12.09.2022 friday

Friday,  December 9th, 2022 

A court in Moscow sentences prominent opposition figure Ilya Yashin to eight and a half years in prison on charges related to his criticism of the ongoing war in Ukraine. (ABC News) 

Ukraine’s Energoatom says that Russian soldiers have abducted two senior staff members from the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant. Energoatom says that the two workers were “beaten” before being driven off in an “unknown direction”. (Reuters) 

At least one person is killed after a large explosion occurs during a massive fire at a shopping center in Moscow, Russia. (Al Jazeera) 

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy accuses Russia of “destroying” the front line city of Bakhmut after weeks of relentless shelling by Russian forces. (Newsweek) 

Serbian Prime Minister Ana Brnabić says that Serbia is close to deploying its troops to North Kosovo after claiming that the lives of the Serb minority there are “being threatened”, and that the NATO-led Kosovo Force was “failing to protect them”. (ABC News) 

The United States Office of Foreign Assets Control imposes sanctions on former Chinese Communist Party Secretary of the Tibet Autonomous Region Wu Yingjie and People’s Police chief for the Himalayas Zhang Hongbo over “serious” human rights abuses in Tibet. (AFP via NDTV) 

The U.S. Office of Foreign Assets Control imposes sanctions on former Guinean president Alpha Condé for engaging in political violence during his presidency. (AFP via VOA) 

The Belgian Federal Police arrest Greek MEP and European Parliament vice-president Eva Kaili following an investigation into corruption tied to lobbying efforts in support of Qatar. Kaili’s political parties, the Panhellenic Socialist Movement and the Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats, have both suspended her membership. (CNN) 

A Japanese research team from Yamagata University announces the discovery of 168 new big figures near the Nazca Lines in Peru. (EFE via El Mundo) 

The Ironman Triathlon cancels the 2023 and 2024 triathlons to be held in Juneau, Alaska, United States, citing economic concerns. (Juneau Empire) 

Thursday, December 8th, 2022 

Egypt joins the BRICS-led New Development Bank after the Egyptian government ratifies its accession into the multilateral development bank. (Egypt Independent) 

French President Emmanuel Macron announces that condoms will be free at pharmacies for all adults between the ages of 18 and 24 years beginning on January 1, as part of an effort to reduce the spread of sexually transmitted diseases in the country. (Reuters) 

Russian forces shell the front line in the Donetsk region, killing one civilian and damaging buildings in Toretsk. (Reuters) 

The Kosovo special forces block the city of Kosovska Mitrovica after the Kosovo Police announced that they will increase their presence in North Kosovo. (Srbija Danas) 

At this year’s Game Awards, Elden Ring wins Game of the Year while God of War Ragnarök wins the most awards with six. (Washington Post) 

Iran announces the first known execution of a prisoner arrested in connection with the protests. The man was found guilty of “waging war against God” after being accused of blocking a street and attacking a security forces member with a machete. (Time) 

The United States Federal Trade Commission announces that they will sue in an attempt to block Microsoft’s pending acquisition of Activision Blizzard, citing concerns that the deal would give Microsoft too much control over certain parts of the gaming industry. (The Verge) 

The trial of three executives of the now insolvent German financial services provider Wirecard, including its former chief executive officer Markus Braun, opens in Munich. Braun and two others have been charged with accounting fraud, breach of trust, commercial gang fraud, and market manipulation. (AFP via France 24) 

Basketball player Brittney Griner is released in a prisoner swap for arms dealer Viktor Bout. (CBS News) 

The European Union accepts Croatia’s accession to the Schengen Area, effective January 1. (DW) 

Austria announces that it will veto Bulgaria and Romania’s accession to the Schengen Area, citing fears of increased illegal immigration. (AFP via Times of Malta) 

The U.S. House of Representatives passes the Respect for Marriage Act, which enshrines same-sex marriage and interracial marriage into federal law, in a 258–169–1 vote. (CNBC) (Axios) 

Protests break out across Peru, including the capital Lima, in response to ousting and detainment of former President of Peru Pedro Castillo. (Euronews) 

The Alberta Sovereignty Within a United Canada Act, which grants the cabinet of the Canadian province of Alberta the ability to nullify national laws, passes the Albertan legislature by a party line vote of 27–7, following significant opposition by the Alberta New Democratic Party and Indigenous chiefs. (CBC News) 

Russian forces shell Kurakhove, Donetsk Oblast, killing ten civilians and injuring five others. (The Kyiv Independent)

