Author: BBC News

  • Trailblazing African film-maker and Cannes winner dies

    Trailblazing African film-maker and Cannes winner dies

    Malian film director Souleymane Cissé, one of the pioneers of African cinema, has died aged 84.

    His daughter, Mariam Cissé, confirmed his death at clinic in the capital Bamako, expressing shock and mourning “the loss of a man who dedicated his life to film and art”.

    The cause of his death has not been announced.

    Cissé gained international recognition in 1987 when his film Yeelen (The Light) won the Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival, making him the first film-maker from sub-Saharan Africa to win an award at the prestigious festival.

    His trailblazing career spanned more than 50 years, winning many accolades along the way.

    In 2023, Cissé was honoured by Cannes with a Carrosse d’Or award, usually given to directors who have “marked the history of cinema with their boldness, their exacting standards and their intransigence in staging”.

    Cissé was also a double winner of the grand prize at the Pan-African Film Festival, Fespaco, held annually in Burkina Faso.

    At the time of his death he had been due to travel to Burkina Faso to preside over the jury at the festival, which opens on Saturday.

    Tributes have been pouring in for Cissé for his dedication to African storytelling.

    Mali’s Culture Minister Mamou Daffé lamented the loss “of this monument of African cinema”, while fellow Malian director Boubacar Sidibé said the country’s film industry was in “mourning”.

    Compassionate firebrand

    Film lovers have praised Cissé’s works for their complexity, political engagement and deep humanity.

    His first feature film, Den Muso (The Young Girl) shot in 1975, was in the local Bambara language, and is considered an African classic.

    The film is about a young girl who is raped, becomes pregnant and is rejected by her family.

    The film was banned by the Malian authorities, and Cissé was jailed for having accepted French funding. He wrote the screenplay for his second film, Baara (Work), while in prison.

    He made other films including Finyè (The Wind) in 1981, and Yeelen (The Light), which won the Jury Prize in Cannes in 1987. His last film in 1995 was Waati (Time).

    Cissé was born in the Malian capital Bamako, and spent part of his childhood in neighbouring Senegal.

    Later, he studied film in Russia’s capital Moscow, becoming one of the first generation of African film-makers.

    Cissé went on to champion government support for and investment in the film industry.

    He was the founding president of the union representing West Africa’s entrepreneurs in cinema and audiovisual arts.

    Cissé was often outspoken about other barriers to the spread of African cinema – criticising “censorship” and “contempt”, and urging young film-makers not to act like “beggars who must plead every time for financing from Europe” but instead seek greater independence.

    Hours before his death, he reportedly urged Mali’s military government to help the country’s industry catch up with its continental rivals.

    “It is not enough to make cinema, the works must also be visible,” the AFP news agency quoted Cissé as saying.

    “May the authorities help us with the construction of cinemas.”

  • Trump calls Zelensky a ‘dictator’ as rift between two leaders deepens

    Trump calls Zelensky a ‘dictator’ as rift between two leaders deepens

    President Trump has spent the day attacking Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky, calling him a “dictator” and deepening the rift between the two leaders.

    His attacks came after Zelensky, reacting to US-Russia talks in Saudi Arabia from which Kyiv was excluded, said the US president was “living in a disinformation space” governed by Moscow.

    Speaking at a Saudi-backed investment meeting in Florida, Trump said the only thing Zelensky “was really good at was playing Joe Biden like a fiddle”.

    The “dictator” slur quickly prompted criticism from European leaders including German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, who said “it is simply wrong and dangerous to deny President Zelensky his democratic legitimacy”.

    UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer made it clear he backed Zelensky in a phone call to the Ukrainian president.

    A Downing Street spokesperson said Sir Keir “expressed his support for President Zelensky as Ukraine’s democratically elected leader”.

    It was “perfectly reasonable to suspend elections during war time as the UK did during World War Two,” the spokesperson added.

    Zelensky’s five-year term of office was due to come to an end in May 2024. However, Ukraine has been under martial law since Russia launched its full-scale invasion in February 2022 and elections have been suspended.

    Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson also criticised Trump’s use of the word “dictator” while German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock called the comments “absurd”.

    “If you look at the real world instead of just firing off a tweet, then you know who in Europe has to live in the conditions of a dictatorship: people in Russia, people in Belarus,” she told broadcaster ZDF.

    Speaking in Florida, Trump called Zelensky a “dictator”, just hours after using the same word in a Truth Social post about the Ukrainian president.

    “He refuses to have elections. He’s low in the real Ukrainian polls. How can you be high with every city being demolished?” Trump said.

    He also referenced his attempt to get rare-earth minerals from Ukraine, accusing Zelensky’s government of “breaking the deal”.

    His address echoed his wording of the Truth Social post where Trump said Zelensky “has done a terrible job, his country is shattered, and MILLIONS have unnecessarily died.” In the meantime, the US was “successfully negotiating an end to the war with Russia,” he said.

    A White House official said Trump’s post was in direct response to Zelensky’s “disinformation” comments.

    On Tuesday US and Russian officials held their first high-level, face-to-face talks since Russia’s full-scale invasion.

    The former prime minister of Ukraine, Arseniy Yatsenyuk, told the BBC that Russia was “popping champagne right now” in response to Trump’s comments.

    “Volodymyr Zelensky is a completely legitimate president,” he said. “We cannot hold elections under martial law.”

    The war of words began with comments made by Trump on Tuesday at a news conference at Mar-a-Lago in Florida when he blamed Ukraine for the war.

    Trump was asked by BBC News what his message was to Ukrainians who might feel betrayed, to which he replied: “I hear that they’re upset about not having a seat, well, they’ve had a seat for three years and a long time before that. This could have been settled very easily.”

    “You should have never started it. You could have made a deal,” Trump added.

    Trump did not mention that President Vladimir Putin took the decision to invade Ukraine in February 2022.

    Then on Wednesday, Zelensky told reporters in Kyiv: “We are seeing a lot of disinformation and it’s coming from Russia. With all due respect to President Donald Trump as a leader… he is living in this disinformation space.”

    He added that he believed “the United States helped Putin to break out of years of isolation”.

    Later in the day, the Ukrainian leader said the world faced the choice to be “with Putin or with peace” and announced he would be meeting Washington’s Ukraine envoy, Keith Kellogg, on Thursday.

    Earlier, Zelensky also rejected Trump’s attempts to access Ukraine’s rare minerals, saying no security guarantees were offered in exchange.

    Trump has attempted to make an issue out of Zelensky’s popularity, claiming the Ukrainian president had only a 4% approval rating. But BBC Verify reports that polling conducted this month found 57% of Ukrainians said they trusted the president.

    In Wednesday’s explosive Truth Social post, Trump also took aim at Europe, saying the war in Ukraine is “far more important to Europe than it is to us”.

    “We have a big, beautiful ocean as a separation,” he said.

    Europe had “failed to bring peace” in the region, he added.

    Meanwhile, Russian President Vladimir Putin also spoke to reporters, saying he would meet Trump “with pleasure”.

    For its part, the EU said it would place further sanctions on Russia.

    The new sanctions target Russian aluminium and dozens of vessels suspected of illegally transporting oil. They would also disconnect more Russian banks from the global Swift payment system and ban more Russian media outlets from broadcasting in Europe.

  • Author trial: Salman Rushdie says he thought he was dying after stabbing

    Author trial: Salman Rushdie says he thought he was dying after stabbing

    Sir Salman Rushdie has told a court that he thought he was dying after being stabbed repeatedly on stage two years ago, leaving him blind in one eye.

    The renowned British-Indian author gave evidence at the trial of his alleged attacker, 27-year-old Hadi Matar, who has pleaded not guilty to charges of assault and attempted murder.

    Proceedings are taking place at a New York state court a few miles from where Sir Salman was attacked on 12 August 2022 as he was about to give a talk on how the US was a haven for exiled writers.

