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Environmental activists occupying a German village due to be swallowed up by a coal mine have vowed to fight on as police gear up to evict them.

The village of Luetzerath in western Germany has gradually been abandoned by its original inhabitants, as it is set to be demolished to make way for an extension to the Garzweiler II lignite mine.

The village stands just a few hundred meters from a vast pit where German utility giant RWE extracts lignite coal to burn in nearby power plants.

The fate of the village embodies the broader debate over Germany’s efforts to wean itself off coal, the most polluting fossil fuel, by 2030, amid the gas crisis.

An environmental activist is surround by police officers as he sits on a monopod directly at the demolition edge of the Garzweiler II opencast lignite mine in Luetzerath, Germany, Thursday, Jan. 5, 2023. According to police, they have once again cleared a barricade for safety reasons at the occupied village of Luetzerath. The village of Luetzerath is abandoned by its inhabitants but occupied by opponents of lignite mining to protest against the further expansion fossil energy. Pic: AP
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An environmental activist is surrounded by police officers as he sits on a monopod directly at the demolition edge of the mine. Pic: AP
A lignite excavators of the energy company RWE operates in the Garzweiler II opencast lignite mine near the village Luetzerath, in Jackerath, Germany, Thursday, Jan. 5, 2023. The village of Luetzerath is abandoned by its inhabitants but occupied by opponents of lignite mining to protest against the further expansion fossil energy. (Rolf Vennenbernd/dpa via AP). Pic: AP
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The mine extracts lignite coal that powers nearby energy plants. Pic: AP

Environmentalists, who warn the coal would release millions of tonnes of climate-heating carbon dioxide and harmful air pollution, moved into the abandoned homes of former residents two years ago.

The group LuetziBleibt – which translates as Luetzi is Staying – claimed “around a couple of hundred people” were currently hunkered down in the village and expects more to join at the weekend.

“We want the coal to stay in the ground because it threatens the basis of human civilisation,” said Johanna Inkermann, a spokesperson for Luetzi is Staying.

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“With climate catastrophe already being here, already harshly affecting people in the Global South, who have not caused [it], we are demanding a change in our current economic system,” she told Sky News over the phone from the camp.

Tree houses built in trees, as part of a protest camp against an open pit lignite mining in Luetzerath, Germany, Dec. 20, 2022. The eviction of the camp announced for January 2023 as the ignite excavator is now operating less than 100 meters from the protest camp. (Rolf Vennenbernd/dpa via AP). Pic: AP
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Activists said they have tree houses and ‘other structures that are hard to get people out of’. Pic: AP
Environmental activists sit on a makeshift platform on stilts, near the demolition edge of the Garzweiler II opencast lignite mine in Luetzerath, Germany, Thursday, Jan. 5, 2023. According to police, they have once again cleared a barricade for safety reasons at the occupied village of Luetzerath. The village of Luetzerath is abandoned by its inhabitants but occupied by opponents of lignite mining to protest against the further expansion fossil energy. (Rolf Vennenbernd/dpa via AP). Pic: AP
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Occupiers sit on a makeshift platform on stilts, near the demolition edge of the mine. Pic: AP

But the Heinsberg county administration has given the police the go-ahead to evict the occupiers from Tuesday 10 January. The activists expect police to start by fencing off the village to prevent more people from joining.

“We will definitely not be moved,” vowed Ms Inkermann.

“We will keep standing in the way of the destruction that is happening here… we will defend this village and we will defend climate justice.”

Environmental activists work on a barricade near the demolition edge of the Garzweiler II opencast lignite mine in Luetzerath, Germany, Thursday, Jan. 5, 2023. According to police, they have once again cleared a barricade for safety reasons at the occupied village of Luetzerath. The village of Luetzerath is abandoned by its inhabitants but occupied by opponents of lignite mining to protest against the further expansion fossil energy. (Rolf Vennenbernd/dpa via AP). Pic: AP
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A barricade near the demolition edge of the Garzweiler II opencast lignite mine. Pic: AP
Climate activists shout slogans during a protest in front of the ministry for economy and climate in Berlin, Germany, Wednesday, Jan. 4, 2023. About 150 people gathered outside Habeck's ministry Wednesday to protest against the expansion of the Garzweiler coal mine that will swallow Luetzerath, arguing that a compromise reached between the government and RWE will result in more emissions, not less. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber). Pic: AP
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About 150 climate activists protested outside the ministry for economy and climate in Berlin. Pic: AP

Last summer the German government said it was forced to fire up additional coal power, in a “bitter but necessary” move to fill the gap left by Russian gas cut off by President Vladimir Putin.

