Four police officers were among nearly two dozen people killed after security forces engaged in an hour-long gunbattle with suspected cartel members Saturday in a Mexican town near the U.S. border, days after President Trump said he was moving to designate Mexican drug cartels as terror organizations.

The shootout happened around noon in the small town of Villa Union, a town in Coahuila state located about an hour’s drive southwest of Eagle Pass, Texas.

Coahuila state Gov. Miguel Angel Riquelme told local media that four of the dead were police officers killed in the initial confrontation and that several municipal workers were missing. On Sunday, the Coahuila state government said that security forces killed seven additional members of the gang, bringing the death toll to at least 21.

THE IMPACT OF DESIGNATING MEXICAN CARTELS A ‘FOREIGN TERRORIST ORGANIZATION’

The armed group of suspected cartel members stormed the town of 3,000 residents in a convoy of trucks, attacking local government offices and prompting state and federal forces to intervene. Ten alleged members of the Cartel of the Northeast were initially killed in the response.

The City Hall of Villa Union is riddled with bullet holes after a gun battle between Mexican security forces and suspected cartel gunmen, Saturday, Nov. 30, 2019.
(AP Photo/Gerardo Sanchez)

Riquelme told reporters the state had acted “decisively” to take back the town, as videos of the shootout posted on social media showed burned-out vehicles and the facade of Villa Union’s municipal office riddled with bullets.

The City Hall of Villa Union is riddled with bullet holes after a gun battle between Mexican security forces and suspected cartel gunmen, Saturday, Nov. 30, 2019.
(AP Photo/Gerardo Sanchez)

A damaged black pickup truck with the C.D.N. of the Cartel del Noreste, or Cartel of the Northeast, written in white on its door could be seen on the street in an Associated Press photo.

A damaged pick up marked with the initials C.D.N., that in Spanish stand for Cartel of the Northeast, is on the streets after a gun battle between Mexican security forces and suspected cartel gunmen, in Villa Union, Mexico, Saturday, Nov. 30, 2019.
(AP Photo/Gerardo Sanchez)

Riquelme told reporters that police had identified 14 vehicles involved in the attack and seized more than a dozen guns. Three of the suspected gunmen were killed by security forces in the initial pursuit of the gang members as they fled into rugged terrain, according to Reuters.

In the wake of the assault, the governor said that security forces will remain in the town for several days to restore a sense of calm. The town is about 12 miles from the site of a 2011 cartel massacre where officials say 70 died.

“These groups won’t be allowed to enter state territory,” the government of Coahuila said in a statement.

MEXICO’S ANNUAL HOMICIDE COUNT ON PACE TO BE HIGHEST IN DECADES AS NEARLY 100 KILLED DAILY

Mexico’s murder rate has increased to historically high levels, inching up by 2 percent in the first 10 months of the presidency of Andrés Manuel López Obrador. Federal officials said recently that there have been 29,414 homicides so far in 2019 – up from 28,869 over the same period last year.

The release of the figures comes at a time when López Obrador is facing growing criticism for his government’s “hugs, not bullets” policy of not using violence when fighting violent drug cartels.

In early November, Mexico made international headlines when a drug cartel ambush killed nine Americans, focusing world attention on rising violence in the country.

The three women and six children — all members of dual-citizen families that lived in La Mora, a decades-old settlement in the Sonora State founded as part of an offshoot of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints — were on their way to see relatives in the U.S when they were targeted about 70 miles south of Douglas, Ariz., by cartel members.

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At the time, Trump called on Mexico to “wage war” on the cartels.  He told author and former Fox News Channel host Bill O’Reilly in an interview posted last week his administration is “well into that process” to designate drug cartels as terror organizations. While the president did not indicate how the U.S. policy would change from past years, Trump said he told López Obrador that the U.S. stands ready to “go in and clean it out.”

At least 14 people were killed, four of them police officers, after an armed group in a convoy of trucks stormed the town, in Coahuila state, prompting security forces to intervene, state Gov. Miguel Riquelme Solis said.
(AP Photo/Gerardo Sanchez)

On Friday — the day before the deadly gunbattle — Mexico’s president said he would not accept any foreign intervention in Mexico to deal with violent criminal gangs after Trump’s comments.

A damaged pick up is on a street of Villa Union, Mexico, after a gun battle between Mexican security forces and suspected cartel gunmen on Saturday.
(AP Photo/Gerardo Sanchez)

Riquelme on Saturday made similar comments to Lopez Obrador on how Mexico should handle the problem.

“I don’t think that Mexico needs intervention. I think Mexico needs collaboration and cooperation,” he told reporters. “We’re convinced that the state has the power to overcome the criminals.”

U.S. Attorney General William Barr is scheduled to visit Mexico this week to discuss cooperation over security, according to Reuters.

Fox News’ Greg Norman, Edmund DeMarche and the Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/world/mexico-cartel-member-gunbattle-police-texas-border

Authorities in Nashville, Tennessee, are searching for four teenage boys, two of whom are accused of murder, who escaped custody in a juvenile detention center.

The teens escaped custody on Saturday night at around 9:44 p.m. during a work detail when their supervisor went to handle a fight that broke out in a different part of the facility and left them alone, according to the Metropolitan Nashville Police Department. It took about 35 minutes for authorities to realize the young men were gone.

“They managed to get onto an elevator and used staff protocols to ride to the ground floor where they went through a series of doors and exited to the outside,” police said in a statement.

Decorrius Wright, 16; Morris Marsh, 17; Brandon Caruthers, 17; and Calvin Howse, 15.Metro Nashville Police Department

Two of the teenagers, Decorrius Wright, 16, and Morris Marsh, 17, have been accused of murder.

Wright allegedly killed 24-year-old Kyle Yorlets in February, according to NBC affiliate WSMV. A judge set Wright’s bond at $400,000 in August after prosecutors argued he was too dangerous to be released, WSMV reported at the time.

Marsh was charged in April for the murder of 19-year-old Charlie Easley.

The other two teens — Brandon Caruthers, 17, and Calvin Howse, 15 — have armed robbery and gun possession charges in their history, police said.

