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Police chase anti-government protesters in Serbia as president pledges crackdown

Police chase anti-government protesters in Serbia as president pledges crackdown

BELGRADE, Serbia — Thousands of anti-government protesters marched again in Serbia on Monday with baton-wielding riot police chasing them in downtown Belgrade, prompting Serbia's populist President Aleksandar Vucic to reiterate his pledge of a planned major crackdown against the demonstrators.
The protest in the country's capital was peaceful until a group of young people, believed to be soccer hooligans, split from the crowd and hurled rocks at ruling party's downtown offices, breaking front windows.
The riot police soon appeared at the scene on armored trucks, dispersing the crowd and triggering a panicky escape by the crowd.
In a show of defiance, Vucic showed up at his party's damaged office , calling the protesters terrorists and saying that 'soon, the citizens will be freed from this terror and evil.'
Vucic on Sunday announced tough measures against anti-government protesters following days of riots in the streets throughout Serbia that have challenged his increasingly autocratic rule in the Balkan country. On Monday, he reiterated his claims that months of persistent protests against his rule have been orchestrated in the West and aimed at destroying Serbia.
'Our country is in grave danger, they have jeopardized all our values, normal life, each individual,' Vucic said.
The stern warnings came after days of clashes between the protesters on one side and police and Vucic's loyalists on the other. Angry protesters on Saturday evening torched Vucic's governing Serbian Progressive Party offices in a town in western Serbia.
Vucic did not specify what the state response would be in the coming days. Scores of people have already been detained and injured in the past days while police have faced accusations of excessive force and arbitrary detentions of protesters.
The clashes last week marked a major escalation of violence following more than nine months of largely peaceful demonstrations that started after a concrete canopy collapsed at a train station in Serbia's north, killing 16 people.
Many in Serbia blamed the tragedy on alleged widespread corruption in state-run infrastructure projects. Vucic has faced accusations of stifling democratic freedoms while allowing organized crime and corruption to flourish, which he denies.
Serbia is formally seeking European Union membership, but Vucic has maintained strong ties with both Russia and China.
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Washington Spirit seize the moment as DC United stumble in city of unrest
Washington Spirit seize the moment as DC United stumble in city of unrest

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Washington Spirit seize the moment as DC United stumble in city of unrest

