As Trump wrestles indictments, Biden keeps focus on economy

This combination of pictures created on February 16, 2022 shows Former US President Donald Trump during a visit to the border wall near Pharr, Texas on June 30, 2021 and US President Joe Biden during a visit to Germanna Community College in Culpeper, Virginia, on February 10, 2022. (AFP)
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Updated 16 August 2023
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As Trump wrestles indictments, Biden keeps focus on economy

  • Biden is walking a careful line ahead of his possible 2024 rematch with Trump, who remains the frontrunner for the Republican nomination

MILWAUKEE: As criminal charges against Donald Trump mount, his rival for the White House President Joe Biden is determined to avoid commenting on the Republican’s legal troubles.
A day after Trump was indicted for the fourth time, for alleged racketeering and election interference in Georgia, Biden delivered a public speech in another key swing state, Wisconsin, focused on wind power and job creation.
In a factory busy with new orders for wind turbines, the Democrat boasted of new jobs and investments linked, in his view, to the major energy and infrastructure policies he has enacted during his first term.
Though the speech was aimed squarely at countering Trump’s message of American decline, he was careful not to even mention his predecessor’s name — and certainly not the Georgia indictment.
“They tell us America is failing,” Biden said of Republicans’ political messaging.
“They are wrong... America isn’t failing. It’s winning.”
Asked about Trump’s latest legal development, White House spokeswoman Olivia Dalton said Tuesday aboard Air Force One that she was “certainly not going to comment.”
Biden is walking a careful line ahead of his possible 2024 rematch with Trump, who remains the frontrunner for the Republican nomination.
Trump’s refusal to accept his 2020 election loss to Biden has led to the slew of indictments against him — first in federal court in August, and again in the southern state of Georgia on Monday, where he was painted as leading a Mafia-like operation to subvert Biden’s victory.

Biden, 80, has maintained his silence since Trump was hit with his first indictment — in New York earlier this year, over hush-money payments made to porn star Stormy Daniels.
The US leader knows that the slightest comment he makes will be seized on by rival Republicans as alleged proof that he has unleashed the Justice Department to immobilize his likely 2024 opponent.
Already not fond of speaking with reporters, Biden has carefully avoided the press since the beginning of the summer and their persistent questions about Trump.
He frequently ignores shouted questions as he boards his plane or while taking bike rides at his beachside home in Delaware.
The Democrat instead sticks to well-practiced speeches on major economic policies, especially his signature “Inflation Reduction Act.”
While its name was designed to show Americans he was taking action over rising prices, the gut of the policy is incentives for investment and job creation in the renewable energy sector.
Biden says it has already generated $110 billion in private investment.
“In Wisconsin alone, companies have committed over $3 billion in manufacturing and clean energy investments since President Biden was sworn into office,” the White House said Tuesday.

For his 2024 reelection campaign, Biden likely knows he cannot drown out all the noise about Trump’s indictments and coming trials.
But he is betting that ultimately the robustness of the US economy, which has defied predictions of recession, will convince voters to support him.
To set himself out from his rival, Biden does not see the need to stoke the fires of Trump’s legal woes.
Equally so, he is mute on the legal problems of his own son, Hunter Biden, who faces possible criminal tax and other charges from a Justice Department special counsel appointed just last week.
While that drew big headlines, it was quickly eclipsed by Georgia’s indictment of Trump.
Still, Biden faces an uphill battle.
Opinion polls show he has a low confidence rating among voters, who don’t completely understand his economic policy and are put off by his age. If reelected, Biden would be 86 when he finishes his second term.
Still, at the peak of a five-decade political career, the US leader is gambling that time favors him and that voters will prefer his personality to Trump’s.
“This is still a country that believes in honesty, decency and integrity,” Biden said Tuesday in a thinly veiled swipe at his Republican opponent.