Police released the teenagers’ photos and have asked the public to contact emergency services if anyone spots the boys. Metro Nashville PD had tweeted out a photo from a gas station it said was of the escapees, but later deleted it, saying that upon further review it was not the wanted teens.

All four are considered dangerous.

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/police-search-4-teens-2-accused-murder-who-escaped-custody-n1093761

Updated at 1:18 p.m. ET

Eleven people were shot in New Orleans’ French Quarter early Sunday morning, according to police. NPR affiliate WWNO reports that the shooting victims were taken to University Medical Center and Tulane hospital, and two of the victims are in critical condition. One victim, according to police, was a walk-in patient at a local hospital.

Police say the shooting occurred at approximately 3:21 a.m local time.

“We do not know how it started,” New Orleans Police Superintendent Shaun Ferguson told reporters at the scene early Sunday morning. Ferguson said officers were “right there” on the same block as the shooting when they heard it begin.

Ferguson said police had detained an individual, but had not determined whether that individual had any involvement in the shooting. According to New Orleans police, the Louisiana State Police and federal officers are involved in assisting with an investigation. No arrests have been made, and no further information has been released about the identities of the victims.

Saturday was the 46th Bayou Classic, which attracts fans of Grambling State University and Southern University football to watch the game at the Mercedes-Benz Superdome and celebrate in New Orleans’ French Quarter.

“The shootings on Canal Street early this morning were an ugly disruption of an otherwise beautiful holiday weekend,” New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell wrote in a statement on Twitter. “This tragedy will not define us, and it will not deter us from moving our City forward and keeping our people safe.”

In a statement around midday Sunday local time, Ferguson said the investigation was still in the “very beginning stages.”

“To the victims — you are in our thoughts and prayers, and we will work tirelessly to bring those behind this cowardly act to justice,” the statement said. “That is a promise.”

This is a developing story. Some things that get reported by the media will later turn out to be wrong. We will focus on reports from police officials and other authorities, credible news outlets and reporters who are at the scene. We will update as the situation develops.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/12/01/783969596/at-least-11-people-shot-in-new-orleans-french-quarter

House Democratic Caucus Chair Hakeem JeffriesHakeem Sekou JeffriesSunday shows preview: Washington gears up for next round of impeachment hearings The Hill’s Morning Report – Wild Wednesday: Sondland testimony, Dem debate take center stage USMCA deal close, but not ‘imminent,’ Democrats say MORE (D-N.Y.) on Sunday dismissed a poll showing declining support for the House’s impeachment inquiry, noting other polling contradicting the result and saying Congress’ job is “to follow the facts.”

On “Fox News Sunday,” anchor Chris WallaceChristopher (Chris) WallaceKennedy walks back comments on potential Ukraine interference: ‘I was wrong’ Democrats look to next steps in impeachment Swalwell on pace of impeachment: ‘There’s an urgency to make sure the election and the ballot box have integrity’ MORE asked Jeffries to respond to polling finding support for impeachment had fallen to 48 percent over a two-month span after initially enjoying majority support.

“Democrats have been making your best case to the public for two months now, you just finished 30 hours of public hearings and the public apparently isn’t buying it,” Wallace said, noting Speaker Nancy PelosiNancy PelosiPelosi heading to Madrid for UN climate change convention Mexican negotiator says US trade deal needs work, could be finalized next week Adam Schiff’s star rises with impeachment hearings MORE (D-Calif.), before the start of the inquiry, had said the House would only seek impeachment with bipartisan support.

Jeffries countered with other polling indicating 50 percent support for impeachment, as well as polling indicating 70 percent of Americans believed President TrumpDonald John TrumpHouse Intelligence Committee to review impeachment investigation report Monday Comedian Rosanne Barr to speak at Trumpettes’ Gala at Mar-A-Lago Israeli, Palestinian business leaders seek Trump boost for investment project MORE committed wrongdoing with regard to Ukraine.

“Our job is to follow the facts, apply the law, be guided by the U.S. constitution and present the truth to the American people no matter where it leads, because no one is above the law,” Jeffries said. “That’s what we have been doing, that’s what we are doing, that’s what we’re going to continue to do moving forward.”

Wallace also pressed Jeffries on Republican complaints that the impeachment inquiry is moving too fast for the White House to adequately defend itself, asking “how can you ask the White House to participate in a hearing three days from now when they don’t even know who the witnesses are going to be?”

Jeffries responded by noting the numerous witnesses who already testified before the House Intelligence Committee, many of whom were Trump appointees, and that several of them testified to the existence of a quid pro quo conditioning aid to Ukraine on investigations of the 2016 election and former Vice President Joe BidenJoe BidenHouse Intelligence Committee to review impeachment investigation report Monday Biden canvassers join Teamsters union California Rep. John Garamendi endorses Biden MORE’s son Hunter.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/sunday-talk-shows/472508-top-judiciary-democrat-dismisses-poll-showing-declining-support

An hour-long cartel versus cops gun battle left 14 dead and a Mexican town looking like a bullet-pocked war zone on Sunday.

Four of those who died were cops after a truck convoy carrying suspected cartel members rolled into a town in Coahuila state, officials said.

Photos from Villa Union, a town of 3,000 residents about an hour drive southwest of Eagle Pass, Texas, show the front, side, and back of the town’s municipal building strafed by gunfire.

Another photo shows a bullet-damaged, partially-wrecked pickup truck with Texas plates. On the truck’s driver’s side door can be seen the letters C. D. N. — which stands in Spanish for Cartel of the Northeast.

It was unclear what may have prompted the armed group to storm the town.

Security forces will remain in the town for several days to restore a sense of calm, the governor said.

“These groups won’t be allowed to enter state territory,” the government of Coahuila said in a statement.

With Post wires

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2019/12/01/cartel-vs-cops-gun-battle-leaves-14-dead-and-mexican-town-pocked-with-bullets/

Nine people have been killed after a plane crashed in South Dakota in extreme winter weather conditions.

The death toll includes two children, according to NBC news. The area of the crash was under a winter storm warning, according to the National Weather Service.