    The attack occurred after Sir Salman spent years in hiding because of threats to his life after his novel The Satanic Verses was published in 1988.

    Prosecutors, who have not specified a motive for the stabbing, called Sir Salman to the stand as the first witness on Tuesday morning, asking him to recall the moments before and after the attack.

    The 77-year-old told the jury that on the day in question, he had been sitting on stage ready to address an audience at the prestigious Chautauqua Institution.

    It was shortly after Sir Salman was introduced that he said he noticed a person rushing at him from his right-hand side.

    He described the attacker as wearing dark clothes and a face mask, and said he was struck by the individual’s eyes, “which were dark and seemed very ferocious”.

    Sir Salman said he felt the first blow to his right jaw and neck, and thought at first that he had been punched. Then he saw blood pouring on to his clothes.

    “At that point he was hitting me repeatedly, stabbing and slashing,” the author said, adding that the incident unfolded in a matter of seconds.

    Sir Salman told the court he was struck a total of 15 times, with wounds to his eye, cheek, neck, chest, torso and thigh.

    His left hand was also stabbed when he attempted to defend himself.

    The knife wound to his eye was the most painful, he said.

    At one point, he took off his glasses, which concealed his right eye with a dark lens, to reveal the extent of the injury.

    “As you can see, that is what is left of it,” he told the jury. “There’s no vision in the eye at all.”

    As Sir Salman, who wore a dark suit, delivered his testimony, Mr Matar often had his head down, with the two never appearing to make eye contact.

    Sir Salman’s wife, Lady Rushdie, cried from her seat in the second row as her husband recounted the incident.

    He has been worried about his safety since the publication of The Satanic Verses, his surrealist, postmodern novel that was inspired by the life of the Muslim Prophet Muhammad.

    While it met acclaim and awards in the Western world, many Muslims considered it blasphemous and some countries banned it. Iran’s religious leader issued a fatwa calling for the author’s death due to the book.

    That fatwa – a religious decree – caused Sir Salman to face countless death threats. He was forced into hiding for nine years and only began travelling again when Iran said it would not enforce the law.

    Two weeks before the attack, the author had told a German magazine that he was living a “relatively normal” life as the threats had diminished.

    But the attack on Sir Salman in Chautauqua, New York, shattered that feeling of safety.

    The writer told the court on Tuesday that in the moments afterwards, “it occurred to me quite clearly that I was dying – that was my predominant thought”.

    He also described feeling like he was lying in “a lake of blood”.

    He recalled how bystanders, including members of the audience, subdued the attacker.

    “And thanks to that, I survived,” Sir Salman said.

    The author told the jury he was airlifted to a trauma centre, where he received treatment for his injuries for 17 days.

    Mr Matar was arrested at the scene.

    The suspect’s lawyer, Lynn Schaffer, cross-examined Sir Salman and asked him about whether he could trust his recollection of events given the trauma he endured.

    The author responded that trauma can alter people’s memory, but added he was certain that he had been wounded 15 times.

    “Afterwards I could see [the wounds] on my body,” he said. “I didn’t need to be told by anybody.”

    Asked if he had ever had any contact with the suspect before the attack, Sir Salman replied that he had not. He also said the attacker did not say anything to him.

    More witnesses are expected to be called to the stand in the coming days, including the surgeon that operated on Sir Salman, as well as law enforcement officers who responded to the attack.

