Trump Weird News - Caught Lying! - So What's New?

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Trump Weird News - Caught Lying! - So What's New?
Spate of physical incidents includes attack on a six-year-old girl at a County Waterford housing estate
In the west Dublin suburb of Tallaght, a group of teenagers accosted, beat and partially stripped an Indian man, who was then filmed staggering and bleeding. Days later a gang attacked another Indian man in the nearby suburb of Clondalkin, hitting him in the face, chest, back and legs, leaving him with a fracture, gashes and multiple bruises. Days later again, two male passengers turned on an Indian taxi driver in the north Dublin suburb of Ballymun, striking him across the face with a bottle and shouting: âGo back to your country.â Days later, boys in a County Waterford housing estate allegedly punched a six-year-old girl in the face, hit her in the genital area with a bicycle and told her: âGo back to India.â These are just some of a spate of incidents in recent weeks that have sown alarm and bewilderment among the Indian community, and other immigrants, in Ireland. In each case police are investigating but no charges have yet been brought. Indians held a silent protest outside the justice department and the Indian embassy in Dublin has urged its citizens to take security precautions and avoid deserted areas. Media in India have given prominent coverage to the assaults, a jolt to those from the country who had long considered Ireland a safe, welcoming destination. âA fellow on a motorbike stopped and hit me in the face when I was stopped in traffic,â said a Dublin-based taxi driver from the state of Punjab, who declined to be named. âWhy is this happening?â
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It's happening because successive governments ignored growing problems for society's most disadvantaged; they focussed on economic growth to the detriment of poorer segments of society. The far-right gave the "lower class" somebody to blame for their predicament.
Mr. Lanez, a Canadian rapper, was accused of firing at the Houston hip-hop star after an argument in 2020. The matter became the subject of speculation and gossip on social media and in songs.
Breaking News: A Los Angeles jury found Daystar Peterson, the rapper better known as Tory Lanez, guilty of shooting a fellow artist, Megan Thee Stallion, in both of her feet following an argument about their romantic entanglements and careers in 2020.
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The assault of a top womenâs player made headlines, with masked men, a metal bar and the arrest of a teammate. But weeks later, new details suggest the original story might have been wrong.
By Tariq Panja.
(some excerpts, click link for the complete story)
VERSAILLES, France â It was dark by the time Aminata Diallo stepped through the concrete arch of the HĂŽtel de Police and onto the sidewalk outside. It had been about 36 hours since officers had banged on her apartment door, rousing her from sleep and taking her into custody.
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Diallo, the news reports said, was the player who had been driving the car last month when one of her teammates was pulled from the passenger seat by a masked man and assaulted. Diallo, the reports said, was the one who had been unharmed as her friend and teammate Kheira Hamraoui was beaten with an iron bar. And Diallo was the player now being questioned not as a witness but as a possible suspect in what the police had suggested was an orchestrated attack.
The story, with its hints of sporting jealousy, its echoes of Tonya Harding and its links to Paris St.-Germain, the reigning French champion and one of the richest soccer clubs in the world, quickly spread far and wide.
But as details emerge â about marital infidelity; about accusations implicating other members of the team; about reports of menacing phone calls to players disparaging the victim before she was attacked â that initial story has been turned on its head.
And now no one is sure what, or whom, to believe.
More than three weeks have passed since Diallo, 26, walked out of the police station in Versailles, released after two days of interviews and a night in a tiny, foul-smelling cell. The investigation continues, but the police appear to be no closer to figuring out what, or who, was behind the attack on Nov. 4 on a dark street in the Paris suburb of Chatou.
A few things are undisputed. Hamraoui, 31, was the victim of a serious crime. Diallo was questioned and released. None of the attackers have been identified. No weapon has been recovered. And no one has been charged with a crime.
But in reporting about the tumultuous weeks since the attack, The New York Times also learned that Hamraoui has at times suggested other people with links to the club, including at least two other teammates, may have been involved in her assault; that while P.S.G. kept Diallo and Hamraoui training apart from the team, and from each other, for weeks, a scheduling mistake led to one interaction in which sharp words were exchanged; and that while the police released Diallo without filing charges, they have declined to clear her of suspicion and have retained her two cellphones and laptop.
The collateral damage of the incident, meanwhile, continues to grow. Diallo and Hamraoui had their names smeared and their careers disrupted. The locker room harmony at P.S.G. has been shattered, hobbling the trophy ambitions of one of Europeâs best teams. And the marriage of a French soccer hero drawn into the case has collapsed; his wife released a statement saying she would seek a divorce after, her lawyer claimed, he had admitted to her that he had been having an extramarital affair with Hamraoui.
