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US issues sanctions against UN official investigating abuses in Gaza

US issues sanctions against UN official investigating abuses in Gaza

The Guardian2 days ago
The Trump administration announced on Wednesday it was issuing sanctions against an independent official tasked with investigating human rights abuses in the Palestinian territories, the latest effort by the United States to punish critics of Israel's 21-month war in Gaza.
The state department's decision to sanction Francesca Albanese, the UN special rapporteur for the West Bank and Gaza, comes after a recent US pressure campaign to force the international body to remove her from her post failed.
Albanese, a human rights lawyer, has been vocal about what she has described as the 'genocide' that Israel is waging against Palestinians in Gaza. Both Israel and the US, which provides military support, have strongly denied that accusation.
In recent weeks, Albanese has issued a series of letters, urging other countries to pressure Israel, including through sanctions, to end its deadly bombardment of the Gaza Strip. The Italian national has also been a strong supporter of the international criminal court's indictment of Israeli officials, including the prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, for war crimes. She most recently issued a report naming several US giants among companies aiding what she described as Israel's occupation and war on Gaza.
'Albanese's campaign of political and economic warfare against the United States and Israel will no longer be tolerated,' the secretary of state, Marco Rubio, posted on social media. 'We will always stand by our partners in their right to self-defense.'
Albanese has been the target of criticism from pro-Israel officials and groups in the US and in the Middle East. Last week, the US mission to the UN issued a scathing statement, calling for her removal for 'a years-long pattern of virulent anti-Semitism and unrelenting anti-Israel bias'.
The statement said that Albanese's allegations of Israel committing genocide or apartheid are 'false and offensive'.
It is all a culmination of an extraordinary and sprawling campaign of nearly six months by the Trump administration to quell criticism of Israel's handling of the deadly war in Gaza, which is closing in on two years. Earlier this year, the Trump administration began arresting and deporting faculty and students of American universities who participated in pro-Palestinian demonstrations and other political activities.
The war between Israel and Hamas began on 7 October 2023, when Hamas-led militants stormed into Israel and killed nearly 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and took 251 people captive. Israel's retaliatory campaign has killed more than 57,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza's health ministry, which says women and children make up most of the dead but does not specify how many were fighters or civilians.
Nearly 21 months into the conflict that displaced the vast majority of Gaza's 2.3 million people, it is nearly impossible for the critically wounded to get the care they need, doctors and aid workers say.
'We must stop this genocide, whose short-term goal is completing the ethnic cleansing of Palestine, while also profiteering from the killing machine devised to perform it,' Albanese said in a recent post on X. 'No one is safe until everyone is safe.'
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Tucker Carlson makes bombshell allegations about Jeffrey Epstein as MAGA civil war rages over 'client list'
Tucker Carlson makes bombshell allegations about Jeffrey Epstein as MAGA civil war rages over 'client list'

Daily Mail​

time27 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Tucker Carlson makes bombshell allegations about Jeffrey Epstein as MAGA civil war rages over 'client list'

