US: House panel to widen Trump probe, request documents

The US House of Representatives’ Judiciary Committee will seek documents from more than 60 people and organisations as it begins investigations into possible obstruction of justice and abuse of power by President Donald Trump, according to the panel’s chairman.

Jerrold Nadler told ABC’s This Week programme on Sunday the committee wanted to get documents from the Department of Justice, the president’s son Donald Trump Jr and Trump Organization Chief Financial Officer Allen Weisselberg, among others.

“We are going to initiate investigations into abuses of power, into corruption … and into obstruction of justice,” Nadler, whose committee would be responsible for starting impeachment proceedings against Trump, said.

“It’s very clear that the president obstructed justice,” he added, noting, however, that it was too soon to consider whether impeachment should be pursued.

“Before you impeach somebody, you have to persuade the American public that it ought to happen,” he said.

Trump denies his campaign worked with Moscow [Joshua Roberts/Reuters]

‘Innocent man being persecuted’

As evidence of obstruction, Nadler cited Trump’s May 2017 firing of FBI Director James Comey, who was leading an investigation into Russia activities in the 2016 US presidential election and possible collusion with Trump’s campaign.

That investigation was subsequently taken over by Special Counsel Robert Mueller, who is expected to deliver his findings to the US attorney general within weeks.

Nadler also cited what he called Trump’s attempts to intimidate witnesses in the probe. He said the committee on Monday would release the list of people and organisations it would request documents from.

Trump has denied his campaign worked with Moscow.

“I am an innocent man being persecuted by some very bad, conflicted & corrupt people in a Witch Hunt that is illegal & should never have been allowed to start,” Trump said in a tweet on Sunday.

…said was a total lie, but Fake Media won’t show it. I am an innocent man being persecuted by some very bad, conflicted & corrupt people in a Witch Hunt that is illegal & should never have been allowed to start – And only because I won the Election! Despite this, great success!

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) March 3, 2019

There was no immediate comment from the White House and the Trump Organization on Nadler’s remarks.

Trump told a group of conservative activists and politicians on Saturday that investigators want to look at his finances and business dealings because no evidence of collusion has been found.

“All of a sudden they are trying to take you out with bullshit,” he said.

While the Mueller investigation is focused on specific crimes, Congress’ probes will cast a wider net, Nadler said.

The interview follows the public testimony on Wednesday of Trump’s former personal lawyer Michael Cohen, who accused his former boss of telling multiple lies as a candidate and after taking office. 

Cohen, who pleaded guilty to lying to Congress, tax evasion and campaign finance violations, called Trump a “conman” and a “cheat” in the testimony before the House Oversight Committee.

Nadler said Congressional investigators will also look at whether Trump used the White House for personal enrichment in violation of the constitution’s emoluments clause.

“All of these have to be investigated and laid out to the American people,” he added.

House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy attacked Nadler as having an impeachment agenda.

“They’re setting a whole new course because there’s no collusion so they want to build something else,” he told ABC.

Several US congressional committees are pursuing investigations focusing on Trump.

The House Intelligence Committee’s Democratic chairman, Adam Schiff, said his panel would look closely at negotiations to build a Trump Tower in Moscow, which Cohen said continued well into the 2016 presidential campaign.

“That was a deal that stood to make him more money than any other deal in his life and it was a deal where he was pursuing help from the Kremlin, from [Russian President Vladimir] Putin himself, at a time when Putin was seeking relief from sanctions,” Schiff told CBS’ Face the Nation programme.

“That is the most compromising circumstance that I can imagine.”

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Rand Paul to oppose Trump on national emergency


Rand Paul

Sen. Rand Paul is the fourth senator to pledge to vote against the disapproval resolution when it comes up for a vote in the Senate this month. | AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin

Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) says he will vote to disapprove of President Donald Trump’s national emergency declaration, clinching a bipartisan majority in opposition of the president’s move to secure funding for a border wall.

“I can’t vote to give the president the power to spend money that hasn’t been appropriated by Congress,” Paul said at an event in Kentucky on Saturday, according to the Bowling Green Daily News. “We may want more money for border security, but Congress didn’t authorize it. If we take away those checks and balances, it’s a dangerous thing.”

Story Continued Below

Paul becomes the fourth Republican senator to pledge to vote for the disapproval resolution when it comes up for a vote in the Senate this month. Trump has vowed to veto the resolution, though both the House and Senate will lack the votes to override the veto.

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Fierce fighting as SDF pounds last ISIL-held pocket in Syria

US-backed Kurdish forces say they are locked in heavy fighting with ISIL fighters in northeast Syria, using artillery fire and air raids as they press ahead to capture the armed group’s final patch of territory in the country.