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Many of those interviewed sought to rebut the storyâs existing narrative of jealousy and betrayal, and nearly all agreed to speak only if they were not quoted by name, given the sensitivity of the case.
A Team Dinner
After dropping off Karchaoui, and with parked cars narrowing the roadway, Diallo was still pulling away tentatively when two men, their faces covered by masks, emerged from behind a van. They thumped on the carâs hood, demanding that it stop, and screamed to Diallo and Hamraoui to âopen the door.â
The assailants moved quickly. One opened the driverâs door and pinned Diallo against the steering wheel. The other yanked Hamraoui from the passenger seat.
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Hamraoui said she recalled hearing one of the men yell something about a married man. Diallo would later tell the police she heard a full sentence: âSo like that, you touch married men?â Diallo also told the police that she had heard sexually charged insults above the agonizing screams of Hamraoui as the attackerâs blows rained down.
The attack lasted less than a minute before the assailants fled. Hamraoui, blood streaming from a wound on her hand, slumped back into the car. She and Diallo immediately called Karchaoui, whose home was less than 100 meters behind them, to tell her what had happened and to ask her to join them at the car. Then they set off for a nearby emergency room.
The Aftermath
As Diallo drove, the players alerted their team. P.S.G.âs deputy head of security, FrĂ©dĂ©ric DouĂ© arrived at the hospital with Bernard Mendy, an assistant coach on the womenâs team. A friend of Hamraouiâs soon appeared there as well.
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In the hotel, the women discussed who might have been behind the attack. Hamraoui was adamant from the start that someone at the club was involved, according to people familiar with the conversations. The players also discussed a strange episode from a couple of weeks earlier, when a number of their teammates had received anonymous calls from a man speaking ill of Hamraoui. But as they continued to talk through the night, Hamraoui also alighted on other potential suspects, at one point raising the name of the husband of a fourth P.S.G. teammate, who acts as the agent for yet another French star on the team.The next morning, after a few hours of fitful, fretful sleep, the women went through the events again. As they talked, Hamraoui received a phone call. It was Eric Abidal, a former French national team player whom she had come to know at Barcelona, where she played for three seasons when he served as the clubâs technical director.
Hamraoui asked Abidal if his wife might want to hurt her, before telling him that she had been assaulted. With the phone set to loudspeaker, the people in the room could hear his response: He sounded stunned. A few more words were exchanged and the call ended.
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The club, uneasy about an attack on one of its players, assigned members of its security staff to watch over the homes of Diallo, Hamraoui and Karchaoui in the days that followed, but news of the assault stayed within the club.Inside the team, though, tensions were mounting. The French national team striker Kadidiatou Diani, angry that Hamraoui had mentioned her husband as a possible suspect â he has not been implicated or even questioned by the police â confronted her teammate as Hamraoui worked out on a bicycle.
On Nov. 9, less than a week after the attack, Diallo started in Hamraouiâs place in a Champions League game against Real Madrid. Karchaoui played, too. Nothing seemed amiss, beyond Hamraouiâs absence, which was explained away by the club as being for âpersonal reasons.â P.S.G. collected another victory. It had still not allowed a goal all season.
That night, as she does after most games, Diallo stayed up late, the adrenaline of having played keeping her up until about 3 a.m. She had barely slept, according to people close to her, when a few hours later she was awakened by banging at her front door. Opening it, she was confronted by four police officers.
36 Hours
(At the police station, Diallo declined an offer to have a lawyer present during questioning.)
From the moment the police started asking her questions, Diallo realized Hamraoui had named her as a suspect. The police suggested Diallo had taken a different route home after dinner than the one she had first suggested. They questioned her about why she had been driving so slowly after she pulled away from Karchaouiâs home. And then they presented her with the theory, later published by a French newspaper while she was still in custody, that the assault might have been rooted in her desire to acquire Hamraouiâs midfield spot in the first team.
It was that claim that vaulted the story into the global news cycle, and prompted the comparisons with the infamous 1994 assault on the figure skater Nancy Kerrigan.
The police concentrated on the same series of questions during repeated rounds of questioning with Diallo, mainly focusing on the car journey and her actions during the assault. But they also asked her about her connection to a man imprisoned in Lyon for unrelated crimes, including extortion. The man, known as Ja Ja, was familiar to several female soccer players, Diallo told the police, including Hamraoui. He, too, was being questioned about the attack, the police later confirmed.
And after at first keeping it to herself, Diallo revealed to her questioners that she had heard one of the assailants accuse Hamraoui of sleeping with a married man. (By the end of her fifth interview, the police had learned that the chip in Hamraouiâs cellphone was registered in Abidalâs name; Hamraoui had told them only that it was linked to an ex-boyfriend.)
