Man arrested after ‘Molotov’-like bombs tossed at Japan ruling party HQ

Police officers remove a vehicle which crashed into a barricade outside the prime minister's official residence in central Tokyo on October 19, 2024, after a man threw Molotov cocktail-like objects outside the ruling party's headquarters building, hit a riot police vehicle, and then later drove into the barricade. (AFP)
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Updated 19 October 2024
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Man arrested after ‘Molotov’-like bombs tossed at Japan ruling party HQ

TOKYO: A man was arrested after throwing several suspected petrol bombs at the headquarters of Japan’s ruling party Saturday and ramming his car into a fence outside the prime minister’s office, police said.
No injuries were reported in the incident, which comes just over a week before a general election in which new Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba hopes to shore up his mandate.
A Tokyo police spokeswoman said a 49-year-old man from Saitama, north of the Japanese capital, was “arrested on the spot on suspicion of obstructing public duties.”
At around sunrise on Saturday, “he approached the headquarters of the Liberal Democratic Party in a vehicle, got out and threw what appeared to be Molotov cocktails,” the spokeswoman told AFP.
“He also drove into the road in front of the prime minister’s office, crashing into a fence to prevent vehicles from entering, and then threw what appeared to be a smoke bomb toward police officers after getting out of the car,” she added.
Public broadcaster NHK said the five or six Molotov cocktail-like objects hit a riot police vehicle, but the fire was soon extinguished and no one was injured.
Several plastic tanks usually used to carry liquids were found in the man’s small white car, according to the Asahi Shimbun daily and other media outlets.
The prime minister’s office is located about 15 minutes’ walk from the LDP headquarters in central Tokyo.
Images from the aftermath of the incident showed a dark blue riot police van whose front section was partly burned away, as firefighters and police officers gathered at the scene.
“Democracy must never succumb to violence,” LDP head Ishiba said while campaigning in southern Kagoshima region, according to local media reports.
“This happened during the election campaign, but we will do everything to ensure that elections and democracy are not destroyed by violence,” the prime minister said.
Japan will hold a general election on October 27 in a test for Ishiba, who took office after winning the LDP’s leadership vote last month.
Violent crime is rare in Japan, which has strict gun control laws.
But the country was shaken in 2022 by the assassination of former prime minister Shinzo Abe, who was shot in broad daylight on the campaign trail by a man with a makeshift gun.
Ishiba’s predecessor Fumio Kishida was also targeted in 2023 by a man who threw an apparent homemade pipe bomb toward the then-premier, who was unharmed in the incident.
The conservative LDP has been in power for most of Japan’s post-war history, albeit with frequent leadership changes.
Low voter turnout and a divided opposition mean the party and its junior coalition partner are likely to win this month’s election, although the size of their majority could shrink.
The policies of former defense minister and confessed security policy “geek” Ishiba, 67, include plans to “re-create” aging Japan by revitalising depopulated rural areas.


Boat carrying more than 100 Rohingya sighted off Indonesia: officials

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Boat carrying more than 100 Rohingya sighted off Indonesia: officials

  • Thousands risk their lives each year on long and dangerous sea journeys to try to reach Malaysia or Indonesia
  • The Rohingya boat is anchored around five to six kilometers off the coast of South Aceh district with its engine turned off
BANDA ACEH, Indonesia: A boat loaded with more than 100 Rohingya refugees was spotted off Indonesia’s westernmost province with at least one dead body seen on board, local officials said Saturday.
The mostly Muslim ethnic Rohingya are heavily persecuted in Myanmar, and thousands risk their lives each year on long and dangerous sea journeys to try to reach Malaysia or Indonesia.
The Rohingya boat is anchored around three to four miles (five to six kilometers) off the coast of South Aceh district with its engine turned off, community leader Muhammad Jabal said.
He said the boat was first seen on Friday when he and others set off to deliver food and water to the refugees, estimating more than a hundred were on board.
“I saw with my own eyes there was a body. There were many children too aboard the boat,” Jabal said.
The day before the sighting of the boat, the body of a Rohingya woman was found at sea.
Local police chief Sabda Man Sobri confirmed she was a member of the ethnic group, but could not comment on whether she was connected to the boat.
Yuhelmi, a South Aceh district spokesperson, confirmed the boat sighting but said locals were waiting for an immigration team from provincial capital Banda Aceh to arrive before deciding the next step for the refugees.
“Whether (the refugees) will be brought on land, that’s within the authority of the immigration. For now, there has been no decision,” said Yuhelmi, who goes by one name.
The United Nations refugee agency (UNHCR) said it had been informed by local authorities about the vessel and hoped the refugees would be rescued immediately.
Many Acehnese are sympathetic to the plight of the Rohingya but some locals have opposed their arrivals, accusing members of anti-social behavior.
In December 2023, hundreds of students forced the relocation of more than a hundred Rohingya refugees, storming a function hall in Aceh where they were sheltering and kicking their belongings.