Tucker Carlson claimed Jeffrey Epstein was an Israeli agent who blackmailed US politicians on Friday while addressing a political gathering for young voters in Florida. The former Fox News host issued his wild conspiracy theory about Epstein as MAGA implodes over the Trump administration's handling billionaire's so-called 'client list.' 'The real question is, why was he doing this, on whose behalf, and where did the money come from?' the 56-year-old Republican firebrand asked. 'And those are the questions that need to be answered. And I think it's entirely fair to ask them.' While addressing the ring-wing crowd, Tucker brought up the Department of Justice (DOJ) recently declaring Epstein's 'client list' never existed. Attorney General Pam Bondi has come under fire for the call she made earlier this week, when she also squashed speculation that Epstein's 2019 jail cell death was anything other than a suicide. Carlson denounced the DOJ's findings, going on to share his own theory about Epstein's sinister scheme. He explained that he believes Epstein, 66, was employed by Israel's intelligence service, Mossad. Carlson questioned where all of the billionaire's wealth came from, going from a math teacher to 'having multiple airplanes, a private island, and the largest residential house in Manhattan.' 'And no one has ever gotten to the bottom of that because no one has ever tried. And moreover, it's extremely obvious to anyone who watches, that this guy had direct connections to a foreign government,' he claimed. He said the reason Epstein's connection to the Middle Eastern nation is not discussed publicly was because 'we have been somehow cowed into thinking that's naughty.' 'There is nothing wrong with saying that. There is nothing hateful about saying that. There's nothing anti-Semitic about saying that. There's nothing even anti-Israel about saying that,' Tucker asserted. 'And the effect of making that off-limits has been to create a lot of resentment and I'll say it, hate online, where people feel like they can't just say, 'What the hell is this? You have the former Israeli prime minister living in your house?"' Carlson was likely referring to Epstein's close ties with the former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak. Barak met with him dozens of times - and even allegedly stayed over at Epstein's place - starting in 2013. 'You have all this contact with a foreign government. Were you working on behalf of them? Were you running a blackmail operation on behalf of a foreign government?' he asked the stunned listeners. Carlson also claimed that 'every single person in Washington DC' shares his sentiment, and none of them 'hate Israel.' On Tuesday, Carlson discussed this very topic on his podcast, claiming Bondi was orchestrating a cover-up in order to protect members of the intelligence community who were ensnared in Epstein's conduct. 'The current DOJ under Pam Bondi is covering up crimes, very serious crimes by their own description,' Carlson said. 'Intel services are at the very center of this story, US and Israeli and they're being protected.' Carlson was not the only one to bring up the controversial issue at the summit full of thousands of young conservatives on Friday night. Fox News Host Laura Ingraham also took the Turning Point stage - taking an audience poll of who is satisfied with how the Epstein investigation was handled. 'How many of you are satisfied – you can clap – satisfied with the results of the Epstein investigation? Clap,' she urged the crowd. Not a single clap could be heard. Instead, the room echoed with boos. 'How many of you are not satisfied with the results of the investigation?' she asked, this time hit with a wave of clapping and applause from passionate listeners. The Turning Point event kicked off Friday and will run through the weekend, with high-profile conservatives including President Donald Trump scheduled for appearances. Despite fury directed at the Trump administration - which many believed would deliver more transparency regarding Epstein's convoluted case - the president has backed Bondi amid calls for her to step down. Far-right activist and media personality Laura Loomer helped lead the calls on X for Bondi's resignation on Monday While many have also criticized FBI Director Kash Patel and Deputy FBI Director Dan Bongino, Bondi has faced the brunt of the backlash. Far-right internet personality Laura Loomer, for example, has been especially vocal about booting Bondi. 'Please join me in calling for Blondi to RESIGN!' Loomer posted to X, using her nickname for the blonde-haired AG. 'How many more times is this woman going to get away with Fing (sic) everything up before she is FIRED?' she added in the Monday evening post. But White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt reaffirmed Trump's continued support for Bondi despite calls to resign. 'President Trump is proud of Attorney General Bondi's efforts to execute his Make America Safe Again agenda,' Levitt told the Daily Mail.

Trump's political guru Steve Bannon gives devastating take on fallout of Epstein debacle
Trump's political guru Steve Bannon gives devastating take on fallout of Epstein debacle

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Trump's political guru Steve Bannon gives devastating take on fallout of Epstein debacle