Peter Knudson with the National Transportation Safety Board told the Associated Press 12 people were aboard the Pilatus PC-12 when it crashed about 12.30pm Saturday, shortly after taking off from Chamberlain, about 140 miles (225.3km ) west of Sioux Falls.

Knudson says nine people were killed and three were injured. The single-engine plane was bound for Idaho Falls, Idaho.

“The men and women of law enforcement, first responder and medical professionals should be commended in their heroic actions to rescue the victims in extreme weather conditions,” Theresa Maule Rossow, the Brule county state’s attorney, said in a statement.

Chamberlain and central south-central South Dakota were under a winter storm warning at the time of the crash. Brule County emergency manager Katheryn Benton told the Sioux Falls Argus Leader that planes were unable to land at Chamberlain at the time of the crash.

Knudson says weather will be among several factors NTSB investigators will review, but no cause has yet been determined. He says inclement weather is making travel to the site difficult.

Benton also said the passengers ranged in age from seven to 81. She said the three survivors were three men ages 28, 27 and 17.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2019/dec/01/plane-crash-south-dakota

Millions of Americans who had to navigate a bomb cyclone and a Midwest wind storm on the way to Thanksgiving will encounter more inclement weather when returning home Sunday and Monday, as a major winter storm takes shape in the Northeast and a new storm hits the San Francisco Bay area.

In the Northeast, heavy snow, mixed precipitation and strong winds are expected to develop in many areas beginning as early as Sunday. Freezing rain was already falling in parts of Pennsylvania on Sunday, making roads hazardous, and the stage is set for a burdensome Monday morning commute for many from New York to Portland, Maine.

As the storm intensifies off the Mid-Atlantic coast, flight disruptions are likely to increase.

Already, delays exceeded two hours at Newark and an hour at La Guardia in New York, two airports that were expecting a mix of snow and rain on Sunday. Delays could mount later Sunday and extend into Boston, Washington and Charlotte, among other locations, because of low clouds and a heavy smorgasbord of precipitation.

Other travel trouble spots

Aside from the East Coast storm, snow was falling in Minneapolis on Sunday morning, though not as heavily as the storm that hit there last week. Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport is a major hub for Delta Air Lines.

Road travel in northeastern Minnesota was not advised because of a combination of light snowfall and high winds, which was creating blizzard conditions near Duluth.

While motorists on the bulk of roadways in the rest of the Midwest were traveling at or near normal speeds as of Sunday morning, there were several slowdowns in northern Michigan, including along Interstate 75. Heavy snow was just exiting the region after dropping more than half a foot locally.

Along the West Coast, flight delays of greater than two hours were already on the board, according to the Federal Aviation Administration’s website as of early Sunday, as a significant storm system known as an “atmospheric river” because of the sheer amount of water vapor contained within it hits the area.

That storm is causing high winds of up to 50 mph throughout the San Francisco Bay region, slowing air traffic into airports in San Francisco, Oakland and San Jose. While rain has fallen intermittently in San Francisco, the heaviest showers are concentrated south near Monterey. The storm is also dumping heavy snow in the northern Sierras.

The long-duration Northeast storm begins

As of Sunday morning, the storm that will evolve into the first big storm of the 2019-2020 winter season in the Northeast was centered 700 miles west of New England, just east of Chicago.

But its expansive precipitation shield was branching well off to the east, with heavy rains and downpours reaching as far south as Augusta, Ga. That slug of moisture — which has slowed traffic on Interstate 95 along much of the Eastern Seaboard — wrapped all the way up through Washington, Baltimore, Philadelphia, Buffalo and even into Detroit, before curling north as snow in northern Wisconsin and Michigan.

The storm is reshuffling, though, transferring its energy to a new developing low off the Mid-Atlantic coast. That is making for turbulent flights for those traveling through the Northeast, a zone of low pressure set to quickly intensify well east of the Jersey Shore. That secondary low will take over as the main storm system Sunday night, spreading heavy precipitation up the New England coast.

One effect of the storm is that air travelers who endured extremely bumpy flights out on Wednesday are also having to deal with moderate to at times severe turbulence on Sunday, as the low-pressure area begins to transfer its energy to a coastal storm.

Interior Northeast

Wintry weather was settling over the Appalachians on Sunday morning behind the storm’s cold front, where storm warnings peppered the high terrain of eastern Tennessee and western North Carolina.

For parts of Pennsylvania and West Virginia, though, the story was one of freezing rain — enough to accrete as a treacherous glaze that could turn outdoor surfaces into frosty slip-n-slides. With up to a quarter-inch of icing expected, the National Weather Service warned of “nearly impossible” travel conditions and sporadic power outages. The bulk of it was forecast to wrap up for central and western Pennsylvania by midafternoon, though road travel could remain difficult to impossible for hours afterward.

As the storm evolves, it will bring snow to a small part of Pennsylvania, specifically the northeast, beginning later Sunday and extending through Monday and possibly into early Tuesday. There, amounts could build to as much as 9 or 10 inches as one nears the New York border.

Snowfall totals of a foot-plus are possible in eastern New York state east of Interstate 81 by the time the long-duration storm ends. Pockets of up to 18 inches may punctuate some spots in the Catskills and Hudson Valley.

New England forecast: Messy Sunday and Monday with travel delays

To the east, the main action is just getting started. An initial band of heavy snow swept through much of New York state around 9 a.m., providing a taste what is to come. But in Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut, the radar was deceptively quiet early Sunday. It won’t be for long.

Rain and mixed precipitation, which are ongoing in New York City, won’t arrive into Boston or Providence, R.I., until close to dark, increasing in intensity during the late evening hours and transitioning to a mostly rain event for both cities during the overnight.

The precipitation could be enough to snarl travel along I-95 and more inland routes between New York and Boston, particularly as the day goes on.

Travelers getting a later start on their post-Thanksgiving journey are likely to encounter more severe weather in the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast as the storm slowly congeals.

Delays both on the road and in the air are likely to increase throughout Sunday in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic, and anyone traveling there Monday morning to beat the Sunday rush is likely to encounter even more problematic conditions as precipitation gets heavier and winds increase along the coast.