Columns of black smoke on Sunday billowed from the village of Baghouz, in Deir Az Zor province, where commanders of the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) said fierce clashes were under way.

The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL or ISIS) was fighting back with snipers, suicide bombs and booby traps.

An SDF commander in Baghouz told Reuters news agency that the armed group had sent explosive-ridden vehicles towards advancing forces on Saturday night.

Mustafa Bali, a spokesman for SDF, said US-led coalition air raids destroyed several car bombs during the past two days of fighting.

In a Twitter post, he said three car bombs that were trying to hit SDF positions were destroyed.

Several car bombs were destroyed by coalition airstrikes during the last two days of battle here in #Baghouz. 3 VBIEDS that were trying to hit our positions were destroyed by #SDF fighters.

— Mustafa Bali (@mustefabali) March 3, 2019

Fires still smouldered from the village on Sunday and ammunition exploded time and again, a day after an air raid hit a building, setting off a huge blast.

Earlier on Sunday, the SDF had said it expected a “decisive battle” after advancing gradually for 18 hours to avoid land mines sown by ISIL, whose fighters are also using underground tunnels to stage ambushes.

By midday, however, there was no sign of the battle being over.

“ISIS fighters have been using suicide vests and car bombs to slow down the SDF offensive and hide from Coalition strikes in the area of Baghouz,” Colonel Sean Ryan, a spokesman for the coalition supporting the SDF, told Reuters.

“They still hold civilians and are lacing the tunnels with IEDs as well,” he said, referring to improvised explosive devices.

The SDF has previously estimated several hundred ISIL fighters to be inside Baghouz, mostly foreigners. Ryan said their hiding underground made it difficult to determine current numbers.

As ISIL’s territory shrank, thousands of fighters, followers and civilians had retreated to Baghouz, on the eastern side of the Euphrates River near the Iraqi border.

Over the past few weeks, they have poured out in greater numbers than expected, holding up the final assault.

After removing the remaining civilians on Friday – mostly women and children – the SDF resumed their assault on the village.

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Premier League Live: Everton vs. Liverpool

  1. Liverpool Offside @LFCOffside

  2. Live: Liverpool Face Everton

    via Bleacher Report

  3. Klopp Explains Firmino, Milner Omissions

    via liverpoolecho

  4. Firmino and Richarlison on Bench

    Miguel Delaney @MiguelDelaney

    Everton-Liverpool teams https://t.co/OQOQb7hH0t

  5. Everton’s Goodison Cat Returns

    via liverpoolecho

  6. Liverpool FC @LFC

  7. Joe Prince-Wright @JPW_NBCSports

  8. Ultra Football Facts @UltraFootyFacts

  9. This Is Anfield @thisisanfield

  10. Ian Doyle @IanDoyleSport

  11. 90min @90min_Football

  12. Ian Doyle @IanDoyleSport

  13. Everton V Liverpool | Team News LIVE

  14. Liverpool FC @LFC

  15. Ian Doyle @IanDoyleSport

  16. This Is Anfield @thisisanfield

  17. COPA90 @COPA90

  18. Mike L. Goodman @TheM_L_G

  19. Miguel Delaney @MiguelDelaney

  20. WhoScored.com @WhoScored

  21. Ian Doyle @IanDoyleSport

  22. MailOnline Sport @MailSport

  23. Ian Doyle @IanDoyleSport

  24. Fantasy Football Scout @FFScout

  25. Liverpool FC @LFC

  26. BBC Sport @BBCSport

  27. This Is Anfield @thisisanfield

  28. Guardian sport @guardian_sport

  29. Liverpool FC @LFC

  30. Empire of the Kop @empireofthekop

  31. Ian Doyle @IanDoyleSport

  32. Ian Doyle @IanDoyleSport

  33. This Is Anfield @thisisanfield

  34. roger bennett @rogbennett

  35. This Is Anfield @thisisanfield

  36. Ian Doyle @IanDoyleSport

  37. Football365 @F365

  38. OptaJoe @OptaJoe

  39. Match of the Day @BBCMOTD

  40. 90min @90min_Football

  41. Liverpool FC @LFC

  42. NBC Sports Soccer @NBCSportsSoccer

  43. NBC Sports Soccer @NBCSportsSoccer

  44. Premier League @premierleague

  45. Match of the Day @BBCMOTD

  46. The Anfield Wrap @TheAnfieldWrap

  47. Empire of the Kop @empireofthekop

  48. Royal Blue Mersey @RBMersey

  49. Classic Football Shirts @classicshirts

  50. Miguel Delaney @MiguelDelaney

  51. James Pearce @JamesPearceEcho

  52. Ian Doyle @IanDoyleSport

  53. Standard Sport @standardsport

  54. Ian Doyle @IanDoyleSport

  55. Carl Clemente @clemente_carl

  56. Royal Blue Mersey @RBMersey

  57. Royal Blue Mersey @RBMersey

  58. Anfield Edition @AnfieldEdition

  59. Royal Blue Mersey @RBMersey

  60. Ian Doyle @IanDoyleSport

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Premier League Live: Everton vs. Liverpool

