Dutch authorities investigate alleged police violence after pro-Palestinian protest

Amsterdam police say they are aware of footage that appears to show officers beating protesters after banned rally

Dutch authorities have said they are investigating reports of police violence against pro-Palestinian protesters after a banned rally on Wednesday evening had been broken up.

Amsterdam police said on X that they were aware of online footage, which seemed to show police officers beating protesters who had already been released after being taken away from the site of the protest.

Continue reading...

Dick Van Dyke glad he ‘won’t be around’ for Trump’s second term as president

The 98-year-old Mary Poppins star had previously endorsed Kamala Harris and Joe Biden

Mary Poppins star Dick Van Dyke has said he is glad he “won’t be around” to experience the full duration of Donald Trump’s second term as president.

In a video published by the Daily Mail, Van Dyke, 98, was stopped in a car park and asked: “Does the future look bright for America?” The actor replied: “I hope you’re right.”

Continue reading...

Russia increases Ukraine drone attacks by 44% since Trump election – ABC News

  1. Russia increases Ukraine drone attacks by 44% since Trump election  ABC News
  2. Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 993  Al Jazeera English
  3. Russia Launches Missiles Against Ukraine’s Capital  The New York Times
  4. Russia fires dozens of missiles and drones at Ukraine's capital as North Korean troops start fighting in Kursk  CBS News
  5. Russia launches massive missile, drone attack on Kyiv as it ramps up airborne offensive  Yahoo! Voices
Posted in Uncategorized

Many NHS staff would use conscience clause if assisted dying is legalised, say doctors

Christian and Muslim groups say medics who refuse to help patients die not protected in England and Wales bill

A significant proportion of NHS medical staff are likely to exercise a conscience clause if assisted dying is legalised by parliament.

Labour MP Kim Leadbeater’s private member’s bill stipulates that no doctor would be under any obligation to participate in assisted dying.

Continue reading...

Minister criticises Badenoch for attack on council tax cap that Tories imposed – UK politics live

Matthew Pennycook says Tory position now unclear on cap on tax rises that was in place when Kemi Badenoch was local government minister

A minister has criticised her Tory shadow for talking about “joy” in the health sector about the funding it received.

Karin Smyth, a health minister, said it was a strange word to use given the state of NHS finances left by the last government.

Many in the health sector would have been pleased to hear the announcement of the extra funding going into the NHS [in the budget], only for the joy to be struck down by the realisation of a broken manifesto promise not to raise national insurance contributions.

This was only compounded further on the discovery that a raft of frontline care providers – care homes, hospices, care charities, pharmacies, GPS, to name but a few – found themselves not exempt from the NI rises, leaving them with crippling staff bills and the threat of closure and redundancies.

He talks about joy. There was no joy when we inherited the mess that they left back in July.

The chancellor took into account the impact of changes to national insurance when she allocated an extra £26bn to the Department of Health and Social Care.

There are well established processes for agreeing funding allocations across the system, we are going through those processes now with this issue in mind.

The British government needs to start now indicating for them what they believe is the tipping point at which they believe a referendum would be called.

Continue reading...

New Orleans priest accused of child abuse competent to proceed with trial

Lawrence Hecker, 93, self-admitted serial child molester, grapples with Alzheimer’s dementia and had trial delayed

With less than a month to go before his latest scheduled trial date, a self-admitted serial child molester and retired Roman Catholic priest from New Orleans remains competent to proceed with his oft-delayed rape and kidnapping case – albeit marginally as the 93-year-old grapples with Alzheimer’s dementia, according to his most recent medical evaluation.

A pair of doctors who evaluated Lawrence Hecker on 6 November made it a point to note that his illness is “a chronic and progressive disease”, suggesting additional delays beyond several already seen in the case create a risk that the clergyman declines into a state of legal incompetence preventing him from ever standing trial given his advanced age.

Continue reading...

Middle East crisis: Israeli strike kills six in southern Lebanon, health ministry says – as it happened

This live blog is now closed. You can read all our coverage of the Israel-Gaza war here and all our coverage of Israel’s war on Lebanon here

Overnight the IDF announced that six soldiers had been killed in clashes with Hezbollah inside southern Lebanon.

The Times of Israel reports “it was one of the heaviest single-day losses in the operation that began in late September,” and that “according to an initial IDF probe, the soldiers were killed in an exchange of fire with at least four Hezbollah operatives inside a building in a village in southern Lebanon.”

Continue reading...

No adverse findings in probe into elite Northern Territory police triggered by offensive ‘awards’

Corruption watchdog rules out further investigation into racism within the force despite evidence of historical racial discrimination

WARNING: This article contains offensive content

A corruption watchdog has closed an investigation into racism within the Northern Territory police force’s elite tactical response group with no adverse findings despite uncovering historical evidence of race-based discrimination.

The probe was triggered after former constable Zachary Rolfe attempted to prove the force’s ingrained culture of racism, using as evidence a historical racist mock-award handed out in the group to the officer who behaved “most like an Aboriginal”.

Continue reading...

French prosecutor seeks 5-year jail sentence and ban from office against far right leader – NBC News

  1. French prosecutor seeks 5-year jail sentence and ban from office against far right leader  NBC News
  2. Marine Le Pen’s next bid for French presidency threatened as prosecutors seek political ban  CNN
  3. Prosecutors request ban on Marine Le Pen running for public office in embezzlement trial  POLITICO Europe
  4. Paris prosecutor seeks jail and public office ban for Marine Le Pen  The Guardian
  5. French prosecutors seek a 2-year prison sentence and ineligibility period against Marine Le Pen  The Associated Press
Posted in Uncategorized

Clive Palmer-scale political donations to be blocked under new electoral spending caps

Candidates to receive $5 per vote from public funding, while parties and independents will receive $30,000 per MP and $15,000 per senator each

Donation and electoral spending caps could pass parliament as early as this fortnight, with Labor confident the Coalition will help it block campaigns of the size run by Clive Palmer at the national level and teal independents at the local level.

But the bill, to be introduced next week, could spark outrage from independents, emerging and minor parties, with plans to increase public funding of elections from $3.35 a vote to $5.

Sign up for Guardian Australia’s breaking news email

Continue reading...

Monaco Grand Prix’s long-term future resolved with F1 extension until 2031

  • Race remains on F1 calendar after six-year deal agreed
  • Contest has been part of motor sport scene since 1950

Formula One’s iconic Monaco Grand Prix will remain on the calendar until at least 2031 after a six-year extension was announced on Thursday, with a date change to June that also avoids future clashes with the Indianapolis 500.

The race around the streets of Monte Carlo was part of the first world championship season in 1950 and has been present since, with the exception of 2020 during the global pandemic.

Continue reading...

Minister pledges better protection for UK airline passengers

Louise Haigh says she hopes to ensure a repeat of the air traffic control failure of August 2023 never happens again

Airline passengers will benefit from tougher enforcement of consumer protection laws following an inquiry into the August 2023 air traffic control meltdown, transport secretary Louise Haigh has said.

She said she wants to ensure “all passengers feel confident when they fly”.

Continue reading...