
Greece student protests and a Kenyan funeral: photos of the day
A boy watches over water containers. People queue in front of water tankers every day to get clean water Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images
People attend to a person who collapsed in a temporary migrant shelter at a municipal hall on Crete Photograph: Nicolas Economou/Reuters
A Bosnian Muslim woman mourns amid gravestones of victims killed during the Srebrenica genocide, at the Srebrenica Genocide Memorial Photograph: Amel Emrić/Reuters
A protester stands in front of a military vehicle approaching an agricultural facility where federal agents and immigration officers carried out an operation Photograph: Daniel Cole/Reuters
Police clash with students outside a hotel where the minister of education is scheduled to speak at a meeting of Greek university rectors. Demonstrators are protesting against a new education bill that allows students to be expelled from university if they exceed the maximum duration of their studies Photograph: Yannis Kolesidis/EPA
A memorial for flood victims in Texas Photograph: Ashley Landis/AP
People hold photos of children who remain in the US after being separated from their parents. Hundreds protested to demand the return to Venezuela of at least 30 children who were separated from their parents during the deportation process from the US Photograph: Pedro Mattey/AFP/Getty Images
Susan Njeri, the mother of Boniface Mwangi Kariuki, breaks down at Kenyatta University Funeral Home. Kariuki was shot by police on 17 June during protests over the death of a Kenyan blogger in police custody. He died two weeks later Photograph: Daniel Irungu/EPA
Vusimuzi 'Cat' Matlala appears in Alexandra magistrates court. The businessman faces charges of attempted murder, conspiracy to commit murder and money laundering after he allegedly orchestrated a hit on his ex-girlfriend, the actor Tebogo Thobejane, in 2023 Photograph: Per-The Slovenian rider Tadej Pogacar of UAE Team Emirates (left) and the Belgian Remco Evenepoel of Soudal Quick-Step shake hands prior to stage seven of the Tour de France, from Saint Malo to Mur-de-Bretagne Photograph: Christophe Petit-Tesson/EPA
Lionel Richie performing during the 59th Montreux jazz festival Photograph: Valentin Flauraud/AP
A model presents a creation from the collection Skin, Seed, Decay during the designer Gabrielle Fenech's catwalk show at Malta fashion week Photograph: Darrin Zammit Lupi/Reuters
Kanye West at Shanghai Pudong international airport after arriving for a concert Photograph: Héctor Retamal/AFP/Getty Images
Competitors wait to enter the main arena on the final day of the 166th Great Yorkshire show. The four-day event celebrates agriculture, food, farming and the countryside
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Daily Mail
15 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Greece arrests hundreds of migrants after imposing asylum freeze
Greece has detained nearly 200 migrants who arrived after an asylum freeze imposed on claimants from North Africa. 'The illegal immigrants who entered from Libya in recent hours were arrested by the coast guard,' migration minister Thanos Plevris said on X on Saturday. 'They do not have the right to apply for asylum, they will not be taken to reception centers, but will be held in police custody until the process of their return is initiated,' he added. The 190 migrants arrived in three groups south of the island of Crete, the coastguard told AFP. A fourth group of 11 people was found near the island of Agathonisi, opposite the Turkish coast. State TV ERT reported one of them was injured and later died in hospital. The move marks a further hardening of Greece's stance towards migrants under Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis' centre-right government, which has built a fence at its northern land borders and boosted sea patrols since it came to power in 2019. Greece is experiencing a rise in migrant arrivals from Libya, mainly landing in Crete, the home island of Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis. Over 2,000 people have landed just in July, sparking anger among local officials and tourism operators who have put pressure on the conservative government to take action to stop the flows. The government has declared a three-month suspension on asylum requests from any persons arriving by sea from North Africa. Earlier this month, dozens of migrants were seen in shocking footage leaping off a boat and running onto a beach in front of tourists on a Greek holiday island. In one clip, recorded at Diskos beach in the south of Crete, a group of asylum seekers were seen crammed in to a small boat as it bobbed near the shoreline. The concerning levels of sea arrivals prompted a visit by Greece's foreign minister George Gerapetritis to eastern Libyan commander Khalifa Haftar this month. Last month Athens also said it would deploy two frigates near Libyan territorial waters to help stem the flow. It urged Libya to cooperate more closely with Greece and the EU to stop migrants sailing from there or turn them back before they exit Libyan territorial waters. The North African country has remained deeply divided since the 2011 NATO-backed revolt that toppled and killed longtime leader Moamer Kadhafi. Human rights groups accuse Greece of forcefully turning back asylum-seekers on its sea and land borders. This year, the European Union border agency said it was reviewing 12 cases of potential human rights violations by Greece. The government denies wrongdoing. Greece was on the front line of migration crisis in 2015-16 when hundreds of thousands of migrants from the Middle East, Asia and Africa passed through its islands and mainland.