  1. Liverpool Offside @LFCOffside

  2. Live: Liverpool Face Everton

    via Bleacher Report

  3. Klopp Explains Firmino, Milner Omissions

    via liverpoolecho

  4. Firmino and Richarlison on Bench

    Miguel Delaney @MiguelDelaney

    Everton-Liverpool teams https://t.co/OQOQb7hH0t

  5. Everton’s Goodison Cat Returns

    via liverpoolecho

  6. Liverpool FC @LFC

  7. Joe Prince-Wright @JPW_NBCSports

  8. Ultra Football Facts @UltraFootyFacts

  9. This Is Anfield @thisisanfield

  10. Ian Doyle @IanDoyleSport

  11. 90min @90min_Football

  12. Ian Doyle @IanDoyleSport

  13. Everton V Liverpool | Team News LIVE

  14. Liverpool FC @LFC

  15. Ian Doyle @IanDoyleSport

  16. This Is Anfield @thisisanfield

  17. COPA90 @COPA90

  18. Mike L. Goodman @TheM_L_G

  19. Miguel Delaney @MiguelDelaney

  20. WhoScored.com @WhoScored

  21. Ian Doyle @IanDoyleSport

  22. MailOnline Sport @MailSport

  23. Ian Doyle @IanDoyleSport

  24. Fantasy Football Scout @FFScout

  25. Liverpool FC @LFC

  26. BBC Sport @BBCSport

  27. This Is Anfield @thisisanfield

  28. Guardian sport @guardian_sport

  29. Liverpool FC @LFC

  30. Empire of the Kop @empireofthekop

  31. Ian Doyle @IanDoyleSport

  32. Ian Doyle @IanDoyleSport

  33. This Is Anfield @thisisanfield

  34. roger bennett @rogbennett

  35. This Is Anfield @thisisanfield

  36. Ian Doyle @IanDoyleSport

  37. Football365 @F365

  38. OptaJoe @OptaJoe

  39. Match of the Day @BBCMOTD

  40. 90min @90min_Football

  41. Liverpool FC @LFC

  42. NBC Sports Soccer @NBCSportsSoccer

  43. NBC Sports Soccer @NBCSportsSoccer

  44. Premier League @premierleague

  45. Match of the Day @BBCMOTD

  46. The Anfield Wrap @TheAnfieldWrap

  47. Empire of the Kop @empireofthekop

  48. Royal Blue Mersey @RBMersey

  49. Classic Football Shirts @classicshirts

  50. Miguel Delaney @MiguelDelaney

  51. James Pearce @JamesPearceEcho

  52. Ian Doyle @IanDoyleSport

  53. Standard Sport @standardsport

  54. Ian Doyle @IanDoyleSport

  55. Carl Clemente @clemente_carl

  56. Royal Blue Mersey @RBMersey

  57. Royal Blue Mersey @RBMersey

  58. Anfield Edition @AnfieldEdition

  59. Royal Blue Mersey @RBMersey

  60. Ian Doyle @IanDoyleSport

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Award-winning photographer Yannis Behrakis dies aged 58

Yannis Behrakis, an award-winning photographer with Reuters news agency, has died after a battle with cancer. He was 58.

Behrakis, who worked at Reuters for more than 30 years and died on Saturday, was “one of the best photographers of his generation”, Greece’s foreign press association said in a statement on Sunday.

“His pictures shaped the very way in which we perceived events,” it added.

Born in Athens in 1960, Behrakis studied photography at a private school and worked at a studio before fulfilling his lifelong dream to become a photojournalist.

After joining Reuters in 1987, Behrakis covered many of the most tumultuous events around the world, including conflicts in Afghanistan and Chechnya, a huge earthquake in Kashmir and the Egyptian uprising of 2011. In the process, he won the respect of both peers and rivals for his skill and bravery.

In 2000, he was ambushed in Sierra Leone, likely by rebels, and barely escaped along with Reuters’ co-worker Mark Chisholm. Their Reuters colleague Kurt Schork, Behrakis’ close friend, and AP cameraman Miguel Gil Moreno were killed.

