Foreign News
Shoe thrown at India’s top judge in religious row
An Indian lawyer has thrown a shoe at the country’s Chief Justice BR Gavai after apparently being angered by remarks the judge made about Hinduism.
Rakesh Kishore launched his attack during Monday’s court proceedings in Delhi in what is seen across India as a serious public insult and security breach.
Three lawyers present in the courtroom confirmed to the BBC that a shoe had been hurled at the judge, with one saying it “brushed against the chief justice and another justice and fell behind them”.
Mr Kishore was heard saying “India won’t tolerate insult to Sanatan Dharma [Hinduism]”, as he was led away from the courtroom by security officials. He was later suspended from practice.
Advocate Ravi Jha, a lawyer who was in the courtroom during the incident, told the BBC that Mr Kishore “threw his shoe, and raised his hand to indicate that he had thrown the shoe”. “After he was apprehended by the courtroom security, the chief justice told the lawyers to continue their arguments and not get distracted,” Mr Jha added.
Chief Justice Gavai remained calm all the time, Anas Tanwir, another lawyer who was in the courtroom, told the BBC. The chief justice has not publicly commented on the issue. Indian authorities later said no charges would be filed against Mr Kishore.
It is unclear which remarks angered the lawyer.
But some media reports suggest it could be related to a recent court petition rejected by a bench headed by the chief justice, when he also made remarks about the Hindu god Vishnu.
Dismissing a plea to reconstruct a seven-foot idol of Lord Vishnu at a temple in Madhya Pradesh state last month, the chief justice had said: “This is purely publicity interest litigation… Go and ask the deity himself to do something.”
The comments sparked controversy, with some accusing him of mocking Hindu beliefs. Justice Gavai later took note of the criticism, saying he respects “all religions”, the Press Trust of India reported.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi called the shoe attack “utterly condemnable”, joining a chorus of criticism from across the political spectrum.
Modi spoke to Justice Gavai and said the attack had angered every Indian, PTI reports. “There is no place for such reprehensible acts in our society,” the PM said.
Throwing a shoe at someone in public is seen as an act of disrespect and humiliation in India and many other countries.
Earlier this year, a shoe was hurled at Kenyan President William Ruto during a rally.
In 2008 an Iraqi journalist hurled a shoe at then US President George W Bush in protest over America’s invasion of Iraq.
[BBC]
Foreign News
21 dead, search continues after refugee boat sinks near Malaysia, Thailand
Authorities in Malaysia and Thailand have recovered at least 21 bodies as they search for survivors after a boat carrying Rohingya refugees fleeing Myanmar sank, police and maritime officials said on Monday.
Officials said the boat was carrying about 70 migrants when it capsized near Thailand’s Ko Tarutao island, just north of Malaysia’s Langkawi Island, three days after departing from Myanmar’s Rakhine state.
They were believed to have been part of a larger group of some 300 people who were split between at least two boats, police said.
Tarutao is just north of Malaysia’s island resort of Langkawi, where officials said search-and-rescue operations were being concentrated.
Thirteen survivors have been rescued in Malaysian waters since Saturday, the Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency (MMEA) told reporters on Monday.
Search-and-rescue operations were expected to last for seven days, Romli Mustafa, MMEA director in the northern states of Kedah and Perlis, told reporters on Monday evening.
Hundreds of Rohingya people boarded a vessel bound for Malaysia two weeks ago and were transferred onto two boats on Thursday, Malaysian authorities said.
One boat carrying 70 people sank shortly afterwards, while the fate of about 230 people on board the other vessel remains unclear, officials said.
More than 5,100 Rohingya boarded boats to leave Myanmar and Bangladesh between January and early November of this year, and nearly 600 of them have been reported dead or missing, according to data from the United Nations Refugee Agency.
[Aljazeera]
Foreign News
Israel parliament passes first reading of death penalty for ‘terrorism’ law
Israel’s parliament has passed the first reading of a bill that would introduce the death penalty for “terrorism”.
The amendment to the penal code, proposed by far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, was approved by 39 votes to 16 in the 120-member Knesset on Monday, signalling it has support from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government.
According to the draft text, the death penalty would apply to individuals who kill Israelis out of “racist” motives and “with the aim of harming the State of Israel and the revival of the Jewish people in its land”, The Times of Israel reported.
Critics said the wording means that in practice, the death penalty would apply almost exclusively to Palestinians who kill Jews, not to Jewish hardliners who carry out attacks on Palestinians.
Attempts to introduce similar legislation have failed in the past. The current bill must pass a second and third reading before becoming law.
A statement from the National Security Committee that includes the bill’s explanatory note said: “Its purpose is to cut off terrorism at its root and create a heavy deterrent.”
Ben-Gvir welcomed the result of the vote on social media and said his Jewish Power party is “making history”.
Human rights groups have condemned Ben-Gvir’s long-running push for such legislation, warning that it targets Palestinians specifically and deepens systemic discrimination.
While the death penalty still exists for a small number of crimes in Israel, it has become a de facto abolitionist state. Nazi Holocaust perpetrator Adolf Eichmann was the last person executed by the country when he was put to death in 1962.
The vote on the bill took place during the United States-brokered ceasefire, which came into effect last month, aimed at ending Israel’s war on Gaza.
