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Probe into Beirut blast paused again

The development came moments after Judge Tarek Bitar issued an arrest warrant for ex-finance minister Ali Hasan Khalil on Tuesday, after he did not show up for questioning.

Shortly afterwards, the judge was notified that lawyers for Khalil and former public works minister Ghazi Zeiter, who has also been charged, had made a new request to dismiss him from the case, a judicial source told Al Jazeera.

Bitar’s other questioning sessions scheduled this week for Khalil, Zeiter and former interior minister Nouhad Machnouk have been suspended.

The request on Tuesday was Zeiter and Khalil’s third attempt to remove Bitar from his position as the head of the probe into the explosion at Beirut’s port last August, which killed more than 200 people, injured about 6,500 and devastated large parts of the city.

Their initial request filed late last month led to the temporary suspension of the probe. The request was rejected by the Appeals Court on October 4, followed by another rejection from the Cassation Court on Monday.

Machnouk and former Public Works Minister Youssef Finianos previously lodged two separate legal complaints against the judge. Bitar issued an arrest warrant for Finianos in September, but it has not been implemented. The judge had also summoned former Prime Minister Hassan Diab for an interrogation later this month.

The judge has come under huge pressure from groups who have accused him of political bias. On Monday, Hezbollah Secretary-General Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah accused Bitar of using “the blood of the victims to serve political interests”, and effectively called for his replacement.

Legal experts have rejected accusations that Bitar has targeted individuals for political reasons. Nizar Saghieh, a lawyer with the Legal Agenda watchdog organisation, told Al Jazeera on Monday that Bitar has charged and pursued officials with “clear documentation and evidence”.

Families of the victims who continue to back the judge have said Lebanese officials are systematically obstructing the investigation.

Bitar has led the Beirut blast probe since February, after his predecessor Judge Fadi Sawan was removed following a similar legal complaint that questioned his impartiality. In their complaint against Sawan, Zeiter and Khalil said that he could not hold a partial investigation because his home in Beirut was damaged in the blast.

Entire neighbourhoods in Beirut were destroyed in the explosion on August 4, 2020, after a huge stockpile of ammonium nitrate, which had been stored unsafely at the port for years, detonated.

An estimated 300,000 people were also left homeless in one of the largest non-nuclear explosions ever recorded.

No officials have been convicted.

IRGC naval commander: U.S. slapped repeatedly in Persian Gulf

“The IRGC Naval Force has carried out six successful operations in the Persian Gulf against the aggressor America, in which… the hegemony of the United States in the Persian Gulf has been broken,” Rear Admiral Alireza Tangsiri said in a ceremony commemorating Iranian naval forces who lost their lives on 8 October 1987 in a U.S. attack during the Tanker War.

“We never started a war in the Persian Gulf, and although the Americans targeted our tankers, platforms, and oil terminals, we showed restraint. After all the damage they inflicted on us, we entered a year-and-a-half war with the Americans. We slapped them hard six times,” Tangsiri explained.

The IRGC naval force commander went on to say that Iran will not tolerate any insecurity and conflict in this strategic region because it is the home of Iran and neighboring countries.

He said the Americans have no place in the Persian Gulf, because they cause insecurity wherever they go.

Iran Beauties in Photos; Kalouts in Kerman

Kalouts are renowned as sight in the southern province of Kerman. But they are not just found there. These Kaluts are in the Kouh-e-Mond area of the Dashti County in Boushehr Province and are among the tourist sites of the province.

These hills are a result of erosion of loose land and sedimentary layers by wind and water.

North Korea’s Un vows to build ‘invincible’ army

Kim has boasted of his country’s “invincible” military during a major weapons expo, and blasted Washington for hypocritically talking of peace while driving a wedge between Pyongyang and Seoul.

Speaking at the Defense Development Exhibition Self-Defense-2021 event in Pyongyang on Monday, Kim declared “a new era of strengthening the national defense force”, saying the military would serve as an “invincible” line of defense, the country’s state media reported.

“Today’s grand exhibition… is a demonstration of national power that is as significant as a large-scale military parade,” Kim reportedly stated, adding that without the military, Pyongyang would be “coerced by external military threats” and could not “protect the very existence of the state and its people.”