Snowfall forecast: A ‘kitchen sink’ storm

The National Weather Service in Boston noted that “surface observations shows temps 2-3 degrees warmer than forecast in some locations” already, with a wedge of warm air expected to enter at the mid-levels as the storm makes its closest pass to the coast Sunday night. Along the immediate coastline, it’s a “kitchen sink” storm, with an unwelcome sampler pack of sleet, freezing rain and plain rain alternating shifts.

But farther inland, it’s looking as if mostly snow will fall. Totals will walk a steep gradient, increasing quickly west of the I-95 corridor.

New York City proper isn’t under any weather alert right now, but heavy snow is possible just to the west. The same is true in Boston and Providence, which are under winter weather advisories instead of winter storm warnings. These two cities are ground zero for the dreaded dance of the rain-snow line.

It both cities, it will be a “snow sandwich,” with snow at the onset on Sunday and the tail end sometime Monday into Tuesday morning but predominantly rain and mixing in between.

All precipitation should wind down west to east Tuesday morning, clearing all but Maine by noontime Tuesday. Regions east of I-95 in Maine could see 4 to 6 inches total.

The Weather Service is forecasting Boston would wind up with 4 to 6 inches when all is said and done, but that might be a bit generous given the relatively warm air involved. In Providence, the forecast calls for 2 to 4 inches, with the cape and islands left out on nearly everything.

Coastal Connecticut won’t see more than a few inches, either. Two to 4 inches for places like New Haven and Bridgeport seem reasonable, with heavier amounts toward Hartford.

In interior Massachusetts, around a foot (or more) is likely in two areas — one just west of the Blackstone Valley from Worcester to Fitchburg, with another along the east slopes of the Berkshires. The Weather Service is calling for as much as 14 to 16 inches there.

Heavy snow is also forecast to extend into central and southern Vermont and New Hampshire. The Hudson Valley of New York and portions of northeastern New Jersey could pick up at least several inches of snow before the storm exits on Monday, as colder air filters into the region.

Winds at the height of the storm will also gust near 40 mph near the coast, with less forceful breezes anticipated inland.

On the plus side, the long duration of the storm means that road crews should have an easier time keeping up with it.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/weather/2019/12/01/major-winter-storm-taking-shape-northeast-millions-travel-home-thanksgiving/

A supporter gets the crowd amped up for opposition presidential candidate Han Kuo-yu at a campaign rally at a Hakka temple in Taiwan’s Miaoli county in November.

Emily Feng/NPR


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A supporter gets the crowd amped up for opposition presidential candidate Han Kuo-yu at a campaign rally at a Hakka temple in Taiwan’s Miaoli county in November.

Emily Feng/NPR

At a recent election campaign event in Taiwan, a procession of women beat ceremonial drums, dance and wave lotus-shaped umbrellas in celebration. But beyond the slogans promising national security and prosperity, the topic on everyone’s mind is what to do about China.

The star of the event is Han Kuo-yu, a pro-Beijing candidate running for president with the opposition Kuomintang, who poses a stark contrast with the current leaders.

“[The governing party] relentlessly uses Taiwan independence as a way to negate China,” Han, the mayor of the city of Kaohsiung, said to rallygoers at the event in Miaoli county, just south of Taiwan’s capital of Taipei. “However, Taiwan and Beijing are one family.”

Taiwan, a U.S. ally, has its own government, military and capitalist economy, but the Chinese Communist Party says Taiwan belongs to the People’s Republic of China.

Voters are preparing to elect Taiwan’s next president and legislature on Jan. 11. While the leading opposition candidate sympathizes with Beijing, President Tsai Ing-wen’s Democratic Progressive Party calls China the “enemy of democracy.”

Many Taiwanese are also closely watching what is happening in Hong Kong, where more than five months of sometimes violent protests are pushing back against mainland China’s control. Taiwan largely wants to avoid becoming another Hong Kong, which could tip the election in favor of President Tsai, who is running for reelection and enjoys a widening lead in opinion polls.

Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen delivers a speech as she launches her reelection campaign in Taipei, on Nov. 17. Taiwan will hold its presidential election on Jan. 11.

Chiang Ying-ying/AP


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Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen delivers a speech as she launches her reelection campaign in Taipei, on Nov. 17. Taiwan will hold its presidential election on Jan. 11.

Chiang Ying-ying/AP

“We see the freedom enjoyed by the Hong Kong people is being chipped away,” Joseph Wu, Taiwan’s foreign minister, told NPR. “We see the experience of Hong Kong is not quite what the Chinese government promised in the early days.”

“One country” rejected

Still, China’s leader Xi Jinping has been pressuring Taiwan to follow Hong Kong’s model.

It’s called “one country, two systems,” meaning Hong Kong is part of China but keeps some autonomy, including government functions and independent courts — in theory.

Many Hong Kongers accuse the leadership in Hong Kong and Beijing of eroding their limited autonomy. That sentiment is in part why thousands have taken to the street in anti-government protests that are now in their sixth month.

Taiwan’s leaders flatly reject any proposal for Taiwan to enter a similar arrangement with China.

“Hong Kong is on the verge of chaos due to the failure of ‘one country, two systems,'” President Tsai said on Taiwan’s national day in October. “The overwhelming consensus among Taiwan’s 23 million people is our rejection of ‘one country, two systems,’ regardless of party affiliation or political position.”

Supporters of President Tsai cheer at her reelection campaign launch in November.

Chiang Ying-ying/AP


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Supporters of President Tsai cheer at her reelection campaign launch in November.

Chiang Ying-ying/AP

More than 86% say they would prefer to maintain Taiwan’s current status, according to the latest polls.

Even the opposition candidate Han, who has sparked controversy over his pro-Beijing stance, disavowed the Hong Kong policy after the protests erupted. “Taiwanese people can never accept [‘one country, two systems’], unless it’s over my dead body,” he said.

Taiwan has been preparing for China to attack ever since Nationalist leader Chiang Kai-shek retreated to the island in 1949, along with 2 million of his supporters and soldiers, after losing a civil war against Mao Zedong’s Communist forces.

