’s decisions and actions were unpredictable, even among his staff, which unlike Biden’s, was filled with outsiders.

“Trump was elected because he didn’t have political or government or military experience,” said Barbara Perry, director of presidential studies at the University of Virginia’s Miller Center. “In fact, that was a selling point for him.”

She said that “in the minds of people who voted for him, it wasn’t a weakness it was a plus,” but argued that it did not lead to “informed leadership at the top.”

Chris Lu, who served as Cabinet Secretary in the Obama White House, drew a comparison between the new administration and the Obama, Clinton and Bush White Houses.

“It’s refreshing how normal it is. This is what happens in a normal White House. You have a process for making policy decisions, you have a message of the day, you have a president who sticks to the message. You have a sense of order,” Lu said.

It is not all hunky-dory, as Biden, who pegged himself a moderate Democrat during the campaign, is facing expected pressures from the left and the right as he enacts his agenda.

There have been familiar policy and political disputes ranging from the size and substance of the COVID-19 relief measure — Republicans have balked at the price tag —  to whether Biden is going too far  in restricting oil and gas drilling to reduce climate change.

Yet even the controversies at the White House seem like a return to normalcy. White House press secretary Jen Psaki was criticized by conservatives this week for dismissing a question about the Space Force, the sixth military branch established under Trump. She later issued a tweet that made it clear the Biden administration sees the Space Force as important, an apparent effort to dispel the criticism.

There’s a notable contrast with Capitol Hill, where tensions remain high one month after an angry pro-Trump mob attacked the Capitol. The House voted on Thursday to remove first-term Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) from her committee assignments as punishment for a string of controversies, including remarks about school shootings being staged.

Both the Capitol and White House remained fortified by large fences, a daily reminder of the violence one month earlier. Psaki told reporters this week that the perimeter would be adjusted when it “makes sense from an overall security standpoint.”

Biden’s White House has sought to project order and control while taking over amid a deadly spike in the pandemic and a severe economic downturn. Biden has also tried to manage expectations, warning repeatedly that it will take months to change the course of the virus.

Trump was elected at least partly as a response by voters who disliked the Obama years and what they represented. This could suggest there’s at least some political risk to doing things the way they were done from 2009 to 2016.

Yet Democratic strategist Eddie Vale argued voters are likely to like the signals from Biden so far as a welcome break.

“Just having a sense of normalcy and routine is already making people feel better, but, it’s actually most effective because it’s also infused with competency that is already showing people with action that we are going to come back – or dare I say build back better – from this recession and pandemic,” he said.

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More deaths from Himalayan glacier confirmed

Rescuers in northern India have continued working to rescue more than three dozen power plant workers trapped in a tunnel after part of a Himalayan glacier broke off and sent a wall of water and debris rushing down the mountain in a disaster that has left 18 people dead and 165 missing.

More than 2,000 members of the military, paramilitary groups and police have been taking part in search-and-rescue operations in the northern state of Uttarakhand after yesterday's flood, which destroyed one dam, damaged another and washed away homes downstream.

Officials said the focus was on saving 37 workers who are stuck inside a tunnel at one of the affected hydropower plants. Excavators had been brought in the help with the efforts to reach the workers, who have been out of contact since the flood.

READ MORE: India clamps down on free speech to fight farmer protests

"The tunnel is filled with debris, which has come from the river. We are using machines to clear the way," said H. Gurung, a senior official of the paramilitary Indo Tibetan Border Police.

Authorities fear many more are dead and were searching for bodies downstream using boats. They also walked along river banks and used binoculars to scan for bodies that might have been washed downstream.

The flood was caused when a portion of Nanda Devi glacier snapped off yesterday morning, releasing water trapped behind it. Experts said the disaster could be linked to global warming and a team of scientists was flown to the site today to investigate exactly what happened.

The floodwater rushed down the mountain and into other bodies of water, forcing the evacuation of many villages along the banks of the Alaknanda and Dhauliganga rivers.

Video showed the muddy, concrete-grey floodwaters tumbling through a valley and surging into a dam, breaking it into pieces with little resistance before roaring on downstream. It turned the countryside into what looked like an ash-colored moonscape.

A hydroelectric plant on the Alaknanda was destroyed and a plant under construction on the Dhauliganga was damaged, said Vivek Pandey, an Indo Tibetan Border Police spokesman.