  • Grammys 2025: Full list of winners

    Grammys 2025: Full list of winners

    Album of the year

    Winner: Beyoncé – Cowboy Carter

    Record of the year

    Winner: Kendrick Lamar – Not Like Us

    Song of the Year

    Winner: Kendrick Lamar – Not Like Us

    Best new artist

    Winner: Chappell Roan

    Best pop vocal album

    Winner: Sabrina Carpenter – Short n’ Sweet

    Best pop solo performance

    Winner: Sabrina Carpenter – Espresso

    Best pop duo/group performance

    Winner: Lady Gaga & Bruno Mars – Die With A Smile

    Best dance/electronic recording

    Winner: Justice & Tame Impala – Neverender

    Best dance/electronic album

    Winner: Charli XCX – Brat

    Best dance/pop recording

    Winner: Charli XCX – Von Dutch

    Best traditional pop vocal album

    Winner: Norah Jones – Visions

    Best Latin pop album

    Winner: Shakira – Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran

    Best rock performance

    Winner: The Beatles – Now And Then

    Best rock song

    Winner: St Vincent – Broken Man

    Best rock album

    Winner: The Rolling Stones – Hackney Diamonds

    Best alternative music album

    Winner: St Vincent – All Born Screaming

    Best alternative music performance

    Winner: St Vincent – Flea

    Best metal performance

    Winner: Gojira, Marina Viotti & Victor Le Masne – Mea Culpa (Ah! Ça ira!)

    Best rap performance

    Winner: Kendrick Lamar – Not Like Us

    Best melodic rap performance

    Winner: Rapsody ft Erykah Badu – 3:AM

    Best rap song

    Winner: Kendrick Lamar – Not Like Us

    Best rap album

    Winner: Doechii – Alligator Bites Never Heal

    Best country solo performance

    Winner: Chris Stapleton – It Takes A Woman

    Best country duo/group performance

    Winner: Beyoncé ft Miley Cyrus – II Most Wanted

    Best country song

    Winner: Kacey Musgraves – The Architect

    Best country album

    Winner: Beyoncé – Cowboy Carter

    Best R&B performance

    Winner: Muni Long – Made For Me (Live On BET)

    Best R&B song

    Winner: SZA – Saturn

    Best progressive R&B album

    Joint Winner: Avery*Sunshine – So Glad to Know You

    Joint Winner: NxWorries (Anderson .Paak & Knxwledge) – Why Lawd?

    Best R&B album

    Winner: Chris Brown – 11:11 (Deluxe)

    Best African music performance

    Winner: Tems – Love Me JeJe

    Producer of the Year, Non-Classical

    Winner: Daniel Nigro

    Songwriter of the Year, Non-Classical

    Winner: Amy Allen

    Best comedy album

    Winner: Dave Chappelle – The Dreamer

    Best compilation soundtrack for visual media

    Winner: Maestro: Music By Leonard Bernstein – London Symphony Orchestra, Yannick 

    Best score soundtrack for visual media (includes film and televison)

    Winner: Hans Zimmer – Dune: Part Two

    Best score soundtrack for video games and other interactive media

    Winner: Winifred Phillips – Wizardry: Proving Grounds of the Mad Overlord

    Best song written for visual media

    Winner: Jon Batiste – It Never Went Away (From American Symphony)

    Best audiobook narration

    Winner: Jimmy Carter – Last Sunday in Plains: A Centennial Celebration

    Best music video

    Winner: Kendrick Lamar – Not Like Us

    Best music film

    Winner: American Symphony

    Best jazz vocal album

    Winner: Samara Joy – A Joyful Holiday

    Best jazz instrumental album

    Winner: Chick Corea & Béla Fleck – Remembrance

    Best alternative jazz album

    Winner: Meshell Ndegeocello – No More Water: The Gospel Of James Baldwin

    Best jazz performance

    Winner: Samara Joy feat. Sullivan Fortner – Twinkle Twinkle Little Me

    Best musical theatre album

    Winner: Hell’s Kitchen

    Best opera recording

    Winner: Saariaho: Adriana Mater – Esa-Pekka Salonen, conductor (San Francisco Symphony; San Francisco Symphony Chorus; Timo Kurkikangas)

    Best orchestral performance

    Winner: Ortiz: Revolución Diamantina – Gustavo Dudamel, conductor (Los Angeles Philharmonic)

  • Thousands flee homes as floods hit Australia

    Thousands flee homes as floods hit Australia

    A woman has died in Australia and thousands have been forced to flee their homes after torrential rainfall caused flooding in northern Queensland.

    Authorities say waters will continue to rise and have warned of a “dangerous and life-threatening” situation.

