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Woman subjected to ‘gang rape’ in Faisalabad

Police say they arrested two suspects while hunt for other suspects is also launched A woman has allegedly been subjected to gang rape in Painsra town of Faisalabad, Geo News reported on Saturday. Police said the woman filed a case at the Thekriwala police station, following which they arrested two suspects while hunt for the other suspects was also launched. As per police, the victim, who is a resident of Lahore, came to Faisalabad to meet her friend Muhammad Waseem. The incident took place when the woman stayed at house of the friend’s acquaintance near a bus station, after failing to find a bus, as she wanted to leave for Lahore, they said. In the first information report (FIR), the victim said she went to meet Waseem on August 14 in the evening in Painsra. However, she mentioned that they both had an argument after which Waseem left for his house, leaving the victim alone. “I went to Waseem’s house myself and asked him to drop me to the bus station. However, we couldn’t find a bus and went back to Painsra Chowk where we had an argument again,” she said. The victim, in the FIR, said that Waseem then called his friend Abdul Raheem and requested him to give him accommodation for two hours till the bus came. The woman said a suspect, Imran alias Mani, accompanied by three to four accomplices entered the Abdul Raheem’s house, thrashed Waseem and tied him in another room. Then, she alleged, Imran and his accomplices gang raped her. She also alleged that the suspects had snatched their mobile phones as well. She suspected that Abdul Raheem and Waseem were also involved in the crime, the victim said, requesting the authorities to bring the culprits to justice. Source: https://www.thenews.com.pk/latest/1220783-woman-subjected-to-gang-rape-in-faisalabad

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We don’t know what’s happening’: Fear and confusion in Kursk as Russian residents take shelter and Ukraine advances

Bodies decomposing in the street. Bullet-marked civilian cars lining the road. Half of Lenin’s face blown away from the statue on the square. Streets littered with shrapnel. Locals huddling in a bomb shelter. The smell of death, in buildings torn open. It is a scene achingly familiar to Ukraine, yet until now alien to Russia. But the border town of Sudzha was assaulted by Ukraine eleven days ago and claimed by President Volodymyr Zelensky on Thursday as under their control. When Russian President Vladimir Putin began his war of choice two years ago, Russia did not expect to get invaded back. CNN crossed into Russia accompanied by the Ukrainian military, past the border post torn to shreds by Ukraine’s first attack. With the skyline ahead occasionally marred by black smoke from explosions, the road itself was surreally calm. On either side, tranquil fields once protected by a Cold War superpower that had not seen an invasion since the Nazis. The turnoff into Sudzha was marked with a huge Orthodox Christian cross, upon which was written “God save and protect us.” Yards away lay the wreckage of two tanks and other armor from the intense fighting days earlier. The town’s streets were mostly vacant, yet echoed with the storm raging around them. Small arms fire and outgoing artillery broke the silence, but at a distance. Our Ukrainian escort said the Russian attack drones that had blighted Ukraine’s progress on the front lines in the past months were simply too busy at the frontline battles to harass Kyiv’s forces at the border and in Sudzha. Their conspicuous absence, and that of Russian air power, suggested a possible improvement in Ukraine’s capabilities for this surprise assault. The ubiquity of Western-supplied armored vehicles on the roads into Russia showed Ukraine was throwing resources it had long claimed it lacked into this fight. Sudzha was not completely deserted. At one large building, outside the basement entrance, a large cardboard hand-written sign announced, “Here are peaceful people in the basement, no military.” Inna, 68, sat outside. There were 60 other civilians downstairs, she said. “They brought a lot of boxes, their food,” she said of the Ukrainian forces. In the basement was a scene we have witnessed in dozens of Ukrainian towns over the past two years, and still as saddening in Russia. At the entrance to the shelter was Stanislav, who stroked his gray beard when asked how life was. “See, this is not life. It is existing. It is not life.” In the dark, subterranean dank were the infirm, isolated, and confused. One elderly woman, still in her wig and bright red summer dress, rocked slightly as she intoned: “And now I don’t know how it will end. At least a truce so we can live peacefully. We don’t need anything. It’s my crutch, I can’t walk. It’s very hard.” Flies buzzed around her face, in humid gloom. In the next room, the light flickered on a family of six. The man said, “A week. No news. We don’t know what’s happening around us.” His son sat silent next to him, his white face stony. At the end of the corridor, talking to one of our Ukrainian escorts was Yefimov, who said he was in his 90s. His daughter, niece and grandchildren are married to Ukrainian men and live in Ukraine, yet he cannot reach them. “To Ukraine,” he said, when asked where he wanted to flee. “You are the first to mention it. People talked about it but you are the first to come.” The idea of evacuation would be arduous for many here in peacetime. On the street outside is Nina, 74, searching for her medication. The shops are shredded and pharmacies closed. She insists she does not want to leave, with the same passionate defense of her right to live where she always has as so many Ukrainian women of her age, in similar scarred towns. “If I wanted to I would. Why would I leave where I lived 50 years? My daughter and mother are in the graveyard and my son was born (here), my grandkids…  I live on my land. I don’t know where I live. I don’t know whose land this is, I don’t understand anything.” It is unclear how and where this fast, successful and surprise assault ends, or when Russian forces arrive. Yet they will be too late to reverse another dent in Russia’s pride since it began an invasion meant to take only a matter of days in February 2022. Source: https://edition.cnn.com/2024/08/16/europe/sudzha-russia-ukraine-streets-intl-latam/index.html