Even by the city's own high standards, things have been strange in Washington DC lately. On U street Friday night, the usual throngs of drunken party goers were decidedly smaller. Lines outside clubs and bars were nonexistent. The week prior, residents of the District watched as the reality of US president Donald Trump's 'crackdown' unfolded in front of them. Police set up checkpoints in some of their city's immigrant strongholds and approached other people at random. The mere presence of the military on the streets of the US capital has been an uneasy sight for many longtime Washingtonians, who already lack voting representation in Congress and are so frequently at the mercy and whim of the federal government. Yet even amid this uneasiness, on that same Friday night, 11,691 journeyed to the south-west waterfront to watch the NWSL's Washington Spirit take on Racing Louisville. In the 51st minute of the match, patches of the crowd at Audi Field broke into a 'free DC' chant – a nod to the District's long-running quest to become the 51st state. Before long, the entirety of the stadium joined in. The match itself was an entertaining, end-to-end affair. The crowd at Audi Field felt energetic and invested, exploding into bedlam when the Spirit's recent prize catch – Ballon D'Or nominee Sofia Cantore – smashed home the opener from distance. Louisville later equalized and took the lead late in the match but when Spirit attacker Rosemonda Kouassi salvaged a draw nine minutes into second-half stoppage time, the entire building shook. It's the type of response that the stadium's primary tenants, Major League Soccer's DC United, can only dream of these days. Mired in last place, the club has watched as the Spirit have approached, if not wrestled away, their grip on the hearts and minds of local soccer fans. In just a few short years, the Spirit have used an ownership change and an accompanying influx of cash and ambition to mainstream themselves in the DC sports scene. United, MLS' original dynasty, have done their part to step aside. With the exception of a few bright moments, the club has oscillated between being uninspiring and downright awful over the last decade, costing them the goodwill of many longtime fans. NWSL clubs across the country are making massive inroads in terms of popularity and relevance. But there are few other markets where the narrowing of the popularity gap between men's and women's clubs has been made so apparent as it has in DC, where the Spirit may have already eliminated the gap completely. 'The whiplash of vibes could not be further apart,' said Douglas Reyes-Ceron, co-founder of Rose Room Collective, a supporters group that supports the Spirit and United alike. 'It's reaching a point on the DC United side, where it's so fucking dire that people are just walking away. The Spirit have earned so much credence and cache with this fanbase that it's just a lot easier to weather the storm with them.' United's last home match, which took place before the deployment of federal troops, also featured a protest. As they have all year, supporters in the stadium's north end chanted 'sell the team' – a sentiment which used to be muted and sometimes felt a little unreasonable, but which has now become impossible to ignore. Some of those fans have supported the club since its inception 30 years ago. In that era, it drew big crowds and won three of the first four MLS Cups, then won another in 2004 – the last time it appeared in the league's showpiece event. While other clubs built their own stadiums and found new revenue streams in the mid-aughts, United struggled to do so and languished at the decrepit, raccoon-invaded confines of RFK Stadium. 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For years the club blamed its stadium situation for their woes, saying that losses forced them into thrift. When they do finally spend money, the team often wasted it on players that, for one reason or another, just didn't fit. Results never improved. Watching the club's most recent big-name signing – former Crystal Palace and Liverpool striker Christian Benteke – is simultaneously inspiring and rage-inducing. His often beautiful play is entirely squandered by a downright dreadful team; an excellent finisher who rarely gets the chance to finish. United have cycled through coaches (four non-interim hires since 2021), through general managers, through players, through front office personnel. Levien, along with co-owner Steve Kaplan, have added a laundry list of minority owners over the years but their involvement remains constant. 'The only common thread remaining is ownership,' said Reyes-Ceron. 'The fanbase feels that way. It's concentrated and pointed now.' The Spirit, meanwhile, feel as if they haven't even touched their ceiling. Kang is now working alongside Levien to push the DC government toward renovating and expanding Audi Field, which is less than a decade old. The Spirit have averaged over 15,000 fans a game this year, third in the NWSL, and they've sold Audi Field out multiple times in the past few years, about as frequently as United have. In June, a Spirit match on a Sunday afternoon outdrew a DC United one a night prior, a first on a shared weekend for the clubs. The Spirit have their own challenges. They've set the bar high for themselves, having featured Rodman and any other number of quality players. Like Inter Miami in MLS, the Spirit are now among the league's standard-bearers. Fans of the club expect ambition and excellence, unlike their landlords, for whom winning at all would be an improvement.

Pirro Orders Office to Maximize Criminal Charges on Street Arrests
Pirro Orders Office to Maximize Criminal Charges on Street Arrests

New York Times

time5 hours ago

  • New York Times

Pirro Orders Office to Maximize Criminal Charges on Street Arrests

The U.S. attorney in Washington, Jeanine Pirro, has instructed her prosecutors to maximize criminal charges against anyone arrested in the administration's crackdown on street crime, and charge them with stiffer federal crimes whenever possible. Ms. Pirro held a staff meeting on Monday, as did her deputy overseeing criminal cases, to emphasize that going forward, there would be far less prosecutorial discretion to allow for charging lesser offenses in any case, according to people familiar with the remarks. 'In line with President Trump's directive to make D.C. safe, U.S. Attorney Pirro has made it clear that the old way of doing things is unacceptable,' said Tim Lauer, a spokesman for Ms. Pirro. 'She directed her staff to charge the highest crime that is supported by the law and the evidence.' The new directive comes as an influx of hundreds of new federal agents are deployed in Washington, suddenly thrust into street patrol duty. Many federal agents have never done such work before, have little training in the use of force and are inexperienced in what types of suspicious behavior justifies a search of a stranger on the street. Ms. Pirro's decree also reflects the unique role that her office holds in local law enforcement. She oversees prosecutions in Superior Court, which pursues categories of crime usually handled by local district attorneys, and she also oversees prosecutions in Federal District Court, which handles more serious violations of federal criminal statutes. Ms. Pirro's instruction amounts to a declaration that her understaffed office will now seek to ramp up criminal charges arising from the president's takeover of law enforcement in the nation's capitol and shift more defendants into the federal courthouse, where prison terms are often much stiffer. Ms. Pirro has publicly complained that she is short-handed by some 60 prosecutors, a situation that current and former members of the office said was largely because her predecessor, Ed Martin, fired more than a dozen prosecutors and spurred many others to quit. As part of the administration's takeover, Ms. Pirro and other Justice Department officials have been distributing cards to law enforcement officers and agents with a 24-hour-a-day phone number to call prosecutors in her office with any legal questions about how to handle suspects or arrests. The U.S. Marshals have announced a $500 reward for tips that result in an arrest in the city. Typically, prosecutors in Washington have had to drop or abandon many criminal cases because the evidence is insufficient to win a conviction. Ms. Pirro's new, more aggressive approach seems to signal that when in doubt, her office will file felony charges first and let the cases proceed to court.