    More than 1,000mm (39in) of rain has fallen on parts of north-east Queensland since Friday with “record rainfalls” set to continue into Monday, according to Queensland State Premier David Crisafulli.

    Meteorologists say these could be the worst floods in the region in more than 60 years.

    Crisafulli said conditions were unlike anything northern Queensland had experienced “for a long time”.

    “It’s not just the intensity, but it’s also the longevity of it,” he told Australian broadcaster ABC.

    The woman who died was onboard a State Emergency Service (SES) dinghy which hit a tree and capsized in the town of Ingham, in north-west Queensland.

    It is understood she was a member of the public who was being rescued at the time, and was not an emergency worker. The other five people on board were able to get to safety. An investigation has been launched.

    Meanwhile, three people were rescued from the roof of a house in Cardwell, about halfway between Cairns and Townsville.

    Video has emerged showing a man clinging to a pole in Ingham after his vehicle was washed away – and being taken to safety by locals in a boat.

    The Townsville Local Disaster Management Group says that 1,700 homes in the city may be inundated – some up to the second floor – as river levels rise.

    Thousands of people across six Townsville suburbs were told to leave their homes by midday on Sunday, but officials say about 10% of residents had opted to stay.

    The same areas were severely hit during the 2019 flooding.

    Premier Crisafulli urged people to heed the warnings, saying: “In the end, houses and cars and furniture, that can all be replaced. Your family can’t”.

    Andrew Cox was among those who heeded the advice to leave. He told the BBC that police had visited his partner’s home on Saturday evening advising they may have to evacuate and had returned early on Sunday to reiterate the message.

    “Some of the neighbours said they’d been here during floods in 2019 and that it would be fine, but we didn’t want to take a chance, so we packed up,” he said.

    On Sunday night local time, a new evacuation centre was being opened – as others reached capacity.

    Parts of the road between Townsville and the tourist centre of Cairns have been cut off, hampering efforts to get rescue teams and sandbags to the worst-hit areas.

    Meanwhile, Townsville airport is closed until Monday morning, supermarkets have run out of fresh food, and thousands of homes are without power, including in Ingham and the Indigenous community of Palm Island.

    And there is a warning for locals to watch for crocodiles lurking in floodwaters away from their usual habitats.

    Sitting in the tropics, north Queensland is prone to destructive cyclones, storms and flooding.

    But climate scientists say that warmer oceans and a hotter planet create the conditions for more intense and frequent extreme rainfall events.

  • Canada imposes 25% tariffs in trade war with US

    Canada imposes 25% tariffs in trade war with US

    Canada has announced retaliatory tariffs against the US, in a move that marks the beginning of a trade war between the neighbouring countries.

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau set out “far-reaching” tariffs of 25%, affecting 155bn Canadian dollars’ worth ($106.6bn; £86bn) of American goods ranging from beer and wine to household appliances and sporting goods.

    The move matches US President Donald Trump’s 25% levy on Canadian and Mexican imports to the US – and an additional 10% on China – over his concerns about illegal immigration and drug trafficking.

    Trudeau said he would “not back down in standing up for Canadians”, but warned of real consequences for people on both sides of the border.

    “We don’t want to be here, we didn’t ask for this,” he said at a news conference late on Saturday.

    The Canadian prime minister added that tariffs on 30bn-worth US goods would come into force on Tuesday and another 125bn in 21 days to give Canadian firms time to adjust.

    Trudeau’s response targets items including American beer, wine, bourbon, fruits and fruit juices, vegetables, perfumes, clothing and shoes, as well as household appliances, sporting goods and furniture.

    Lumber and plastics will also face levies and non-tariff measures are also being considered are related to critical minerals and procurement.

    Economists have warned the introduction of import taxes by the US, and the response from Canada, as well as Mexico and China, could lead to prices rising on a wide range of products for consumers.

    A tariff is a domestic tax levied on goods as they enter a country, proportional to the value of the import.