North Korea says it recovered crashed South Korean military drone, KCNA says

Updated 24 min 2 sec ago
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North Korea says it recovered crashed South Korean military drone, KCNA says

  • South Korea declines to say if such drones were flown, and whether they were flown by its military or civilians
  • ‘It is quite likely that the drone is the one which scattered leaflets over the center of Pyongyang Municipality’

SEOUL: North Korea said on Saturday it had discovered the remains of a crashed South Korean military drone, suggesting it was on a propaganda mission in the latest confrontation between the two involving cross-border flying objects.
“In light of the drone’s shape, the presumptive period of flight, the leaflet-scattering box fixed to the underpart of the drone’s fuselage, etc, it is quite likely that the drone is the one which scattered leaflets over the center of Pyongyang Municipality. But the conclusion has not yet been drawn,” said state news agency KCNA.
South Korea’s government has declined to say if such drones were flown, and if they were, whether they were flown by its military or civilians. It said to comment on the North’s claim would be to get drawn into a ploy.
“If a violation of the DPRK’s territorial ground, air and waters by ROK’s military means is discovered and confirmed again, it will be regarded as a grave military provocation against the sovereignty of the DPRK and a declaration of war and an immediate retaliatory attack will be launched,” KCNA said.
DPRK is short for the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, North Korea’s official name, and ROK stands for Republic of Korea, the South’s formal name.
“North Korea’s one-sided claims are not worth verifying, nor do they merit a response,” South Korea’s defense ministry said in a statement.
South Korean lawmaker Yu Yong-weon said the drones in North Korea’s photos are “very similar” to surveillance drones made by South Korean company Sungwoo Engineering and supplied to the South Korean military in 2023.
Sungwoo says on its website it has supplied 100 of its S-Bat drones — which have a maximum flying time of four hours and a top speed of 140kph (88 mph) — to the South Korean military.
Yu said South Korea’s drone command ordered the aerial vehicles last year after a North Korean drone entered a no-fly zone surrounding South Korea’s presidential office.
Tensions between the Koreas have escalated since the North began flying balloons carrying trash across the border to the South in late May, with Seoul responding by restarting loudspeaker propaganda broadcasts, which anger Pyongyang.
North Korea has intensified its hostile rhetoric in recent days, accusing the South’s military of flying drones over its capital on three days this month and threatening “a horrible disaster” if it detects another drone over its skies.


China’s Xi urges missile troops to boost deterrence, combat capabilities

Updated 42 min 24 sec ago
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China’s Xi urges missile troops to boost deterrence, combat capabilities

  • Last month China conducted a rare launch of an intercontinental ballistic missile into the Pacific Ocean
  • China’s military has undergone a sweeping anti-corruption purge since last year

BEIJING: Chinese state media reported on Saturday that President Xi Jinping on Thursday inspected a brigade of the People’s Liberation Army’s Rocket Force, urging the troops to boost their “deterrence and combat capabilities.”
During the inspection Xi also urged the strategic missile troops to “resolutely fulfil the tasks entrusted by the Party and the people,” state news agency Xinhua said.
The PLA Rocket Force, which oversees the country’s conventional and nuclear missiles, has been tasked with modernizing China’s nuclear forces in the face of developments such as improved US missile defenses, better surveillance capabilities and strengthened alliances.
During the inspection, Xi stressed the need to “adhere to political guidance, strengthen mission responsibility,” and “promote high-quality development of the force construction,” according to Chinese media outlet Cailianshe.
Last month China conducted a rare launch of an intercontinental ballistic missile into the Pacific Ocean, underscoring growing international focus on the country’s nuclear build-up.
China’s military has undergone a sweeping anti-corruption purge since last year, with several generals, including from the Rocket Force, and aerospace defense industry executives removed from the national legislative body.
In June, Xi said there were “deep-seated problems” in the Chinese military’s politics, ideology, work style and discipline, adding “there must be no hiding place for corrupt elements in the army.”


