Category Archives: headline

US: 2 FBI Agents Killed in Florida Gunfight

Two FBI agents were killed yesterday and three others wounded after a shootout ensued as agents were attempting to serve a warrant outside Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

The agents were said to be part of a task force battling violent crimes against children in the area. According to reports, the suspect opened fire almost immediately, prompting a SWAT response, but was found dead of an apparent suicide before law enforcement could apprehend him.

The two victims were identified as Special Agents Daniel Alfin and Laura Schwartzenberger. Alfin had been part of the 2015 takedown of Playpen, the world’s largest child exploitation site, run out of Naples, Florida.

It marked the deadliest attack against members of the FBI since a fatal firefight between agents and a pair of bank robbers in 1986, which also took place in South Florida. It had been almost 13 years since an agent had been fatally shot in the line of duty.

Explore the Bureau’s Wall of Honor here.

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Two charged after woman found with stab wounds in car boot

Two women have been charged after another woman was found in the boot of a car after a driver saw her hand waving from the tail light on a NSW road.

NSW Police said a driver called police when they allegedly saw the hand protruding from the rear of the white Holden sedan on the Hume Highway at Pheasants Nest in the NSW Southern Highlands about 11.30am yesterday.

Highway patrol officers stopped the car at Berrima about 20 minutes later and found a woman in the boot.

A driver saw a woman's hand protruding out of this tail light before he called police.

The 24-year-old had been stabbed multiple times and was rushed to Liverpool Hospital.

Police said she had injuries to her knee, thigh and forearm, but they were not life-threatening.

"Some excellent work done by the motorist that identified the hand coming out of the vehicle," Detective Chief Inspector Brendan Bernie said.

"It is very fortunate that we've found this lady alive, we obviously think that this could have ended quite catastrophically for her.

"At this stage it appears all the people involved are from the greater Sydney Metropolitan Area."

https://www.facebook.com/nswpoliceforce/posts/10158598795986185

The two other women in the car, aged 18 and 24, were arrested and taken to Southern Highlands Police Station.

Both have been charged with wounding a person with intent to cause grievous bodily harm, detaining in company with intent to get advantage occasioning actual bodily harm and taking and driving without consent of owner.

The 24-year-old was also charged with driving a motor vehicle during disqualification period and drug possession.

Both women were refused bail and are expected to appear at Picton Local Court today.

Ousted Myanmar leader charged over 'illegally imported walkie-talkies'

Police in Myanmar have charged deposed national leader Aung San Suu Kyi with having several illegally imported walkie-talkies in her home, members of her party said Wednesday.

Suu Kyi was detained on Monday along with other senior politicians when the military staged a coup the day the newly elected Parliament was supposed to open its session.

Party officials say she has not been moved from her residence, where she was being held under house arrest.

READ MORE: Workout video during Myanmar military coup goes viral

The charges against Suu Kyi appear to carry a maximum sentence of two years in prison.

The charge sheets indicate the unregistered walkie-talkies were for use by Suu Kyi's bodyguards.

National League for Democracy spokesman Kyi Toe confirmed the charge on his Facebook page. He also said the country's ousted president, Win Myint, was charged with violating natural disaster management law.

An NLD lawmaker, Phyo Zayar Thaw, also confirmed the charges.

Police and court officials in the capital Naypyitaw could not immediately be contacted.

The coup was a dramatic backslide for Myanmar, which had been making progress toward democracy, and highlighted the extent to which the generals have ultimately maintained control in in the Southeast Asian country.

The leader's fall from power

The takeover also marked a shocking fall from power for Suu Kyi, a Nobel Peace Prize laureate who had lived under house arrest for years as she tried to push her country toward democracy and then became its de facto leader after her party won elections in 2015.

Suu Kyi had been a fierce critic of the army during her years in detention.

But after her shift from democracy icon to politician, she worked with the generals and even defended their crackdown on Rohingya Muslims, damaging her international reputation.

The military has announced it will hold power under a state of emergency for a year, and then hold elections whose winner will take over government.

Suu Kyi's party has called for non-violent resistance to the military takeover, and on Tuesday night, scores of people in Yangon, Myanmar's largest city, honked car horns and banged on pots and pans in a noise protest called by activists. They included shouts wishing Suu Kyi good health and calling for freedom.

Supporters of the military have also staged demonstrations, attracting as many as 3,000 people to a Tuesday rally.

While in power, Myanmar's new leader said the military government plans to investigate alleged fraud in last year's elections.

Senior General Min Aung Hlaing announced the moves Tuesday at the first meeting of his new government in the capital, the state-run Global New Light of Myanmar newspaper said.