    The prospect of higher tariffs being introduced on imports to the US has been concerning many world leaders because it will make it more expensive for companies to sell goods in the world’s largest economy.

    Christopher Sands, director of the Wilson Center’s Canada Institute, told the BBC that tit-for-tat tariffs between the US and Canada were “mutually assured destruction” and they would impact people’s lives very quickly.

    He said there would be no adjustment time as US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent had recently proposed: “Just a massive hit that’s going to make a lot of people’s lives a lot tougher, very quickly.”

    But the taxes are a central part of Trump’s economic vision. He sees them as a way of growing the US economy, protecting jobs and raising tax revenue – and in this case, pushing for policy action.

    Canada, Mexico and the US have deeply integrated economies, with an estimated $2bn (£1.6bn) worth of manufactured goods crossing the borders daily.

    Canada is America’s largest foreign supplier of crude oil. According to the most recent official trade figures, 61% of oil imported into the US between January and November last year came from Canada.

    While 25% has been slapped on Canadian goods imported to the US, its energy faces a lower 10% tariff.

    The White House said on Saturday the implementation of tariffs was “necessary to hold China, Mexico, and Canada accountable for their promises to halt the flood of poisonous drugs into the United States”.

    But Trudeau pushed back on the suggestion the shared border posed a security concern, saying less than 1% of fentanyl going into the US comes from Canada.

    He added less than 1% of illegal migrants entered the US through the border and that tariffs were “not the best way we can actually work together to save lives”

    Trump has indicated he is ready to escalate the duties further if the countries retaliate to his tariffs, as Canada has done.

    Prior to the tariffs announcement, Canada has pledged more than $1bn to boost security at its shared border with the US.

    Trudeau said on Saturday had not spoken to Trump since he had taken office.

    Mark Carney, the former head of Canada’s and England’s central banks, told BBC Newsnight on Friday that the tariffs would hit economic growth and drive up inflation.

    “They’re going to damage the US’s reputation around the world,” said Carney, who is also in the running to replace Trudeau as leader of Canada’s Liberal Party.

     

  • Prosecutors add two more women to Diddy case

    Prosecutors add two more women to Diddy case

    Prosecutors in New York have expanded their case against rapper Sean “Diddy” Combs, accusing him of coercing two additional women into commercial sex acts, and of dangling a person over an apartment balcony.

    Combs has been in jail since September after an initial indictment charged him with racketeering, sex trafficking by force, and transportation to engage in prostitution.

    On Thursday, the indictment was updated to add two more victims, although no new charges were added to the case.

    The musician, 55, has strenuously denied all the accusations against him, including the federal criminal case and more than 30 separate civil lawsuits.

    In response to the superseding indictment, his lawyer, Marc Agnifilo, said the prosecution’s case “remains flawed.

    “The government has added the ridiculous theory that two of Mr Combs’s former girlfriends were not girlfriends at all, but were prostitutes. Mr Combs is as committed as ever to fighting these charges and winning at trial.”

    The original indictment identified only one victim, named in court documents as “Victim-1”, whose accusations aligned closely to those of Cassandra Ventura – the singer who sued Combs for rape and sex trafficking in 2023.

    In the new filing, prosecutors allege that Combs “used force, threats of force, and coercion, to cause victims, including but not limited to three female victims” to engage in commercial sex acts.

    That alleged violence was vividly illustrated in a video of the musician kicking, dragging and throwing a vase at Ms Ventura at a Los Angeles hotel in 2016.

    In the new indictment, prosecutors claim that “Combs, with the assistance of several close associates, paid hotel security staff $100,000” (£80,000) for the footage.

    However, it was leaked to CNN last year. Combs later said he was “disgusted” by the footage and had sought “professional help” after the incident.

    Ms Ventura said the violence she had experienced “broke me down to someone I never thought I’d become”.

    New claims added

    The updated indictment signals that federal prosecutors are widening their case against Combs as his trial date in May approaches.

    A footnote to the document notes that their investigation is ongoing and that further updates will be filed “as promptly as possible” ahead of the trial.