Ministers have been exploring how to boost clean power, aiming to source 80% of the country’s electricity from renewables by 2030.

The ministry for economic affairs and climate action and the mine operator, RWE, were not immediately available to comment, but last year said the war in Ukraine had amplified the importance of a secure supply of lignite coal for power plants.

One study by the German Institute for Economic Research (DIW) claims the lignite coal below Luetzerath was not needed to secure German power supply, even in the absence of Russian gas.

The protesters believe Germany can find ways to manage without the coal.

“It’s about getting the grid more flexible and building up possibilities to store energy,” as well as building further renewable power, said Ms Inkermann.

She said it was not the group’s responsibility to come up with alternatives, but to stop the expansion of the mine to protect people from climate change.

“After all,” she added, the “climate catastrophe doesn’t wait for this problem to be solved. And we don’t have time anymore to to burn more coal… we have to manage multiple crises at the same time. And it’s entirely possible”.

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The moment Vladimir Putin has craved – a red carpet from Donald Trump for a man with blood on his hands

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The moment Vladimir Putin has craved - a red carpet from Donald Trump for a man with blood on his hands

All eyes were on Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin as they met for the first time in more than six years, the Russian president visiting the US for high-stakes talks that could reshape the war in Ukraine.

The two leaders greeted each other with a handshake after stepping off their planes at the Elmendorf-Richardson military base in Anchorage, Alaska – and a smiling Trump even applauded Putin as he approached him on a red carpet that had been laid out.

It is exactly the moment Putin has craved, writes Moscow correspondent Ivor Bennett. The Russian leader has been welcomed on to US soil as an equal for a meeting of great powers.

Trump-Putin summit – latest updates

The red carpet, the handshake, the flypast – only North Korea would give an indicted war criminal a greeting like this.

It marks the end of his isolation from the West in the most spectacular fashion.

Pic: Reuters/Kevin Lamarque
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Pic: Reuters/Kevin Lamarque

Instead of sanctions, Trump has rewarded the Russian president with the equivalent of a state visit.

The pariah looks more like a partner.

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‘Will you commit to not killing civilians?’

US correspondent James Matthews, reporting from the ground in Alaska, describes the meeting on the tarmac as “extraordinary”.

There was the red carpet and more for a man with blood on his hands, he writes. Putin – aggressor, pariah and wanted for war crimes.

Quite the CV for a man who was applauded on to the airbase by his host, the US president.

It couldn’t have looked more cordial – a superpower moment with a smile and a shake between the men who hold peace in their hands.

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The snowy remote base where Trump is hosting Putin

If that wasn’t enough, there followed a military flypast to dress the spectacle.

A smiling Putin seemed duly impressed, but what it says about the power dynamic in the relationship will trouble onlookers in Ukraine – and one moment they may have found particularly galling.

Posing for photographs with Trump before waiting media, Putin was asked: “Will you stop killing civilians?”

To which he smiled, and gave it a deaf ear

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Ukraine vows to continue drone attacks until there’s a peace deal

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Ukraine vows to continue drone attacks until there's a peace deal

Ukraine says there will be no let-up in its punishing long-range drone attacks on Russia until Moscow agrees to peace.

The warning comes ahead of Vladimir Putin meeting Donald Trump in Alaska.

Ukraine war latest: Trump prepares for summit with Putin

It was made in a rare interview with one of the key commanders of Ukraine’s drone forces.

We met in an undisclosed location in woods outside Kyiv. Brigadier General Yuriy Shchygol is a wanted man.

There is a quiet, understated but steely resolve about this man hunted by Russia. His eyes are piercing and he speaks with precision and determination.

Brigadier General Yuriy Shchygol has been in charge of several devastating drone strikes against Russia
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Brigadier General Yuriy Shchygol has been in charge of several devastating drone strikes against Russia

His drone units have done billions of dollars of damage to Russia’s economy and their range and potency is increasing exponentially.

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“Operations”, he said euphemistically, “will develop if Russia refuses a just peace and stays on Ukrainian territory”.