Turning to the US, Kim said Washington continues to offer false promises of peace, but remains a threat and has only ratcheted up “regional tensions” with “wrong judgements and actions.”

“What is clear is that the political instability on the Korean Peninsula cannot be easily resolved due to its origin in the United States,” Kim added, arguing that the US has helped to drive a wedge between the two Koreas.

“The United States has frequently signaled in recent years that it is not hostile to our country, but there is no basis for believing that. I am very curious about who is foolish enough to believe their words – that the United States is not hostile to the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea,” he stressed.

Kim noted that Pyongyang faces a more pronounced “military danger” than it did 10, five, or even three years ago, pointing to ever-growing ties between Washington and Seoul, including weapons sales and regular joint drills which effectively simulate an invasion of the North.

“Recently, with the strong support of the United States, South Korea is attempting to renew its military’s combat power by obtaining stealth joint strike fighters, high-altitude unmanned reconnaissance aircraft, and a vast array of advanced weapons,” he said.

“While talking about peace, cooperation and prosperity in the past… you can see the nature of the various military exercises that the United States and South Korea frequently hold,” he added.

However, taking a more conciliatory tone later in his address, Kim also said that so long as Seoul does not attempt to threaten the North or its sovereignty, “I can assure you, there will be no tensions on the Korean Peninsula.”

He added that he does not seek a “war of words” with the South, does not wish to repeat a “horrific history” of armed conflict between fellow Koreans and insisted that Seoul “is not a target for our armed forces.”

A number of major weapons systems were shown off during Monday’s expo in the capital city, including long-range missiles, mobile artillery units and aircraft, some of which performed a colorful flyover during the event.

Worshippers Critically Wounded in Afghan Terror Attack to Be Treated in Iran

At the request of the officials of Afghanistan’s Islamic government, some of the people who suffered severe wounds in the blast and could not be treated in Kunduz are being taken to Iran to undergo treatment at one of Iran’s well-equipped hospitals, reported Tasnim News Agency.

A suicide bomber of the ISIS terrorist group set off an explosion at Shiites’ mosque in Kunduz last Friday, killing upwards of 100 worshippers and wounding many more.
ISIS claimed responsibility for the attack.

U.S. Capitol Police accused of ‘failures’ during riot

A U.S. Capitol Police whistleblower sent a letter to congressional leaders late last month accusing the agency’s two senior leaders of mishandling intelligence surrounding the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol.

In the letter, the whistleblower accused Sean Gallagher, the acting chief of uniformed operations, and Yogananda Pittman, the assistant chief for protective and intelligence operations, of significant “failures” in the lead-up to and aftermath of the attack.

The whistleblower accused Gallagher and Pittman of failing to take appropriate action “which directly contributed to the deaths and wounding of officers and civilians.”

They also accused Pittman, who was the agency’s acting chief from Jan. 6 to July 23, of lying to Congress about having sent “the single most critical” intelligence report to other Capitol Police staff members the day before the attack. The whistleblower said the report was never shared.

The letter — addressed to Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif. — also accused Congress of not holding Capitol Police leaders accountable in the fallout.

In response, Capitol Police said: “Although there is more work to do, many of the problems described in the letter have been addressed.”

The agency announced in a statement, “USCP leaders, under new Chief Tom Manger, are committed to learning from prior mistakes and protecting our brave officers, who fought valiantly on January 6, so we can continue to carry out the Department’s critical mission.”

Last week, the White House formally blocked an attempt by former President Donald Trump to withhold documents from Congress related to the Jan. 6 attack, setting up a legal showdown between the current and former presidents over executive privilege.

Turks believe Erdogan party to fall from power in next vote

Only 37.8 percent of respondents think that the AKP will stay in power, even though this number jumps to 65.8 percent among AKP voters. Still, 25.7 percent of AKP voters don’t foresee their party staying in office.

Among voters of ruling alliance partner Nationalist Movement Partner (MHP), the portion that believe the AKP will stay in office was 55.2 percent, and only 38.3 percent thought the party would fall.