Steve Bannon issued a blistering warning that fallout over the handling of the Jeffrey Epstein files could rip the Republican coalition apart and cost the GOP 'up to 40 seats' in the midterm elections. Bannon, the architect of Donald Trump 's 2016 victory, declared in fiery live broadcast on Friday that unless Trump takes swift action the political cost could be catastrophic. 'If we lose 10 percent of the MAGA movement right now, we're gonna lose 40 seats in '26. We're gonna lose the president,' Bannon thundered to a packed audience. 'They don't even have to steal it, which they're gonna try to do in '28.' The longtime political guru of the MAGA movement addressed conspiracy theories that Epstein was behind an elite cabal of child rapists. 'It's not about just a pedophile ring and all that. It's about who governs us, right? And that's why it's not gonna go away,' Bannon said. 'They've disheartened the hardest core populist nation that's always been who governs us.' At the heart of the firestorm is the Justice Department's abrupt decision to close the book on the Epstein investigation - denying the existence of the long-rumored 'client list,' reaffirming that Epstein died by suicide, and refusing to release further records. The memo, jointly released by the DOJ and FBI, stated that further disclosures were neither appropriate nor warranted. But what was intended as a final word has instead detonated a whole new round of conspiracy theories on the right. Attorney General Pam Bondi, once a darling of the movement, had assured Fox News viewers that a list of Epstein's clients was 'on her desk' but the DOJ now says no such document exists Influential MAGA figures, already furious over Attorney General Pam Bondi's failure to deliver the promised bombshells, erupted. Alex Jones sarcastically tweeted that the DOJ would next claim 'Actually, Jeffrey Epstein never even existed.' 'This is over the top sickening,' Jones added. Bondi, once a darling of the movement, had assured Fox News viewers that a list of Epstein's clients was 'on her desk' but the DOJ now says no such document ever existed. Far-right influencer Laura Loomer, close to Trump himself, didn't hold back. 'President Trump should fire Bondi for lying to his base and creating a liability for his administration. She is an embarrassment and she doesn't do anything to help Trump,' Loomer wrote on X. Meanwhile, Dan Bongino, Trump's deputy FBI director and himself a key player in cultivating MAGA loyalty, reportedly considered resigning after a heated clash with Bondi at the White House. Sources say Bongino was 'furious' over how the Epstein memo was handled and skipped work on Friday to contemplate his future. In an attempt to rally the base and refocus their fury, Bannon called for the immediate appointment of a special prosecutor to investigate Epstein's clients and possible blackmail operations. 'There's only one solution,' Bannon insisted. 'You must appoint a special prosecutor immediately. DOJ and FBI, love those guys, but they can't do it. No possibility. They're too busy. Too conflicted.' His call was echoed by conspiracy theorist Jack Posobiec, who demanded action in front of a roaring crowd. But despite the fiery rhetoric, the administration appears to be circling the wagons. President Trump leapt to Bondi's defense in a Cabinet meeting Tuesday, scolding a reporter who dared raise the Epstein issue. 'Are you still talking about Jeffrey Epstein? This guy's been talked about for years. That is unbelievable.' Behind closed doors, however, tensions are boiling. A private clash earlier in the week between Bondi and Bongino sparked by a NewsNation report suggesting DOJ obstruction nearly broke into the open. FBI Director Kash Patel, Deputy AG Todd Blanche, and even Bongino were all forced to issue public statements denying divisions within the administration. The Epstein memo marked a stunning reversal from earlier promises. In February, MAGA influencers were invited to the White House and handed binders labeled 'The Epstein Files: Phase 1 – Declassified.' But the files were mostly rehashed public documents. Bondi promised that a 'truckload' of unreleased evidence was coming but that release never happened. Instead, on Monday the DOJ said that court orders sealed most of the remaining materials, and much of it would never have been made public even if Epstein had stood trial. The only disclosure accompanying the memo was a video intended to prove Epstein's jailhouse suicide. Yet even that drew fire from skeptics due to a mysterious one-minute gap in the footage. Complicating matters, tech mogul Elon Musk, once a close Trump confidant, is now hammering the president from the outside. Having announced plans to launch his own political party, Musk took to X to stoke Epstein suspicions. 'How can people be expected to have faith in Trump if he won't release the Epstein files?' Musk asked. Musk has hinted that Trump may have been named in redacted documents, further fueling speculation and deepening the fissure within the right. The Epstein backlash comes amid a series of fractures inside Trump's base. MAGA hardliners are already fuming over Trump's decision to resume arms shipments to Ukraine, his bombing of Iranian nuclear sites, and his recent comments urging restraint on immigration raids at farms.

DOGE sprouts in red states, as governors embrace the cost-cutter brand and make it their own
DOGE sprouts in red states, as governors embrace the cost-cutter brand and make it their own

The Independent

timean hour ago

  • The Independent

DOGE sprouts in red states, as governors embrace the cost-cutter brand and make it their own