G7 defense summit convenes during ‘historic moment’

Updated 19 October 2024
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G7 defense summit convenes during ‘historic moment’

  • Italian Defense Minister Guido Crosetto welcomed each of the attendees, who also included NATO chief Mark Rutte

Naples: G7 defense ministers started talks on Saturday against a backdrop of escalation in the Middle East and mounting pressure on Ukraine as it faces another winter of fighting.
Italy, holding the rotating presidency of the Group of Seven countries, organized the body’s first ministerial meeting dedicated to defense, staged in Naples, the southern city that is also home to a NATO base.
Italian Defense Minister Guido Crosetto welcomed each of the attendees, who also included NATO chief Mark Rutte.
“I believe that our presence today... sends a strong message to those who try to hinder our democratic systems,” Crosetto told ministers as he opened the event.
Crosetto said on Friday in Brussels he had requested the summit, given the many conflicts facing the international community.
“Ample space” would be given to discussing the escalating Middle East conflict during the one-day summit, Crosetto said.
Also on the agenda is the war in Ukraine, development and security in Africa and situation in the Asia-Pacific.
The meeting comes two days after Israel announced it had killed Hamas chief Yahya Sinwar, mastermind of the October 7, 2023 attacks on Israel that triggered the devastating retaliatory war in Gaza.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Sinwar’s death in the Palestinian territory signalled “the beginning of the end” of the war against Hamas, while US President Joe Biden saying it opened the door to “a path to peace.”
Italy’s prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, was in Lebanon on Friday, where Israel is also at war with Hamas ally Hezbollah.
Speaking in Beirut, Meloni slammed attacks on UN peacekeepers in Lebanon as “unacceptable” after the UN force accused Israel of targeting their positions.
Italy has around 1,000 troops in the UN peacekeeping force in Lebanon, which has soldiers from more than 50 countries.
On Ukraine, the ministers will contemplate Kyiv entering a third winter at war, battlefield losses in the east — and the prospect of reduced US military support should Donald Trump be elected to the White House next month.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, under mounting pressure from Western allies to forge a winning strategy against Russia, on Thursday presented what he called a “victory plan” to the European Union and NATO.
Its main thrust is a call for immediate NATO membership, deemed unfeasible by alliance members.
It also demands the ability to strike military targets inside Russia with long-range weapons, and an undefined “non-nuclear strategic deterrence package” on Ukrainian territory.
Under discussion will also likely be reports, based on South Korean intelligence, that North Korea is deploying large numbers of troops to support Moscow’s war against Ukraine.
NATO was not as yet able to confirm that intelligence, Rutte said on Friday.
Saturday’s summit was to conclude with a press conference at 4:00 pm.


Scholz in Turkiye to discuss Mideast crisis, migrants

Updated 19 October 2024
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Scholz in Turkiye to discuss Mideast crisis, migrants

ISTANBUL: German Chancellor Olaf Scholz was due to meet Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Saturday to discuss the escalating Middle East crisis and migration.
Scholz arrived in Istanbul on Friday night after a meeting with US President Joe Biden and the leaders of France and Britain in Berlin.
The West is hoping that the killing of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar by Israel will lead to a ceasefire in Gaza after a year of conflict.
A fierce critic of Israel’s Gaza campaign, Erdogan has often criticized Western capitals for supporting Israel which he brands a “terror state.”
Berlin is a strong supporter of Israel and has defended its right to self-defense.
Scholz on Friday said he hoped Sinwar’s death would pave the way for a ceasefire. Sinwar was considered the architect of the October 7, 2023, attack on Israel which sparked the Gaza conflict.
Erdogan has forged close ties with the Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas.
His foreign minister Hakan Fidan on Friday held talks with Hamas officials in Istanbul and offered “condolences” over Sinwar’s death.
They also discussed “the state of recent negotiations for a ceasefire deal allowing the exchange of hostages and prisoners,” Fidan’s ministry said.
Turkiye’s relations with Germany — home to Europe’s largest Turkish diaspora of some three million people — are sensitive. Berlin has voiced concerns over the state of human rights and democracy under Erdogan especially after a failed 2016 coup.
Migration is expected to figure high on the agenda of the talks between Scholz and Erdogan.
Scholz’s government has been under heightened pressure over the issue after a series of violent crimes and extremist attacks committed by asylum seekers.
Turkiye will also expect progress on its plans to buy 40 Eurofighter Typhoons which are built by a four-nation consortium including Germany.
Scholz last visited Turkiye in March 2022 a few months after taking office.