READ MORE: Why did the military stage Myanmar coup?

The military has said one of its reasons for ousting the elected civilian government was because it failed to properly investigate its allegations of electoral irregularities.

The state Union Election Commission has said there were no significant problems with the vote.

In the November 2020 election, Suu Kyi's party captured 396 out of 476 seats contested in the lower and upper houses of Parliament.

The main opposition party, the military-backed Union Solidarity and Development Party, won only 33 seats.

The military, known as the Tatmadaw, is automatically allocated 25 per cent of the seats in the combined houses under the 2008 Constitution that was drafted under a previous military government.

The state newspaper reported that Min Aung Hlaing told Cabinet members that a new Union Election Commission, with what he described as independent and unbiased personnel, "would examine the voting data to find correct results, and actions would be taken accordingly in the process."

He said voter lists would be scrutinised against family household registrations.

Myanmar and COVID-19

Min Aung Hlaing also said that COVID-19 containment measures taken by Suu Kyi's government would be continued.

Myanmar has confirmed more than 140,600 cases including some 3100 deaths. Its health care infrastructure is one of the weakest in Asia, according to UN surveys.

A statement issued on Wednesday in the name of the executive members of Suu Kyi's party said that authorities began raiding the party's offices in Mandalay and other states and regions on Tuesday and seized documents and laptop computers.

The statement on the Facebook page of party spokesman Kyi Toe said locks were broken at several offices. It denounced the raids as illegal and demanded that they stop.

The takeover presents a test for the international community.

US President Joe Biden called the military's actions "a direct assault on the country's transition to democracy and the rule of law" and threatened new sanctions.

The UN Security Council held an emergency meeting on Tuesday but took no action.

The foreign ministers of the Group of 7 leading industrial nations on Wednesday issued a statement calling for Suu Kyi and others to be released, the state of emergency to be scrapped and power restored to the democratically elected government.

It also expressed concern about restrictions on information, an apparent reference to cuts to phone and internet service on Monday.

"We stand with the people of Myanmar who want to see a democratic future," it said.

The group comprises the United States. Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United Kingdom, along with the European Union.

Investigation launched into into Melbourne quarantine hotel spread

An urgent investigation has been launched after two returned travellers who never crossed paths are feared to have somehow passed the UK coronavirus variant between them at the Park Royal Hotel in Melbourne.

The potential transmission took place is between January 20 and January 28 and involves a family of five and a woman on the same floor within the quarantine hotel.

"The viral load of the room of the family of five was so high that just opening the door to pick up food saw the virus travel into the corridor," head of COVID-19 Quarantine Victoria Lisa Neville Neville said.

READ MORE: Australian Open hotel quarantine worker tests positive to coronavirus

The family, which includes a man in his 40s, a woman in her 40s, and three children aged one, four and seven, arrived in Melbourne from Nigeria on January 20 and were placed on the same floor as the woman.

"The family tested positive on January 24 following their day three swabs and were moved to a health hotel and subsequently tested positive to the coronavirus UK variant," a government statement reads.

The woman, who is aged in her 60s, arrived in Melbourne from Malaysia via Singapore on January 11 and previously tested negative for the virus on her day three and 11 tests, but tested positive to the UK variant on January 28.

She was moved to a health hotel and her husband has tested negative to his day three and 11 swabs, but will continue to undergo further testing as an additional precaution.

Ms Neville said there was "an exceptionally low risk" of community transmission after the spread was identified.

READ MORE: Melbourne COVID-19 exposure sites revealed after hotel quarantine worker contracts coronavirus

Lisa Neville

"This is a hotel transmission," Ms Neville said.  

"It is not community transmission."

Ms Neville, who is also the Minister for Police and Emergency Services, said nobody at the hotel had broken any rules and all cases were asymptomatic but the strain was highly contagious.

"The viral load of the room of the family of five was so high that just opening the door to pick up food saw the virus travel into the corridor," Ms Neville said.

Victoria's Deputy Chief Health Officer Melanie Van Twest said there is no indication anyone else on the floor or staff have been infected but test results over the coming days would provide more clarity.

Professor Van Twest said the positive cases were being investigated and could be "a perfect storm of events that have happened to line up".

READ MORE: Victoria restrictions reintroduced – what you need to know

All of the residents with positive results are now at the Alfred Health hotel in Melbourne.

More than 12,000 people have gone through hotel quarantine since the program began.

The investigation comes as up to 600 people associated with the Australian Open have been told to isolate after being identified as casual contacts of a worker at a different quarantine hotel, who has tested positive to coronavirus.

St. Lucia Back in COVID State of Emergency

Saint Lucia will go back to a state of emergency effective Wednesday, February 3, 2021.