    Amongst the new developments, prosecutors have moved the alleged start date of Combs’ sex trafficking offences back to 2004, four years earlier than previously stated.

    They have also expanded the list of narcotics the musician allegedly used to keep his victims “obedient and silent” – adding methamphetamine and psychedelic mushrooms to the previously cited cocaine, oxycodone and ketamine.

    The accusation that Combs dangled a woman from a balcony mirrors a claim made in a civil lawsuit filed by fashion designer Bryana “Bana” Bongolan last December.

    Prosecutors also added a claim that Combs had assaulted not just women but also “his employees, witnesses to his abuse and others”.

    The musician’s legal team has previously dismissed the charges against him as “baseless” and accused the government of conducting a “witch hunt.”

  • Harvey Weinstein asks for earlier trial, cites deteriorating health

    Harvey Weinstein asks for earlier trial, cites deteriorating health

    Harvey Weinstein has begged a court in New York to bring forward his retrial for sex crimes, citing his deteriorating health and conditions at the Rikers Island prison, which he called a “hell hole”.

    At a court hearing at Manhattan’s Criminal Court on Wednesday, Judge Curtis Faber scheduled the disgraced Hollywood producer’s trial for 15 April.

    Wearing a navy blue suit and in a wheelchair, Weinstein told the judge he might not live that long.

    “I can’t hold on anymore. I’m holding on because I want justice for myself and I want this to be over with,” he said.

    The 72-year-old has several medical conditions, including cancer and diabetes. In September, he was taken to hospital for heart surgery and has spent time in a secure hospital unit.

    In court, he said every day was a struggle because of his health and that he was in “a serious emergency situation”.

    His lawyers have previously complained that he is receiving substandard medical treatment in unhygienic conditions at the infamous facility, which officials plan to close.

    Weinstein told the judge that the situation at Rikers was “medieval” and remained a stain on the city. He said just that morning, a new nurse had given him the wrong pills, which he caught at the last second.

    Judge Faber said he was empathetic but had another murder trial before his.

    “I’m begging the court to move your date so we can have that date instead and proceed with this trial as quickly as we can and get out of this hell hole,” Weinstein told him.

    The judge agreed to consider moving the trial up by a week.

    Weinstein’s landmark 2020 rape conviction was overturned by the New York court of appeals. It found he did not get a fair trial because women who were allegedly abused by Weinstein were allowed to testify against him despite not being a part of the charges.

    It was a major blow to the #MeToo movement, which launched after the bombshell allegations against the Oscar-winning producer in 2017.

    The once untouchable Hollywood heavyweight is being retried on charges that he raped an aspiring actor Jessica Mann in 2013 and forcibly performed oral sex on production assistant Mimi Haley in 2006.

    At the same time, he also faces a new sexual assault charge for allegedly forcing oral sex on a different woman at a Manhattan hotel in 2006. He denies any wrongdoing.

    Judge Faber denied Weinstein’s bid to have the new charge dismissed.

    Weinstein remains in custody because of a separate conviction for rape in California for which he was sentenced to 16 years in prison.

  • Israel confirms it killed Hamas leader Haniyeh in Tehran

    Israel confirms it killed Hamas leader Haniyeh in Tehran

    Israel’s defence minister has for the first time acknowledged that Israel killed Hamas’s political leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran in July.

    Israel Katz made the comments in a speech vowing to target the heads of the Iran-backed Houthi movement in Yemen, which has been firing missiles and drones at Israel

    Haniyeh was killed in a building where he was staying in the Iranian capital in an attack widely attributed to Israel.

    Separately, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said some progress had been made towards agreeing a ceasefire in Gaza with Hamas, but he could not give a timeline for when a deal would be reached.

    It comes after a senior Palestinian official told the BBC that talks between Hamas and Israel were 90% complete, but key issues remained.

    In his speech, Katz said Israel would “strike hard” at the Houthis and “decapitate” its leadership.