 


Finland’s crackdown on undocumented migrants sparks fear

Updated 8 sec ago
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Finland’s crackdown on undocumented migrants sparks fear

“My situation is very, very, very difficult,” a Moroccan woman in her fifties told AFP
As of last year, undocumented migrants are unable to apply for work in Finland — they must instead do it from their home country

HELSINKI: The Finnish government’s crackdown on immigration has led to a sharp rise in deportations, raising fears among undocumented migrants who could face dangerous situations in their home countries.
At a Helsinki day center called “Toivon talo,” or “House of Hope,” where undocumented non-European migrants can get legal, social and medical help, people chat while enjoying the free lunch served most days.
The center, run by a Christian organization and volunteers, provides help to people who in most cases are staying in Finland illegally after their asylum applications have been rejected, or their residence permits or visas have expired or been turned down.
“My situation is very, very, very difficult,” a Moroccan woman in her fifties told AFP, requesting to remain anonymous.
A social services worker by training, she came to Finland in early 2024 to search for a job, but was unable to find work during the 90-day period that third-country nationals can stay without a residence permit.
As of last year, undocumented migrants are unable to apply for work in Finland — they must instead do it from their home country.
“I can’t go back to Morocco, because I’m now divorced and when my ex-husband finds out that I’m back... He can be aggressive,” she said, adding she had been ordered to leave in November.
Anne Hammad, project manager for House of Hope, told AFP she has seen a rise in the number of people at the center who fear deportation ever since Finland’s right-wing government, in power since 2023, began tightening the country’s immigration policy.
Many were in vulnerable situations and often concerned about returning to their countries for different reasons, she added.
Between January and September 2025, some 2,070 foreign nationals were deported, a 30 percent increase from the same period in 2024, according to Finland’s National Police Board.
Chief superintendent Janne Lepsu said foreigners’ right of residence was now “investigated more closely.”
“If it is found that a foreign national does not have this right, every effort will be made to ensure that they leave Finland or the Schengen area,” he said.
There is no official data on how many undocumented people live in Finland, but estimates suggest between 3,500 and 5,000 in recent years.

- ‘Paradigm shift’ -

Since 2023, Finland has introduced stricter requirements for obtaining asylum, residence permits, family reunification and citizenship, though it welcomes work-based immigration.
The government’s aim is to better manage immigration, strengthen internal security and align Finland’s immigration policy with other Nordic countries.
“We have considerably tightened our immigration policy. We can probably even talk about a paradigm shift in this regard,” Finland’s Interior Minister Mari Rantanen told AFP.
Several other EU members have also cracked down on immigration in recent years.
Researcher Erna Bodstrom from the Migration Institute of Finland told AFP that “before, it was possible to build a secure life in Finland for more immigrants.”
“But that is not the case anymore.”
Around 11 percent of Finland’s population of 5.6 million had a foreign background as of 2024, with the number growing steadily during the 2000s, according to Statistics Finland.
While the figure is still higher than in the 2010s, both work-related immigration and asylum applications have declined in recent years.

- Less individual consideration -

“Negative decisions on residence permit applications are now more common than before” and cases receive less individual consideration, Finnish Immigration Service spokesman Johannes Hirvela told AFP.
Meanwhile, Finland is increasingly enforcing deportation rulings even if people have appealed against their rejected asylum applications, according to the Immigration Service’s director of Control and Monitoring Tirsa Forssell.
The majority of visitors at the House of Hope are men aged between 30 and 45 from Morocco, Somalia or Iraq, but the undocumented people there also include families, children, elderly people and victims of human trafficking from more than 40 non-EU nationalities.
“It’s difficult,” said 30-year-old Rachid, who arrived from Morocco in 2022 as a seasonal worker.
After his contract ended, he started looking for a new job, but now that possibility has been ruled out.
He spends his days at the House of Hope, waiting.
“I hope the next government will change the rules.”