Flowing out of the Himalayan mountains, the two rivers meet before merging with the Ganges River.

The trapped workers were at the Dhauliganga plant, where on yesterday 12 workers were rescued from a separate tunnel.

A senior government official told The Associated Press that they don't know the total number of people who were working in the Dhauliganga project.

"The number of missing people can go up or come down," S A Murugesan said.

Mr Pandey said today that 165 workers at the two plants, not including those trapped in the tunnel, were missing and at least 18 bodies were recovered.

Those rescued yesterday were taken to a hospital, where they were recovering.

One of the rescued workers, Rakesh Bhatt, told The Associated Press said they were working in the tunnel when water rushed in.

READ MORE: Indian court rules groping child without removing clothes is not sexual assault

"We thought it might be rain and that the water will recede. But when we saw mud and debris enter with great speed, we realised something big had happened," he said.

Mr Bhatt said one of the workers was able to contact officials via his mobile phone.

"We waited for almost six hours — praying to God and joking with each other to keep our spirits high. I was the first to be rescued and it was a great relief," he said.

The Himalayan area where yesterday's flood struck has a chain of hydropower projects on several rivers and their tributaries. Authorities said they were able to save other power units downstream because of timely action taken to release water by opening gates.

The floodwaters also damaged homes, but details on the number and whether any residents were injured, missing or dead remained unclear. Officials said they were trying to track whether anyone was missing from villages along the two rivers.

Government officials airdropped food packets and medicine to at least two flood-hit villages.

Many people in nearby villages work at the Dhauliganga plant, Mr Murugesan said, but as it was a Sunday fewer people were at work than on a weekday,

"The only solace for us is that the casualty from the nearby villages is much less," he said.

Some have already started pointing at climate change as a contributing factor given the known melting and breakup of the world's glaciers, though other factors such as erosion, earthquakes, a buildup of water pressure and volcanic eruptions have also been known to cause glaciers to collapse.

Anjal Prakash, research director and adjunct professor at the Indian School of Business who has contributed to UN-sponsored research on global warming, said that while data on the cause of the disaster was not yet available, "this looks very much like a climate change event as the glaciers are melting due to global warming."

Caribbean Governments Bidding for COVID Vaccine Supplies

Caribbean Community governments appear to have left the daily management of the COVID-19 to medical professionals and have switched their focus to acquiring hundreds of thousands of doses of the vaccine with shipments lined up to arrive in several countries in the next month.

Guyana, Suriname, Jamaica, Barbados and Trinidad, among others, are all close to beginning mass vaccinations for those interested in being jabbed in the arms but community associate, Bermuda, is way ahead of the pack already immunizing 5,000 citizens with another 8,000 awaiting their turn Premier David Burt said this week. The prime minister

As authorities await shipments from Cuba, India, China, the UK and the US, authorities across the region are expressing concern about lax compliance across the region relating to the wearing of masks, social distancing and assembling in large numbers blaming such poor attitudes and approaches for positive infection spikes in recent weeks, linking this mostly to post Christmas activities and revelry.

In the case of Barbados which until the past six weeks appears to have had the situation under control, the island was from Wednesday slipping into a 15-day lockdown of non essential services to help tame a spike that officials blame on non compliance across the spectrum of published regulations.

Prime Minister Mia Mottley said a dusk to dawn curfew will remain in effect during the period and businesses and entities not considered as nationally essential must shut their doors during what she called as “a national pause.” This is the island’s second lockdown in nine months.

“We need now to be able to spread the message to everyone. There are still too many people regrettably who are not wearing masks, there are still too many people who are gathering unnecessarily and I want to remind Barbadians that this thing is not playing, this thing is real and to that extent, I am asking every one of us to join the effort in being able to encourage persons in our communities, in our households,” she said in a national broadcast on Tuesday. “On Sunday, at midday, I am asking for everyone in this country to pause, literally pause, to pray and to reflect on what we must do to save our nation and to save our people.”

Suriname has also tightened up on overnight activities in the wake of 33 deaths in January compared to a mere five in December.

Meanwhile, Jamaica Minister of Health, Chris Tufton announced the imminent arrival of 900,000 doses of Astra Zeneca vaccine later this month as authorities move to inoculate about 500,000 people 16 percent of the population in the first instance the Gleaner newspaper reported. The island’s death toll as of this week reached 352 from 15,800 cases.

