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Syrian commission prepares war crimes case against notorious Assad official

A Syrian rights commission is preparing a case accusing Fadi Saqr, a militia leader within the Assad regime, of involvement in crimes against humanity and war crimes, a senior Syrian official has told the Guardian. Saqr is a former commander of the National Defence Forces (NDF) militia and is widely accused of involvement in the mass killing and forcible disappearance of civilians in the Tadamon neighbourhood of Damascus, as well as other parts of the Syrian capital. After Bashar al-Assad, the former Syrian president, was ousted in December 2024, Syria’s new government collaborated with Saqr on security files, causing anger among victims who had sought accountability for his alleged crimes. Zahra al-Barazi, the deputy chair of the National Commission for Transitional Justice and an adviser in Syria’s foreign ministry, said the commission was working with victims to build a case against Saqr. Although the commission was appointed by the Syrian government, it is an independent body that will refer its findings to the Syrian judiciary, which in turn will decide whether or not to pursue the case. Judicial proceedings against the former militia chief would be an important milestone for Syria, which has grappled with how to establish transitional justice after more than a decade of war left hundreds of thousands dead and pitted towns and neighbourhoods against each other. Experts have said a proper transitional justice process could help to stem intercommunal violence in the country, which has seen sectarian massacres and sporadic killings since the fall of Assad. Al-Barazi said: “There is absolutely enough evidence against Saqr. We are also working with organisations who have documented a lot of these things. He was useful for certain reasons and he’s no longer useful. No one is above the law.” Last week Syrian authorities arrested Amjad Youssef, a main perpetrator in the Tadamon massacres. Videos found on the laptop of the former intelligence officer that were leaked out of the country documented the killing of nearly 300 civilians by regime forces in Tadamon in 2013. The Guardian in 2022 published a selection of the footage, which showed Youssef ordering blindfolded civilians to run forward while he shot at them, pushing them into a pit, executing them and burning their corpses. While Youssef has become notorious because of the videos, Tadamon residents have long insisted there were many more perpetrators, including members of the NDF led by Saqr. During the celebrations of Youssef’s arrest on Friday, they called for Saqr to be detained. Ahmed al-Homsi, 33, an activist with the Tadamon Coordination Committee, a network that documented the massacres, said: “Amjad was just a foot soldier compared to Fadi Saqr. In Tadamon, nothing happened without orders from Fadi Saqr, whether it was the robberies, the arrests, the disappearances or the killings. He was in control, he knew about it all.” Saqr has denied responsibility for the massacres. He told the Guardian he “only learned of the massacre through the media” and said he “trusted the judicial process”. “Anyone proven to have committed crimes against humanity must be punished,” he said. “My silence regarding the campaigns against me stems from my desire not to influence the course of the investigations.” Saqr said he became the NDF commander in Damascus in June 2013 – two months after the public footage of Youssef’s executions of civilians by the pit was recorded. However, the Guardian has reviewed unpublished videos of additional killings carried out by Youssef and NDF personnel that includes footage shot in October 2013, four months into Saqr’s tenure. Prof Uğur Ümit Üngör, one of the Amsterdam-based academics who obtained the videos and leaked excerpts to the Guardian, said: “What is now often described as the Tadamon massacre was not a single event, but a process of mass killing carried out throughout 2013 and in the years that followed. The NDF participated in these atrocities and Saqr, whatever his personal involvement, was part of the chain of command.” Tadamon residents and other Syrians have long expressed their outrage at the new government’s collaboration with Saqr. Maher Rahima, a 31-year-old man who lived through the atrocities, said: “If the officials of the new government had seen what I saw in Tadamon and heard the sounds of torture and smelled the burning of bodies, they would be ashamed to look at themselves in the mirror after protecting Fadi Saqr and other criminals.” The government has justified working with figures like Saqr by saying it is attempting to balance the need for justice with pragmatic considerations of ensuring Syria’s stability in its transitional period. Saqr has helped the government to liaise with remnants of the Assad regime who have mounted a low-level insurgency since the fall of the former Syrian president. Al-Barazi said plans to build a case against Saqr had been in place for a few months, during which time the political cost of keeping the former militia leader onboard increased. “I think there’s a real acknowledgment that whatever gains from him, balanced against the tension it was creating with the public, is not worth it,” she said, adding that Youssef’s arrest had “helped to push this to the forefront”. Al-Barazi visited residents of Tadamon on Tuesday, inviting them to join forces in building a case against Saqr and explaining how the commission would ensure witness protection. “We said that we would help them come together with a case to put forward to the prosecution against Fadi Saqr,” she said. “That would mean there would be a request to arrest him.” It is ultimately up to the Syrian judiciary, not the commission, to issue such an arrest warrant, but al-Barazi said she had “heard of no resistance” to the plans to mount a case. In Tadamon, the prospect of Saqr facing justice has given new hope to people who saw their neighbourhood turned into a killing field and feel little has been achieved in terms of accountability. Al-Homsi said: “Fadi Saqr’s arrest would be way bigger than that of Amjad Youssef. It would be like a second liberation day.”

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Thursday briefing: What new evidence tells us about the reality of racial discrimination in maternity care