Israel is accused of violating the ceasefire with consistent attacks on Gaza, while Israeli settlers and the military have regularly carried out deadly assaults across the occupied West Bank.
Israel claims Hamas is breaking the terms of the ceasefire and remains a threat to its military in Gaza.
Responding to the parliamentary vote, the Palestinian group said the proposed law “embodies the ugly fascist face of the rogue Zionist occupation and represents a blatant violation of international law”.
The Palestinian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Expatriates called the proposed bill “new form of escalating Israeli extremism and criminality against the Palestinian people”.
More than 10,000 Palestinians, including women and children, are currently being held in Israeli prisons.
Israeli and Palestinian human rights organisations assert that they are subject to torture, starvation and medical neglect that has led to the deaths of numerous detainees.
[Aljazeera]
Foreign News
US Senate passes funding bill as historic shutdown nears likely end
The US Senate has passed a crucial funding bill that could bring the longest government shutdown in history to an end within days.
The bill passed in a 60-40 vote late on Monday, with nearly all Republicans joining eight Democrats who splintered from the party to approve it. The deal funds the government until the end of January.
The House of Representatives will now have to pass the bill before President Donald Trump can sign it into effect. Trump signalled he would be willing to do so earlier on Monday.
The deal came to fruition over the weekend, after some Democrats joined Republicans and negotiated an agreement to get federal employees back to work and essential services restarted.
Republicans – who hold a 53-47 majority in the Senate – needed the measure to clear the 60-vote minimum threshold.
Democratic Senators Dick Durbin, John Fetterman, Catherine Cortez Masto, Maggie Hassan, Tim Kaine, Jackie Rosen and Jeanne Shaheen broke from the rest of their party to vote in favour of the funding bill.
They were joined by Maine’s Angus King, an independent who caucuses with the Democrats, who also voted to reopen the government.
Only one Senate Republican – Kentucky’s Rand Paul – voted with the majority of Democrats against it.
The announcement of the bill’s passage was made to a largely empty room, but the senators who stayed until the end cheered and applauded.
“We are going to reopen government, we are going to ensure that federal employees… will now receive compensation that they’re earned and deserve,” Senator Susan Collins, a Republican who played a key role in authoring the bill, said after it passed.
Many government services have been suspended since October, and around 1.4 million federal employees are on unpaid leave or working without pay.
The shutdown has had wide ranging impacts on a variety of services, including US air travel and food benefits for 41 million low-income Americans.
On Monday, more the 2,400 flights across the US were cancelled according to airline traffic tracker FlightAware. At least 9,000 were delayed.
The funding bill will now go to the Republican-controlled House of Representatives, where members have been out of session and away from Washington since mid-September.
On Monday, with the Senate deal seemingly in reach, House Speaker Mike Johnson called members of his chamber back to Washington.
The House will begin discussing the measure on Wednesday, although it is unclear exactly how much time that process may take.
Republicans have a two-seat majority in the House so every vote will count.
The deal negotiated over the weekend extends funding for the federal government until 30 January.
It also includes full-year funding for the Department of Agriculture, as well as funding for military construction and legislative agencies.
Guarantees that all federal workers will be paid for time during the shutdown, and funding for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) – which provides food aid to one in eight Americans – until next September are also included in the bill.
The package includes an agreement for a vote in December on extending healthcare subsidies that are due to expire this year, a key issue Democrats had been holding out for concessions on.
Democratic Party leaders had said that they would not lend their support to new funding for government operations until Congress addressed the subsidies that help tens of millions of Americans pay for health insurance purchased through government-run exchanges.
The agreement was negotiated between Senate Majority Leader John Thune and the White House, with Democratic Senators Jeanne Shaheen and Maggie Hassan of New Hampshire, and Angus King of Maine, an independent who caucuses with the Democrats.
Some high-profile Democrats have been highly critical of colleagues who sided with Republicans to end the shutdown without concrete guarantees on healthcare, with California Governor Gavin Newsom earlier calling the decision “pathetic”.
Senator Chuck Schumer, the minority leader in the chamber, said the package “fails to do anything of substance to fix America’s healthcare crisis”.
Virginia Senator Tim Kaine was among the group of Democrats who voted in favour of the compromise. He pushed back on that criticism, and said the federal workers he represents were “saying thank you” for agreeing the deal.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune has promised to take up the healthcare subsidies measure by the second week of December, but in the House, Johnson has said he will not bring the measure for a vote.
Trump, meanwhile, signalled earlier on Monday that he would be willing to sign the funding bill into effect if it passes the House.
“We’ll be opening up our country very quickly,” he told reporters in the Oval Office, adding: “the deal is very good.”
[BBC]
-
Features6 days agoFavourites for the title of Miss Universe 2025
-
Midweek Review7 days agoFocus on Minister Paulraj’s UK statement
-
News6 days agoDr. Saman Weerasinghe receives Russia’s prestigious Order of Friendship
-
Opinion5 days agoReturning to source with Aga
-
Opinion7 days agoAmid winds and waves: Sri Lanka and the Indian Ocean – III
-
Business5 days agoMiss Universe Sri Lanka 2025 Lihasha Lindsay White departs for Bangkok
-
Features6 days agoVision of Dr. Gamani Corea and the South’s present development policy options
-
Features7 days agoSri Lanka’s Northern Gateway: Economic promise and geopolitical power in the Indian Ocean