Prime Minister Allen Chastanet made the announcement Tuesday, saying the measure will be in place for an initial seven days.

“This will allow us to further restrict movement with a curfew from 7.00 pm to 5.00 am effective Wednesday, 3rd February,” he said.

Chastanet also disclosed that the COVID-19 act is being amended to reduce operating hours for businesses to coincide with the curfew.

In addition, he said visitors will now require a PCR test within five days of arrival rather than seven days.

However, Chastanet stressed that supermarkets and pharmacies will remain open.

“So there is no need for panic buying,” the PM declared. He said that essential services will continue to operate.

“The full list will be published in the revised statutory instrument on wwwcovid-19 response.lc,” Chastanet explained.

He told the nation that the authorities did not take the decisions he announced lightly. “We know it will be an inconvenience to all of you,” Chastanet stated.

But he asserted that this country’s history has shown that ‘our government has always faced challenges head-on.’

Chastanet gave the assurance that health and safety will never be compromised. He said health and safety are the main focus.

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Barbados: More than 7,000 Businesses Seek Govt. Lockdown Subsidy

More than seven thousand vendors and shop operators have applied for the government’s coping subsidy for businesses that will be closed during the two-week lockdown.

This update from small business and entrepreneurship minister, Kerrie Symmonds, as he led off debate on a supplementary for 3.5 million dollars to facilitate the disbursements.

By way of a service agreement with the ministry, the disbursements will be facilitated by Fund Access and the Barbados Trust Loans Limited.

But Minister Symmonds notes the process has identified a flaw, which his ministry will move with dispatch to correct. He also notes that the government has relaxed the conditions for businesses to access funds this time around as many felt they were too onerous last time and much of the funding was left untouched.

Since the announcement was made last Thursday, he says staff at the Ministry have been working tirelessly to process the online applications and do due diligence which revealed some people including government employees, were trying to take advantage of the system.

But he says government will not allow the actions of a few to impact whose are genuinely in need.

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Govt. Exemption Needed to Leave T&T on CAL

PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad – Anyone wanting to leave Trinidad and Tobago on a Caribbean Airlines (CAL) flight will need an exemption from the Ministry of National Security, the twin-island republic’s flag carrier said Monday.

CAL said in a customer advisory that effective immediately, all departing passengers must adhere to the new online exemption process implemented by the Ministry of National Security under the country’s COVID-19 measures.

“Prior to their date of travel, persons wishing to depart Trinidad and Tobago for any international or regional destination, must apply for a travel exemption,” it said.

“Customers are reminded that their exemption approvals are applied against the respective passports submitted on their exemption request forms, and they must present the same travel documents used with the request forms at check-in.”

CAL added that passengers may obtain online exemptions up to the time of check-in.

The state-owned airline also encouraged all passengers to verify the entry requirements and other important travel information for their intended destination

CMC

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Jamaicans Among Hundreds of Immigrants Deported Under New Biden Administration

HOUSTON (AP) — President Joe Biden’s administration has deported hundreds of immigrants in its early days despite his campaign pledge to stop removing most people in the U.S. illegally at the beginning of his term.

A federal judge last week ordered the Biden administration not to enforce a 100-day deportations ban.

In recent days, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has deported immigrants to at least three countries: 15 people to Jamaica on Thursday and 269 people to Guatemala and Honduras on Friday. More deportation flights were scheduled on Monday.

It’s unclear how many of those people are considered national security or public safety threats or had recently crossed the border illegally. The Department of Homeland Security recently issued new guidance to enforcement agencies, saying that these categories of persons were priority for deportation.

Some of the people put on the flights may have been expelled — which is a quicker process than deportation — under a public health order that former President Donald Trump invoked during the coronavirus pandemic and that Biden has kept in place.

Both Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris vocally opposed the Trump administration’s immigration priorities during the presidential campaign.

In October 2020, Harris stated that on the issue of immigration, “there couldn’t’ be a bigger difference between a Biden/Harris approach and a Donald Trump approach.”

“Donald Trump has been horrendous. Look at the policy which has been about putting babies in cages and separating children from their parents at the border. He also broke his promise to the DREAMers, some of which are coming from Caribbean countries.”

ICE said Friday that it had deported people to Jamaica and that it was in compliance with last week’s court order. The agency did not respond to several requests for further comment on additional deportation flights.

Officials in Honduras confirmed that 131 people were on a deportation flight that landed Friday. Another flight that landed in Guatemala on Friday had 138 people, with an additional 30 people expected to arrive Monday, officials there said.