Good morning. Researchers have long known that women in the UK experience very different birth outcomes depending on their ethnicity, income and physical condition. Black women, for example, are still about 2.7 times more likely to die during pregnancy or shortly after giving birth than white women. As the Guardian reported on Wednesday, a new study suggests one possible explanation: that the cumulative physiological impact of stress caused by racism and inequality may itself affect pregnancy outcomes. For today’s newsletter I spoke to Tobi Thomas, the Guardian’s UK health and inequalities correspondent, about what the study found, why it represents a shift in how researchers are approaching the issue, and whether years of reporting on the beat have left her feeling optimistic about change. First, the headlines. Five big stories UK news | Police are treating the stabbing of two men in Golders Green, north London, as terrorism, with the suspect described as having been hunting for anyone “visibly Jewish” to attack. UK politics | Nigel Farage was given £5m by the crypto billionaire Christopher Harborne shortly before announcing he would stand in the 2024 British general election. Middle East | Pete Hegseth has denied that the US-Israel war on Iran is “a quagmire” and claimed critics of the operation posed a greater threat to the US than Iran itself, as he came under pressure to set out Washington’s strategy for the conflict. UK news | Police have raided the headquarters of the Ahmadi Religion of Peace and Light following an investigation into allegations of serious sexual offences, modern slavery and forced marriage. Defence | Britain has agreed to create a unified naval force with nine European countries to deter future Russian threats from the “open sea border” to the north. In-depth: ‘It’s not just about individual bias’ Tobi Thomas has spent the past few years reporting on disparities in health outcomes, including a steady stream of evidence showing how unequal maternity care can be. Previous research has established the scale of the problem. Black women are significantly more likely to die during pregnancy or shortly afterwards; babies born to Black mothers have markedly higher risks in neonatal care; and many women from minority backgrounds report not being listened to when they raise concerns during pregnancy and labour. What has been less clear is why those disparities persist. *** What did the new study find? “What this study adds is an attempt to get at the root causes of that disparity – not just describing it, but asking why it exists,” Tobi tells me. Researchers focused on whether social and environmental stressors – including racism and inequality – could have a measurable physiological impact during pregnancy. The idea is not entirely new. “I think people have been aware for a while that it’s not just about individual bias,” Tobi says. “It’s not simply that clinicians have unconscious prejudice. There’s growing evidence across healthcare that stress from racism, deprivation, and unequal opportunities can have a real, physical effect on the body.” Researchers found evidence suggesting that the biological effects of long-term stress may contribute to poorer results for Black women, potentially helping to explain part of the gap in maternal mortality and complications. *** Why is this different from previous research? “Often, studies end with a line saying ‘more research is needed to explain why this happens’. This feels like part of that next step,” Tobi explains. It also complicates a sometimes overly simplistic narrative. While bias in healthcare settings remains a factor, the findings suggest inequality is not only about individual interactions with clinicians, but also about the cumulative physical toll of living with racism and disadvantage. “The lead researcher actually said she was surprised more work hadn’t already been done in this area,” Tobi notes. “So in that sense it is quite pioneering.” *** What action is being taken? There is increasing recognition of the scale of the problem – and some movement towards addressing it. Campaign groups such as Five X More and the Motherhood Group have pushed the issue up the agenda, while Tobi says the Royal College of Midwives and Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists “are all pushing for better training and greater awareness of racial disparities in maternity care”. At the same time, official investigations have highlighted how inequality plays out in practice. “One thing that stood out from the interim results of the maternity investigation was the role of stereotypes,” Tobi says. “Women from different backgrounds reported being treated differently by healthcare staff. For example, some Asian women said they were stereotyped as being less able to handle pain, Black women reported being seen as exaggerating or making a fuss. These accounts came directly from people contributing to the investigation.” “It’s not,” Tobi says, “about singling out individuals” because “it reflects wider societal attitudes.” *** So where does this leave things? For Tobi, the shift in research focus offers some cautious grounds for optimism. “There’s been a lot of work showing where inequalities exist,” she says. “I’ve reported stories showing that some groups of women are less likely to have their births properly investigated when something goes wrong. So there’s been a steady stream of evidence showing where inequalities exist and how they manifest in different ways. What feels different now is that researchers are starting to dig into why.” That matters, because understanding the causes of disparity is a necessary step towards fixing it. But the picture remains complex. Inequality in maternity outcomes is not driven by a single factor, and solutions are unlikely to be simple. The latest study adds an important piece to the puzzle – but it also underlines how deeply rooted the problem is. What else we’ve been reading Sam Wollaston’s six-part series on abandoned buildings in Britain is a triumph, and the latest instalment on Hulme Hippodrome in south Manchester is excellent. Patrick Having worked in record shops during the 90s, I am no stranger to the idea the music business isn’t always quite on the level. Shaad D’Souza looks at the cynical viral campaigns giving indie bands authenticity’s veneer. Martin I was gripped by this story by Jamie Bartlett on AI jailbreakers, who are tasked with testing the safety and security of AI models. Patrick I came out of Mother Mary immediately wanting to rewatch it, while being oddly unsure whether I had even liked it. Nick Chen talks to director David Lowery about the art-pop movie. Martin Will Tucker Carlson run for president? Arwa Mahdawi has the inside story. Patrick Sport Football | Arsenal men were denied a first-leg edge at Atlético to draw 1-1 after VAR overruled a late penalty award in a Champions League semi-final tale of three spot-kicks. Arsenal women strolled to a 7-0 win over Leicester in the WSL to maintain their pursuit of Manchester City at the top. Cricket | England’s head coach, Charlotte Edwards, announced a squad for the home T20 World Cup that starts on 12 June almost exactly the same as the one that surrendered the Ashes 15 months ago. Football | The Chelsea captain, Millie Bright, has announced her immediate retirement, ending a trophy-laden career during which she won eight Women’s Super League titles and six Women’s FA Cups at the club. The front pages “Police declare terrorist attack after two Jewish men stabbed” – that’s the Guardian while the i paper runs with “Terror attack on UK Jews foiled by police and hero bystanders”. The Telegraph says “Jew hate ‘out of control’ in UK” and the Mail goes with “Anti-semitism is out of control in UK, warns Israel”. The Times’ version is “UK antisemitism ‘out of control’ after Jews knifed”. It’s “Terror on our streets” in the Daily Mirror and the Express has “These attacks are an attack on Britain itself”. The Metro does an organ donation story: “Bittersweet … but my Theo saved 4 lives”. Top story in the Financial Times is “Oil price surges after Trump warns he ‘does not want’ to lift blockade on Iran”. Today in Focus Iran’s wartime executions Over the last six weeks, the Iranian regime has carried out a spate of executions of political prisoners. Guardian journalist Daniel Boffey reports Cartoon of the day | Nicola Jennings The Upside A bit of good news to remind you that the world’s not all bad For centuries, the dance of the mayfly has been shrouded in mystery. But finally, researchers from the University of Oxford and Imperial College London believe they have found the answer to what the thousands of winged insects are up to each spring. By studying recordings swarms of mayflies in flight, the scientists have discovered the secret to the bizarre up-and-down flight pattern that males use to find female to reproduce. Sign up here for a weekly roundup of The Upside, sent to you every Sunday Bored at work? And finally, the Guardian’s puzzles are here to keep you entertained throughout the day. Until tomorrow. Martin Belam’s Thursday news quiz Quick crossword Cryptic crossword Wordiply

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Taiwan accuses China of vegetable laundering via Vietnam