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Exclusive: Don Jr. and Eric Trump's Middle East jaunt cost US taxpayers over $40,000 in hotel rooms and rental cars
Amid wanton budget cuts by the Trump Administration that put thousands of government employees out of work, canceled school lunch programs for needy kids and zeroed out funding for crucial research into cancer, U.S. taxpayers shelled out for rental cars and hotel rooms as the president's two eldest sons pursued private business deals in the Middle East. Federal procurement data reviewed by The Independent shows more than $40,000 in disbursements by the Secret Service, whose agents accompanied Don Jr. and Eric Trump to Qatar and Saudi Arabia this spring, underwritten by the American public. One transaction, a $13,984 payment arranged by the U.S. Embassy in Riyadh and funded by the State Department's Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs, describes the outlay as: 'ERIC TRUMP Protective USSS Visit – 4 rental vehicles.' It was prepared on April 20, and approved on May 13, 2025, the same day President Trump arrived in the kingdom. However, Eric, 41, was not part of the official delegation, according to reports. A second transaction, for $26,813.24, was arranged by the State Department and funded by the U.S. Embassy in Doha, covered a room for Donald Trump Jr., 47, at The Ned, a 5-star hotel and members-only club located in a building formerly occupied by the Qatari Interior Ministry. 'Trump Jr Visit – May 25 – Team X,' reads the expenditure, which was prepared on May 11 and approved on May 18, 2025, nearly a week after the president was in town. 'Expect tactile furnishings, classical details, and all the essentials for a comfortable home away from home,' the property's website tells prospective travelers. 'Guests enjoy access to Ned's Club Spa and Gym throughout their stay. Airport transfers in our BMW 7 Series can be arranged upon request.' Together, lodging and local transportation for Trump's two adult sons cost taxpayers at least $40,797.24, a figure that does not include air travel, agents' salaries, meals, and other significant outlays. A Secret Service spokesman on Monday told The Independent, 'We support any of our protectees, that go anywhere in the world, including foreign trips. For these foreign trips, we have personnel on the ground before a protectee gets there, so we may be on the ground several days in advance, working with the local government and local authorities.' The contracts themselves, such as the hotel rooms and rental cars required for Don Jr. and Eric, are executed on behalf of the Secret Service by U.S. embassies in the destination countries, according to the agency spokesman. He said the members of the Trump family 'are our protectees, we protect them, regardless of where they go. When you're a protectee, you have round-the-clock protection anywhere in the world. It doesn't matter what type of trip it is, they're getting protection.' The Trump Organization, which is being nominally run by Don Jr. and Eric while their father serves a second term in the White House, recently partnered with a Qatari real estate firm – backed by the country's sovereign wealth fund – to build a Trump-branded luxury golf resort in the emirate. The deal was announced two weeks before Trump made the jaunt to Qatar, which subsequently 'gifted' the president a $400 million Boeing 747 for his own use. The Trump family is also developing two new real estate projects in the Saudi Arabian capital of Riyadh, as well as a Trump Tower to be erected in Jeddah. 'Combining coastal elegance with urban sophistication, Trump Tower Jeddah delivers an unmatched lifestyle,' read an April 30 press release issued by the Trump Organization. 'From refined residences to world-class amenities and personalized service, every detail reflects the signature Trump standard of excellence.' Two weeks later, the White House formally announced that Saudi Arabia had committed to buying at least $100 billion worth of military equipment from the U.S., and said Qatar had agreed to purchase $200 billion worth of U.S.-built jets from Boeing, as well as some $3 billion in American-made drones from General Atomics and Raytheon. The trips by Don Jr. and Eric raised numerous questions about the Trump family's aggressive monetization of the presidency, which administration officials attempted to minimize as a non-issue. During the president's first term, the Trump Organization vowed not to pursue any foreign deals while the company's namesake was in office – a promise promptly broken, according to an investigation by anti-corruption watchdog Global Witness. When Trump returned to the White House in January 2021, he released an ethics agreement that said the Trump Organization would not directly strike any deals with foreign governments. However, it included no prohibition on doing business with private companies abroad, and the president's family business is now involved in no fewer than 21 Trump-branded projects throughout the world, according to CItizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington. Still, prior to Trump's Middle East sojourn, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt insisted that the notion Trump would personally benefit from his family's private business pursuits was, in a word, 'ridiculous.' 'The president is abiding by all conflict of interest laws,' Leavitt said. 