New Year celebration videos misrepresented as China demonstrations
New Year celebration videos misrepresented as China demonstrations

Yahoo

time9 hours ago

  • Yahoo

New Year celebration videos misrepresented as China demonstrations

The beating of a young girl by three teenagers in southwestern China triggered public outrage, but a compilation viewed hundreds of thousands of times online does not show protests escalating into calls for the ouster of President Xi Jinping. The clips in fact show crowds gathering for New Year celebrations in several Chinese cities. The compilation, comprising four clips of huge crowds, was viewed more than 480,000 times after it was shared on Threads on August 6, 2025. "The Jiangyou incident in Sichuan, China, escalates as protestors force the police to retreat," reads part of the superimposed traditional Chinese text on the compilation, referring to a viral school bullying case in the southwestern city (archived link). "More than one million people participated in protests, calling for the overthrow of Xi Jinping and the Chinese Communist Party regime." Police said two teenage girls were sent to a correctional school for assaulting and verbally abusing a 14-year-old girl, footage of which was shared online. Onlookers and a third girl who participated in the abuse were "criticised and educated", the police said, adding that their guardians had been "ordered to exercise strict discipline". The case drew outrage online from some lamenting the punishment did not go further, and sparked rare protests in the country, where opposition to the ruling Communist Party and anything seen as a threat to the civil order is swiftly quashed. Footage showed crowds gathered outside the city hall in Jiangyou, with large crowds stretching around the block. Video also showed people being forcibly pulled aside, and police wearing SWAT uniforms subduing at least three people at an intersection with hundreds of bystanders. Several Taiwanese news organisations included footage from the protests in their reports (archived here, here and here). But the circulating compilation, which was shared elsewhere on YouTube, TikTok and Facebook, misuses unrelated clips. Reverse image searches on Google and Baidu using keyframes from the visuals found they all predate the protests in Jiangyou. Taiwanese fact-checking organisation Taiwan Factcheck Center also previously debunked the false claim the clips show escalating protests in China (archived link). New Year's celebrations The first falsely shared clip was previously shared on December 31, 2024 on Douyin, where it included a hashtag for "Hong Kong New Year's Eve Fireworks" (archived link). The video corresponds to Google Street View imagery of a stretch of Nathan Road -- one of Hong Kong's main thoroughfares (archived link). The second clip had earlier been shared on January 1, 2024 on Douyin, where its caption said it showed a New Year's countdown celebration in Nanning, China (archived link). Street imagery from Baidu Maps shows it was filmed near the Nanning Department Store in Xingning District (archived link). The third clip was posted on December 31, 2024 on Douyin, with the post saying it showed New Year's Eve in Kunming, China (archived link). Street imagery from Baidu Maps shows the two stores found in the Douyin video in the Nanping Pedestrian Street area (archived link). Finally, the fourth clip in the compilation depicts a New Year celebration in Guiyang, China (archived link). The same clip was earlier shared in a Douyin post from January 1, 2025 (archived link). AFP has previously debunked false claims related to protests in China. Solve the daily Crossword

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