Tajikistan says it is ‘deeply concerned’ by latest EU sanctions targeting its banks

Updated 5 min 21 sec ago
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Tajikistan says it is ‘deeply concerned’ by latest EU sanctions targeting its banks

  • The economy of Tajikistan is heavily dependent on remittances from migrant workers in Russia
  • “The Republic of Tajikistan adheres to its international obligations,” the foreign ministry said

ALMATY: Tajikistan’s foreign ministry said on Saturday it was “deeply concerned” by the inclusion of Tajik banks in the latest round of EU sanctions against Russia, and said it would take measures to minimize the consequences on Dushanbe.
Three Tajik banks — Spitamen, Dushanbe City Bank and the Commercial Bank of Tajikistan — were included in the EU’s 19th sanctions package, adopted on October 23.
The economy of Tajikistan, a landlocked country of some 10 million people sandwiched between Afghanistan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan and China, is heavily dependent on remittances from migrant workers in Russia.
“The Republic of Tajikistan adheres to its international obligations and is always ready to cooperate with international partners to jointly prevent risks associated with possible circumvention of sanctions,” the foreign ministry said.


UK pledges millions in urgent aid for Sudan as FM Cooper condemns ‘horrifying’ atrocities

Updated 25 min 25 sec ago
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UK pledges millions in urgent aid for Sudan as FM Cooper condemns ‘horrifying’ atrocities

  • ‘In Sudan right now, there is just despair,’ FM Yvette Cooper says
  • Funds will help provide food, medical care, protection for survivors of sexual violence

LONDON: The UK has pledged an additional £5 million ($6.6 million) in emergency funding to support civilians caught in Sudan’s escalating humanitarian crisis, Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper announced on Saturday.

Speaking at the 21st Manama Dialogue in Bahrain, Cooper described the situation in El-Fasher as “truly horrifying and utterly intolerable,” highlighting that about 260,000 people, half of them children, were trapped amid famine-like conditions and ongoing violence.

“In Sudan right now, there is just despair,” she said. “For too long this terrible conflict has been neglected, while suffering has simply increased. Today I’m announcing from the UK government a further £5 million of humanitarian support in response to the violence in El-Fasher, on top of the £120 million the UK is already providing this year across Sudan.”

The funds will be used to provide critical services such as emergency food, medical care and protection for survivors of sexual violence. Of the total, £2 million will be directed specifically to support survivors of rape and sexual assault.

Cooper condemned reports that both the Rapid Support Forces and Sudanese Armed Forces were continuing to use rape as a weapon.

“Atrocities, mass executions, starvation and the devastating use of rape as a weapon of war, with women and children bearing the brunt of the largest humanitarian crisis in the 21st century, are truly horrifying,” she said.

The UK’s £120 million aid commitment for Sudan this year includes support through partners such as the International Committee of the Red Cross, the Sudan Humanitarian Fund and the Cash Consortium Sudan, delivering food, health assistance and protection services.

British diplomats continue to press all parties to end hostilities, protect civilians and grant unrestricted humanitarian access, as London urges renewed international efforts to bring peace to the war-torn nation.


Ukraine says it hit a key fuel pipeline near Moscow that supplies Russian forces

Updated 01 November 2025
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Ukraine says it hit a key fuel pipeline near Moscow that supplies Russian forces

  • “Our strikes have had more impact than sanctions,” said Kyrylo Budanov, the head of HUR,
  • Russia and Ukraine have presented conflicting accounts of what is happening in Pokrovsk