A large majority of 83.2 percent among voters of the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) believe that the AKP will leave office in 2023, and only over 10 percent think that they will stay in power.

Meanwhile, 79.7 percent of pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) voters agreed that the AKP’s two-decade time in office will come to an end in 2023.

The AKP had also emerged as the party with the largest drop in voter share in an August survey by Metropoll as 37 percent of undecided voters were revealed to be former AKP voters.

‘UK response to COVID public health failure’

Britain’s early handling of the coronavirus pandemic was one of the worst public health failures in UK history, with ministers and scientists taking a “fatalistic” approach that exacerbated the death toll, a landmark inquiry has found.

“Groupthink”, evidence of British exceptionalism and a deliberately “slow and gradualist” approach meant the UK fared “significantly worse” than other countries, according to the 151-page “Coronavirus: lessons learned to date” report led by two former Conservative ministers.

The crisis exposed “major deficiencies in the machinery of government”, with public bodies unable to share vital information and scientific advice impaired by a lack of transparency, input from international experts and meaningful challenge.

Despite being one of the first countries to develop a test for Covid in January 2020, the UK “squandered” its lead and “converted it into one of permanent crisis”. The consequences were profound, the report says.

“For a country with a world-class expertise in data analysis, to face the biggest health crisis in 100 years with virtually no data to analyse was an almost unimaginable setback,” it adds.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson did not order a complete lockdown until 23 March 2020, two months after the government’s Sage committee of scientific advisers first met to discuss the crisis.

“This slow and gradualist approach was not inadvertent, nor did it reflect bureaucratic delay or disagreement between ministers and their advisers. It was a deliberate policy – proposed by official scientific advisers and adopted by the governments of all of the nations of the UK,” the report states.

“It is now clear that this was the wrong policy, and that it led to a higher initial death toll than would have resulted from a more emphatic early policy. In a pandemic spreading rapidly and exponentially, every week counted,” according to the report.

Decisions on lockdowns and social distancing during the early weeks of the pandemic – and the advice that led to them – “rank as one of the most important public health failures the United Kingdom has ever experienced”, the report concludes, stressing that “this happened despite the UK counting on some of the best expertise available anywhere in the world, and despite having an open, democratic system that allowed plentiful challenge”.

The report from the Commons science and technology committee and the health and social care committee draws on evidence from more than 50 witnesses, including the former health secretary Matt Hancock, the government’s chief scientific and medical advisers, and leading figures from the vaccine taskforce and NHS Test and Trace.

It celebrates some aspects of the UK’s Covid response, in particular the rapid development, approval and delivery of vaccines, and the world-leading Recovery trial that identified life-saving treatments, but is highly critical of other areas.

Some of the most serious early failings, the report suggests, resulted from apparent groupthink among scientists and ministers which led to “fatalism”. Greg Clark, the chair of the science and technology committee, said he dismissed the allegation that government policy sought to reach “herd immunity” through infection but the outcome came to be seen as the only viable option.

“It was more a reflection of fatalism,” Clark said, adding, “That if you don’t have the prospect of a vaccine being developed, if you think people won’t obey instructions to lockdown for very long, and have a wholly inadequate ability to test, trace and isolate people, that is what you are left with.”

The “impossibility” of suppressing the virus was only challenged, the MPs say, when it became clear the NHS could be overwhelmed.

The report questions why international experts were not part of the UK scientific advisory process and why measures that worked in other countries were not brought in as a precaution, as a response was hammered out.

While Public Health England told the MPs it had formally studied and rejected the South Korean approach, no evidence was provided despite repeated requests.

“We must conclude that no formal evaluation took place, which amounts to an extraordinary and negligent omission given Korea’s success in containing the pandemic, which was well publicised at the time,” the report adds.

The MPs stated the government’s decision to halt mass testing in March 2020 – days after the World Health Organization called for “painstaking contact tracing and rigorous quarantine of close contacts” – was a “serious mistake”.

When the test, trace and isolate system was rolled out it was “slow, uncertain and often chaotic”, “ultimately failed in its stated objective to prevent future lockdowns”, and “severely hampered the UK’s response to the pandemic”. The problem was compounded, the report adds, by the failure of public bodies to share data, including between national and local government.