Taipei has accused China of smuggling vegetables into Taiwan via Vietnam in a bid to evade import restrictions, with officials vowing to crack down on a practice they say amounts to “origin washing”. Taiwan, which bans the importation of more than 1,000 Chinese agricultural and fishery products, said firms in China were evading restrictions by rerouting vegetables like Napa cabbage and shiitake mushrooms through neighbouring Vietnam. The items, officials claimed, are then repackaged as Vietnamese goods and imported into Taiwan. Taiwan’s agriculture minister Chen Junne-jih told lawmakers at a legislative meeting on Wednesday that his ministry is adopting measures to combat origin laundering, including imposing strict penalties on violators. Chen also said his ministry would “carry out aerial surveys in Vietnam” in order to map out how much produce could feasibly originate from certain areas. “If the volume exported to Taiwan exceeds that, there should be a mechanism to address it,” he said. China’s Taiwan office and Vietnam’s foreign affairs ministry have been contacted for comment. At Wednesday’s meeting, Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) legislator Chiu Yi-ying said it was possible to fraudulently purchase an official Vietnamese certificate of origin for as little as NT$13,000 (about $410). Importers can then make profits of between NT$200,000 and NT$500,000 per container, she added. Chiu called on the agriculture ministry to crack down on the practice by requiring third-party isotope testing to assess the product’s origin. China claims Taiwan as a breakaway province, despite never having ruled the self-ruled island democracy, and has vowed to retake it by force if necessary. The early 2000s were marked by a period of greater economic cooperation between China and Taiwan, culminating in the signing of a landmark free trade agreement between Beijing and Taipei in 2010. But recent years have seen China attempt to intimidate Taiwan’s ruling pro-sovereignty DPP and president Lai Ching-te, who Beijing have labelled a “dangerous separatist”, by ramping up its military, political and economic pressure. The export and import of food items is just one area of tension in relations between Beijing and Taipei. China first suspended the import of Taiwanese pineapples in 2021, citing pest control concerns – an act labelled political by Taipei. In September 2024, Taipei accused Beijing of violating World Trade Organization rules when it banned imports of several more Taiwanese fruits, vegetables and seafood. Taiwan condemned the move as “economic coercion”, saying it “harms the interests of farmers” on both sides of the Taiwan Strait. China has, in return, accused Taiwan of violating the terms of its 2010 free trade agreement by banning the import of 2,509 Chinese products. Additional reporting by Yu-chen Li

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Family of New Zealand woman detained by ICE pleads for government help to secure her release

The family of a New Zealand woman detained by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) is pleading with the New Zealand government to help secure her release, claiming she is confined to a room with 46 people for 22 hours a day. Everlee Wihongi, 37, moved to the US with her family aged six, and holds a green card, her mother, Betty Wihongi, told local broadcaster RNZ. The family visited New Zealand in March for an uncle’s 80th birthday, but when they flew back to Los Angeles on 10 April, Wihongi was detained. After a seven hour wait, the family received a phone call from Wihongi saying there had been an issue with a historic conviction and she had been sent to an ICE processing facility. The family told RNZ Wihongi had a conviction for possession of marijuana dating back more than a decade and she had travelled in and out of the country several times without issue. Wihongi faces another six weeks in detention after a judge set her recall date for 10 June. Wihongi was feeling “very anxious” over what the outcome would be, Betty said, while the experience had damaged the family’s view of the US. “This place no longer feels like home to us, especially after seeing how my daughter’s been treated,” she said. The family has called on New Zealand’s ministry for foreign affairs, and its minister, Winston Peters, to intervene. “Step up and do more,” Betty said. “One, do something about Everlee, there has to be something the New Zealand government can do; and two, train your people … because the help we are getting is not the best”. In a statement to the Guardian, the ministry said it could not comment on the specifics of the case due to privacy reasons but said it was providing assistance to the family of a New Zealander detained in Los Angeles. It said it could not influence the immigration decisions of other governments. The Guardian has also contacted Peters’ office. Speaking to reporters on Wednesday, Peters said Wihongi had not declared a prior conviction on her immigration paperwork. “When the form asks you to do things, complete the form accurately,” he said, adding staff had been working on the case “from day one”. “This is going through a process internationally. The process has got to be followed. We cannot intervene. We can do our best to help, but that’s all we can do.” The Guardian has contacted the Wihongi family and ICE for comment. Wihongi’s case is the latest in a growing list of foreigners facing interrogation, detention and deportations at the US border, including New Zealander Sarah Shaw and her six-year-old son, and more recently an Egyptian family of six, and an 86-year-old French widow. According to Guardian analysis, 60,310 people were in detention as of 4 April, and 468,450 people had been deported since Trump’s inauguration.

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The Rendlesham Forest mystery: ‘It’s the perfect storm of a UFO case’

