Connect with us

Published

on

WASHINGTON China on Sunday protested against Washingtons decision to shoot down a suspected Chinese spy balloon over North America, accusing the United States of overreacting and warning that it reserves the right to take retaliatory measures.

China expresses its dissatisfaction and protest against the US use of force to attack the unmanned civilian airship, the Chinese Foreign Ministry said in a statement on Sunday.

Washingtons actions showed it was obviously overreacting and seriously violating international practice, the ministry added.

Chinese Defence Ministry spokesman Tan Kefei said in a separate statement that Beijing reserves the right to use the necessary means to deal with similar situations, without elaborating.

The shooting down of the suspected spy balloon, off the coast of South Carolina on Saturday, has highlighted how relations between the two superpowers can be held hostage to domestic politics in the US, said Chinese analysts.

Professor Zhu Feng, dean of the Institute of International Relations at Nanjing University, said what should have been a technical issue had become a high-level issue of security confrontation between China and the US.

This should serve as a reminder to Chinese and American leaders that in order to have a stable and manageable Sino-US relationship, emotional domestic politics must be kept at a distance, otherwise the bilateral relationship will only get worse, he added.

Mr Hu Xijin, a former editor-in-chief of state-run tabloid Global Times and a commentator known for his nationalistic views, said the manner in which the politicians in the US had stirred up American public opinion with the incident meant that shooting down the balloon was the only way that it could be brought to a conclusion.

The balloon, first spotted earlier last week loitering over Montana, has been shot down by an F-22 fighter jet using an air-to-air missile, according to US military officials. Remote video URL Beijing has rejected allegations that the balloon was meant for espionage, saying instead that it was an unmanned civilian airship intended to monitor the weather.

The incident scuppered an impending visit to Beijing by US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, with Washington saying it would not be appropriate to travel to Beijing for meetings at this time.

Experts had hoped that Mr Blinkens visit who would have been the most senior US diplomat to travel to Beijing since 2018 would put a floor under the bilateral relationship and prevent ties from deteriorating further.

Chinese analysts said the US response was an escalation, pointing out that it showed how anti-China sentiments in the US political establishment were proving to be the biggest impediment to the improvement of ties.

The incident, which was closely watched on social media by netizens in both countries, also showed that public opinion in both countries was becoming more inflammable, making the future more bleak, said Professor Shi Yinhong, director of Centre on American Studies at the Renmin University of China Embed Twitter Tweet URL Writing on Weibo, Mr Hu said the shooting down of the balloon showed that the US was incapable of dealing with the incident in a practical manner, and must politicise it.

China is dealing with a US that does not need to drink to get drunk, its internal (political) strife is constantly generating hostilities that spill over to the international stage, he said. More On This Topic US postpones Blinken trip to China over spy balloon incident The 7 days before suspected Chinese spy balloon was shot down in the Atlantic: A timeline

Continue Reading

Entertainment

Paul Gallagher, older brother of Oasis stars Liam and Noel, appears in court charged with rape

Published

on

By

Paul Gallagher, older brother of Oasis stars Liam and Noel, appears in court charged with rape

Paul Gallagher, the older brother of Oasis stars Noel and Liam, has appeared in court charged with rape, sexual assault and other offences.

Gallagher, of East Finchley, north London, is accused of rape, coercive and controlling behaviour, three counts of sexual assault, three counts of intentional strangulation, two counts of making a threat to kill, and assault occasioning actual bodily harm.

The alleged offences are claimed to have taken place between 2022 and 2024, the charge sheet showed.

During a five-minute hearing at Westminster Magistrates’ Court on Wednesday, Gallagher spoke to confirm his name, age and address, but entered no pleas.

He has been bailed for a further appearance at Harrow Crown Court on 24 September.

Gallagher, who is a year older than Noel and seven years older than Liam, has never been involved in Oasis.

Continue Reading

World

Australia shooting suspect identified as manhunt continues into a second day

Published

on

By

Australia shooting suspect identified as manhunt continues into a second day

A suspect who shot and killed two police officers and seriously injured a third in Australia’s rural south-east has been identified, police said. 

A manhunt is underway for Dezi Freeman, 56, who is heavily armed and experienced in wilderness survival skills, Victoria state’s chief commissioner of police Mike Bush told reporters.

The local residents have been urged to stay indoors.

The whereabouts of Freeman’s wife and two children were initially unknown, but Mr Bush said they had visited a police station and spoken to officers late on Tuesday night.

The shooting happened earlier on Tuesday, when 10 armed police officers tried to execute a search warrant at Freeman’s property in Porepunkah, a town of just over 1,000 people located 200 miles north-east of Melbourne.

The suspect killed two officers and injured a third. Pic: Reuters
Image:
The suspect killed two officers and injured a third. Pic: Reuters

Porepunkah Primary School in Porepunkah, Victoria, was locked down for several hours. Pic: Reuters
Image:
Porepunkah Primary School in Porepunkah, Victoria, was locked down for several hours. Pic: Reuters

The officers “were met by the offender and they were murdered in cold blood,” the police chief said.

Freeman killed a 59-year-old detective and a 35-year-old senior constable, Mr Bush said. Another detective was shot, but his wounds are not life-threatening.