Xi has said Taiwan should unify with mainland China peacefully but has threatened to use force to do so.

As Beijing steps up militaristic rhetoric, the U.S. has stepped up its support f0r the island. It has bulked up its de facto embassy in Taipei and passed legislation encouraging official travel between the U.S. and Taiwan. This year, the U.S. made a high-profile $8 billion sale of fighter jets and other military equipment to the island, angering Beijing.

Taiwan considers itself a bulwark of democracy in the Asia-Pacific region, where China is increasingly asserting its power.

Supporters of Kuomingtang presidential candidate Han Kuo-yu wave the flag of Taiwan. Many in the party favor closer ties with Beijing, although it is a minority view in Taiwan.

Emily Feng/NPR


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Supporters of Kuomingtang presidential candidate Han Kuo-yu wave the flag of Taiwan. Many in the party favor closer ties with Beijing, although it is a minority view in Taiwan.

Emily Feng/NPR

“We are on the front lines. We have faced all these threats and Chinese infiltration for decades,” says Freddy Lim, a death metal rocker turned co-founder of one of Taiwan’s most liberal political organizations, the New Power Party.

The nearly 5-year-old party is now going through an existential crisis over whether to support Tsai’s reelection bid. In August, Lim quit the party to run for reelection to his legislative seat as an independent so he could back President Tsai, arguing the stakes of losing the presidency to a pro-Beijing candidate are too high.

Better collaboration with China

Central to every election in Taiwan is the question: Does Taiwan, a small island, sidle up to its much bigger neighbor China to develop its economy or keep it at an arm’s length?

“There is no such thing as economic and trade without politics in Taiwan,” says Lev Nachman, a doctoral candidate researching Taiwanese political movements.

Some politicians have tried to stake out some middle ground, such as the upstart Taiwan People’s Party that formed in August. It has come under criticism for seemingly waffling on its stance toward Beijing.

“We try to enhance the collaboration with the people with the civil society of mainland China, especially in terms of economics and culture. We very much support the kind of nongovernmental interaction,” explains Kimyung Keng, one of the Taiwan People’s Party candidates running for a district legislative seat.

Unify one way or another

Despite its small size and dwindling number of international allies, Taiwan has managed to nurture a robust economy. Homegrown corporate champions include electronics-making giant Foxconn and the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. Wages are rising and the unemployment rate is just under 3.8%, one of the lowest levels in two decades. President Tsai has built up economic ties with Southeast Asia to diversify Taiwan’s trade portfolio away from mainland China.

But supporters of opposition candidate Han say the president has made a mistake in shutting out Beijing. Taiwan should not be afraid of unification with China, rallygoers at the recent campaign event told NPR.

Chang An-lo, speaks with foreign media in Taipei, in 2014. After serving 10 years in a U.S. federal prison on drug trafficking charges, Chang returned to Taiwan in 2013 to pursue political ambitions as the leader of the China Unification Promotion Party.

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Chang An-lo, speaks with foreign media in Taipei, in 2014. After serving 10 years in a U.S. federal prison on drug trafficking charges, Chang returned to Taiwan in 2013 to pursue political ambitions as the leader of the China Unification Promotion Party.

Wally Santana/AP

The staunchest of the pro-China camp is prominent gangster turned politician. Chang An-lo once helped lead one of Taiwan’s biggest gangs, the Bamboo Union. Now, he heads the Chinese Unification Promotion Party, which nominates no candidates of its own but backs every pro-Beijing Kuomintang candidate.

“When China unifies Taiwan either violently or peacefully, do you want military rule or one country, two systems? The latter is still the best way for Taiwan,” says Chang. “How could an economy of 1.4 billion people be bad for Taiwan? And what’s wrong with returning to China, as we are all Chinese?”

Taiwanese mostly disagree. The latest polls on identity show the island’s residents feel increasingly Taiwanese, not Chinese.

“There is a huge generational difference,” says Luo Chi-cheng, a Democratic Progressive lawmaker running for reelection. “Young people pay close attention to what happens in Hong Kong because [otherwise] in the future, Taiwan may be forced to accept the so-called one country, two system model.”

Older voters tend to care more about economic development, according to Luo. It is the younger Taiwanese, he notes, who have longer to live and more opportunities to decide future election outcomes.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/12/01/782917914/as-taiwans-election-race-heats-up-china-weighs-on-voters-minds

NEW YORKNEW YORK (Reuters) – The U.S. Supreme Court will hear its first major gun rights case in nearly a decade on Monday in a challenge backed by the National Rifle Association over a now-amended New York City handgun regulation that had prevented licensed owners from taking their handguns outside the city.

The nine justices will hear arguments in an appeal by three handgun owners and the New York state affiliate of the NRA – the gun rights group closely aligned with President Donald Trump and other Republicans – who say the regulation violates the U.S. Constitution’s Second Amendment right to keep and bear arms.

Gun control advocates have said that if the justices choose to issue a broad ruling expanding gun rights, it could jeopardize a variety of firearms restrictions passed in recent years by state and local governments across the country, including expanded background checks and confiscations of weapons from individuals who a court has deemed dangerous.

Gun control is a contentious issue in the United States, which has experienced numerous mass shootings. Since 2013, 45 states and the District of Columbia have adopted more than 300 gun control laws, according to the Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence. Republican opposition in Congress has been instrumental in thwarting passage of new federal laws.

“The future of life-saving gun safety laws across our country is very directly on the line with this case,” the center’s litigation director Hannah Shearer said.

The court has a 5-4 conservative majority. Its ruling is due by the end of June.

“I believe it will change the way the Second Amendment is applied to everyone who owns a gun in the country,” said Staten Island resident Romolo Colantone, one of the plaintiffs.

The dispute centers on New York’s handgun “premises” licenses that allowed holders to transport their firearm only to a handful of shooting ranges within the city, and to hunting areas elsewhere in the state during designated hunting seasons.