In 1996, Nick Pope wrote his first book. Open Skies, Closed Minds was a semi-autobiographical examination of well-known UFO cases mixed with his own research. Pope worked at the UK Ministry of Defence for more than two decades, from 1985 to 2006. For three of those years – 1991 to 1994 – he worked on what was known colloquially in the department as “the UFO desk”. The desk’s official name, the Secretariat (Air Staff ) Sec (AS) 2a, was responsible for assessing the defence significance of reported UFO sightings. To promote the book, Pope appeared on BBC Newsnight. The UK’s flagship news programme was famous for its adversarial interviews that left even the most formidable politicians and intellectuals looking like startled deer. Given the subject matter and the platform, this could have gone horribly wrong, but Pope held his own. “I wasn’t nervous, probably because I’d been media-trained by the MoD,” he says. “The irony was that when I was posted to the UFO desk, I occasionally had to go on television in my role as the department’s subject-matter expert and play down both the phenomena and the true extent of our interest and involvement in the subject.” His interrogator that night was Peter Snow. “What do you believe now that you didn’t believe five years ago?” Snow began. “Well, I came into the job as a sceptic, but the sheer weight of the evidence – the sightings, the radar evidence, all that sort of thing – convinced me that some of these things that we see in the sky and call UFOs are extraterrestrial in origin,” Pope said. “Extraterrestrial? What, craft with people inside?” Snow said, looking incredulous. “Well, craft of some sort? Certainly, that’s not to say they all are, of course. Most of them have conventional explanations. But, after rigorous investigation, we find that 5% or 10% absolutely defy any conventional explanation. And these ones, yes, it does look as if they may be some sort of craft from elsewhere,” said Pope. * * * Pope’s job on the UFO desk had been events-led; it could be very busy and then exceptionally slow. It was during these slow periods that he would pore over cold cases. One encounter jumped out at him. It had been reported in Rendlesham Forest by two American airmen on Christmas night in 1980. Rendlesham Forest is in Suffolk, England, outside RAF Bentwaters, an airbase operated by the US during the cold war. On that airbase in 1980 were several nuclear missiles. I’d come to New York to interview Pope for my book Chasing Aliens. If aliens are here, or have been here before, what do they want? Is it possible that they come in peace, or do they want to pillage the Earth like the invaders from War of the Worlds? The UFOs seen in the Earth’s airspace could be reconnaissance crafts feeding our weaknesses back to their mothership. Understanding their motives could be the key to finding them, I thought. When we meet on a sunny afternoon in Bryant Park, Pope is wearing a green stripy shirt that is at least two sizes too big for him. He tells me that unlike other UFO sightings, the eyewitness reports from Rendlesham were backed up by hard evidence. “It’s the perfect storm of a UFO case. It’s multiple witnesses, including military. It’s sightings over three consecutive nights. It’s physical evidence in terms of radar, radioactivity, ground trace indentations, scorch marks. It’s a case where we have declassified and released documents, which you can see at the National Archives and the Ministry of Defence website. So, unlike a lot of UFO documents floating around, there’s no debate about their provenance. They’re the real deal.” Pope’s research into the incident led him eventually to co-write a book, Encounter in Rendlesham Forest, with the eyewitnesses, Jim Penniston and John Burroughs, when he left the MoD. It was published in 2014. * * * The events of that night began when Burroughs, who was patrolling Woodbridge, near the base’s east gate, noticed strange blinking red and blue lights from the forest. Burroughs, along with his supervisor, SSgt Bud Steffens, clambered into a vehicle and headed out to investigate. As they reached a dirt track leading into the forest, a white light joined the red and blue ones. Both agreed they had never seen these lights on other aircraft. The pair rushed back to the guard shack at the east gate and dialled for backup. Penniston, a staff sergeant at the time, took the call and rushed to the scene with his driver, Edward Cabansag. Fearing that a plane had crashed, Penniston radioed Central Security Control for more details. The message that came back was that an unidentified object had appeared and then vanished from Woodbridge’s radar screen 15 minutes earlier. After a brief discussion, Steffens remained at the base, while Burroughs, Penniston and Cabansag drove back to the woods to investigate the lights. Even though there was no report of an explosion or any fire, the trio advanced into the cold, dark forest, expecting to be confronted with the wreck of a crashed aircraft and all the problems that came with it, but they found something far stranger. A week or so after meeting Pope, I speak with Penniston over a video call. He looks a bit like William Shatner, with thin spectacles on a broad face etched by wrinkles that seem to tell of a life of worry and deep thinking. It’s true, Penniston says, that he was called down that evening to investigate a possible aircraft crash. Air force personnel had seen something on radar and Heathrow airport reported that they had lost contact with a non-civilian aircraft as it passed over Woodbridge. Penniston explains that, when he met up with Burroughs, he took over as the on-scene commander. Penniston, Burroughs and Cabansag drove as far as they could into the forest before the roughness of the terrain forced them to continue the journey on foot. Cabansag remained behind, while Penniston, with Burroughs at his side, wove through the trees and scaled the berms before coming upon the lights minutes later – only they were dimmer than before. Abruptly, their radios began to break up. Penniston says he felt a weird sensation, like static electricity was crackling through his hair and on his clothes, then a blinding bright light burst into the night through the forest in front of them. Expecting an explosion, they flung themselves to the ground, but none came. Penniston rose to his feet and saw the bright light beginning to fade, revealing a triangular craft resting in a small clearing on the forest floor, multicoloured neon lights darting over its black opaque surface until they too dimmed and the only light remaining was emanating from underneath the craft. In Penniston’s book, The Rendlesham Enigma, he described seeing Burroughs “frozen to the spot” behind him, “with both arms down by his side, motionless. Although he was standing just outside the dome, or ‘bubble’, of light between us, he was also engulfed in a beam of white/blue light, which looked as though it was shining down from above him.” Penniston didn’t know why Burroughs wasn’t moving, but he thought fear may have paralysed him. Burroughs has few memories of what occurred after that first explosion of light. He has mentioned seeing a “red, oval sun-like object in the clearing”, but not the craft Penniston saw. For Burroughs, seeing the bright light, going prone and getting up again lasted a few seconds; for Penniston, the encounter lasted much longer. Penniston went to get a closer look at the craft. “It was hard getting there,” he explains on our call. “I mean, I was feeling like it was hard to move, like walking through a pool of water that was waist deep. I decided to go ahead and investigate until responding forces could get there.” He took out his notebook and sketched the craft while walking around it: “It was sitting above the forest floor like it was on landing gear, but I looked underneath and there was no landing gear. It was just beams of light. And where three of them were on the ground, you could see weird indentions. So whatever that technology was, it held the craft up.” Penniston drew this conclusion because he tried to move the craft, reasoning that even a car rocks lightly when you push it, but this was a dead weight. “I knew right then and there that it was technology we didn’t possess.” Penniston knew this because the air force base he was guarding housed up to 35 generals, plus research and development teams. As he waited for security at the base to get in touch, he decided to investigate more thoroughly. “Based on my height, I figured it was about six-and-a-half feet tall. It’s hard to tell, because the floor was uneven in the forest,” says Penniston. He circled the craft again and noticed what looked like a dorsal fin on its rear, at about 7ft off the ground, as well as several engravings, which looked like ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs, on its surface. Penniston says that when he touched the craft on first inspection, the surface felt warm and smooth, which he put down to the friction caused by air travel, but he says he later learned that it was the result of beta radiation. When he ran his fingers over the hieroglyphs, they felt rough, like sandpaper. He touched one of the glyphs and a bright white light flooded the scene again, blinding him, and a bizarre series of ones and zeros filled his mind’s eye. “What the fuck is this?” Penniston remembers thinking. “And I just lift my hand off and it stops. Immediately.” The white light began to fade and he regained his sight. The colourful streaks crawling over the vehicle’s surface had returned, so Penniston backed off and made himself prone on the forest floor. The craft began to lift slowly off the ground, moving through the surrounding trees, rising to the level of the forest canopy – and then was gone. Penniston thought what he had witnessed was impossible. The craft had none of the things that conventional wisdom tells us you need to fly: wings, flaps, rotor blades, air displacement. Plus, given the speed at which it winked out of sight, one would have expected to hear a sonic boom, but it made no sound. Burroughs, apparently no longer frozen to the spot, joined Penniston at his side. “It’s over there!” Burroughs shouted, pointing into the distance. Penniston didn’t know what he was talking about – the forest was pitch black. Burroughs took off in the direction of the coast and Penniston, who was feeling exhausted, reluctantly raced after him. They hurtled through the forest, vaulting several fences, until, pausing in a farmer’s field, they saw a light flashing in the distance. It was the beam from nearby Orfordness lighthouse, more than four