Turkey gives the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces an ultimatum to withdraw its fighters from Manbij, Tell Rifaat, and Kobanî within two weeks or face military action. A Turkish official says that Russia and the United States have been informed of the deadline. (Al Jazeera) 

Judge Bobbie Cheema-Grubb of the High Court of Justice of England and Wales suspends American national Anne Sacoolas’ eight-month prison sentence for a 12-month period, during which she is under probation unless she commits another offence, over the death of British man Harry Dunn in a 2019 traffic collision. (AFP via Bangkok Post) 

The Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities approves the first new coal mine in the United Kingdom in 30 years at the Woodhouse Colliery in Cumbria, England. The mine is expected to remain operational for up to 50 years. It will create 500 direct and 1,500 indirect jobs in the region, and will take two years to build at a cost estimated at around £165 million ($201 million). (Reuters)

The Central Bank of Nigeria says it will limit individual cash withdrawals to 100,000 Nigerian naira (225 USD) per week to reduce counterfeiting and to discourage ransom payments to kidnappers. (Al Jazeera) 

Sheffield City Council have declared a major incident as the natural gas network outage affecting thousands of properties in Sheffield, England enters its sixth day. Many residents still have no heating in their homes and temperatures are forecast to drop below 0°C in the coming days. (BBC News) 

In Farah Province, the Taliban carries out its first public execution since taking power last year. The executed man was convicted of fatally stabbing another man in 2017, and was executed by the victim’s father, according to government spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid. (Reuters via The Guardian) 

Jamaican prime minister Andrew Holness declares a nationwide state of emergency due to an increase in crime rates in the country. (CNN) 

President Pedro Castillo announces the dissolution of Congress, the imposition of a curfew, the creation of an “emergency” government, and early parliamentary elections hours before facing his third impeachment vote. The impeachment is successful and Castillo is later arrested after leaving the Government Palace in Lima. First Vice President Dina Boluarte is sworn in as President of the Republic after Castillo’s arrest. (Reuters)  

Former President of Guatemala Otto Pérez Molina and his vice president, Roxana Baldetti, are sentenced to 16-year prison terms for their involvement. (Reuters) 

The End

12.07.2022 wednesday

Wednesday, December 7th, 2022 

German police arrest twenty-five members of the Reichsbürger movement accused of planning a coup d’état. (DW) 

Jemaah Islamiyah member Umar Patek, who was convicted for his role in the 2002 Bali bombings, is released on parole after an Indonesian court shortened his 20-year prison sentence. (AFP via Bangkok Post) 

Belarusian lawmakers approve a bill which punishes high treason among officials and military personnel with the death penalty. The bill also includes prosecution for “spreading false information discrediting the Armed Forces of Belarus”. (RFE/RL) 

Jamaican prime minister Andrew Holness declares a nationwide state of emergency due to rising crime rates. (CNN) 

Janusz Waluś, the convicted assassin of South African anti-apartheid politician Chris Hani, is released on parole. (AFP via RFI) 

Peruvian President Pedro Castillo announced the dissolution of the Congress of the Republic, the imposition of a curfew, the creation of an “emergency” government and early parliamentary election hours before his third impeachment attempt. (Reuters) 

One hundred and fifty five people are injured by a train collision in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. (Reuters) 

Tuesday,  December 6th, 2022 

The 1,574th and final Boeing 747, a 747-8 Freighter, is rolled out from the Boeing Everett Factory(CNBC) 

A jury finds the Trump Organization guilty of tax fraud charges. (The New York Times) 

President of Kosovo Vjosa Osmani announces that the country will submit an application for membership of the European Union by the end of the year. (TVP World) 

Honduras begins a partial state of exception in most of the country as part of an attempt to reduce the amount of violent organized crime(CNN en Español) 

Seven people are killed when a vehicle carrying oil workers hits a roadside bomb in Balkh Province(Reuters) 

Six people are injured when an explosion hits a money exchange market in JalalabadNangarhar Province(Reuters) 

Three people are killed and four others are injured by a bombing near Khlong Ngae railway station, Phang Nga, Thailand. (AP) 

Inflation in the Philippines accelerates to a 14-year record high of 8% from November last year to November 2022 due to rising food prices. (CNBC) 

A court in Argentina sentences Argentine Vice President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner to six years in prison and a life sentence on holding public office on corruption charges. (Reuters)

Voters in the U.S. state of Georgia go to the polls to elect their next Senator in a runoff election between the Democratic incumbent candidate Raphael Warnock and Republican candidate Herschel Walker(The Guardian) 

Dominicans go to the polls to elect the members of the House of Assembly. (CARICOM Daily) 