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BLF terrorist ‘gunned down by comrade’

Terrorist was involved in attacks on forces the killing of former members who had surrendered, say sources Shambeen alias Shahak, a wanted terrorist from Balochistan, was killed by his own accomplice, Geo News reported on Tuesday, citing security sources. The terrorist, according to the sources, belonged to a banned militant organisation, Balochistan Liberation Front (BLF) and was involved in several terror activities, including attacks on forces. “Shambeen alias Shahak was involved in attacks on forces as well as the killing of former members who had surrendered, the sources added. The killed terrorist was also directly involved in numerous attacks on security forces in Balochistan. Is killing a result of infighting? Responding to a question about whether his killing points towards internal fights between the militant groups, Brigadier (retd) Waqar Hassan told Geo News that these terrorist organisations operating in Pakistan, whether they are doing so in the name of Islam or as nationalist groups, are all basically “criminal mafia” and there is no ideology. It is, he added, mainly to create chaos and extortion of money. “The infighting has been going on for a long time,” he said, detailing the surrenders made by ex-members of banned militant organisations, Gulzar Imam Shambay and Sarfraz Bangulzai last year. The cracks within these organisations are a result of our intelligence’s efforts and infighting due to money. “The main reason for infighting is the division of money given to them as funds,” he said. These organisations will hopefully stop operating if the intensity of infighting increases. Balochistan, which remains a target of terrorist activities, has witnessed several attacks on civilians and security forces. Among the 92% fatalities recorded as a result of terrorist attacks, the province suffered 25% of all deaths in the second quarter of 2024, while Khyber Pakhtunkhwa saw 67% lives lost to terrorism. Source: https://www.thenews.com.pk/latest/1219530-blf-terrorist-gunned-down-by-comrade

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Confident Arshad Nadeem attributes Olympic victory to ‘rhythm’

“It was my day. I could have thrown it at a greater distance,” says Olympic gold medalist As the country celebrates a historic Olympic win, Pakistani javelin thrower Arshad Nadeem attributes his achievement to his confidence, stating it was “my day” at the Paris Olympics 2024 Thursday night. Speaking in an exclusive interview with Geo News, the victorious javelin thrower said: “It was my day. I could have thrown it at a greater distance.” Sharing the reason behind his win, the 27-year-old athlete, said he was “in the rhythm” and “hopeful” to clinch the gold medal, given how far he had launched the javelin. Nadeem, the first-ever individual athlete to win a gold medal in Pakistan’s history, expressed his wish to celebrate August 14 with the medal. The javelin ace — who registered a new Olympic record after fetching a 92.97m of the throw in the second round, enough for him to win the competition as others remained behind — made history at the mega sporting event and also brought home the first Olympic gold after 40 long years in any discipline. Pakistan had earlier won gold medals only in hockey, the last being in the 1984 Los Angeles Olympic Games. His throw also set the Olympic record which was previously with Norway’s Andreas Thorkildsen who registered at the 2008 Beijing Games. Following Nadeem’s historic win, Pakistan won an Olympic medal after the gap of 32 years. The last time Pakistan won an medal was in 1992 when the national hockey team clinched bronze by defeating the Netherlands 4-3 at the Barcelona Olympics. Source: https://www.thenews.com.pk/latest/1218134-video-confident-arshad-nadeem-attributes-olympic-victory-to-rhythm

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Ukraine launches ‘massive’ drone strike on Russia’s Lipetsk region, as cross-border attack rages on