“Initially, we had a few drones a month, capable of striking targets 100 to 250 kilometres away. Today, we have drones capable of flying 3,000 to 4,000 kilometres, and that’s not the limit, it’s constrained only by fuel supply, which can be increased”.

A Ukrainian drone struck this building in Kursk, Russia, on Friday. Pic: Kursk regional government/AP
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A Ukrainian drone struck this building in Kursk, Russia, on Friday. Pic: Kursk regional government/AP

Cars were also damaged in the strike. Pic: Kursk regional government/AP
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Cars were also damaged in the strike. Pic: Kursk regional government/AP

His teams had just carried off one of their most complicated and most devastating strikes yet. A massive fire was raging in an oil refinery in Volgograd, or Stalingrad as it was once called.

“If the refinery is completely destroyed, it will be one of the largest operations conducted,” Brigadier General Shchygol said. “There have been other major targets too, in Saratov and Akhtubinsk. Those refineries are now either non-operational or functioning at only 5% of capacity.”

Oil is potentially Vladimir Putin’s Achilles heel. So much of his economy and war effort is dependent on it. Donald Trump could cripple Russia tomorrow if he sanctioned it but so has appeared reluctant to do so, a source of constant frustration for the Ukrainians.

Military activity on both sides has increased as diplomacy has picked up pace.

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Moscow correspondent: What’s Putin’s strategy?

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In another long-range attack, Ukraine says it hit the port of Olya in Russia’s Astrakhan region, striking a ship loaded with drone parts and ammunition sent from Iran.

But on the ground, Russian forces have made a surprise advance of more than 15km into Ukrainian territory.

Ukraine says the intrusion can be contained, but it adds to fears about its ability to hold back the Russians along the 1000-mile frontline.

Russian soldiers prepare to launch a Lancet drone in an undisclosed location in Ukraine. Pic: Russian Defence Ministry Press Service/AP
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Russian soldiers prepare to launch a Lancet drone in an undisclosed location in Ukraine. Pic: Russian Defence Ministry Press Service/AP

Read more from Sky News:
Why was Putin invited to Alaska?
Russia sends heavyweights to summit
What to expect from pivotal meeting

Russia launches almost nightly drone attacks on Ukraine’s cities, killing civilians and striking residential targets.

General Yuriy says Ukraine picks targets that hurt Russia’s war effort, and it is constantly honing its capability.

“Each operation”, he says, “uses multiple types of drones simultaneously, some fly higher, others lower. That is our technical edge.”

How satisfying, I asked, was it to watch so much enemy infrastructure go up in smoke? He answered with detached professionalism.

“It does not bring me pleasure, war can never be a source of enjoyment. Each of us has tasks we could fulfil in peacetime. But this is war; it doesn’t bring satisfaction. However, it benefits the state and harms our enemy.”

Whatever happens in Alaska, General Yuriy and his teams will continue pioneering drone warfare, hitting Vladimir Putin’s economy where it hurts most.

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India ‘will not tolerate’ nuclear blackmail, says prime minister Narendra Modi in warning to Pakistan on Independence Day

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India 'will not tolerate' nuclear blackmail, says prime minister Narendra Modi in warning to Pakistan on Independence Day

India’s Prime Minister has warned Pakistan it will not succumb to, or tolerate, nuclear blackmail.

In Narendra Modi’s 12th consecutive speech from the ramparts of Delhi’s iconic Red Fort, he addressed the nation celebrating its 79th Independence Day from colonial Britain.

He laid emphasis on ‘Atmanirbhar’, or self-reliance, in defending India by increasing and developing a more powerful weapons system for security.

Mr Modi said: “India has decided, we will not tolerate nuclear blackmail. We have established a new normal. Now we will not distinguish between terrorists and those who nurture and support terrorists. Both are enemies of humanity”

The historic Red Fort in Delhi has traditionally been the venue for the prime minister's Independence Day address. Pic: Reuters
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The historic Red Fort in Delhi has traditionally been the venue for the prime minister’s Independence Day address. Pic: Reuters

Pic: AP
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Pic: AP

Narendra Modi (top centre) waves after his speech in Delhi. Pic: Reuters
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Narendra Modi (top centre) waves after his speech in Delhi. Pic: Reuters

This comes on the back of the conflict in May after the killing of 26 people by terrorists in Pahalgam, Kashmir. In retaliation, India launched attacks on terrorist infrastructure across the border.