    “Just as we did with Haniyeh, [Yahya] Sinwar, and [Hassan] Nasrallah in Tehran, Gaza, and Lebanon, we will do so in Hodeida and Sanaa,” he said, referring to Hezbollah and Hamas leaders who have all been killed this year.

    Haniyeh, 62, was widely considered Hamas’s overall leader and played a key role in negotiations aimed at reaching a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip.

    After his assassination, Hamas named Yahya Sinwar, its leader in Gaza and one of the chief architects of the 7 October attacks, as the group’s overall leader.

    Sinwar was killed by the Israeli military in a chance encounter in Gaza in October and the group is still in the process of choosing a new leader.

    Hassan Nasrallah meanwhile was the leader of the Iran-backed Lebanese group Hezbollah – he was assassinated in Beirut in September as Israel dramatically escalated its military campaign against Hezbollah, with which it had been trading near daily cross-border fire since the day after the 7 October attacks

    The Houthis, an Iran-backed rebel group that controls north-western Yemen, began attacking Israeli and international ships in the Red Sea shortly after Israel began targeting Hamas in Gaza last October.

    The group has vowed to continue until the war in Gaza ends.

    On Saturday, Israel’s military said its attempts to shoot down a projectile launched from Yemen were unsuccessful and the missile struck a park in Tel Aviv. A Houthi spokesman said the group hit a military target using a hypersonic ballistic missile.

    Last week Israel launched strikes against what it said were Houthi military targets, hitting ports as well as energy infrastructure in the Yemeni capital Sanaa. The US and UK have also attacked Houthi targets as part of an operation to protect international shipping.

    Hamas attacked Israel in October last year, killing about 1,200 people and taking 251 people hostage.

    In response, Israel launched a military campaign to destroy Hamas in Gaza which has continued for more than a year and has killed 45,317 people according to the Hamas-run health ministry in the Strip.

    That figure includes 58 people killed by Israeli attacks over the past 24 hours, Hamas officials said. Local medical officials said that at least 11 people were killed in three separate strikes on the al-Mawasi area, which had been designated a “safe zone” by the Israeli military. Israel said it was targeting a Hamas fighter.

    On Monday Israel said three of its soldiers had been killed in the northern Gaza Strip.

  • ‘Empire’ actor conviction overturned by Supreme court

    ‘Empire’ actor conviction overturned by Supreme court

    The Illinois Supreme Court has overturned a conviction against actor Jussie Smollett, who prosecutors accused of staging a racist and homophobic attack against himself in 2019 in Chicago.

    Smollett, who is black and gay, was convicted of five counts of disorderly conduct in 2021.

    He had claimed two men targeted him in a hate-crime, yelling racial slurs and putting a noose around his neck while he was walking down the street near his apartment.

    Two men testified that the Empire television show star paid them $3,500 (KSh. 456.1 K) to stage the attack.

    Smollett was sentenced to 150 days in jail, but served only six days before he was freed pending appeal.

    The state Supreme Court sided with Smollett’s attorneys, who argued in their appeal that Smollett should not have been charged by a special prosecutor after the Cook County State Attorney’s Office dropped charges in exchange for community service.

    The decision sparked an uproar from many, including Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel said who said Smollett was “let off scot-free, with no sense of accountability for the moral and ethical wrong of his actions”.

    A grand jury later re-established the charges after a special prosecutor took on the case.

    “We are aware that this case has generated significant public interest and that many people were dissatisfied with the resolution of the original case and believed it to be unjust,” the state Supreme Court wrote in its opinion on Thursday.

    “Nevertheless, what would be more unjust than the resolution of any one criminal case would be a holding from this court that the State was not bound to honor agreements upon which people have detrimentally relied.”

    During Smollett’s trial, prosecutors alleged he staged the attack because he was unhappy with a television studio’s response to hate mail he received.

    Smollett said the attack was “no hoax” and that he was the victim of a hate crime in Chicago.

    But the two men he accused of perpetrating the crime – two brothers, one of whom Smollett said he met through the Empire show – said Smollett hired them and paid them with a cheque.