Foreign News
Former Trump adviser John Bolton criminally indicted
John Bolton, who served as Donald Trump’s national security adviser before becoming a vocal critic of the president, has been criminally indicted on federal charges.
The Department of Justice presented a case to a grand jury in Maryland on Thursday, and they agreed there was enough evidence to indict Bolton, who issued a statement maintaining his innocence.
It comes after FBI agents searched Bolton’s home and office in August as part of an investigation into the handling of classified information.
The indictment makes Bolton, 76, the third of the US president’s political opponents to face charges in recent weeks. He could face decades in prison.
According to a 26-page indictment filed at a court in Greenbelt, Maryland, on Thursday, Bolton is charged with eight counts of transmission of national defence information (NDI) and 10 counts of unlawful retention of NDI.
Prosecutors accuse him of illegally transmitting top secret information about US national defence using his personal email and other messaging apps.
“These documents revealed intelligence about future attacks, foreign adversaries, and foreign-policy relations,” the court papers state.
If found guilty, Bolton could face up to 10 years in prison for each charge. He is expected to surrender to authorities on Friday.
“No one is above the law,” US Attorney General Pam Bondi said in a statement announcing the charges.
Bolton said in a statement that he looked forward to defending his “lawful conduct” in court as he accused Trump of seeking “retribution against me”.
“Now, I have become the latest target in weaponizing the Justice Department to charge those he [Trump] deems to be his enemies with charges that were declined before or distort the facts,” Bolton said.
Bolton’s lawyer, Abbe Lowell, said the charges stemmed from diary entries kept by his client over his 45-year career in public service.
“Like many public officials throughout history, Amb Bolton kept diaries – that is not a crime,” said Mr Lowell.
He described the records as “unclassified, shared only with his immediate family, and known to the FBI as far back as 2021”.
According to CNN, Bolton is alleged to have shared the information with his wife and daughter.
[BBC]
Foreign News
British grandmother flies home after 12 years on Indonesian death row
A British grandmother who spent 12 years on death row in Indonesia after being convicted of drug trafficking flew home on today [Friday] , as part of a deal between the UK and Indonesian governments.
Lindsay Sandiford, 69, was sentenced to death on the island of Bali in 2013, after she was found with nearly 5kg of cocaine worth £1.6m ($2.1m) when she arrived on a flight from Thailand in 2012.
Indonesia has some of the world’s most stringent drug laws, but it has freed several high-profile detainees, including the infamous ‘Bali Nine’ drug ring, in the past year.
Sandiford was repatriated along with another British national Shahab Shahabadi, who had been serving a life sentence for drug smuggling.
Their flight left Bali at about 00:30 local time (16:30 GMT Thursday), Indonesian officials said.
Sandiford and Shahabadi were both said to be suffering from health problems while in prison. Last month, Indonesia’s senior law and human rights minister, Yusril Ihza Mahendra, said Sandiford was “seriously ill” while Shahabadi had “various serious illnesses, including mental health issues”, AFP news agency reported.
Sandiford attended a press conference in the Bali prison in a wheelchair hours before she was due to fly home.
She had admitted to the offences in 2013, but said she only agreed to carry the cocaine after a drug syndicate threatened to kill her son.
The UK’s Deputy Ambassador to Indonesia Matthew Downing said Sandiford and Shahabadi were being repatriated on “humanitarian grounds”.
They will be given necessary treatment while being “governed by the law and procedures of the UK” upon their return, he added.
In December 2024, Indonesia repatriated the five remaining members of the “Bali Nine” drug ring, after they served nearly 20 years in Indonesian prisons. The two ringleaders were executed by firing squad in 2015.
Also in December, Filipina Mary Jane Veloso was repatriated to the Philippines. The mother of two, who was nearly executed, had always maintained she was tricked into carrying the drugs found on her.
[BBC]
Foreign News
Attackers target ship off Somalia’s coast amid piracy resurgence
Attackers firing machineguns and rocket-propelled grenades have boarded a ship off the coast of Somalia, United Kingdom officials say of the latest assault, likely by resurgent Somali pirates, in the region.
“The Master of a vessel has reported being approached by 1 small craft on its stern. The small craft fired small arms and RPG’s towards the vessel,” the British military’s UK Maritime Trade Operations centre said in an alert issued on Thursday. It warned ships in the area to “transit with caution”.
The private security firm Ambrey also said an attack was under way, saying it targeted a Malta-flagged tanker heading from Sikka, India, to Durban, South Africa.
Ambrey added that it appeared to be an assault by Somali pirates, who are reported to be operating in the area in recent days and who seized an Iranian fishing boat to use as a base of operations. Iran has not acknowledged the seizure of the fishing boat, called the Issamohamadi.