Prestigious awards included the World Press Photo in 2000, Bayeux-Calvados in 2016, and Photographer of the Year by the Guardian in 2015.

He also led a Reuters team to a Pulitzer Prize in 2016 for coverage of Europe’s refugee crisis.

One of his most striking pictures from that period is of a Syrian father carrying and kissing his daughter as he walked towards Greece’s northern border in the rain.

“This picture proves that there are superheroes after all,” Behrakis later explained. “He doesn’t wear a red cape, but he has a black plastic cape made out of garbage bags. For me, this represents the universal father and the unconditional love of father to daughter.”

Colleagues who worked with him in the field described him as a talented and committed journalist.

“It is about clearly telling the story in the most artistic way possible,” veteran Reuters photographer Goran Tomasevic said of Behrakis’ style.

“You won’t see anyone so dedicated and so focused and who sacrificed everything to get the most important picture.”

That dedication was striking. His friend and colleague of 30 years, senior producer Vassilis Triandafyllou, described him as a “hurricane” who worked all hours of the day and night, sometimes at considerable personal risk, to get the image he wanted.

What underpinned everything Behrakis did in his professional life was a determination to show the world what was happening in conflict zones and countries in crisis.

He recognised the power of an arresting image to capture people’s attention and even change their behaviour. That belief produced a body of work that will be remembered long after his passing.

“My mission is to tell you the story and then you decide what you want to do,” he told a panel discussing Reuters Pulitzer Prize-winning photo series on the refugee crisis.

“My mission is to make sure that nobody can say: ‘I didn’t know’.”

Here is a selection of some of his work

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Texas GOP races to shore up the suburbs for 2020


John Cornyn

An opponent for Texas Sen. John Cornyn at the statewide level has yet to emerge. | Alex Brandon/AP Photo

2020 elections

The state party is placing organizers in big metro areas early to bolster newly competitive districts.

AUSTIN, Texas — Texas Republicans barely escaped a colossal defeat last year. Now the party is scrambling to avoid a repeat in 2020.

Facing a rapidly changing voter base, anti-Trump fervor and a more motivated Democratic Party, the state GOP is moving earlier than ever to prepare after watching two House members lose in 2018 and another half-dozen win by fewer than 5 points.

Story Continued Below

The party has set new fundraising goals and placed field staffers in Dallas and Fort Worth nine months earlier than in the last election cycle to facilitate more engagement with voters, with plans to expand the early hiring to other major metro areas to stanch bleeding Republican support in the suburbs.

“We are taking seriously our need to earn every vote in Texas,” said James Dickey, chairman of the Texas Republican Party. And donors “are also taking it much more seriously when I tell them how desperately I need them to participate or become a supporter of the party,” Dickey added.

The state GOP will be adding organizers in Houston, San Antonio, Dallas and even traditionally Democratic El Paso to its early hires. Those metro areas overlap with the districts of the six House Republicans who won narrowly in 2018: Reps. Michael McCaul, Chip Roy, Pete Olson, Will Hurd, Kenny Marchant, and John Carter.

Field teams will be responsible for recruiting volunteers to knock on doors, attending events to talk to voters and testing out new texting tools to boost voter registration and turn out among potential GOP voters.

“From my personal experience, there is nothing more effective than talking to folks,” said Sam Pohl, spokesperson at the Republican Party of Texas.

The state party also plans to raise $5 million this year — double the amount it raised in 2018 — with about half of that money earmarked for television advertising.

Next November will be the real test of whether midterm results were a flash in the pan — a combination of O’Rourke’s popular Senate candidacy and a traditional midterm setback for the president’s party, or signs of bigger headwinds for Texas Republicans.

“I still think people are trying to decide how much of [the midterm results] were idiosyncratic,” said Republican campaign strategist Jerod Patterson, “or how much is structural changes in electorate.”

But Texas Republicans acknowledge that they have to win over voters like women, minorities and others that President Donald Trump has alienated and who are moving to Texas towns.

“Be real about it,” said Brendan Steinhauser, who was Sen. John Cornyn’s campaign manager in 2014 and worked for McCaul and fellow Republican Rep. Dan Crenshaw. “Don’t try to run away from the President if you voted with him 85 percent of the time.”

But Steinhauser said that GOP candidates in Texas will have to walk a fine line on issues like border security and trade where many potential Republican voters may disagree with the President.

“Incumbent members of Congress can and should spend the next year communicating to constituents about what they are doing,” said Steinhauser. “That’s a big lesson for 2020 — you have to reintroduce yourself to the voter.”