'The president is a successful businessman, and I think, frankly, that it's one of the many reasons that people reelected him back to this office.' In October 2018, U.S. taxpayers were hit with a $90,000-plus hotel bill for First Lady Melania Trump and her Secret Service detail, who were in Cairo for six hours but did not spend the night. A vacation to Berlin the previous year by Tiffany Trump, the president's youngest daughter, cost taxpayers at least $22,000 in hotel stays for the Secret Service agents accompanying her and her boyfriend. But when the Secret Service traveled with members of the Trump family to Trump-owned hotels, the agency was reportedly charged 'exorbitant' markups far above the usual room rate, contradicting Eric Trump's previous claim that agents were provided lodging 'at cost.' At the same time, a vindictive Trump has sought revenge on officials he believes wronged him during his first term by revoking Secret Service details assigned to protect President Joe Biden's adult children, along with those looking after former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, former National Security Adviser John Bolton, and a host of others. During Barack Obama's time in office, before Trump's foray into national politics, he raged on Twitter about the cost of providing security for the president and his family, taking aim at supposed 'taxpayer funded vacations' costing the American people 'millions of dollars.'


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Two Israelis questioned by police at Belgium music festival over Gaza war crime allegations
Two individuals, identified by Belgian authorities as members of the Israeli army, were questioned by police at a music festival in Belgium over allegations of serious violations of international humanitarian law in Gaza. The Federal Prosecutor's Office in Brussels confirmed the questioning in a statement on Monday. The Israeli Foreign Ministry, however, offered a different account, stating that an Israeli citizen and an Israeli soldier, both on vacation, were taken in for interrogation and released shortly afterwards. The ministry confirmed that Israeli authorities are "dealing with this issue and are in touch with the two." The discrepancy between the Belgian prosecutor's description of "two Israeli army members" and the Israeli Foreign Ministry's reference to "one civilian and one soldier" remains unclear. The current whereabouts of the two individuals who were questioned have not been immediately disclosed. The case was hailed as a 'turning point in the global pursuit of accountability' by a Belgium-based group called the Hind Rajab Foundation, which has campaigned for the arrest of Israeli troops it accuses of war crimes and crimes against humanity. The group was named for a young girl who Palestinians say was killed early in the war by Israeli fire as she and her family fled Gaza City. Israel says its forces follow international law and try to avoid harming civilians, and that it investigates allegations of wrongdoing. In a written statement, the prosecutor's office said that the two army members — who were in Belgium for the Tomorrowland festival — were questioned after the office received legal complaints on Friday and Saturday from the Hind Rajab Foundation and another group. The prosecution office requested the questioning after an initial assessment of the complaints 'determined that it potentially had jurisdiction.' The Hind Rajab foundation said it filed its complaints along with the rights group Global Legal Action Network. The decision to question the two Israelis was based on an article in Belgium's Code of Criminal Procedure that went into force last year and grants Belgian courts jurisdiction over acts overseas that are potentially governed by an international treaty, in this case the 1949 Geneva Conventions and the 1984 United Nations convention against torture, the prosecution statement said. 'In light of this potential jurisdiction, the Federal Prosecutor's Office requested the police to locate and interrogate the two individuals named in the complaint. Following these interrogations, they were released,' the statement said, without elaborating. It said it was not providing any further information at this stage of its investigation. The news in Belgium came as the U.N. food agency accused Israel of using tanks, snipers and other weapons to fire on a crowd of Palestinians seeking food aid, in what the territory's Health Ministry said was one of the deadliest days for aid-seekers in over 21 months of war. The death toll in war-ravaged Gaza has climbed to more than 59,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza's Health Ministry. Its count doesn't distinguish between militants and civilians but the ministry says more than half of the dead are women and children. The ministry is part of the Hamas government, but the U.N. and other international organizations see it as the most reliable source of data on casualties. Since forming last year, the Hind Rajab Foundation has made dozens of complaints in more than 10 countries to arrest both low-level and high-ranking Israeli soldiers. 'We will continue to support the ongoing proceedings and call on Belgian authorities to pursue the investigation fully and independently,' the group said in a statement. ' Justice must not stop here — and we are committed to seeing it through.'