The People’s Representative Council replaces Indonesia’s colonial-era criminal code with one that criminalizes premarital and extramarital sex and cohabitation, among others. (AFP via New Straits Times) 

Monday,  December 5th, 2022 

Russia says that a long-range drone attack on its Dyagilevo Air Base and Engels-2 Air Base has killed three servicemen, injured four others, and damaged two aircraft. (Reuters) 

The Iraqi military is deployed to its borders with Turkey and Iran. (Mehr) 

Irish finance minister Paschal Donohoe is re-elected as President of the Eurogroup. (AFP via Barron’s) 

The US$60-per-barrel price ceiling on Russian seaborne oil imposed by Australia, the European Union, and the G7 comes into force. (Reuters) 

Protests occur in the Mongolian capital Ulaanbaatar in response to a corruption scandal. Four policemen are reported injured. (Tengrinews) 

Russian forces launch another wave of cruise missile strikes on Ukraine, destroying homes and killing two people in Zaporizhzhia Oblast, while knocking out power to many other areas after striking critical infrastructure. (Reuters) 

Russia says a long-range drone attack on its Dyagilevo Air Base and Engels-2 Air Base has killed three servicemen and wounded four others, while damaging two aircraft. (Reuters) 

The US$60-per-barrel price ceiling on Russian seaborne oil imposed by Australia, the European Union, and the G7 comes into force. (Reuters) 

The Indonesian government raises the volcanic alert status to the highest level after the Semeru in East Java erupts, forcing the evacuation of around 2,000 people. (AFP via The Hindu) 

The Iraqi military is deployed to its borders with Turkey and Iran. (Mehr) 

Protests erupt in the town of Atarib, Aleppo Governorate, Syria, after a Turkish military vehicle ran over and killed a woman and a child while conducting a patrol with a local rebel group, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. (ABC News) 

At least 33 people are dead, four others are critically injured and many others missing after a landslide hit a bus in Risaralda, Colombia. (TRT World) 

Swiss multinational mining company Glencore agrees to pay the Democratic Republic of the Congo a sum of $180m (£147m) to settle corruption claims dating from 2007 to 2018. Glencore has admitted to bribing African officials to secure “improper business advantages”, including in the DRC. (BBC News) 

One person is killed and another is injured after a stabbing attack in Ulm, Baden-Württemberg, Germany. (AP) 

Protests begin in Mongolian capital Ulaanbaatar after a corruption scandal. Four policemen were reported injured. (Tengrinews) 

The End

12.04.2022 sunday

Sunday, December 4th, 2022 

The Indonesian government raises the volcanic alert status to the highest level after the Semeru in East Java erupts, forcing the evacuation of around 2,000 people. (AFP via The Hindu) 

Iran says that it has executed four prisoners convicted of spying for Israel(Arab News) 

Iranian prosecutor-general Mohammad Jafar Montazeri announces the dissolution of the Guidance Patrol, though Iranian state media disputes this. (AFP via Khaleej Times) (The New York Times) (BBC News) 

Over 40,000 customers are without power after two power substations in Moore County, North Carolina, United States, are deliberately damaged by gunfire on Saturday night. A curfew has been ordered, and power restoration is expected to take until Thursday. (CNN) 

The African National Congress meets to debate the political future of South African president Cyril Ramaphosa amid an emerging scandal concerning Ramaphosa’s ownership of a farm in alleged breach of anti-corruption laws. Ramaphosa has stated that he does not intend to resign. (AP) 

Donald Trump claims in his social media platform Truth Social that the alleged fraud during the 2020 American presidential elections justifies the “termination of all rules, regulations, and articles, even those found in the Constitution“. (BBC News) 

Saturday, December 3rd, 2022 

The Iranian government gives its first official report regarding deaths from the protests that followed the death of Mahsa Amini in September. The report states that more than 200 people have died in what the government has labelled as “riots”. (Al Jazeera) 

Internal documents released by Twitter CEO Elon Musk show that staff at the company suppressed posts discussing the October 2020 New York Post article on the Hunter Biden laptop story. (Forbes) 

Former South Korean national security director Suh Hoon is arrested on charges of tampering with evidence related to the killing of a Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries official by North Korean agents near the Northern Limit Line in September 2020. (AP) 

Australia, the European Union, and the G7 member states decide to impose a US$60-per-barrel price ceiling on Russian seaborne oil. (AP) 

The United States Commission on International Religious Freedom adds Cuba, Nicaragua, and the Russian paramilitary organization Wagner Group to its blacklist of countries and organizations violating international religious freedom, signalling possible sanctions by the U.S. government. (AFP via France 24) 

The End