House Republicans like Olson, who defeated Democrat Sri Preston Kulkarni by fewer than 14,000 votes in a fast-changing slice of the Houston suburbs last year, say they have gotten the message too. Campaigns are mirroring the state party’s early staffing,

“We plan on it being more a retail race,” said Melissa Kelly, Olson’s chief of staff, who added that Olson plans on being even more active in the diversifying community, attending events like Chinese New Year and Cinco de Mayo celebrations.

“He’s definitely preparing for it to be a more challenging environment,” Kelly said.

Olson’s race is one of six congressional races in Texas that the national Democrats already are targeting in 2020. With the exception of Hurd’s district, which takes in a massive swath of West Texas along the Mexican border, all are contained in fast-growing, rapidly diversifying suburban districts outside cities like Austin, Houston, San Antonio and Fort Worth.

In 2018, national Democrats targeted three Texas districts Hillary Clinton had won in the presidential election, including Hurd’s, ultimately flipping two of them. But after watching Democratic candidates like Senate hopeful Beto O’Rourke and Kulkarni come close in the midterms, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee has identified six GOP-held targets heading into 2020.

“Now as we look toward 2020, the DCCC is taking the lessons we learned and expanding the battlefield further into parts of Texas that are ready to reject the kind of reckless Washington politics that Congressmen McCaul, Roy, Olson, Hurd, Marchant and Carter have rubberstamped,” said Cole Leiter, a DCCC spokesperson.

Brittany Switzer, the digital director of the Texas Democratic Party, said “it is a completely different conversation with our national partners now. We’re ready to deliver Texas.”

Kulkarni, along with MJ Hegar, Joseph Kopser and other Democratic candidates that came close to beating Republican incumbents last November, told POLITICO that they are still unsure whether they will run in 2020. An opponent for Cornyn at the statewide level has also yet to emerge.

But the fact that Democrats view those districts as potential targets — and Republicans acknowledge the need to defend them — speaks to a political landscape in deep flux after the last two elections.

“The question we are going to find out in 2020 is how systemic and how deep issues are” for the Texas GOP, said Patterson.

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Explainer: Who are Kashmir’s armed groups?

Islamabad/Srinagar – Kashmiris have been demanding a solution to the unresolved dispute over whether the territory should be independent, or a part of India or Pakistan since the subcontinent gained independence from the British in 1947.

In 1988, after years of tightening space for political dissent in the Indian-administered portion of Kashmir, protests broke out after a disputed state election months earlier. At the centre of the tensions was the Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF), a pro-independence group that wanted Kashmir to be separate from both India and Pakistan.

More groups soon joined the fray, with the Hizb-ul-Mujahideen taking a leading role in protests and attacks on Indian security forces. The JKLF renounced violence in 1994.

In the years to follow, several other armed groups would emerge – some drawing their support from within Indian-administered Kashmir, while others based themselves in Pakistan.

Here are the major groups that are involved in the armed movement for Kashmiri self-determination.

Hizbul-ul-Mujahideen (HuM)

Hizb-ul-Mujahideen (HuM, also commonly referred to as Hizb) also emerged from the 1988 protests, and has become the largest indigenous rebel group based in Indian-administered Kashmir.

The group was founded by separatist leader Muhammad Ahsan Dar in September 1989, espousing a pro-Pakistani ideology that called for India to leave the territory so that it could accede to Pakistan. Hizb also took an overtly religious stance, as compared to the relatively secular JKLF which it grew to replace at the forefront of the armed movement.

Hizb has carried out dozens of attacks on Indian security forces, from guerilla warfare style raids on personnel and convoys to full-fledged suicide attacks.

In 2016, the killing of HuM commander Burhan Wani by Indian security forces led to widespread protests across Kashmir, with tens of thousands attending his funeral in the town of Tral. The killing sparked massive protests across the territory, culminating in an Indian security forces crackdown that continues until present, involving extrajudicial killings, detentions and the maiming of protesters with pellet guns.

“Wani shunned the veil of anonymity when he and his associates posed for pictures with unmasked faces, flaunting guns,” said a senior police official in the region. “This bravado attracted many young boys towards armed insurgency making it indigenous again.”

The new generation of HuM fighters changed the face of the rebellion in Indian-administered Kashmir, with the movement taking on a more homegrown quality. Some of the new fighters are highly educated, and say they are taking up arms because they feel they are left with no choice in the face of Indian security forces actions in Kashmir.

“I chose a gun over the pen to reply back in the same language,” wrote Manan Wani, a young PhD scholar who joined the group.

Currently, Hizb has a huge network of fighters in southern Kashmir’s Shopian, Kulgam and Pulwama districts.