miles away off the coast. “So, I knew that he [Burroughs] hadn’t seen it. I don’t know what he was doing. He wasn’t very helpful,” Penniston says. The craft was gone and Penniston and Burroughs returned to base in the early hours of Boxing Day. When Penniston got back, he was wired and unable to sleep, so he decided to look through his notes to try to make sense of it all: the lights, the craft, the strange symbols, the eerie silence. Maybe it was the time of night and the adrenaline wearing off, but he couldn’t collect his thoughts; the ones and zeros he saw after touching the hieroglyphs were still swimming in his eyes. “I started writing them down and the more I wrote, the better I felt. I went back to bed and slept all night.” * * * The stories of the lights and the mysterious craft caused unrest around the base. On the evening of 27 December, the deputy base commander, Lt Col Charles Halt, with his lieutenant, Bruce Englund, ventured into the cold evening to investigate the clearing where the craft had supposedly landed on Christmas Day. Halt brought his tape recorder along. What he captured that night is one of the most dramatic pieces of UFO evidence ever recorded. In the recording, which is available online, Halt can be heard walking around the three indentations in the soil alleged to have been caused by the craft’s landing gear. Halt and Englund have a Geiger counter with them and take radiation readings before shifting their attention to marks on the trees surrounding the clearing. “Each one of these trees that face into the blast, what we assume is the landing site, all have an abrasion facing in the same direction, towards the centre,” Englund says. Halt looks up at the trees around the clearing and sees an opening and freshly broken branches on the ground. “Some of them came off about 15 to 20 feet up. Some of the branches [are] about an inch or less in diameter.” After picking over the scene and getting spooked by a screaming deer, Halt, Englund and other unidentified servicemen notice a light in the sky. “You just saw a light? Where? Wait a minute. Slow down. Where?” Halt asks. “Straight ahead, in between the trees – there it is again,” Englund replies. “Watch – straight ahead … There it is.” “I see it too … What is it?” asks Halt, his voice rising with excitement. There is a long pause. “We don’t know, sir.” By this point, they have moved about 140 metres away from the landing site, into a farmer’s field. Halt points out a bird, but everything else is “deathly calm”. “There is no doubt about it – there’s some type of strange flashing red light ahead,” says Halt. “Sir, it’s yellow,” Englund replies. “I saw a yellow tinge in it too. Weird! It appears to be maybe moving a little bit this way? It’s brighter than it has been.” There is another long pause on the tape, then: “It’s coming this way! It is definitely coming this way!” Other voices on the tape, as well as Halt’s, describe pieces “shooting off” the source of the light. “There is no doubt about it. This is weeeeeird!” Halt says, breathlessly. Halt and his men cross into another field. He reports that they have seen up to five lights, all of which have become steady after pulsing with red flashes. “We’re at the far side of the second farmer’s field and made sighting again about 110 degrees,” Halt says. “This looks like it’s clear off to the coast. It’s right on the horizon. Moves about a bit and flashes from time to time. Still steady or red in colour.” Halt’s Geiger counter picks up readings registering at “four or five” clicks – a low reading, consistent with normal background radiation. “There’s definitely something there. Some kind of phenomenon,” Halt says. He then says he sees two strange objects on the horizon, shaped like half-moons, “dancing about with coloured lights on them”. He estimates that the half-moons, which become full circles, are five miles away and moving away. Then, suddenly the lights begin to race towards Halt and his men. In an instant, they are overhead, hovering erratically. Beams of light burst from the circular objects, hitting the ground. Halt laughs nervously. “This is unreal,” he says. Years later, Halt said they could hear chatter on their radios from his colleagues inside the base, reporting that the beams of light went down into the weapons-storage area, where the nuclear weapons were kept. Listening to the tape for the first time was like stumbling across a real-life UFO Blair Witch Project ; it’s just a shame they didn’t think to bring a camera. *** The day after his adventure in the forest, Penniston made this report: Received dispatch from Central Security Control to rendezvous with Police 4 AIC Burroughs, and Police 5 SSgt Steffens. Upon arriving at east gate directly to the east about 1½ miles in a large wooded area. A large yellow glowing light was emitting above the trees. In the centre of the lighted area directly in the centre ground level, there was red light blinking on and off 5 to 10 sec intervals. And a blue light that was being for the most part steady … when we got within a 50 meter distance. The object was producing red and blue light. The blue light was steady and projecting under the object. It was up the area directly extending a meter or two out … This is the closest point that I was near the object at any point ... Nowhere in the report did Penniston mention a triangular craft, lost time or the downloading of a binary code. Burroughs also penned a report of the events that night. Like Penniston, he described a bright white light and flashing blue and red lights coming from the woods; he recounted lying prone, but attributed this to movement in the woods and strange noises, including the sound of a screaming woman (later attributed to muntjac deer). Like Penniston, Burroughs did not mention anything about a craft in his official report, but he did include a sketch of what looks like a craft, with descriptions of the lights coming off it. In subsequent accounts, Penniston claimed that Burroughs was standing still throughout the encounter with the craft. “[He was] staring straight ahead and looked helplessly frozen to the spot … I yelled at him, but he seemed not to hear me … I couldn’t be certain if he was still cognisant and consciously aware of what was going on.” Penniston has also said that Burroughs has no memory of this happening. But what about Burroughs’ diagram? “This has always made me wonder about John’s memory. Why could he do this within 72 hours and today has no memory?” Penniston wrote in Encounter in Rendlesham Forest. There are reasons to believe the men’s official reports may have been coaxed out of them by their superiors to hide what really happened that night. According to Penniston, he originally wrote a four-page report, but was given what became the official report by military superiors, who ordered him to tell their version of the story if anyone asked. The report of Cabansag, who drove Penniston and Burroughs that night, is signed, but there is no date on the sheet. Cabansag has said he was ordered to sign it “under extreme duress”. In an interview in 2013, Penniston said he believed Burroughs’ statement was the only one that had not been tampered with. When Halt returned to base after his adventure in the woods, he was ordered to hand over the tape recording he had made. “I played the tape for the general and the staff,” Halt told the History Channel. “And the general, in his infinite wisdom, said: ‘Happened off the base. It’s a British affair. Case closed.’” Unsatisfied, Halt penned a signed memo a few weeks later, which detailed the events more fully – the patrolmen seeing the “strange glowing object in the forest” that was “triangular in shape” and “hovering or on legs”, the object disappearing and then being briefly sighted again. He then described what he saw: the depressions in the earth and the lights in the sky. The memo corroborates part of Penniston’s story, but there is no mention of him analysing the craft for 45 minutes while scribbling into a notebook. This notebook has become central to Rendlesham lore. Penniston, who left the air force in 1993, says he has had nightmares about that night ever since. He has been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder. He says he thought nothing of the numbers in his notebook until 2010, when he was re-reading it for a documentary. One of the film’s producers noticed the ones and zeros while he flicked through the pages of his notebook and offered to decipher the code. In Encounter in Rendlesham Forest, the authors wrote that the numbers Penniston scribbled down could be interpreted as latitudes and longitudes for global landmarks. The numbers, they claimed, provided coordinates to famous buildings from antiquity, including the pyramids in Giza, the Nazca Lines in Peru and the Temple of Apollo in Naxos, as well as an area of woodland in Sedona, Arizona, known for its red-rock formations, and other locations of cultural and historical significance. They also claimed messages could be interpreted from the code: “exploration of humanity”, “eyes of your eyes”, “continuous for planetary advancement” and “origin year 8100”. There is a “consensus”, they wrote, that binary code “would be a logical way for either extraterrestrials or time travellers to communicate with us”. I don’t know what consensus they were referring to, or what group of people had reached it, but it’s true that the Seti Institute, a US non-profit focused on finding intelligent extraterrestrial life, believes that any communication would more than likely be achieved through a universal language such as mathematics. The authors’ wildest hypothesis was probably their linking of the code to the astrophysicist Ronald Mallett’s contested theories about time travel. Maybe, the authors argued, the craft was unlike anything else because it had come from the future, perhaps to warn humans about the dangers of the nuclear weapons stored at Rendlesham. The MoD maintains that the Rendlesham Forest incident presents “no defence significance”. *** There are sceptics who point to more mundane reasons for what happened in Rendlesham. According to Vince Thurkettle, who worked as a forester on the land at the time, the indentations on the ground could have been made by rabbits. “It was an absolutely normal glade in the forest with three rabbit scrapes – and they’re all carefully marked – that happened to be roughly in a triangle,” he told the BBC in 2020. And the broken branches? “Well, the forest is full of broken branches,” he said. Thurkettle said the burn marks Halt found on the trees were made a few days before by an axe