Mottley also thanked India’s government for agreeing to send 50,000 doses in the coming weeks to Barbados following a request sent to New Delhi 12 days ago. “We have had commitments from the Government of India and we expect to receive very shortly the first supply for 50,000 persons which will be 100,000 vaccines and we hope to be able to start the deployment of that in the very near future.”

Nearby Guyana through Minister of Health,  Dr. Frank Anthony said the country will get about 120,000 doses from China and Astra Zeneca shortly as he listed frontline workers as among the first to receive jabs.

“We are making other arrangements to be able to acquire more vaccines, so we should have enough vaccines for the elderly and persons with co-morbidities. These arrangements haven’t been completed as yet, but we are very optimistic that we will have more vaccines for persons in those areas. When we complete the health workers and the elderly and people with co-morbidities, then we will go to the next level, which is other people in the population,” Anthony said.

Neighboring Suriname expects 79,200 doses of Astra Zeneca supplies by next month with Health Minister Amar Ramadhin saying that the country’s request “has been submitted to the WHO for approval and I recommend that we wait calmly for the results.”

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Biden Aims at Root Cause of Central American Immigration

President Biden is signaling not only an eagerness to reverse Trump-era immigration policies with his early executive actions but a willingness to go beyond the Obama administration.

A trio of orders signed by Biden last week seeks to make amends for the Trump administration’s family separation policy by establishing a task force dedicated to reuniting 545 children with their parents.

Biden also ordered a review of his predecessor’s public charge rule, which limited immigration opportunities for those who might need to rely on government assistance like food stamps or other social programs.

But it was Biden’s call for a sweeping review of the asylum and naturalization process — along with a pledge to try to address the root causes of Latin American migration — that excited immigration advocates.

“We’re not just rolling back back the Trump policies, which were at best superficial and ideological, but we’re going beyond the Obama administration,” said Thomas Saenz, president of Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund.

“Certainly it presents a much much more sophisticated view of the refugee and asylum issues for the Western hemisphere than we have seen.”

The new Biden administration policy puts a particular focus on the Northern Triangle, the nickname given to neighbors Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador, where in recent years migration patterns have rivaled those of Mexican nationals.

The “root causes” strategy Biden’s order calls for would funnel aid to strengthen democracy, combat gang violence and boost the economy.

“This is a much more sophisticated view of seeing the issue from the root causes and a recognition that the root causes in the Northern Triangle are in part caused by the U.S.,” Saenz said.

That seismic shift from enforcement to aid is being hailed by many immigration experts as a more realistic long-term approach.

“We’re in a situation now where we can no longer lead with heavy handed enforcement and our approach needs to change, and I think what we’ve seen from the administration is absolutely an acknowledgement of that,” said Jorge Loweree, policy director at the American Immigration Council.

Others argue the policy, which differs from the Obama years, will prove more cost effective than recent border security measures, in addition to doubling as foreign aid.

“Starting a Marshall plan for Central America is a lot cheaper than building a wall or hiring immgiration officers. It can provide jobs and security in Central America that could turn off the faucet for refugees coming to the U.S. instead of building more tubs,” said Domingo Garcia, president of the League of United Latin American Citizens.

Advocates say Biden isn’t just proposing policies that go beyond the Obama years; he’s also striking a new tone on immigration and setting higher goals.

One of his orders calls for strengthening inclusion of recently naturalized citizens, a nod to potentially reducing the fees and test requirements associated with becoming a citizen.

There are also signs the Biden administration might diverge from the Obama years by enacting policies making it easier to come to the U.S., like directing the government to consider giving those fleeing domestic or gang violence the ability to apply for asylum. Current law only protects those fleeing discrimination based on race, religion, political views and other protected classes.

Biden also called for reviving another program the Trump administration targeted for elimination, one that allows minors from the Northern Triangle to apply for refugee status.

But Biden’s orders, along with a comprehensive immigration bill Biden sent to Congress that would provide an eight-year path to citizenship for some 11 million immigrants, are sparking backlash among some congressional Republicans.

“Through these actions, President Biden has sent the message loud and clear to the world that our immigration laws can be violated without consequence,” said House Oversight and Reform Committee ranking member James Comer (R-Ky.).