“South Kashmir is turning out to be the new stronghold of rebels in the State,” said a police officer. “The fact that most of the rebels in south Kashmir are locals makes the militancy more dangerous here. The killing of every local militant breeds two more. Funerals of rebels have also become an issue, as thousands of people take part in them.”

According to official Indian security forces’ figures, Hizb has 87 local and six foreign fighters in the south. In northern parts of the region, Hizb has 15 local and five foreign fighters, the data says. Central Kashmir has just six local fighters. Currently, there are a total number of 119 Hizb rebels active in Kashmir, according to Indian security forces data.

HuM is led by Mohammed Yusuf Shah, also known as Syed Salahuddin, who is based in Pakistan.

Jaish-e-Muhammad (JeM)

Formed in 2000, Jaish-e-Muhammad (JeM) has claimed responsibility for some of the most high-profile attacks in Kashmir and on targets elsewhere in India in recent times. The group – whose leadership is based in Pakistan and which runs a network of seminaries there – has also been at the centre of Indian allegations that its neighbour is “sponsoring” attacks on Indian soil.

The group was founded by Masood Azhar, a former member of the Harkat-ul-Mujahideen group and a US-designated “terrorist”. Azhar also allegedly has links to al-Qaeda and his group is implicated in sending fighters to Afghanistan to battle US-led NATO coalition forces.

Azhar founded JeM after he was released from Indian custody in 1999, in exchange for more than 150 hostages held on an Indian Airlines flight that had been hijacked and diverted to Kandahar in Afghanistan.

Azhar is said to have formed JeM with the support of then-al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden and the Afghan Taliban, according to the United Nations.

JeM has carried out several high-profile suicide and other attacks against Indian targets since its formation, including a 2001 attack on the Indian parliament in New Delhi and on the legislative assembly in Indian-administered Kashmir.

It has also been linked to the 2016 Uri attack, which killed at least 23 people at an Indian security forces camp in Indian-administered Kashmir, and the Pathankot attack earlier that year, killing at least eight people in a raid on an Indian air force base.

In 2019, JeM claimed responsibility for the Pulwama attack, which saw a suicide bomber drive his vehicle into an Indian security forces convoy, killing at least 42 people. It was the deadliest attack on Kashmiri soil for decades.

Following that attack, Pakistan’s government announced that it had taken over a large JeM seminary complex in the central city of Bahawalpur. Days later, Pakistan’s foreign minister said that JeM chief Masood Azhar was “in the country”, but offered no further details.

India, Pakistan exchange heavy border fire after pilot’s release

Indian security forces say there are 56 JeM fighters active in Kashmir, with 33 foreigners and 23 locals. The bomber who drove his vehicle into the security convoy at Pulwama was one of JeM’s local cadre, 20-year-old Adil Dar.

It was the first time a large-scale suicide attack had been carried out by a local, police say.

“It also is worrying that local boys are being recruited for such attacks,” the police official told Al Jazeera.

The Indian government says it is intensifying its battle against JeM.

“We are intensifying drive against all the militant outfits, particularly Jaish. Our main focus is on foreign militants. We also will deal with people who give shelter to them,” said a senior Indian-administered Kashmir government official.

Lashkar-e-Taiba

Founded in 1990 by Hafiz Muhammad Saeed, Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) has been one of the most prominent armed groups operating on Pakistani soil and allegedly sending fighters across the Line of Control into Indian-administered Kashmir. According to Indian security forces data, the group has the largest presence of fighters in Indian-administered Kashmir, with 129 active fighters.

 The group carried out a series of attacks against Indian security forces when the Kashmiri armed movement began to escalate in the 1990s.

In 2008, India blamed LeT for the Mumbai attacks, which killed more than 160 people when gunmen stormed hotels and a railway terminus. India named Saeed as the “mastermind” of the attack, prompting the United States to place a $10 million bounty on his head. He and his group are also listed by the UN.

Pakistan says it has taken steps to clamp down on LeT, but charitable wings of the group – Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD) and Filah-e-Insaniyat Foundation (FIF) – continue to operate freely across the country. Saeed denies any link to LeT, but is the chief of JuD. Hafiz Abdur Rauf, the chief of FIF, is also a wanted man for his alleged work with LeT.

Following the Pulwama attack on February 14, Pakistan re-imposed a ban on JuD and FIF that had lapsed.

The group has also been attempting to enter mainstream politics, launching a political party by the name of Milli Muslim League (MML). The party was not allowed to register for the 2018 polls, but its candidates ran as independents across the country. They did not win any seats.