owned by one of the forest rangers, meaning the trees were ready to be felled. But what about the lights that Halt and his men saw in the sky? Ian Ridpath, a British astronomer and UFO sceptic who has created a voluminous website dedicated to the incident in Rendlesham, argues that some of these lights were coming from Orfordness lighthouse and some from a meteor. The pieces “shooting off” that Halt mentions on the tape were an optical illusion caused by clouds distorting the lighthouse beacon, according to Ridpath. Halt and his men mention the lights appearing at five-second intervals, which matches with the beacon. Halt even says on the tape: “OK, we’re looking at the thing ... It looks like an eye winking at you.” The bright objects described towards the end of Halt’s tape – the ones that appeared as half-moons, then as full circles, which lingered and shot down beams of light? Simply stars. As well as Encounter in Rendlesham Forest, which was co-written with Pope, Penniston and Burroughs have written their own books on what happened that night. Their stories are contradictory, tangled and convoluted. Years after the incident, in 2006, Burroughs emailed Ridpath, telling him: “Penniston was not keeping a notebook as it went down.” Penniston denies this. Did Penniston make up stories of spaceships and computer code in the aftermath? “Obviously, in empirical terms, I can’t rule that out,” says Pope. “I think it’s more likely, if it didn’t happen as he says, that this is a memory that has somehow been implanted by virtue of hypnosis and drugs. And that this is a constructed narrative that he has been fed, and absolutely believes, because, in my experience, he’s a truthful man.” Penniston underwent hypnotic regression twice in the 1990s in an attempt to unearth memories he had suppressed. Regressive hypnotism is a controversial therapeutic practice that involves encouraging subjects to use their imaginations to take them back to events in their past that are the roots of their emotional trauma. It is more likely to implant false memories than unlock forgotten or murky events from one’s past. A false memory implanted by hypnosis might explain why Penniston is so adamant that he witnessed the craft. But here’s the kicker: Halt wrote his memo detailing the triangular craft a decade before Penniston went under hypnosis. So is Penniston just lying? Pope thinks it would be strange if he were, because he is not the hero of the story; he comes across more like a victim. I put it to him that some people can get ahead by painting themselves as victims. “They do,” Pope replies. “But to what end? What’s he really got out of this?” I think about this for a moment. Money? Pope shakes his head. Although his books have sold well, the royalties for Encounter in Rendlesham Forest were divided between him, Penniston, Burroughs, his agent and his lawyer. But Penniston and Burroughs often appear on TV documentaries; there is money in that. “Well, firstly, most of that is repeats. Secondly, I don’t know what he got, but, reading between the lines, I’d say somebody probably gave him an appearance fee of a couple of hundred dollars here and there. You know, that’s not much.” Pope didn’t think they were in it for the fame, either: while most people have heard of Roswell, virtually nobody has heard of Rendlesham, let alone Burroughs and Penniston. “Even if they thought they had something to gain, which I doubt, they must also have realised they stood to lose a lot in terms of the reputational damage,” he says. “People thinking they’re crazy, people thinking they’re lying, people thinking they’re dumb and they got fooled by a lighthouse.” I ask Pope if he gives any of the sceptical theories any credibility. He says he has been to the forest many times: “I’ve walked the ground. The beam from the lighthouse isn’t even visible from most of the locations because of the topography.” *** After I met Pope, I walked the tall streets of Manhattan and wrestled with all I had heard and read about Rendlesham. The story is extraordinary, like something out of a Marvel movie. Maybe it boils down to nothing more than a group of easily excitable Americans getting spooked by a deer, a lighthouse and some stars. But I found the witnesses’ stories compelling and I believe they saw real aircraft displaying strange characteristics. I don’t accept that stars, meteorological conditions and a lighthouse could fool people to such a wild degree. Halt has said he was well aware of the presence of the lighthouse and has pointed out that neither stars nor lighthouse beacons zip across the sky and shoot light beams down to Earth. And there’s more. There remains confusion about the levels of radiation the servicemen were exposed to over those Christmas nights. Burroughs claims he suffered from an illness after Boxing Day morning in 1980. He filed a claim with Veterans Affairs (VA) to receive disability benefits, but, when he attempted to get his military records, he discovered the government had classified them as top secret. Cheryl Bennett, an aide to the late senator John McCain, helped Burroughs obtain his records in 2015. She said getting information for him was like “pulling teeth” and one of the hardest things she has ever had to do. In 2015, Burroughs won a settlement from the VA, forcing them to pay for his medical bills, which he claims resulted from exposure to radiation caused by his encounter in Rendlesham. Burroughs’s lawyer, Pat Frascogna, said the settlement excluded “the bogus explanations put out there over the years” – the lighthouse and the astronomical phenomena. “We were denied access to records, mainly dating back to 1979, which we believe would have shown John had no health problems when he entered the air force, but that he developed heart problems and other ailments that arose from the incident.” To argue his case, Burroughs referenced Project Condign, a 460-page UK Ministry of Defence study that analysed more than 10,000 possible UFO sightings collected over several decades, many from military personnel. It was declassified in 2006 and asserted that several observers from the Rendlesham incident were “exposed to unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP) radiation”. Frascogna said: “Condign specifically mentions the incident and how radiation from UAPs could cause injury. John was able to furnish that document, and another dating back to the incident, when a radiation reading found levels to be significantly higher than normal.” This doesn’t agree with Halt’s Geiger counter, which found radiation levels to be within the range of background radiation. However, if the radiation was emanating from the triangular craft that Burroughs and Penniston had happened upon, why would Halt have recorded a high reading? The craft had vanished many hours earlier and, if it were emitting beta particles, as Penniston claimed, any radiation spike would have returned to normal shortly after it sped out of Rendlesham. Still, presumably the normal radiation readings Halt recorded wouldn’t have convinced the VA to cough up for Burrough’s medical bills, so did he have evidence we haven’t seen? Maybe we’ll never know. It’s a shame none of this was allowed to play out in court. Reacting to the settlement, Pope said: “After years of denial, this is official confirmation that what they encountered was real and caused them physical harm. This welcome development doesn’t give us a definitive explanation of the Rendlesham Forest incident, but it takes us ever closer to the truth.” Pope may have got slightly carried away there, as legal settlements do not necessarily mean the party being sued is liable or guilty. Often settlements are made to avoid the high costs of litigation. Adding to the sense that a legitimate incident occurred that night is the fact that when the MoD released 35 archives of UFO documents in 2011, the Rendlesham Forest papers were conspicuously absent. The BBC reported that the MoD received a request for its own records of the incident in 2000, but, when officials looked, they discovered a “huge” gap where defence intelligence files relating to it should have been. Peter Hill-Norton, a veteran of the second world war and a former chief of the defence staff in the MoD, who died in 2004, was a passionate believer in the defence significance of UFOs. He took the Rendlesham case very seriously. In an interview in the 1990s, he said: “The colonel on an American air force base, and a lot of his airmen, claim that something from outside the Earth’s atmosphere landed at their air force base. They inspected it, they photographed it, they took tests on the ground where it had been and found radioactive traces. There are only two explanations for what happened that night. One explanation is that it actually happened as Col Halt reported. The other is that Col Halt and all his men were hallucinating. Surely, to any sensible person, either of those explanations is of the utmost defence interest. This should be the subject of rigorous scientific investigation and not the subject of rubbishing by deadline newspapers.” I think Lord Hill-Norton was right. The events at Rendlesham were not an isolated incident: members of the military around the world continually report seeing strange objects around their bases and warships, some of which house nuclear weapons. That’s not to say there is any conclusive evidence that points to guests from space. In February, Pope announced that he was terminally ill: “A while ago, following some digestive issues, I was diagnosed with esophageal cancer. Unfortunately, it’s Stage 4 and has metastasized to my liver. While I know that it’s kindness and hope that leads people to suggest healers and supposed miracle cures, and to say things like ‘fight it’, and ‘you can beat it’, I’m afraid my diagnosis and my situation leaves no doubt whatsoever: I can’t beat it.” Pope had been extraordinarily generous in making time for me over the years. I emailed him to express my sympathy and thanked him for all his help. When we met in New York, it felt as if we were kindred spirits, far from home in the middle of our own adventures. On 7 April, Pope died at home in Arizona. He was 60 years old and is survived by his wife, Elizabeth Weiss. Before he died, he posted: “The things I’ve done; the places I’ve been; the people I’ve met; and the secrets I’ve been privy to. I wouldn’t have swapped it for the world.” • This is an edited extract from Chasing Aliens by Daniel Lavelle, which is published on 30 April (Viking, £20). To support the Guardian, order your copy at guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply.