“These radical, far-left immigration policies will continue to enable the humanitarian crisis at the border, place more children in peril as they are brought dangerously to the southern border, encourage more illegal immigration, and undermine the rule of law.”

Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), who slowed the Senate’s confirmation of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas by placing a hold on his nomination, said Biden’s nominee

had not “adequately explained how he will enforce federal law and secure the southern border.”

Garcia said Democrats will now be tested on showing that their policies are sensible.

“One of the attacks Republicans have against Democrats is that Democrats are for open borders. We have to show we’re not for open borders but for legal immigration in an orderly fashion.”

Immigration advocates argue Biden’s plans are a direct response to what they view as Trump’s failures.

“The last four years of asylum policies have been based on the premise that if we find a way to make it as difficult as possible and increase the hardship that people have to endure to get to us, people will give up or never come in first place. We’ve gone as far as to take children away from their parents at the southern border, but we’re seeing people continue to come,” Loweree said.

“It speaks to the conditions people are facing in their home country. People would not face that kind of risk if remaining in their home country weren’t such a dangerous proposition.”

That’s where advocates see a chance for Biden to treat the border differently than Trump did.

Biden’s order calls for expansion of shelter networks “to address the immediate needs of individuals who have fled their homes to seek protection elsewhere in the region.”

From Saenz’s perspective, the U.S. bears some responsibility for having contributed to a militarized Northern Triangle that is now creating refugees.

“We contributed to those conditions a lot, and not just with our drug policy but with our immigration policy,” he said.

“Pretty much everyone that’s leaving wants to get out of that situation because it’s so dangerous, and that’s as true in a war atmosphere like Syria as it is in the violent circumstances of the Northern Triangle.”

Loweree argued that Biden needs to go further than reuniting families that were separated during the Trump years.

“They also need to give considerable thought to some kind of compensation fund to provide redress for harms they faced from the previous administration,” he said.

Still, Loweree said the Biden administration has already taken great strides in a short amount of time.

“The reality is they’ve done a lot. They’ve been in office for two weeks, and they’ve done an extraordinary amount of work on immigration. It’s an indication of a new era.”

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More & More Arrests for US Capitol Riot

in New York

Guardian (UK) A huge investigation has so far arrested 235 people, including far-right militants, members of the military – and otherwise unremarkable Trump fans

As prosecutors from the House of Representatives prepare to present their case against Donald Trump at his impeachment trial next week for incitement of insurrection, supporters who heeded his call on 6 January to “fight like hell” and went on to storm the Capitol Building are finding themselves in far greater legal peril.

The trial that kicks off in the US Senate on Tuesday could lead to a further vote that would permanently debar Trump from holding office in the future. By contrast, the mob of fervent Maga acolytes who broke into the US Capitol following an incendiary rally headlined by Trump could face prison for up to 20 years.

 

One month after the events which left five people dead including a US Capitol police officer, there is no sign of the Department of Justice and FBI letting up in their relentless pursuit of the insurrectionists. In the past week alone there have been arrests of alleged rioters in Seattle, Washington; Las Vegas, Nevada; Corinth, Texas; Garner, North Carolina; and Marion, Illinois.

All 56 FBI field offices are engaged in a huge investigation that ranks alongside the biggest the bureau has conducted. As Michael Sherwin, acting US attorney for Washington DC which is leading the hunt, has put it: “The scope and scale of this investigation are really unprecedented, not only in FBI history but probably DoJ history.”

David Gomez, a former FBI national security executive who spent years countering domestic terrorism, told the Guardian that the bureau would classify and handle the search as a “major case”.

“It is probably one of the largest investigations since 9/11,” he said.

Already the number of people who have been arrested, either by the FBI, Capitol police or local Washington DC officers has reached 235, spanning more than 40 states. As the investigation widens and deepens, the focus is tightening on anyone considered to have acted as a coordinator of the action in an attempt to take out the ringleaders.

Police intervene against Trump supporters who breached security and entered the Capitol building.
Police intervene against Trump supporters who breached security and entered the Capitol building. Photograph: Mostafa Bassim/Anadolu Agency/Getty

The FBI has set up a special strike force of experienced federal prosecutors who have been given the express instruction to pursue aggressive sedition and conspiracy charges. So far at least 26 people have been charged with conspiracy or assault.