The transport rule was amended in July to specifically allow for a gun to be taken to a range or other residence outside the city. The city unsuccessfully asked the Supreme Court to cancel the arguments and drop the case because the amendment removed the provision being challenged.

The New York State Rifle and Pistol Association filed the lawsuit in 2013 along with three city residents who were told by authorities they could not participate in a shooting competition in New Jersey or bring their guns to a home elsewhere in the state.

The plaintiffs are appealing a 2018 ruling by the Manhattan-based 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals that the regulation did not violate the Second Amendment and advanced the city’s interest in protecting public safety.

The Supreme Court has avoided taking up a major firearms case since 2010, when it extended to state and local regulations a 2008 ruling that recognized for the first time that the Second Amendment protects a person’s right to keep a gun at home for self-defense.

That has left open questions such as whether that right extends outside the home. The challengers also are asking the Supreme Court to require lower courts to more strictly review gun curbs, with an eye toward striking them down.

(Reporting by Andrew Chung; Editing by Will Dunham)

Source Article from https://mobile.reuters.com/article/amp/idUSKBN1Y50ZG

Media captionBoris Johnson says about 74 convicted terrorists have been released early from prison

Boris Johnson has told the BBC that 74 people jailed for terror offences and released early will have their licence conditions reviewed.

The Ministry of Justice launched the urgent review after convicted terrorist Usman Khan, who had served half of his sentence, killed two people in a knife attack at London Bridge on Friday.

The prime minister claimed scrapping early release would have stopped him.

But Labour is blaming budget cuts for “missed chances to intervene”.

One of the victims has been named by police as 25-year-old Jack Merritt. The second victim has not been named, but the University of Cambridge has confirmed she was a former student.

One of the three other people injured was a member of staff from the university.

Dr Vin Diwakar, medical director for NHS London, said two victims remain in a stable condition in hospital, while a third has been discharged.

They were all attending an event to mark five years of the Learning Together programme – which gives students and inmates the opportunity to study together to help reduce re-offending.

Friday’s attack was brought to an end when police shot Khan dead.

The 28-year-old had previously been jailed over a plot to bomb the London Stock Exchange in 2012.

He was sentenced to indeterminate detention for “public protection” with a minimum jail term of eight years.

This sentence would have allowed him to be kept in prison beyond the minimum term.

But in 2013, the Court of Appeal quashed the sentence, replacing it with a 16-year-fixed term of which Khan should serve half in prison.

He was released on licence in December 2018 – subject to an “extensive list of licence conditions”, Met Police Assistant Commissioner Neil Basu said.

Media captionVideo footage shows moment London Bridge attacker was apprehended

‘Repulsive’

The prime minister told the BBC’s Andrew Marr show it was “repulsive” that someone as “dangerous” as Khan could be released from prison after “only serving eight years”.

He blamed Khan’s release on legislation introduced under “a leftie government”, insisting the automatic release scheme was introduced by Labour – but was challenged about what the Conservatives had done to change the law over the past 10 years in government.

“I’m a new prime minister,” said Mr Johnson. “We take a different approach.”

He added: “I opposed [automatic release] both in 2003 and 2008, and now that I am prime minister I’m going to take steps to make sure that people are not released early when they commit… serious sexual, violent or terrorist offences.

“I absolutely deplore that fact that this man was out on the streets… and we are going to take action against it.”

Mr Johnson said there are “probably about 74 people” who had been subject to early release following serious offences, adding that action had been taken immediately following London Bridge attack “to ensure there is no threat to the public”.

The Ministry of Justice confirmed the 74 figure following the interview.


How the law on early release changed

2003 – The Criminal Justice Act meant most offenders would be automatically released halfway through sentences, but the most “dangerous” would have their cases looked at by a Parole Board. Sentences with no fixed end point, called Imprisonment for Public Protection (IPP), were also introduced.

2008 – Criminal Justice and Immigration Act removed review process by Parole Boards, meaning more offenders were released automatically halfway through sentences. Judges could still hand down life sentences or IPPs for dangerous offenders.

2012 – Usman Khan was handed a sentence with no fixed end date because of the risk he posed to the public. In the same year, the Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act scrapped IPPs and reintroduced the role of the Parole Board for extended sentences of 10 years or more – this time after two-thirds of the sentence has passed. But that did not mean those already serving IPPs would have them lifted.

2013 – During an appeal, Lord Justice Leveson ruled that Khan’s indeterminate sentence should be substituted for an extended sentence with automatic release at the halfway point.


At an event in York, Jeremy Corbyn called for an inquiry into “everything surrounding” Khan, including his sentence and what happened to him in prison.

But he warned against “knee-jerk legislation”, saying the country could “pay a price later”.

Media captionJeremy Corbyn says cuts in public services could put more lives at risk

In his speech, the Labour leader said: “No government can prevent every attack. No-one would believe any political leader who said they could.

“But the government can act to make such acts of terror less, rather than more likely.”

Mr Corbyn said there needed to be more funding for public services, including probation and mental health, as when they are cut “they leave behind gaps”.

He added: “That can lead to missed chances to intervene in the lives of people who go on to commit inexcusable acts, whether it’s during their childhood, their first brush with the law, their first conviction or in prison through rehabilitation programmes.

“You can’t keep people safe on the cheap.”

Mr Corbyn told Sky’s Sophy Ridge programme terrorists should “not necessarily” serve their full sentences automatically, but that it “depends on circumstances”.

“There has to be an examination of how our prison services work and crucially what happens when they are released from prison,” he said.

Both parties have been accused of politicising the attack.

Liberal Democrat deputy leader Ed Davey told Sophy Ridge on Sunday that he was “alarmed” at Mr Johnson’s reaction to the London Bridge attack.

“In the middle of an election, we shouldn’t be making political capital out of a tragedy, and he’s doing that, and he’s doing that in a way which is misleading people about what the law actually says.”

But Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage tweeted that those convicted of terror offences “should never be released”.

“It is appalling that 74 convicted terrorists are on our streets,” he added. “These are not ordinary criminals but people with a jihadi virus.”