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Christchurch gunman fails in bid to appeal against guilty pleas in New Zealand court

The Australian white supremacist who murdered 51 Muslim worshippers at two mosques in Christchurch in 2019 has been prevented from appealing against his guilty pleas, after one of New Zealand’s highest courts said his bid was “utterly devoid of merit”. Brenton Tarrant, who is responsible for the worst mass shooting in New Zealand’s history, asked the court of appeal in February to allow him to appeal against his guilty pleas, claiming harsh prison conditions had affected his mental health and compelled him to admit to the crimes. In a decision released on Thursday, the court said it did not accept Tarrant’s evidence about his mental state, which was inconsistent with detailed observations of prison authorities, mental health professionals and trial lawyers. “He endeavoured to mislead us about his state of mind in a weak attempt to advance an appeal in circumstances where all other evidence demonstrated that he made an informed and totally rational decision to plead guilty.” The court said Tarrant was not coerced or pressured in any way to plead guilty. “The evidence overwhelmingly demonstrates that he was not suffering any significant psychological impacts as a result of his prison conditions at the time he pleaded guilty.” Tarrant also failed to adequately explain the delay in filing his notice of appeal, despite having access to lawyers, the court said. “The court concludes that Mr Tarrant’s proposed appeal is utterly devoid of merit.” Tarrant pleaded guilty in March 2020 to 51 counts of murder, 40 counts of attempted murder and a terrorism charge, after initially saying he would defend the charges. In August 2020, Tarrant became the first person in New Zealand to be sentenced to life in prison without the chance of ever walking free. But in 2022 he filed an appeal at the court of appeal, for both his convictions and his sentence. The court had to first consider whether the appeal could proceed because it was filed outside the legislated time frame to do so. During the week-long hearing, which began on 9 February, Tarrant told the panel of three judges his mental health had deteriorated due to conditions in prison, where he was held in solitary confinement, with limited reading material or contact with other prisoners. He said he was suffering “nervous exhaustion” by the time he entered his guilty pleas, and he had admitted to the crimes just months before his trial was due to begin because he felt there was “little else I could do”. Tarrant, a self-declared white supremacist, said he had masked his mental illness, partly driven by the “political movement I’m a part of” and said he had made a late application because he had not had access to the information required to make it. Tarrant’s former lawyers, psychologists and prison staff also gave evidence during the hearing, challenging Tarrant’s claims of mental health distress and harsh prison conditions. Experts had ruled Tarrant was fit to enter pleas. The crown lawyer Barnaby Hawes told the court that Tarrant was “an unreliable witness and his narrative should be treated with caution”. Further, evidence of his guilt – including livestreaming the attacks – was so overwhelming, a guilty verdict would be assured if his case went back to trial, Hawes said. Tarrant moved to New Zealand in 2017 planning to carry out a white supremacist attack. He planned the mass shooting for months, conducted reconnaissance at the mosques, distributed a manifesto expressing his racist views before he opened fire, and live-streamed part of the assault on Facebook. After the attack, Jacinda Ardern’s government banned military-style semi-automatic rifles and created a firearms registry. An inquiry into the attacks is the largest coronial investigation New Zealand has seen and is still under way. In October 2025 the high court left the door open for Tarrant to be called as a witness despite objections from survivors and families of the victims.