In Indian-administered Kashmir, the group is most active in the northern part of the territory, police say. There are 54 foreign and 14 local fighters in the northern region, Indian security forces data says, with 43 local and eight foreign fighters in southern Kashmir. In central Kashmir, the group has just two local and eight foreign fighters.

“Lashkar-e-Taiba has a strong presence in the northern part of Kashmir. They are mostly foreign militants who have infiltrated into Kashmir from Pakistan,” said the Indian police officer.

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The view from Brussels: How Brexit could hit the EU at its heart

Brussels, Zeebrugge – Belgium – Brussels, the EU’s headquarters, is considered to be the heart of Europe. 

Around 2,000 British nationals work for EU institutions, mostly employed by the European Commission in the capital. 

Their number, however, has been dropping. In 2016, there were 1,164 staff members, 1,046 in 2017 and just 917 last year. 

EU Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker has asked Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel to “show the same generosity when it comes to granting Belgian citizenship” to British EU staff.

Belgium is the UK’s eighth trading partner, with the UK exporting automotive goods, textiles and pharmaceuticals.

Al Jazeera spoke with Belgians, and a Dutch student, about how they feel regarding Brexit and their own country’s EU membership.

‘The top-down approach of the EU has to end’

Pieter Cleppe, 37, head of Brussels office at policy think-tank Open Europe

“I didn’t predict it, but I thought Brexit was possible because I simply looked at the opinion polls. In 2015, we prepared an estimate of what could have happened, how expensive might Brexit be and what were the conditions for it to be a success or not. At Open Europe, we were always aware of the risks. That’s why, before Brexit, we were very much in favour of reforming the EU and making sure it didn’t happen. 

“I think other countries’ leaders are partly to blame, as well, particularly Angela Merkel, who said it was not possible to change the EU treaties. Of course, it is hard, but she refused to do it from the very beginning. Before Brexit, the EU should have listened to the concerns of the British and reformed the EU according to their needs. Not so much because the UK should dictate what must happen in Europe, but because many of the concerns the UK has been expressing over the years are shared by many people elsewhere. 

“If you look at the rise of the anti-establishment movements, they are sometimes left-wing and sometimes right-wing but they are all concerned to lose control and that their fate is no longer decided by national democracy.

“It’s perfectly possible to keep the EU. The EU is fundamentally a good thing, because it helps people move and trade across borders, but the approach according to which a lot of regulations are being made at a Brussels level need to end. Supposedly it opens up trades. Often making rules at the EU level is an excuse for governments preferring to make rules in Brussels so they don’t have to face their national parliaments and the scrutiny of the national media.

“One can also open up trade by scrapping protectionist elements in national legislation. The very technocratic top-down approach of the EU has to end. I think, despite all the bad aspects of Brexit, one good side of it is that we will see more regulatory competition.”

‘It may be an issue for British people living abroad’

Laura Wambach, 27, teacher at Bogaerts international primary school

Laura Wambach [Emanuela Barbiroglio/Al Jazeera]

“There are some British students in this school and I know many British teachers. 

“I’ve always thought about Brexit impacting more economic structures rather than social ones, but of course, it may be an issue for British people living abroad. A lot of our students are here because their parents are sent away on different missions to work in a foreign country. If their parents have to go back home for whatever reason, including EU institutions making them ‘redundant’, it would be a problem. I am also worried about my co-workers.

“I am not so sure about the implications of Brexit for both parts at the moment. Even in Belgium, I’ve heard people who disagree with European policies. But to be that extreme and say, ‘Let’s leave the EU and become completely autonomous’ would sound unexpected to me.”

‘Brexit is bad for future generations’

Ramata Hoorntje, 29, coding student from the Netherlands

Ramata Hoorntje, a Dutch student, says future generations will suffer because of Brexit [Emanuela Barbiroglio/Al Jazeera]

“I’m of the generation that has been given the freedom to move around in the EU and I’m the example of it, having studied and worked in London. I’m saddened by the fact that this is likely not going to be an easy option for the generation of Europeans to come. I think Brexit is bad for future generations.

“I remember colleagues crying in London the morning the results of the referendum had been announced. London was numb, but that clearly didn’t reflect the feeling in other parts of the country, given the final result.

“I’ve since moved away but I ask my European friends who are still in London, ‘What’s going to happen next?’. It seems that the cloud of uncertainty around Brexit as led them to adopt a wait and see approach.”