Further criticism is levelled at poor protection in care homes, for black, Asian and minority ethnic groups and for people with learning disabilities.

Prof Trish Greenhalgh, of the University of Oxford, said the report hinted at a “less than healthy relationship” between government and its scientific advisory bodies.

“It would appear that even senior government ministers were reluctant to push back on scientific advice that seemed to go against commonsense interpretations of the unfolding crisis,” she stated.

“It would appear that Sage, Cobra, Public Health England and other bodies repeatedly dismissed the precautionary principle in favour of not taking decisive action until definitive evidence emerged and could be signed off as the truth,” she continued.

Jonathan Ashworth, the shadow health secretary, said the report was damning. Hannah Brady, of the Covid-19 Bereaved Families for Justice group, said the report found the deaths of 150,000 people were “redeemed” by the success of the vaccine rollout.

“The report … is laughable and more interested in political arguments about whether you can bring laptops to Cobra meetings than it is in the experiences of those who tragically lost parents, partners or children to Covid-19. This is an attempt to ignore and gaslight bereaved families, who will see it as a slap in the face,” she added.

Iran Says Has Documents on Transfer of Terrorists to Azerbaijan

“Iran has even acquired [the audio files of] their conversations, and has them on its intelligence radar,” said Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh in a Tuesday interview with Iran’s national radio.

“We told the Azeri side that this is not acceptable, and their highest-ranking officials promised to ally our concern,” he said.

“Our relations with the Azerbaijan Republic are very cordial, good and multi-layered, and visits to both countries’ by the two sides’ officials are ongoing,” the spokesman explained.

“There are some third groups in the region that wouldn’t want Iran and the Azerbaijan Republic to have friendly ties. Accordingly, they release fake and untrue news and try to cash in on the sentiments of the people of both countries in order to advance their own objectives,” he added.

“In the Caucasus developments, we stressed that the rights of neighbouring countries should be restored; accordingly, we welcomed the restoration of the Azerbaijan Republic’s rights; meanwhile, we believed war was not the right method to realize this and stressed the need for diplomatic ties,” he added.

“Iran and Russia helped push for diplomatic negotiations between the warring sides,” said the spokesman in a reference to the war between Armenia and the Azerbaijan Republic over Karabakh region last year.

Elsewhere in his remarks, Khatibzadeh touched upon negotiations on Iran’s nuclear program, stressing that the talks will be held in Vienna.

“We do insist that these negotiations should ensure the necessary guarantees to secure Iranian people’s interests,” he said.

“A few months after coming to power, the Biden administration decided to take part in the Vienna talks, and he has entered into these negotiations pursuing Trump’s unilateral approach,” the spokesman underlined.

“The US government has also adopted a unilateral policy on the lifting of sanctions and just wants to remove the sanctions that it wants and would like to make decisions unilaterally in this regard, but Iran insists that all sanctions should be lifted and the necessary guarantees should be given to Iran in this regard,” he noted.

He then referred to the approach adopted by the administration of new Iranian President Ebrahim Raeisi.

“Among the priorities of the Raeisi administration is interaction with neighbouring countries,” he explained.

“Between 70 to 80 percent of our trade transactions take place with neighbouring and regional countries plus China,” he said.

Tehran Experienced Only 2 Days of Clean Air in 9 Months: Reports

During the roughly 9-month period, air quality in the metropolis was “acceptable” for 165 days, “unhealthy for sensitive groups in society” for 37 days, and “unhealthy for all” for one day.

During the similar period a year ago, Tehran experienced 15 days of clean air and 147 days of acceptable air quality. Forty-one days were also unhealthy for sensitive groups and two days unhealthy for all residents.

Currently, the air quality index in Tehran hovers around 95, meaning it verges on the state of pollution.

Different factors contribute to air pollution, including the burning of fuel oil at power stations, aging vehicles still being used, and the production of low-quality vehicles.

Nevertheless, air pollution could mainly be attributed to the trapping of pollutants, a phenomenon known as inversion.