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Ukraine war briefing: Enough of our homegrown weapons to go around, says Zelenskyy

Ukraine is making a surplus of up to 50% in some types of weapons and military cooperation “is already under way” with countries in the Middle East, the Gulf, Europe and the Caucasus, Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on Tuesday. Deals involve the production and supply of drones and missiles as well as software and technology, said Zelenskyy, adding that Kyiv has handed a proposal to the US for cooperation on drones, defence systems and other types of weapons for use in the air, on land and at sea. Another oil facility deep inside Russia – at Perm, 1,500km (900 miles) from Ukraine – was on fire Wednesday after what Ukraine’s president said was his country’s latest long-range drone attack. Nasa’s satellite fire monitoring system showed a hotspot over an array of tanks and a large surrounding area near Perm. Ukraine’s SBU security service said it struck the Transneft pumping station as part of efforts to target Russia’s revenue-earning energy infrastructure. Plumes of black smoke towered over the southern Russian oil town of Tuapse on Wednesday and residents wore face masks after multiple Ukrainian drone strikes on a major oil refinery in the coastal town. Eight people were injured in an attack on the Kharkiv region, the regional prosecutor’s office said. In the Sumy region, officials said a 60-year-old woman died as a result of an attack. In the southern Odesa region, Russian forces struck Izmail, damaging a hospital and infrastructure. A Ukrainian strike killed three passengers of a minibus and wounded eight people in the Russian border region of Belgorod, the local governor said on Wednesday. Ukraine denies targeting civilians. Russia’s annual Victory Day parade will be held on 9 May without military hardware for the first time in almost two decades, Pjotr Sauer writes, ostensibly because of fears of a long-range attack by Ukrainian drones. Since the invasion, the parades have been scaled back, with observers suggesting Russia’s battlefield losses meant it did not have enough tanks and armaments to mount a decent show. Last year’s grand parade, for the 80th anniversary of Victory Day, did feature tanks, rocket launchers and drones. Ukraine has asked Israel to seize a vessel it claims is carrying grain looted from Russian-occupied Ukrainian soil, Pjotr Sauer writes, as a rare diplomatic spat between the two countries rolls on. Ukraine said the cargo vessel Panormitis, sailing under a Panamanian flag, was en route to dock in Haifa. The vessel’s Greece-based management company has denied it is carrying any grain from occupied Ukraine. Israel has said evidence submitted by Ukraine is being examined. The Israeli outlet Haaretz reported on Sunday that Israel had been buying grain allegedly looted by Russia from occupied Ukrainian territory for at least two years. In a statement to Haaretz, an EU spokesperson said it was considering sanctions on Israeli individuals and entities aiding Russia. The Russian economy contracted by 0.3% in the first quarter, marking its first quarterly contraction since early 2023, preliminary data showed on Wednesday, as the war, western sanctions and high interest rates took their toll. Russia’s economy had been growing since the first quarter of 2023 in what analysts have described as unsustainable, unproductive growth fuelled by production for military purposes that does not improve the economy in the long term. Reuters analysts write that reports of falling profits or losses by Russia’s major companies show that with the key interest rate at 14.5% and little foreign investment, Russian companies are struggling to invest and grow. Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump floated a temporary ceasefire in Ukraine in a phone call on Wednesday. The US president said Putin offered help with ending the conflict in Iran but Trump said he preferred for the Russian president to be “involved with ending the war in Ukraine”. Speaking to reporters afterwards, Trump seemed to confuse the Ukraine war with the Iran war, Pjotr Sauer writes. Kim Jong-un has praised North Korean soldiers who blew themselves up with grenades in order to avoid capture while fighting Ukrainian forces in Russia’s western Kursk region, confirming the existence of the extreme battlefield policy, Luke Harding writes. In 2024, North Korea sent about 14,000 troops to join Russia’s war against Ukraine. According to South Korean and Ukrainian officials, more than 6,000 were killed in intense fighting.

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US charges Sinaloa governor and other Mexican officials with drug trafficking offences

The US justice department has charged the governor of Sinaloa and nine other current and former officials for alleged ties to the Sinaloa cartel, accusing them of aiding in the massive importation of illicit narcotics into the United States . Some officials were members of Mexico’s progressive ruling party, Morena, posing a political conundrum for Mexican president Claudia Sheinbaum as she seeks to offset mounting pressures from the Trump administration. The 10 people charged in Manhattan federal court are current and former government or law enforcement officials in Sinaloa, including Rubén Rocha Moya, 76, who has been the governor of Mexico’s Sinaloa state since November 2021. The indictment alleges the governor was elected in 2021 with the help of the Sinaloa cartel, which allegedly kidnapped and intimidated political rivals in exchange for protection of their operations once in power. Charges against Moya included narcotics importation conspiracy and possession of machine guns and destructive devices, along with another conspiracy count. If convicted, he could face life in prison or a mandatory minimum of 40 years behind bars. Responding to the indictment, Rocha Moya wrote on X that he “categorically and unequivocally reject[s]” the charges, which were “completely untrue and without any basis”. “It is part of a perverse strategy to violate (Mexico’s) constitutional order, specifically on national sovereignty, ” he wrote in a post on X on Wednesday afternoon. “We will show them that this slander doesn’t have any sort of foundation.” US ambassador to Mexico Ronald Johnson said that combating transnational crime was a shared priority between the US and Mexico. “Our countries have pledged to strengthen transparency, enforce anti-corruption laws, and uphold the rule of law. That is what our citizens on both sides of the border want and, as I have said repeatedly, this is what they deserve.” President Sheinbaum is yet to comment on the charges, but the foreign relations secretariat released a statement saying it had received various extradition requests from the US government, adding the attorney general’s office would determine whether there was sufficient evidence to detain those charged. Authorities alleged the defendants played critical roles in helping the cartel ship fentanyl, heroin, cocaine and methamphetamine from Mexico into the US. The Sinaloa cartel is among eight Latin American crime groups designated as terrorist organizations by the US government. Under pressure from the Trump administration, which has threatened tariffs and unilateral military action, the Mexican government has ramped up its arrests and drug seizures across the country, transferred roughly 100 high-level cartel operatives to US prisons, and launched operations against kingpins. In the last two months, the Mexican military killed Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, known as “El Mencho”, the leader of the Jalisco new generation cartel, and arrested Audias Flores, who was a possible successor. With Associated Press