Media captionUsman Khan speaking to the BBC in 2008: ‘I ain’t no terrorist’

The father of Jack Merritt, who was a course co-ordinator for Learning Together, said in a now-deleted tweet that his son “would not wish his death to be used as the pretext for more draconian sentences or for detaining people unnecessarily”.

Foreign secretary Dominic Raab said David Merritt should be listened to, declaring “nobody wants to see the politicisation of this”.

But he added: “The question is, who is going to make sure that the overriding priority is avoiding any unnecessary risk to the public?”

“I think if you look at what we’re saying on sentencing… it is the Conservatives who are saying we will stop at nothing to keep people safe.”

Khan was living in Stafford and wearing a GPS police tag when he launched his attack inside Fishmongers’ Hall, where he was one of dozens of students and offenders attending a conference hosted by Learning Together, a prisoners’ rehabilitation programme.

The attack then continued onto London Bridge itself.

Mr Basu said officers had been working “flat out” to try to establish the “full circumstances” of the stabbing.

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-50618744

VINELAND, N.J. – Amid glossy photos of prominent politicians adorning Democratic Congressman Jefferson Van Drew’s Capitol Hill office is a framed picture of him with Donald Trump.

It’s from 2008 when Van Drew was a state senator and the future president visited Atlantic City to christen the Chairman Tower at the Trump Taj Mahal. Both are wearing business suits, red ties and smiles.

“Nothing really amazing,” Van Drew, who goes by ‘Jeff,’ recalled about the moment. “It was a ribbon-cutting. He was very gracious. Very nice. Ivanka (Trump) was there. We talked for about 10 minutes.”

That he would choose to display the photo among those of Democrats Bill Clinton and Bill Bradley speaks to a level of respect the freshman congressman from South Jersey has for Trump, a nod that is uncommon among Democratic lawmakers, many of whom view the president as a polarizing figure.

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2019/12/01/democratic-lawmaker-trump-unsavory-not-impeachable/2567848001/

“We feel better because of the election and the bill, but that’s not the end of the protest,” said Eric Chan, 33. “We need to bear in mind that we have a lot of demands which we cannot forget, and if we forget these demands, our friends, our comrades who have died or been prosecuted, their sacrifice would be for nothing.”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/asia-pacific/tear-gas-returns-to-hong-kong-as-police-disperse-authorized-protest-march/2019/12/01/ee5c860a-1415-11ea-924c-b34d09bbc948_story.html

Members of the House Intelligence Committee on Monday will review a report on the panel’s investigation into whether President Trump committed an impeachable act, specifically by allegedly withholding military aid to Ukraine until the country investigated former Vice President Joe Biden and his son, Fox News has confirmed.

Lawmakers will then approve the report before sending it – along with minority views – to the House Judiciary Committee, which will draft and consider articles of impeachment in the weeks ahead.

REP. DINGELL ON IMPEACHMENT PUSH: ‘NOBODY IS ABOVE THE LAW’

House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, D-Calif., right, shown with committee staffer Daniel Noble at left, speaks at the conclusion of public impeachment hearings last month. (Associated Press)

Intelligence panel Chairman Adam Schiff, D-Calif., sent a letter to his colleagues last week that report would be coming “soon” from his committee but did not provide a specific time frame.

He has also said the report would summarize the panel’s two-month investigation into President Trump and Ukraine and list the likely articles of impeachment.

The House has moved swiftly to investigate the president since Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., announced the formalization of an impeachment inquiry in September.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

This week’s first impeachment hearing is scheduled for Wednesday and will feature a panel of constitutional experts who will offer what constitutes an impeachable offense.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/house-intel-committee-draft-ukraine-report

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Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/11/30/asia/china-arrests-hong-kong-intl/index.html

The London Bridge stabber masqueraded as a reformed jihadist, claiming his terrorist days were behind him and begging to be de-radicalized.

Yet less than a year after convicted bomb plotter Usman Khan was released from prison, having served only half of a 16-year sentence for his part in an al Qaeda scheme to blow up London landmarks, he killed two people, including a young coordinator of the rehab program he so wanted to join.

Another staff member of the program, called Learning Together, was killed, and three others were wounded.

Khan, 28, who was wielding two kitchen knives and wearing a fake suicide vest, would have wreaked more havoc if heroic civilians hadn’t taken him down before he was shot dead by police.

Khan, wearing an electronic monitor from his 2018 release, acted alone, London police said.

Nevertheless, ISIS claimed responsibility for the carnage, tweeting that Khan had killed in response to its calls to target countries fighting the jihadist group.

On Saturday, as Britain mourned the victims, many expressed outrage that Khan had been walking the streets at all.

“We’re playing Russian roulette with people’s lives, letting convicted, known, radicalized jihadi criminals walk about our streets,” said Chris Phillips, the former head of Britain’s National Counter Terrorism Security Office.

The plot that sent Khan to prison “was described as one of the most significant terrorist plots in British history,” according to the Sunday Times of London. Khan, just 19 at the time, “was considered by the judge to be a ‘more serious jihadi’ than many of his fellow gang members when he was jailed indefinitely for public protection.”

Khan admitted to a charge of engaging in conduct for the preparation of acts of terrorism. He had been secretly taped plotting and talking about martyrdom.

But once behind bars, the high school dropout, who was known to follow radical cleric Anjem Choudary and suspected of planning to create a terror training camp on family land in Kashmir, wrote a letter claiming he was reformed, and requested a de-radicalization class.

“I would like to do such a course so I can prove to the authorities, my family and soicity [sic] in general that I don’t carry the views I had before my arrest and also I can prove that at the time I was immature,” he wrote in October 2012. “And now I am much more mature and want to live my life as a good Muslim and also a good citizen of Britain.”

Khan hoodwinked authorities again in 2013, The Times of London wrote, when he won an appeal of his indeterminate sentence and was granted a 16-year term, allowing his early parole.

And Khan is not unique. As many as 70 terrorists have been released from Britain’s jails, the Telegraph reported.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who visited the scene at London Bridge Saturday, said he had “long argued” that it was a “mistake to allow serious and violent criminals to come out of prison early.”

The Conservative Party leader, who is in the midst of an election campaign, said the criminal justice system “simply isn’t working.”