Details of the vessel attacked on Thursday correspond to the Hellas Aphrodite, which changed its track and slowed down at the time of the attack. The ship’s owners and managers could not immediately be reached for comment.
Another maritime security firm, the Diaplous Group, said the attacked tanker had a crew of 24 mariners, all of whom reportedly locked themselves into the ship’s citadel for safety during the attack. The vessel did not have an armed security team on board it, the firm added.
The European Union’s Operation Atalanta, a counterpiracy mission around the Horn of Africa, has responded to other recent pirate attacks in the area and issued a recent alert to shippers that a pirate group was operating off Somalia and assaults were “almost certain” to happen.
Thursday’s attack came after another vessel, the Cayman Islands-flagged Stolt Sagaland, found itself targeted in a suspected pirate attack that involved both its armed security force and the attackers shooting at each other, the EU force said.
Piracy off Somalia peaked in 2011 when 237 attacks were reported. Somali piracy in the region in 2011 cost the world’s economy about $7bn with $160m paid out in ransoms, according to the Oceans Beyond Piracy monitoring group.
The threat was diminished by increased international naval patrols, a strengthened central government in Somalia and other efforts.
However, Somali piracy has surged again since late 2023. According to Solace Global Risk, a travel risk management company, the decline in antipiracy patrols and the relocation of funds to counter Houthi rebels activities contributed to the rise in attacks.
In 2024, there were seven reported incidents off Somalia, according to the International Maritime Bureau. So far this year, multiple fishing boats have been seized by Somali pirates.
[Aljazeera]
Foreign News
US school teacher shot by six-year-old student awarded $10m
A jury in the state of Virginia in the United States has awarded $10m to a former teacher who was shot by a six-year-old student.
The jury on Thursday sided with former teacher Abby Zwerner’s claim, made in a civil lawsuit, that an ex-administrator at the school had ignored repeated warnings that the six-year-old child had a gun in class.
Zwerner, 28, was shot in January 2023 as she sat at a reading table in her first-grade classroom and spent nearly two weeks in the hospital, required six surgeries and still does not have the full use of her left hand.
The bullet fired by the six-year-old narrowly missed her heart and remains in her chest.
Zwerner, who did not address reporters outside the court after the decision was announced, had sought $40m in damages against Ebony Parker, a former assistant principal at Richneck Elementary School in the city of Newport News, Virginia.
One of her lawyers, Diane Toscano, said the verdict sent a message that what happened at the school “was wrong and is not going to be tolerated, that safety has to be the first concern at school”.
Zwerner’s lawyers had claimed that Parker, the assistant principal at the time, had failed to act in the hours before the shooting after several school staff members told her that the student had a gun in his backpack.
“Who would think a six-year-old would bring a gun to school and shoot their teacher?” Toscano had asked the jury earlier.
“It’s Dr Parker’s job to believe that is possible. It’s her job to investigate it and get to the very bottom of it.”
Parker did not testify in the lawsuit.
The mother of the student who shot Zwerner was sentenced to four years in prison after being convicted of child neglect and firearms charges.
No charges were brought against the child, who told authorities he got his mother’s handgun by climbing onto a drawer to reach the top of a dresser, where the firearm was in his mother’s purse.
Newtown Action Alliance, an advocacy organisation that supports reforms aimed at addressing gun violence, said that the case points to the need for greater regulations over the storage of firearms in homes with children.
“Abby Zwerner was shot by her 6-year-old student using a gun from home,” the group said in a social media post, adding that “76 percent of school shooters get their guns from their homes or relatives”.
Zwerner no longer works for the school district and has said she has no plans to teach again. She has since become a licensed cosmetologist.
While accidents involving young children accessing unsecured firearms in their homes are common in the US, school shootings perpetrated by those under 10 years old are rare.
A database compiled by US researcher David Riedman has registered about 15 such incidents since the 1970s.
[Aljazeera]
-
Features3 days agoFavourites for the title of Miss Universe 2025
-
Features7 days agoRolls – Royce in Ceylon
-
News7 days agoTeachers threaten strike against education reforms and ‘bid to shut down more than 1,500 schools’
-
News7 days agoSri Lanka: Fewer births, rapid ageing mark a new demographic era
-
Business6 days agoRajaputhra Foundation, Nawaloka Hospitals partner for free breast cancer awareness and screening
-
News5 days agoJSC removes 20 officials including judges
-
Opinion7 days agoA Royal tribute to a true Royalist — Lorenz Pereira
-
Editorial7 days agoEstablishing courts, closing schools