Russia’s Lipetsk region has been struck by a “massive” Ukrainian drone attack, according to its governor, as Ukraine’s cross-border assault into Russia shows no sign of easing. At least nine people were wounded in the attack, which damaged energy infrastructure and prompted the temporary evacuation of residents in several areas, Lipetsk governor Igor Artamonov wrote Friday on Telegram. The reported strike comes after Russia accused Ukrainian troops of crossing the border into its Kursk region on Wednesday, which marked the first incursion of its kind from Ukraine and put pressure on Moscow in an area largely untroubled by more than two years of war. On Thursday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky acknowledged the offensive for the first time, saying Moscow must “feel” the consequences of its brutal invasion of Ukraine. “Russia brought the war to our land, and it should feel what it has done,” Zelensky said in his evening address, without directly referencing the assault. Zelensky speaks in front an an F-16 fighter jet on Ukrainian Air Forces Day at an undisclosed location, August 4, 2024. Sergei Supinsky/AFP/Getty Images A Ukrainian source with knowledge of Friday’s attack on Lipetsk – which lies even deeper into Russian territory than Kursk – said it struck an airfield in the region, destroying an ammunition depot with more than 700 guided bombs, in a joint operation involving its military, security service and special operation forces. The source said dozens of fighter jets and helicopters were on the airfield at the time, and that a powerful explosion had led to a huge fire breaking out. Lipetsk’s emergency ministry also reported a fire at a military airfield in the region. “The enemy is hitting civilians in Kursk and Belgorod,” Artamonov wrote on Telegram. “Today [it] massively attacked our region with drones. We will not be frightened, we will not give in, but we are not going to risk the lives of our people either.” Russia’s defense ministry said Friday it intercepted and destroyed 75 “aircraft-type” drones, including 19 over Lipetsk, 26 over Belgorod, seven over Kursk, and several others over the regions of Bryansk, Voronezh, and Orel. It said it also destroyed five over Crimea and eight over the waters of the Black Sea. The reports show that Ukraine’s assault on Russia is not letting up. Although pro-Ukrainian groups of Russian nationals have mounted fleeting cross-border assaults on Russia, and Ukraine has repeatedly targeted the border region of Belgorod with airstrikes, this week’s incursion marks the first time that regular Ukrainian and special operations units have strode into Russian territory. The intention, according to US and Ukrainian officials, is partly to divert Russian forces away from other parts of the eastern front – from which they have been able to bombard Ukraine’s Kharkiv region – and partly to disrupt and demoralize Russian forces. US officials do not believe Ukraine intends to hold Russian territory for the long term. On Thursday, Kursk residents wrote on Telegram that “huge, furious battles are underway,” and recorded a video address to Russian President Vladimir Putin asking for his help. Russia ‘a legitimate target’ for Ukraine Mykhailo Podolyak, an adviser to Zelensky, praised the Western response to the Ukrainian assault, saying “most quietly approve” of it. Previous Ukrainian attacks on Russia have made some Western officials jittery, with some arguing that Kyiv should fight only a defensive war to avoid provoking a potential Russian escalation. Podolyak said Thursday that the West’s response had been “absolutely calm, balanced, objective, and based on an understanding of the spirit of international law and the principles of defensive warfare.” Unlike Zelensky, Podolyak directly referenced “events in the Kursk region.” “Now, a significant part of the global community considers [Russia] a legitimate target for any operations and types of weapons,” he added. The European Union foreign affairs spokesperson Peter Stanno said Wednesday that Ukraine “has the legal right to defend itself, including striking an aggressor on its territory.” US State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller was slightly more tight-lipped, saying Ukraine has to decide its own tactics. Source: https://edition.cnn.com/2024/08/09/europe/russia-lipetsk-kursk-ukraine-zelensky-intl/index.html

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At least 63 killed, dozens trapped after landslides hit India’s Kerala

Heavy rain hinders rescue efforts after landslides struck the hilly Wayanad district while people were sleeping. Landslides triggered by relentless monsoon rains have struck tea plantations in the southern Kerala state and killed at least 63 people, with at least 250 others rescued from mud and debris, officials said. The landslides hit near Meppadi in the district of Wayanad at about 2am on Tuesday (20:30 GMT on Monday), cutting off at least four villages, and rescue efforts were hampered by blocked roads in the disaster area. State revenue minister K Rajan’s office confirmed the death toll to reporters. District official D R Meghasree said another 125 people were in hospital for treatment. Wayanad is famed for the tea estates crisscrossing its hilly countryside which rely on a large pool of casual labourers for planting and harvest. Local media reported that most of the victims were tea estate workers. Television footage showed rescue workers making their way through mud and uprooted trees to reach those who had been stranded. Vehicles swept off the roads were seen stuck in a swollen river. Authorities mobilised helicopters to help with rescue efforts and the Indian Army was roped in to build a temporary bridge after landslides destroyed a main bridge that linked the affected area. “We are trying every way to rescue our people,” state Health Minister Veena George said. Images published by the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) showed rescue crews trudging through mud to search for survivors and carry bodies on stretchers out of the area. “My thoughts are with all those who have lost their loved ones and prayers with those injured,” Prime Minister Narendra Modi said in a post on social media platform X, adding that families of victims would be given a compensation payment of $2,400 (200,000 rupees). Opposition leader Rahul Gandhi, who until recently represented Wayanad in parliament, told lawmakers that the scope of the devastation was “heartbreaking”. “Our country has witnessed an alarming rise in landslides in recent years,” he added. “The need of the hour is a comprehensive action plan to address the growing frequency of natural calamities.” India’s meteorological agency is predicting more rain in the coming hours. Monsoon rains across the region from June to September offer respite from the summer heat and are crucial to replenishing water supplies.They are vital for agriculture and therefore the livelihoods of millions of farmers and food security for South Asia’s nearly two billion people. But they also bring destruction in the form of landslides and floods. The number of fatal floods and landslides has increased in recent years, and experts say climate change is exacerbating the problem. Intense monsoon storms battered India earlier this month, flooding parts of the financial capital Mumbai, while lightning in the eastern state of Bihar killed at least 10 people. Nearly 500 people were killed around Kerala in 2018 during the worst flooding to hit the state in almost a century. India’s worst landslide in recent decades was in 1998, when rockfall triggered by heavy monsoon rains killed at least 220 people and completely buried the tiny village of Malpa in the Himalayas. Source: https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2024/7/30/several-feared-dead-hundreds-trapped-after-landslides-hit-indias-kerala

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