Last week, U.S. District Judge Drew Tipton banned the Biden administration from enforcing a 100-day deportation moratorium that had gone into effect Jan. 22. Tipton said the Biden administration had violated the federal Administrative Procedure Act in issuing the moratorium and had not proven why a pause in deportations was necessary.

Tipton’s ruling, however, does not require deportations to resume at their previous pace. Immigration agencies typically have latitude in processing cases and scheduling removal flights.

A statement from the White House said that despite the court ruling, President Biden remained committed to the cause.

“President Biden remains committed to taking immediate action to reform our immigration system to ensure it’s upholding American values while keeping our communities safe,” the White House said.

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Barbados Gets 100,000 Doses of AstraZeneca COVID Vaccine from India

Doses of the COVID-19 vaccine developed by Oxford University and U.K.-based drugmaker AstraZeneca are logged by a technical officer, as they arrive at the Princess Royal Hospital in Haywards Heath, England, Saturday Jan. 2, 2021. The UK has 530,000 doses available for rollout from Monday. (Gareth Fuller/Pool via AP)

Prime Minister of Barbados, Mia Mottley on Tuesday announced that India has agreed to give Barbados 100,000 Oxford-AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccines.

In an address to the nation on the eve of a February 3-17 lockdown, she said the logistics were being worked out to get the vaccines here “in short order”, but did not give a specific timeline.

Mottley said she had written to Prime Minister of India, Narendra Modi approximately two weeks ago, “indicating that our country was facing a peculiarly difficult moment and that we would wish to have both the donation and purchase of vaccines from Oxford-AstraZeneca, which as you know are being manufactured in India”.

“Let me at the outset first and foremost thank the Government of India and Prime Minister Modi….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,” she said, adding that the logistics of the arrangements were being finalized and more details would be given as the process moved forward.

Frontline workers will be vaccinated first, along with the elderly and those in the population considered vulnerable.

“We have given a commitment and Cabinet has agreed that the first beneficiaries must be the frontline workers,” Mottley said, noting that those in critical medical care, police and national security forces, and critical essential services that keep the country going would be included.

“We feel that in those 50,000 we can also reach the elderly and the most vulnerable and I’ve asked the hospital and the Ministry of Health, through its polyclinics, to identify those patients, those persons, with multiple comorbidities who must be in that first batch of 50,000.”

In addition to efforts to get more vaccines from other sources, the Barbados government will also benefit from the World Health Organization’s (WHO) COVID-19 Vaccines Global Access (COVAX) Facility, which aims to accelerate the development and manufacture of vaccines, and guarantee fair and equitable access for every country in the world.

Barbados is among 36 Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) member countries that have been notified about estimated doses of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccines they could be receiving under the first phase of delivery, beginning this month.

The vaccine is still under review by the WHO for emergency use approval, but PAHO said on Sunday that this exercise is expected to be advanced over the “next few days.”

It said the number of doses and delivery schedules remain subject to emergency use approval and manufacturing capacity, as well as the establishment of supply agreements between the producers, and PAHO and UNICEF, which are designated to procure and deploy vaccines under COVAX.

Ahead of the two-week “national pause” as the country tries to get a handle on the community spread of COVID-19, Prime Minister Mottley urged Barbadians to use the period to “pause, rest, reflect and renew”.

A 7 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew takes effect on February 3 and only essential services and businesses will be allowed to operate.

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New study proves delaying second coronavirus vaccine dose effective

Britain's health chief says a new study supports the government's strategy of delaying the second shot so more doses can be delivered to more people.

Health Secretary Matt Hancock's comments came after Oxford released a study showing that a single dose of the COVID-19 vaccine developed by Oxford University and AstraZeneca provides a high level of protection for 12 weeks.

The vaccine cut transmission of the virus by two-thirds and prevented severe disease.

READ MORE: A scientist, lawyer and GP answer your vaccine questions

The study has not been peer-reviewed yet, but it was greeted with excitement by UK officials under pressure to justify their decision to delay the second dose.

"That reduction in transmission, as well as the fact there is no hospitalisations, the combination of that is very good news," Mr Hancock told Sky News on Wednesday.

"And it categorically supports the strategy we've been taking on having a 12-week gap between the doses."

One of the lead researchers on the project, Dr Andrew Pollard from Oxford University, said Oxford scientists believe the vaccine will continue to offer protection against new variants of COVID-19, although they are still waiting for data on this.

Even if the virus adapts, "that doesn't mean that we won't still have protection against severe disease.''

"If we do need to update the vaccines, then it is actually a relatively straightforward process it only takes a matter of months, rather than the huge efforts that everyone went through last year to get the very large-scale trials run," he told the BBC.