Johnson’s rival, Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn, who also visited the scene Saturday, said the nation’s Probation Office and Parole Board should have had a role in the decision to release Khan.

“We have to ensure that the public are safe,” he said. “That means supervision of prisoners in prison but it also means supervision of ex-prisoners when they are released ahead of the completion of their sentence, to have tough supervision of them to make sure this kind of danger is not played out on the public in the future.”

But David Merritt, the father of victim Jack Merritt, said his son would not have supported the backlash. He described him as a “champion for underdogs everywhere” and especially for the incarcerated.

The second victim has not yet been identified. The three wounded remained in the hospital, including a man in a medically induced coma.

Queen Elizabeth II said in a statement that she and her husband, Prince Philip, were sending their thoughts to everyone affected by the “terrible violence.”

Security officials earlier this month had downgraded Britain’s terrorism threat level from “severe” to “substantial.”

With Post wires 

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2019/11/30/london-bridge-stabber-usman-khan-faked-being-a-reformed-jihadist/

New Jersey’s first wintry mess of the season is expected to begin around 7 a.m. Sunday and could deliver snow, ice and rain (depending on where you live) as commuters head back home or to work.

North Jersey is expected to see the brunt of mixed heavy precipitation, including snow and ice. And while forecasters can’t agree on snowfall totals for North Jersey, most agree on one thing: the bulk of any snow will drop Sunday night into Monday morning.

That should make for headaches among school administrators, commuters and those still straggling to get home after visiting relatives for Thanksgiving.

Sussex County could see the highest snowfall totals, with some forecasters predicting up to 12 inches. Morris and Warren counties could see a bit less.

Mostly rain is expected in South Jersey for the duration of the 48-hour storm. Forecasters seemed to differ on their predictions for areas closer to New York City, with some expecting rain and others expecting minor snow accumulations.

Snow bands which predict the accumulation totals vary among forecasters as well.

Here is what six different forecasters predict for the storm:

AccuWeather’s snowfall projections for New Jersey.

Storm forecast: Colder air will overcome the New Jersey region Sunday night, leading to heavier snow accumulation into Monday.

Details: AccuWeather predicts snowfall totals of up to 12 inches in the northernmost point of Sussex County. Anywhere from 3 to 6 inches of snow is predicted South of that until what appears to be Mercer and Middlesex counties. Only rain is expected for South Jersey.

The northern part of New Jersey is in the projected path of snow, ice and rain during the day on Sunday, according to AccuWeather forecaster Alex Sosnowski. Warm air, however, is likely to sweep in from the south and the Atlantic, so the storm will transition to mostly rain Sunday night. But cold air is likely to come into the area during Monday, bringing a change in accumulation to snow.

Northern parts of New Jersey could see anywhere from 5 to 11 inches of snow, forecasters predicted Saturday evening.

Storm forecast: The National Weather Service expects the wintry mix to begin 7 a.m. Sunday, although a winter storm warning is in effect for parts of North Jersey from 4 a.m. Sunday to 1 a.m. Tuesday.

Details: Total snow accumulations of 5 to 11 inches and ice accumulations of up to one-tenth of an inch are expected in Sussex, Warren and Morris counties, where winter storm warnings will be in effect from 4 a.m. Sunday to 1 a.m. Tuesday. Sussex County appears to have the highest snow accumulation predictions. Mixed precipitation with snow accumulations of 3 to 5 inches are expected in Hunterdon and Somerset counties. Just 2 to 4 inches of snow and a light glaze of ice are expected for Middlesex and Mercer counties.

The National Weather Service also predicts a lull in the storm Sunday evening followed by more snow late Sunday night and Monday.

Storm forecast: Most people may think this storm is a bust come Sunday night. But the bulk of projected snow will fall Monday around 1 a.m., this New Jersey-based weather company warns.

Details: The storm will kick off Sunday morning, first hitting South Jersey with rain. Warm air in the region will make for a wintery mix of snow, sleet and rain for other parts of New Jersey. But between 5 and 7 p.m. Sunday evening, the warm air will stop. The precipitation will change back over to snow Monday morning, when temperatures fall off. The snow band will rotate Monday from Trenton to the Monmouth County coastal waters. Moderate to heavy snowfall is expected in this region, bringing snow accumulations of 5 to 10 inches of snow in parts o Sussex County and 2 to 5 inches of snow in Central Jersey.

Storm forecast: Heavier snow bands are likely in some localized Northern areas of New Jersey due to vigorous energy in the upper atmosphere, this Virginia-based company says.

Details: There could likely be mesoscale banding of heavy snow, which could lead to much higher localized amounts in northwestern parts of New Jersey during late Sunday night into Monday morning. PerspectaWeather predicts much like the others: cold air during Sunday night will bring the bulk of snowfall towards the end of the storm. Mostly rain is expected for areas closer to New York City too.

Storm forecast: The storm is expected to leave the region by midday Monday.

Details: WeatherWorks predicted earlier Saturday morning that North Jersey would get wintry mix around Sunday afternoon. The group predicted up to an inch of snow to fall per hour in Northern portions of New Jersey, including Sussex County, throughout Monday. Northwest Jersey could possibly see a “handful of inches” of snow, while areas closer to New York City could see about 2 inches.

Storm forecast: Precipitation will likely begin as snow Sunday from eastern Pennsylvania into Southern New England before areas closer to the coast change over to sleet, freezing rain and rain.

Details: Areas along the cost that changed over to rain, sleet and freezing rain on Sunday are predicted to transition back to snow before the storm pushes out later Monday, the Weather Channel predicts. The channel, however, did not specify exact snowfall totals for the region along the Northeast coast.

Rebecca Panico may be reached at rpanico@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter @BeccaPanico.

Source Article from https://www.nj.com/weather/2019/12/nj-weather-when-will-the-snow-start-heres-what-6-forecasters-are-saying.html

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Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/11/30/us/south-dakota-plane-crash/index.html

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Source Article from https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2019/11/kamala-harris-aide-resigns-scathing-letter-staff-treated-poorl.html