The armed man fled alone on foot into the nearby forest, where an intensive search for him continued through the night and into Wednesday.

Porepunkah is located 200 miles north-east of Melbourne, Australia.
Image:
Porepunkah is located 200 miles north-east of Melbourne, Australia.

Mr Bush would not elaborate on the search warrant for Freeman’s property and said it was “too soon to say” if his attack on the officers was ideologically motivated.

But he told reporters that some of the officers who tried to execute the search warrant included members of a unit that investigates sexual offences and child abuse.

Read more on Sky News:
Israel ‘killing a lot of journalists’
Three die in helicopter crash
SpaceX completes spectacular test flight

Australian media widely reported that Freeman expressed so-called sovereign citizen beliefs, referencing a 2021 video from Wangaratta Magistrates’ Court in which he is seen representing himself and unsuccessfully trying to arrest a magistrate and police officers.

Members of self-proclaimed sovereign citizen movements use debunked legal theories to reject government authority.

A manhunt in Australia continues into its second day. Pic: Simon Dallinger/AAP Image/AP
Image:
A manhunt in Australia continues into its second day. Pic: Simon Dallinger/AAP Image/AP

In a 2024 finding from Victoria’s Supreme Court, where Freeman attempted to challenge a lengthy suspension of his driver’s licence, a judge noted that the man had “a history of unpleasant encounters with police officers”.

In his submissions to the court, Freeman referred to the officers as “Nazis” and “terrorist thugs”.

The chief commissioner would not say how much was known of Freeman’s beliefs before the visit to his property.

Porepunkah, famous for its vineyards and beautiful views, is a gateway to Victoria’s alpine tourist region.

On Tuesday, public buildings and the nearby airfield were shut, and the local school, with just over 100 students, was locked down for several hours before children and staff were permitted to leave.

“Be vigilant, keep yourselves safe,” Mr Bush urged residents on Wednesday. “Please don’t go outside if you don’t need to.”

Mr Bush said the suspect’s knowledge of outdoor survival skills posed a “challenge” to authorities.

Continue Reading

UK

Labour sinks to lowest approval rating of this parliament

Published

on

By

Labour sinks to lowest approval rating of this parliament

Labour has sunk to its lowest approval rating for this parliament, according to a fresh YouGov poll for Sky News.

Sir Keir Starmer’s party is currently on 20% of the vote – the lowest level since last year’s general election and just three points ahead of the Conservatives. on 17% of the vote.

Politics latest: Labour goes on the attack against Reform

Nigel Farage’s Reform UK, which on Tuesday outlined plans to deport hundreds of thousands of migrants if it wins power at the next election, is currently in the lead with 28% of the vote.

Asked about the polling, Nick Thomas-Symonds, the EU relations minister, told Sky News’ Anna Jones that the government had been forced to take “very difficult decisions to stabilise the public finances early in this parliament”.

He said Labour had acted in the “national interest” by securing a reset deal with the EU which lowers costs for supermarkets and shoppers, and which the government hopes to extend.

“That is acting in the national interest, that is not about particular opinion polls you are showing me today,” he said.

“That is about work the prime minister asked me to do and to prepare for before this government came into office and that is what this government does. It does the hard yards of delivery for the British people.”

He added: “What Nigel Farage does is to stoke problems and offer empty promises for their solution.”

Mr Thomas-Symonds, who represents Torfaen, took the fight to Mr Farage in a speech today, where he accused the Reform UK leader of wanting to “reverse our progress” and of “dividing communities and stoking anger”.

The government wants to get a permanent deal with the EU on food and drink agreed in the next 18 months.

The current temporary agreement, which was put in place in June, stopped checks on some fruit and vegetables imported from the EU, which meant no border checks or fees would be paid, and is due to expire in January 2027.

Mr Farage has previously called for the agreement between the UK and EU to be torn up, saying in May that the SPS [sanitary and phytosanitary] provisions agreed that month would push the UK “back into the orbit of Brussels, giving away vast amounts of our sovereignty for very little in return”.

In his speech, Mr Thomas-Symonds said the Tories and Reform UK only offer “easy answers and snake oil” over the UK’s relationship with the EU.

“Some will hysterically cry even treason,” he said. “Some will say we’re surrendering sovereignty or freedoms, but that is nonsense.

Read more:
Farage’s small boats plan is about putting Labour on the spot
How Farage’s latest ‘leave’ plan might impact you

“We are determined to plug the gaps, to rebuild Britain, protect our borders, bring down bills in every part of the country and secure good jobs, a new relationship of mutual benefit, one that brings freedom back to our businesses and exercises our sovereignty.

“And it needs pragmatism. When you’re tough, decisive and collaborative. That cannot rest on easy answers and snake oil. The Tories [are] completely 2D, stuck with a ghost of Brexit past. And then Nigel Farage, who has pledged to reverse our progress.”

A Reform UK spokesperson said: “No one has done more damage to British businesses than this Labour government.

“With 157,000 fewer people on payroll since Labour took office, their jobs tax is stifling success and hitting small and medium-sized businesses across the country.

“Cosying up to the EU and leaving us entangled in reams of retained EU law which Kemi Badenoch failed to scrap will not resuscitate Britain’s struggling economy.”

Continue Reading

Trending