By then, Diallo told friends, she had noticed a softening in the policeâs questioning. Still, they said she would have to spend the night in her cell because the next day she would be required to participate in a âconfrontationâ with Hamraoui â a feature in French criminal investigations in which suspects and witnesses are presented with versions of events at the same time and allowed to respond.
To make her stay more comfortable, the police allowed Diallo, a Muslim, to order her own dinner through a food delivery app. She chose a halal chicken sandwich.
A Murky Future
It was late in the afternoon the next day when Diallo finally came face to face with Hamraoui. She later told friends and relatives that she found it âbizarreâ to hear the accusation being leveled at her: that Hamraoui had heard from other teammates that Diallo was behind the attack. Diallo denied the charge. The meeting lasted about an hour. When it ended, Diallo was allowed to leave.
That evening she hired a lawyer, Mourad Battikh, to represent her. The next day, P.S.G.âs general manager, Ulrich RamĂ©, accompanied by a doctor, met with Diallo at her home. They urged her to spend time with her family, to recover. Diallo insisted she was ready to return to training, that all she wanted to do was play again. The team quickly made it clear that would not be possible initially.
Neither Diallo nor Hamraoui has said anything publicly about the attack or its aftermath. But a few days after Dialloâs release from detention, Battikh appeared on French television and described his clientâs arrest as âdefamatory, scandalous and incoherent.â A few hours later, Hamraouiâs lawyer, Said Harir, took to the airwaves brandishing images that showed in graphic detail the injuries his client had sustained.
P.S.G., which declined to comment for this article, has said little amid twisting plotlines in the case, which now appear to include the demise of Abidalâs marriage. A lawyer representing his wife, Hayet, said she had filed for divorce, and released a statement on Nov. 18 in which Hayet Abidal claimed her husband had admitted to an extramarital affair with Hamraoui. Eric Abidal later took to Instagram to plead with his wife for forgiveness.
Hayet Abidal has denied any involvement in the attack. But Maryvonne Caillebotte, the prosecutor first responsible for the case, told Le Monde last month that Abidal âwould be heard soonâ and did not exclude the possibility that his wife would be questioned, too.
Battikh, Dialloâs lawyer, remains furious at how Diallo was treated by the police. âWhen itâs Aminata they show their muscles and they place her in detention,â Battikh said. âWhen itâs Eric Abidal â someone strong, famous, popular â they take their time, go slowly, ensure they donât make a mistake.â
The P.S.G. womenâs team remains convulsed by the crisis. Its first game after the news broke was a 6-1 thrashing by its main title rival, Lyon, that damaged its hopes of retaining the French championship. Since then, a few of Hamraouiâs teammates have asked to move their lockers away from hers in the dressing room. Others have told club management that they will find it hard to play with her again. Several of the clubâs best players just want to move on.
All the while, the assailants remain at large, and no one can say where the case may lead. A premeditated attack like the one inflicted on Hamraoui carries a five-year prison sentence, according to a police spokeswoman in Versailles.
Diallo wants justice, her lawyer said. She is convinced of her innocence and determined to continue her career at P.S.G., where she has only six months left on her contract. âHer reputation was damaged by all the newspapers around the world,â said Battikh, her lawyer.
Hamraoui wants justice, too, and continues to believe the truth will be found inside her soccer club. She said as much in her most recent interview with the police on Nov. 29; the investigators, according to a person familiar with her appearance, asked her again about Dialloâs actions on the drive home, and the route she took.
Hamraouiâs lawyer, Harir, said the focus must remain on finding out who was behind the attack. âWe expect they will charge the guilty people quickly,â he said.
âWhat she wants today,â he added of Hamraoui, âis that her private life is respected, that her status as a victim is respected.â
In India, both Facebook and WhatsApp have been at the forefront of the rabid Islamophobia generated by the hate industry, in cahoots with the BJP IT cell. In fact, hate is easily the most profitable item in India at the moment, and hate directed at Muslims and Dalits the most effective magic wand to control a heterogenous population ravaged by economic uncertainties and the pandemic-induced decimation. Hate speeches which directly led to violent riots erupting within hours, such as in the case of Delhi 2020, lynching and gang-rape videos, flogging and assaults on Dalits, as well as other forms of murderous humiliation directed at minorities are âviral contentâ. They are equivalent to super clicks and commensurate profits for social media companies.
Annie Domini, 'Ankhi Das Stepping Down Is an Eyewash: Facebook Won't Change its Ways', Leaflet Â
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In the past two days, Iâve heard about one accident and one assault in which the victim ârefused medical attention on the sceneâ. I donât get it. You get sideswiped by another car, or punched in the street and you wonât let EMS check you out? Please, check my eyes, my ears; give me a scan or take me to the hospital and x-ray me. Iâd want to survive whatever happened to me -- why do people refuse help?