Pakistan retaliated, which quickly escalated into both countries launching a series of missiles, armed drones and heavy gunfire on each other.

After four days of fighting, a ceasefire was agreed to between the two nuclear-armed neighbours that have fought wars and many skirmishes over decades.

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US President Donald Trump intervened saying: “I know the leaders of Pakistan and India. I know [them] very well. And they’re in the midst of a trade deal, and yet they’re talking about nuclear weapons… this is crazy.

“I’m not doing a trade deal with you if you’re going to have war, and that’s a war that spreads to other countries, you’ll get nuclear dust. When they start using nuclear weapons, that stuff blows all over the place and really bad things happen.”

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India and Pakistan agree on ceasefire

Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif immediately thanked the American president for the ceasefire and bringing about peace and stability in the region, also recommending him for the Nobel Peace Prize as a genuine peacemaker and his commitment to conflict resolution.

Mr Modi’s government is yet to acknowledge President Trump’s intervention and maintains that the Pakistani military initiated the ceasefire process and India agreed to halt military action.

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‘Pakistan has the upper hand’

In parliament, India’s Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar said: “There was no leader… nobody in the world that asked India to stop its operations. This is something the prime minister also said. There was no linkage of trade in any of these conversations and there was no talk between the prime minister and President Trump.”

Mr Modi’s speech is an audit of the year gone by and his future plans of strengthening the economy and of self-reliance in the face of very high tariffs imposed by President Trump for buying discounted Russian oil.

He spoke of bringing in structural reforms, welfare schemes for farmers, women’s empowerment, employment, technology, clean energy and the green industry, but also raised concerns about rising obesity levels.

Schoolchildren dressed with tree leaves perform during Independence Day celebrations in Kolkata. Pic: AP
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Schoolchildren dressed with tree leaves perform during Independence Day celebrations in Kolkata. Pic: AP

Assam Police Commandos in a motorbike formation at a parade in Guwahati. Pic: AP
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Assam Police Commandos in a motorbike formation at a parade in Guwahati. Pic: AP

India has the fourth largest economy in the world and is expected to be the third largest before Mr Modi’s current term ends in 2029.

Although when it comes to GDP per capita income, which serves as an indicator of individual prosperity, India is ranked 144 out of 196 countries.

The big economy illusion of GDP size has little to do with the well-being and fortune of its people, something the government refuses to acknowledge.

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Read more from Sky News:
Deadly flooding hits Kashmir village
UK-India free trade deal examined
Modi sworn in as PM for third time

In its 2024 report, Paris-based World Inequality Lab said the inequality in India now is worse than under British rule. The research stated that 1% of the wealthiest Indians hold 40% of its wealth and enjoy a quarter of the nation’s income.

Comparing the ‘British Raj’ to the ‘Billionaire Raj’, the study said there are now 271 billionaires in the country and 94 new ones were added the previous year. The rise of top-end inequality in India has been particularly pronounced in terms of wealth concentration in the Modi years between 2014-15 and 2022-23.

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Explained: The UK-India trade deal

With over 1.46 billion people, India is the most populous country, making up 17.8% of the global population.

More than half the country is under 30, and it has one of the lowest old-age dependency ratios, enabling productivity, higher savings and investment.

A key challenge for the government is to match employment with its growing young population. It’s even more critical as artificial intelligence (AI) is increasingly used in production and services, eating into jobs.

Indian Army's Bihar Regiment marching in Kolkata during Independence Day celebrations. Pic: AP
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Indian Army’s Bihar Regiment marching in Kolkata during Independence Day celebrations. Pic: AP

Bagpipers from Jammu Kashmir Police performing in Srinagar, Indian-controlled Kashmir. Pic: AP
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Bagpipers from Jammu Kashmir Police performing in Srinagar, Indian-controlled Kashmir. Pic: AP

Last week, President Trump levied an additional 25% tariff on India for buying Russian oil, taking the total tariff level to over 50% and hitting Indian manufacturing and trade.

“I don’t care what India does with Russia. They can take their dead economies down together,” the president said.

Since the Ukraine war, India has been buying discounted Russian crude and its imports have risen from 3% in 2021 to about 35% to 40% in 2024.

Defending its stance, India says it does so for its energy security and to protect millions of its citizens from rising costs.

It’s a national day of celebration with patriotic fervour all around, but also a grim reminder of the tragedy of partition – the trauma of which still haunts its people.

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