KYIV: Ukrainian forces hit an important fuel pipeline in the Moscow region that supplies the Russian army, Ukraine’s military intelligence said Saturday, a claim that came amid a sustained Russian campaign of massive drone and missile attacks on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure.
The operation was carried out late Friday, according to a statement on the Telegram messaging channel. The agency, which is known by its acronym HUR, described it as a “serious blow” to Russia’s military logistics.
HUR said its forces struck the Koltsevoy pipeline, which spans 400 kilometers (250 miles) and supplies the Russian army with gasoline, diesel and jet fuel from refineries in Ryazan, Nizhny Novgorod and Moscow.
The operation, which targeted infrastructure near Ramensky district, destroyed all three fuel lines, HUR said.
The pipeline was capable of transporting up to 3 million tons of jet fuel, 2.8 million tons of diesel and 1.6 million tons of gasoline annually, HUR said.
“Our strikes have had more impact than sanctions,” said Kyrylo Budanov, the head of HUR, referring to international sanctions on Russia imposed over its all-out war and the February 2022 invasion of Ukraine.
Moscow strains to take key eastern city
Meanwhile, Russia’s defense ministry on Saturday claimed its forces defeated a team of Ukrainian special forces that were rushed to the eastern front-line hotspot of Pokrovsk in a bid to stop Russian troops from pushing further into the city.
Russia and Ukraine have presented conflicting accounts of what is happening in Pokrovsk, a key Ukrainian stronghold in the eastern Donetsk region. Russian President Vladimir Putin claimed last week that his forces had encircled the city’s Ukrainian defenders.
But the spokesman for Ukraine’s eastern forces, Hryhorii Shapoval, told The Associated Press last week that the situation in Pokrovsk is “hard but under control.” On Friday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky acknowledged that some Russian units had infiltrated the city, but insisted that Ukraine is weeding them out.
Kyiv did not immediately comment on the Russian defense ministry’s latest claim. But Zelensky said last week that Russia had deployed around 170,000 troops in Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk region, where Pokrovsk lies, in a major push to capture the city and claim a major battlefield victory.
Putin is trying to persuade the United States, which wants him to seek a peace deal, that Ukraine can’t hold out against Russian military superiority. He has also stressed what he says is Russia’s improving nuclear capability as he refuses to budge from what he says are his country’s legitimate war aims.
A key goal for Moscow has been to take all of Ukraine’s industrial heartland of Donbas, made up of the eastern Luhansk and Donetsk provinces. Kyiv still controls about a tenth of the coal-rich region.
Russian nighttime strikes kill a civilian and injure 15 more
Elsewhere, a civilian died and 15 more were injured after Russia struck southern Ukraine with a ballistic missile on Saturday morning, local official Vitaliy Kim said. A child is among those injured in the strike on the Mykolaiv region, he said and added that Russia used an Iskander missile.
Another Russian strike early Saturday sparked a fire at a gas plant in the central Poltava region, Ukraine’s emergency service reported.
The latest strikes came as Russia keeps up massive drone and missile attacks on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure — attacks that brought power outages and restrictions across Ukraine earlier this week, in what Kyiv described as a “systematic energy terror.”
Moscow launched 223 drones at Ukraine overnight into Saturday, 206 of which were shot down, according to the Ukrainian air force. Seventeen struck targets in seven Ukrainian regions, the air force said, without providing details.
Russia also hit an agricultural enterprise in Ukraine’s northern Chernihiv region, injuring a 66-year old woman there, according to a Telegram update by regional government official Viacheslav Chaus.


Two dead, more injured in suspected Greek vendetta shooting

Updated 01 November 2025
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Two dead, more injured in suspected Greek vendetta shooting

  • Gunmen opened fire on houses in the central village of Vorizia
  • The incident occurred hours after a house under construction was targeted with an explosive device

ATHENS: At least two people died and several were injured on Saturday, state media reported, in a shooting on the Greek island of Crete suspected to be linked to a family vendetta.
State news agency ANA said at least two people, including a 50-year-old woman, were killed after gunmen opened fire on houses in the central village of Vorizia, some 52 kilometers (32 miles) southwest of the island capital Iraklio.
At least 10 more people were injured, ANA reported.
The incident occurred hours after a house under construction was targeted with an explosive device, the agency said.
Armed police launched an operation to secure the area so ambulances could pick up the injured, state TV ERT said.
Illegal gun ownership is rife on Crete, and family vendettas are common on the island.
Last Sunday, a 23-year-old shot and killed a 52-year-old man during a village celebration in western Crete.