Foreign
UK PM Sunak Sacks Interior Minister Suella Braverman
UK PM Sunak Sacks Interior Minister Suella Braverman
The British Prime Minister, Rishi Sunak, sacked his interior minister, Suella Braverman, on Monday, after her criticism of the Police’s handling of a pro-Palestinian march divided his party and threatened his own authority.
Under fire from opposition lawmakers and members of the governing Conservative Party to eject Braverman, Sunak seemed to have brought forward a long-planned reshuffle to bring in allies and remove ministers he felt were not performing.
The controversial Braverman defied Sunak last week in an unauthorised article accusing Police of “double standards” at protests, suggesting they were tough on right-wing demonstrators but easy on pro-Palestinian marchers.
The opposition Labour Party said the development inflamed frictions between a pro-Palestinian demonstration and a far-right counter-protest on Saturday when nearly 150 people were arrested.
“Rishi Sunak has asked Suella Braverman to leave government and she has accepted,” a government source said.
She was replaced by foreign minister James Cleverly, who was seen walking up to Sunak’s Downing Street office on Monday.
In what would be a surprise move, the Telegraph reported that former Prime Minister David Cameron was being made foreign minister.
Braverman’s removal will anger some Conservatives on the right of the party, who believe her criticism of the police was justified, and Sunak may try to keep them on board by suggesting that it was her language, not her points that were wrong.
The move comes just days before the government and the interior ministry find out whether they have succeeded in one of their key policy areas – winning a legal battle at the Supreme Court to be able to deport asylum seekers to Rwanda.
Sunak is expected to carry out a wider number of changes in his cabinet, bringing in allies and removing some ministers who his Downing Street office said have not been performing as well as he wanted in their departments.
Foreign
U.S. president considering 25% tariffs on Canada, Mexico starting in February
Donald Trump said tariffs of 25 per cent on products from Canada and Mexico could be introduced as early as February, hours after taking office as US president on Monday.
Speaking at the White House while signing various orders shortly after his inauguration, Trump said, “We’re thinking in terms of 25 per cent on Mexico and Canada, because they’re allowing vast number of people … to come in.”
“I think we’ll do it Feb. 1,” Trump added, referring to the potential start date for the tariffs.
Earlier on Monday, the Wall Street Journal reported that Trump did not intend to impose tariffs on trading partners like Canada, Mexico, and China.
Instead, he planned to instruct the authorities to assess trade relations with China and its neighbours on the North American continent, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing a summary of a planned memorandum and Trump’s advisers.
Shortly after winning the election in November, Trump threatened to impose tariffs on goods from Canada, Mexico, and China.
There are also fears in the EU that Trump could impose new tariffs.
Tariffs are a type of surcharge on imported goods. They are paid as goods enter the country.
Trump imposed a range of tariffs on imported goods during his first term in office from 2017 to 2021.
Foreign
Israel releases first 90 Palestinian prisoners
The first 90 Palestinian prisoners to be released by Israel under the terms of the Gaza ceasefire deal were freed hours after an agreement took effect on Sunday.
This is to halt the fighting that has devastated the coastal territory; local media cited Israeli authorities as confirming.
Local media outlets, including the Times of Israel, cited the prison authority as confirming the release, saying that most of the freed prisoners were women and minors.
The majority of the detainees came from the West Bank, while others were from East Jerusalem, according to the reports.
Palestinian media has showed the footage and pictures of what they said were released prisoners arriving in Ramallah.
On Sunday, the Palestinian militant organisation Hamas released the first three Israeli hostages as part of the ceasefire agreement.
They were transferred by the Palestinian militant group Hamas to the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) on Sunday afternoon.
Among those transferred were three women, named by the Israeli military as Romi Gonen, Emily Damari and Doron Steinbrecher.
They were then transferred to Israeli forces and transported to a hospital in Tel Aviv, where they were greeted by family.
A Hamas spokesman had confirmed that four more Israeli hostages would be released next Saturday.
This will be part of the deal to exchange 33 hostages for 1,904 Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails over the course of six weeks.
Following months of stalemate in the 15-month Gaza war, a three-stage ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hamas was brokered on Wednesday, capping months-long efforts by the U.S.
Others are; Egypt and Qatar to mediate between the warring parties.
The first stage of the ceasefire agreement also foresaw the Israeli military withdrawing from densely populated areas of the Gaza Strip.
Foreign
Elon Musk congratulates Bezos for successful launch of New Glenn rocket
SpaceX founder Elon Musk congratulated his rival Jeff Bezos on the successful maiden test-launch of his heavy-lift rocket New Glenn on Thursday.
“Congratulations on reaching orbit on the first attempt’’ Musk wrote on X, the social media platform he owns, tagging Bezos in his post.
Amazon founder Bezos established his rocket company Blue Origin nearly 25 years ago.
But he has seen Musk’s SpaceX come to dominate the U.S. commercial space industry and obtain lucrative government contracts.
SpaceX’s unscrewed mega rocket Star ship, developed to carry astronauts to the moon, failed during its first two launches in 2023.
But the spacecraft has now made it into Earth’s orbit on several occasions, and the next test launch is planned for later Thursday.
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