“Sedition is the most serious crime that anybody could be accused of from 6 January,” Gomez said. “It’s advocating the overthrow of the US government. It involves not just talking about overthrowing democracy but having the means and wherewithal to carry out those actions.”

As more has become known about those arrested, the strategy being pursued by the FBI has also revealed itself. In several cases, people who participated in the storming of the Capitol were picked up and charged with relatively minor offenses such as trespassing or theft of mail simply as a means to get them into prosecutorial clutches.

Once in the system, more serious charges could then be added as intelligence came in. That pattern of escalating charges can be seen in the cases of Nicholas DeCarlo from Texas and Nicholas Ochs from Hawaii.

Initially, the pair were accused of unlawful entry into federal property. But new conspiracy charges were added this week in which they are alleged to have planned out their travel across state lines, raised money to pay for it, and then made the trip to Washington DC in a premeditated attempt to obstruct the certification of Joe Biden as winner of the US presidential election.

If convicted, DeCarlo and Ochs each face maximum sentences of 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

A supporter of US President Donald Trump sits inside the office of US Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi as he protest inside the US Capitol in Washington, DC, January 6, 2021.
A supporter Donald Trump sits inside the office of the speaker of the house, Nancy Pelosi. Photograph: Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images

Prosecutors have made clear that they are ramping up the charges against select individuals as a means of discouraging further violence from Trump supporters and their far-right and white supremacist allies. “We are going to focus on the most significant charges as a deterrent, because regardless of if it was just a trespass in the Capitol or someone planted a pipe bomb, you will be charged and you will be found,” Sherwin said.

The FBI’s work has been greatly assisted by the plethora of intelligence swirling around online – in many cases posted by the suspects themselves. Take the hapless duo, DeCarlo and Ochs.

A photo of the pair, posing thumbs up in front of the memorial door of the US Capitol on which they had scrawled the words “MURDER THE MEDIA”, was easily found online. It has been included in the indictment against them, and earned them the special attentions of the media assault strike force set up by federal prosecutors to investigate violent threats against members of the media.

That photo is one of at least 200,000 digital media tips that have poured into the FBI from across the country, some coming from friends and even family members who recognized individual rioters from the profusion of video and stills footage plastered across the internet and promptly informed on them.

The phrase “Murder the media” is written on a door to the U.S. Capitol a day after supporters of U.S. President Donald Trump stormed the Capitol in WashingtonThe phrase “Murder the media” is written on a door to the U.S. Capitol a day after supporters of U.S. President Donald Trump stormed the U.S. Capitol Building in Washington, U.S., January 7, 2021.
The phrase ‘Murder the media’ is written on a door to the US Capitol a day after the insurrection. Photograph: Erin Scott/Reuters

As federal agents work their way through this mountain of digital information they are starting to get a feel for the kinds of people who were present that fateful day on the Hill. As feared, the leadership role played by far-right and white supremacist groups has veered into sight.

At least 10 members of the extremist group the Proud Boys are among the mounting number of those arrested, including Ochs, who according to the justice department claims to have founded a Honolulu chapter of the network. This week’s Washington state arrest was also of a self-declared Proud Boys leader – Ethan Nordean calls himself “sergeant of arms” of the Seattle chapter and is accused in court documents of having led a group of rioters into the Capitol.

On the back of mounting evidence of the Proud Boys’ leadership role in the attack, the Canadian government this week moved to designate the group as a terrorist organization.

Meanwhile, several members of the Oath Keepers, one of the largest far-right militia groups in the US, have also been arrested.

Another chilling element emerging from the indictments is the number of current and former law enforcement officers and military personnel who are among them. An analysis of the first 150 people to be arrested by CNN found that at least 21 had military experience, some ongoing.

Of those, eight were former marines, underlining the danger of elite military training designed to defend the country from international threats being turned back on itself and used to attack the heart of US democracy at home.

At least four law enforcement officers who were actively serving in their positions at the time of the 6 January attack have been accused, and have left their jobs. They include a Houston, Texas, police officer and a corrections officer from New Jersey.

One of the emerging truths that FBI detectives and prosecutors will have to wrestle with is that, despite the substantial presence of white supremacists and military personnel, most of those who have been arrested are what might be described as unremarkable Americans with no previous criminal records or history of extremist behavior.