The brash and chaotic first days of President Donald Trump 's Department of Government Efficiency, once led by the world's richest man Elon Musk, spawned state-level DOGE mimicry as Republican governors and lawmakers aim to show they are in step with their party's leader. Governors have always made political hay out of slashing waste or taming bureaucracy, but DOGE has, in some ways, raised the stakes for them to show that they are zealously committed to cutting costs. Many drive home the point that they have always been focused on cutting government, even if they're not conducting mass layoffs. 'I like to say we were doing DOGE before DOGE was a thing,' Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds said in announcing her own task force in January. Critics agree that some of these initiatives are nothing new and suggest they are wasteful, essentially duplicating built-in processes that are normally the domain of legislative committees or independent state auditors. At the same time, some governors are using their DOGE vehicles to take aim at GOP targets of the moment, such as welfare programs or diversity, equity and inclusion programs. And some governors who might be eyeing a White House run in 2028 are rebranding their cost-cutting initiatives as DOGE, perhaps eager to claim the mantle of the most DOGE of them all. No chainsaws in the states At least 26 states have initiated DOGE-style efforts of varying kinds, according to the Economic Policy Institute based in Washington, D.C. Most DOGE efforts were carried out through a governor's order — including by governors in Florida, Iowa, Louisiana, Montana, New Hampshire and Oklahoma — or by lawmakers introducing legislation or creating a legislative committee. The state initiatives have a markedly different character than Trump's slash-and-burn approach, symbolized by Musk's chainsaw-brandishing appearance at a Conservative Political Action Committee appearance in February. Governors are tending to entrust their DOGE bureaus to loyalists, rather than independent auditors, and are often employing what could be yearslong processes to consolidate procurement, modernize information technology systems, introduce AI tools, repeal regulations or reduce car fleets, office leases or worker headcounts through attrition. Steve Slivinski, a senior fellow at the libertarian Cato Institute who researches state government regulatory structures, said that a lot of what he has seen from state-level DOGE initiatives are the 'same stuff you do on a pretty regular basis anyway' in state governments. States typically have routine auditing procedures and the ways states have of saving money are 'relatively unsexy," Slivinski said. And while the state-level DOGE vehicles might be useful over time in finding marginal improvements, "branding it DOGE is more of a press op rather than anything new or substantially different than what they usually do,' Slivinski said. Analysts at the pro-labor Economic Policy Institute say that governors and lawmakers, primarily in the South and Midwest, are using DOGE to breathe new life into long-term agendas to consolidate power away from state agencies and civil servants, dismantle public services and benefit insiders and privatization advocates. 'It's not actually about cutting costs because of some fiscal responsibility,' EPI analyst Nina Mast said. Governors promoting spending cuts Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry rebranded his 'Fiscal Responsibility Program' as Louisiana DOGE, and promoted it as the first to team up with the federal government to scrub illegitimate enrollees from welfare programs. It has already netted $70 million in savings in the Medicaid program in an 'unprecedented' coordination, Landry said in June. In Oklahoma, Gov. Kevin Stitt — who says in a blurb on the Oklahoma DOGE website that 'I've been DOGE-ing in Oklahoma since before it was cool" — made a DOGE splash with the first report by his Division of Government Efficiency by declaring that the state would refuse some $157 million in federal public health grants. The biggest chunk of that was $132 million intended to support epidemiology and laboratory capacity to control infectious disease outbreaks. The Stitt administration said that funding — about one-third of the total over an eight-year period — exceeded the amount needed. The left-leaning Oklahoma Policy Institute questioned the wisdom of that, pointing to rising numbers of measles and whooping cough cases and the rocky transition under Stitt of the state's public health lab from Oklahoma City to Stillwater. Oklahoma Democrats issued rebukes, citing Oklahoma's lousy public health rankings. 'This isn't leadership,' state Sen. Carri Hicks said. 'It's negligence." Stitt's Oklahoma DOGE has otherwise recommended changes in federal law to save money, opened up the suggestion box to state employees and members of the general public and posted a spreadsheet online with cost savings initiatives in his administration. Those include things as mundane as agencies going paperless, refinancing bonds, buying automated lawn mowers for the Capitol grounds or eliminating a fax machine line in the State Board of Licensure for Professional Engineers and Surveyors. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed an executive order in February creating a task force of DOGE teams in each state agency. In the order, DeSantis recited 10 points on what he described as his and Florida's 'history of prudent fiscal management' even before DOGE. Among other things, DeSantis vowed to scrutinize spending by state universities and municipal and county governments — including on DEI initiatives — at a time when DeSantis is pushing to abolish the property taxes that predominantly fund local governments. His administration has since issued letters to universities and governments requesting reams of information and received a blessing from lawmakers, who passed legislation authorizing the inquiry and imposing fines for entities that don't respond. After the June 30 signing ceremony, DeSantis declared on social media: 'We now have full authority to DOGE local governments.' In Arkansas, Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders launched her cost-cutting Arkansas Forward last year, before DOGE, and later said the state had done the 'same thing' as DOGE. Her administration spent much of 2024 compiling a 97-page report that listed hundreds of ways to possibly save $300 million inside a $6.5 billion budget. Achieving that savings — largely by standardizing information technology and purchasing — would sometimes require up-front spending and take years to realize savings. ___

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