‘There will be issues for British artists’

Pierre Retif, 45, event organiser at the Centre for Fine Arts – BOZAR

Pierre Retif says Britain has never fully embraced Europe [Emanuela Barbiroglio/Al Jazeera]

“Besides the whole rhetoric, I think there will be some administrative obstacles [for the museum]. There will be issues for British artists, in terms of coverage, freedom of movement, fundings. The UK will lose the money that comes as part of European projects.

“The British have never totally put their feet inside Europe, they have always kept one foot in and one out. But I think that both the UK and the rest of the continent will regret it, because we will miss a very important player.” 

‘Brexit is forcing everyone to look for alternatives’

Katia Al Jbrail, 39, worker in the financial sector

Katia Al Jbrail says Brexit uncertainty will force political and economic players to seek other options [Emanuela Barbiroglio/Al Jazeera]

“Brexit is creating a situation of complete uncertainty. Negotiations are so difficult because it is something new that never happened before. The models to estimate its impact are all very sensitive to any kind of assumption.

“This vulnerability is creating a big disruptive situation, which brings a lot of challenges but also a lot of opportunities to find solutions.

“Brexit is a negative operation overall and in the long run, it might be worse for the UK. But small countries in an already precarious situation will suffer the most at the beginning, along with countries whose supply chain is highly linked to the UK – like Belgium. Brexit is forcing everyone to look for alternatives.”

‘It’s a pity’

Joachim Coens, 52, port of Zeebrugge’s managing director

Joachim Coens, a manager at a port, believes Brexit will not bring positive change [Emanuela Barbiroglio/Al Jazeera]

“Our logistics hub [at the port of Zeebrugge] focuses on the UK trade. Up to 45 percent of traffic and activity is related to business with the UK, so it is a very important market. Everything that makes trading less efficient is a pity. The fact that the UK will not stay in a kind of union that allow us to exchange goods easily is a pity.

“Globalisation created an emotional reaction and some people would like to go back in time. With Brexit, however, everybody is losing.”

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Bernie Sanders kicks off 2020 presidential campaign

Bernie Sanders kicked off his presidential campaign on Saturday not far from the rent-controlled apartment where he grew up in Brooklyn, and forcefully made the case that he is nothing like fellow New Yorker Donald Trump.

Sanders proclaimed himself the Democrat best prepared to beat the incumbent in 2020. The rally was his first campaign event since announcing a week ago that he would run for the White House.

“My experience as a child, living in a family that struggled economically, powerfully influenced my life and my values. I know where I came from,” Sanders boomed in his unmistakable Brooklyn accent. “And that is something I will never forget.”

Sanders has never shied from addressing Trump in stark terms, and during his speech at Brooklyn College, he called Trump “the most dangerous president in modern American history” and said the president wants to “divide us up”.

The Vermont senator positioned himself in opposition to Trump administration policies from immigration to climate change.

Beyond the issues themselves, Sanders, who grew up in the heavily Jewish neighborhood of Flatbush in a middle-class family, drew a stark contrast between himself and the billionaire in the White House who hails from Queens.

“I did not have a father who gave me millions of dollars to build luxury skyscrapers, casinos and country clubs,” said Sanders, who has lived in Vermont for decades. He pegged his allowance as a kid at 25 cents a week.

Sanders also said he “did not come from a family of privilege that prepared me to entertain people on television by telling workers, ‘You’re fired’”.

“I came from a family who knew all too well the frightening power employers can have over every day workers,” he added.

In the name of socialism

More than 300km away in suburban Washington, Trump reveled in his 2016 election win and said Republicans “need to verify it in 2020 with an even bigger victory”.

While Trump didn’t mention Sanders explicitly in a two-hour speech, he railed against the policies of “socialism” in a continued attempt to portray Democrats as out of touch with ordinary Americans.

Sanders is a self-described democratic socialist.

“Socialism is not about the environment, it is not about justice, it is not about virtue. It is only about one thing – it is called power for the ruling class,” Trump said.

“We know the future does not belong to those who believe in socialism.”

Sander’s supporters

Hours before his speech in Brooklyn College’s East Quad, a line of supporters snaked down the snowy streets.

A reggae band played before Sanders spoke, and he was introduced by a number of supporters including Nina Turner, the former Ohio state senator who is a co-chair of Sanders’ campaign this year, and Shaun King, the writer and civil rights activist.

King cited Sanders’ participation in the civil rights movement in the 1960s, when he was a student at the University of Chicago.

“This is the origin story of an American revolutionary,” King said of Sanders, who will return to Chicago on Sunday evening for a second campaign rally, where he’s expected to further highlight his own activism.

The candidate will make his first trip to the leadoff caucus state of Iowa next week, with plans to campaign in Council Bluffs, Iowa City and Des Moines. He is headed to the early state of Iowa.

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