A wanted poster (R) by the FBI is displayed at a bus stop in the now-fenced Independence avenue southwest near the US Capitol (L), as security perimeters expand ahead of the inauguration in Washington, DC, USA, 18 January 2021. The FBI is seeking the public’s help in identifying the insurrectionists that stormed the US Capitol as the Congress worked to certify the electoral votes for the Presidential election.
An FBI wanted poster is displayed at a bus stop near the US Capitol. Photograph: Gamal Diab/EPA

Political scientists at the University of Chicago who studied the profiles of arrestees and published their conclusions in the Atlantic found that many were middle-class and middle-aged – with an average age of 40. Almost 90% of them had no known links with militant groups. Some 40% were business owners or with white-collar jobs, and they came from relatively lucrative backgrounds as “CEOs, shop owners, doctors, lawyers, IT specialists, and accountants”.

The one common denominator uniting this large group is not any extremist group, website or media outlet, but an individual – Donald Trump. This is why the connection between the pending impeachment trial and the ongoing FBI roundup of suspects is so critical.

The link has been made overtly in the defense cases being compiled by lawyers on behalf of several of the arrested rioters. Take Jacob Chansley from Arizona, the self-styled “QAnon Shaman” who went shirtless and wore a furry headdress with horns as he battled as far as the Senate dais during the Capitol assault.

His lawyers have offered him up as a witness during Trump’s trial. They say Chansley, who faces six charges including civil disorder, used to be “horrendously smitten” by Trump but now feels betrayed by him. They are also likely to use the argument that Chansley was misled by the then US president as a central argument in his own defense.

But Gomez is doubtful that the ploy will prove effective.

“I don’t think that’s going to hold water in federal court,” Gomez said. “‘I only robbed that bank because somebody told me to do it’ – I’ve never heard that line working for any crime.”

The post More & More Arrests for US Capitol Riot appeared first on The St Kitts Nevis Observer.

Pop-up DNA centre draws hundreds searching for missing relatives

A world-first pop-up DNA collection centre has been inundated by the families of missing people wanting to volunteer their samples.

The NSW Police Missing Persons Registry is hoping familial DNA may help to identify more than 300 unidentified bones and bodies found in NSW since 1964.

Susan Boxsell was the first person through the doors on the centre in Coffs Harbour today.

READ MORE: New DNA links mystery jawbone to mariner lost in 1979 boating tragedy

Her brother Ronald "Ronny" Pye went missing in Hervey Bay in 1967, never returning to his Arncliffe home in Sydney.

"This is my last opportunity to do what I can do," she said.

Missing Persons Registry boss Detective Inspector Glen Browne welcomed families at the door before guiding them through to a room where they were interviewed before providing a buccal swab.

"It is our last chance, probably the only chance we have left to link up long-term missing persons with unidentified remains," he said.

Father and son Craig and Peter Bradridge provided samples but also came with a lock of hair and the wisdom teeth of Rodney Bradridge.

READ MORE: $250,000 reward to help solve cold case murder 21 years on

Rodney, a musician who had lived in Dee Why on Sydney's Northern Beaches, was due to meet his mother at the end of a camping trip at Mullumbimby in 1997.

He vanished without a trace, and police and his family fear he met with foul play.

His brother Craig said he felt mixed emotions being at the centre but was hopeful.

"Mixed feelings but at the same time closure would be beneficial to not knowing," he told 9News.

"To be able to pay our final respect would be fantastic."

His father Peter said it was hard to hope too much.

"You get to a stage where it's overwhelming," he said.

"You don't want to hope too much because you get your hopes up and then they are dashed again."

Malila Howell's daughter Rose went missing near Bellingen in 2003 after she was last seen hitchhiking. A coroner found it was likely she was killed by someone.

Ms Howell attended the pop-up centre and said she was comforted police were still looking at ways to find missing people.

"(Rose) went to Bellingen to give out birthday invitations and never came back," she said.

Police have likened the coastal area between Newcastle and Byron to the Bermuda triangle, with almost 200 unsolved missing persons cases — 50 per cent more than any other region in NSW.

The number of missing people made Coffs Harbour and Port Macquarie the natural choice for the pilot program.

There are nearly 800 long-term missing person cases in NSW but many lack DNA samples from close relatives.

Detective Inspector Browne was adamant the swabs taken would be only used to help find missing people.

"There is no chance we can match their DNA against crime scenes, legally we can't," he said.

"The sole objective of this program is to try and get a match and try to bring closure to those families with long term missing family members."

Collection of familial DNA is the latest tool being used to help investigate missing people but won't provide all answers.

Police say there is still detective work required to put all the pieces together in identifying remains and understanding the circumstances behind their deaths.

Any relatives are welcome to attend the Coffs Harbour community centre on February 9 or to volunteer samples at the Historic Courthouse in Port Macquarie on February 10 and 11.

Mum contracts deadly disease by inhaling crystalline silica

Joanna McNeill just wishes someone had told her.

Told her that even though she worked in administration, the dust she would inhale from the nearby quarry would leave her lungs scarred.

Told her that as the years progressed, her lung capacity would diminish and she would one day struggle to breathe.

"This is a life sentence for me and I don't know when my time is up," she told 9News.

When Mrs McNeill returned to her admin position after maternity leave, she underwent a health assessment.

Tests, X-rays, CT scans and a lung biopsy later, Mrs McNeill was diagnosed last year with silicosis – a lung disease caused by inhaling crystalline silica.

She never thought she'd be at risk.

Her office was in an admin building but she would go home and could feel the dust on her face, on her lips, in her hair.

"I was very shocked," she says.

"I had no idea what that meant for me. I thought 'oh my gosh, do I have cancer?'

"I'm still a little bit in denial."

Mrs McNeill has two daughters aged two and four and the 34-year-old mother said her biggest fear is not being there for them.

"My greatest fear with my kids is I just want to be around for them. I don't want to die early. I just want to be there for them."

Now she's playing a waiting game; her lung capacity is tested every four months.

"This whole process has given me so much anxiety… not knowing what the future holds," she says.

Husband Matthew says the diagnosis came from left field and was a shock to the family, particularly as she didn't work in the actual quarry.

"The big issue for us is the unknown," he says.

For now, Mrs McNeill is exercising daily to increase her lung capacity and doing as much as she can with her daughters while she is still able.

She's also supporting a national campaign launching tomorrow by the Australian Workers Union calling for tougher regulations with minimum benchmarks that protect all workers exposed to deadly silica dust.

The AWU also wants a compensation fund put in place to avoid a repeat of the decades long battle with James Hardie over asbestos.

"It took two decades to make James Hardie pay for what they did and for the truth to come out about asbestos," AWU national secretary Daniel Walton said.

"It would be a disgrace if we allowed history to repeat itself."

Preliminary reforms recommended by the Federal Government's National Dust Disease Taskforce provides extra protection for stonemasons but not for other workers in construction, mining, quarries and tunnels, Mr Walton said.

"Around six per cent of all Australians are exposed to silica dust each year," he said.

"Yet this is a substance even more deadly than asbestos.

"The lives of tens of thousands of workers … are being put at risk by companies who are placing profits ahead of worker safety and being allowed to get away with it."

Silicosis has been around for decades but there has been a resurgence in workers in recent years.

Mrs McNeill says she wants people to know that you don't have to be in the industry for 20 years before it affects you or that it takes decades to develop like asbestosis.

She had been at her workplace for just seven years.

Koala causes peak hour chaos at Adelaide freeway

A curious koala has been rescued after causing peak hour chaos on an Adelaide freeway.

The furry local sparked a five-car pile-up while crossing the road at Crafers West, bringing this morning's peak-hour traffic to a stand-still.

Lucky for the koala, one motorist managed to scoop it up and take it to safety about 8am.

"I thought okay, if we don't catch this koala now and the traffic starts moving, they will stop suddenly and there will be another pile-up of cars," Nadia said as she found herself staring at the cause of the chaos.

"I saw to my right to the front there was a little cute koala running towards me."

Nadia said she was able to catch the koala with the help of other drivers and put it in her boot until animal rescue teams arrived.

READ MORE: Queensland woman injured in kangaroo attack

"I grabbed my jacket out of the back seat and I went to the koala on this side like a toreador would do to a bull," Nadia said.

But the cheeky koala decided its adventures weren't over as it took to the wheel.

"It was poking its nose through the headrest and I thought, okay that's too close for comfort – I'd better get out and you have the car," she said.

The koala stayed calm until animal rescuers arrived and returned it to the wild, although not before leaving its mark on Nadia's car – a deep scratch clawed into the dash.

No animals or people were injured in the crash.