Saturday, May 24, 2025

Arson attack possible cause of Cannes power cutNew Foto - Arson attack possible cause of Cannes power cut

Arsonists could be behind a major power cut at theCannes Film Festival, according to French police. The power cut caused chaos just hours before the festival's star-studded closing ceremony, with local media suggesting it could have been caused by "malicious acts". The French national gendarmerie confirmed that officials were "looking into the likelihood of a fire being started deliberately", reported Reuters. It added that no arrests had been made so far. Mobile networks, 4G, traffic systems and train lines were all affected, making travel and communication difficult. The headquarters of the festival switched to a backup power supply that organisers hoped would allow the closing ceremony to take place. An official statement from the festival said: "A power outage is currently affecting the city of Cannes and surrounding areas. At this stage, the cause of the outage has not yet been identified. Restoration efforts are under way. "The Palais des Festivals has switched to an independent power supply, allowing all scheduled events and screenings, including the closing ceremony, to proceed as planned and under normal conditions." The first signs of power trouble were seen ahead of a press conference with The Crown star John O'Connor, when a loud bang was heard in the festival building, before it was plunged into temporary darkness. Guests were later seen paying for drinks and ice cream in cash, while expensive local restaurants lost the use of card machines. France Info, a radio network, broadcast unconfirmed reports that two "malicious acts" took place along train lines in the Var region, to the west of Cannes, before the blackout. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

Arson attack possible cause of Cannes power cut

Arson attack possible cause of Cannes power cut Arsonists could be behind a major power cut at theCannes Film Festival, according to French ...
Gangs prey on tourists with deadly 'zombie' drugNew Foto - Gangs prey on tourists with deadly 'zombie' drug

Colombian gangs are using a deadly drug once used by the CIA as a truth serum to kidnap and rob Western tourists. Dubbed Devil's Breath, the drug scopolamine is derived from the seeds of the Borrachero tree and is also known as burundanga. In potent doses of 10mg or more, it can paralyse its victims, rendering them highly suggestible to commands as they are placed in a "zombie"-like state. Thegangs will ensnare touristsby promising them a night of passion in messages sent over dating apps such as Tinder or the LGBT platform Grindr. After leading them to a secluded setting, the victim is offered a drink, or even a stick of chewing gum or a cigarette, that is laced with thecolourless and odourless drug. Cases have also been reported of victims being injected using incredibly fine needles that leave no trace of an entry wound. As the chemical cocktail works its way through their nervous system over the next 30 minutes, the victim is assailed with hallucinations, delirium and starts to lose control of their limbs. Sprawled helplessly on the bed or couch, their captors drain their accounts, rummage through their wallets or prise pieces of jewellery from their fingers and wrists. Those who start reacting erratically or try to resist are often hit over the head, according to Agustin Guerrero Salcedo, a leading toxicologist from Barranquilla with 40 years of experience treating such incidents. Police fear this is the fate that befellAlessando Coatti, a 38-year-old Italian scientist who went missing while on holiday in the coastal city of Santa Marta last month. Detectives believe the molecular biologist, who worked in London, was lured to an abandoned house in the San José del Pando neighbourhood after being contacted over the Grindr dating app. What exactly happened on the evening of April 4 remains unclear but post-mortem examinations concluded that Coatti was killed by blunt-force trauma. His body was then dismembered and stuffed into suitcases and bags strewn across the city in an apparent attempt to trick investigators into believing it was a gangland-style hit involving warring drug clans. "It does something to your brain whereyou forget completely… it's like a vacuum," recalled Fernando, a 64-year-old British financial analyst who believes he was drugged with Devil's Breath while on a business trip to Bogota in 2012. Speaking on condition of anonymity, the retired father of two, currently living in Spain, told The Telegraph he was duped into withdrawing around €1,000 with two separate credit cards after his beer was spiked during a night out at a bar near his hotel. He woke up the next afternoon at 1pm with next to no recollection of what had occurred the night before. Fernando said was forced to rely on the hotel receptionist to piece together the fragments of what happened that evening. He could only recall being approached by someone at a bar and then, according to the hotel staff, was picked up by a sympathetic taxi driver who came across him wandering in a daze along the streets of a shady neighbourhood of Bogota. "It's very dangerous because you're totally hypnotised, you do anything they say," Fernando said. "The next day I went to work and told people what happened to me. They suggested I go get tested, and it turned out I had been drugged "I don't remember much, I just have glimpses of vague instances of walking along the streets and stumbling over my feet. "Since then I have never accepted [random] drinks or left my drink alone: I think that's what had happened, I had probably gone to the toilet and let my beer down." Fernando explained that because he left one of his cards in the hotel safe, it means he was made to go back to the hotel and collect it while possibly intoxicated on Devil's Breath. "I had gone back into my hotel, during the time in which I was on burundanga and, on my own, taken a card and gone out again." Fernando informed police of the incident but claimed the dismissive manner in which they treated his complaint suggested such thefts were very commonplace. Cases have become so prevalent in Colombia that the US embassy in Bogota singled out scopolamine in a security warning to tourists in June 2023 over the dangers of meeting people through online dating. Many cases go unreported out of embarrassment and a reluctance to engage with police or judicial authorities. Tourist cities of Medellin, Cartagena, and Bogota were singled out as hotspots. Thefts committed against foreign visitors to Medellin in the last three months of 2023 had risen by 200 per cent compared with the previous year, city authorities said. Violent deaths of foreign visitors, most of which were US citizens, had increased 29 per cent. In January last year the US embassy disclosed that there had been eight deaths of its citizens attributed to involuntary drugging overdose or suspected homicides between November 1 and December 31 2023. In the first case of its kind in the UK, Diana Cristea, then 19, together with her boyfriend Joel Osei, used Devil's Breath to poison and robAdrian Murphy, an Irish dancer, in June 2019 after befriending him over Grindr. Toxicology reports showed Murphy had died from an overdose of the drug. Cristea, of Mill Hill, north London, and Osei, then 25, were both found guilty of murder following a trial at Croydon Crown Court. They were also convicted of poisoning a second man with the same drug two days earlier. The victim, who cannot be named for legal reasons, survived, but was taken to hospital after being found by a neighbour almost naked, extremely agitated and confused. Cristea was jailed for 16 years and handed a life sentence. Osei was sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum term of 32 years. The National Crime Agency, Britain's equivalent of the FBI, said there was little evidence of scopolamine being used in the UK but that they were monitoring cases. Prof Kamyar Afarinkia, a lecturer on drug toxicology from the University of West London, said that a backstreet chemist with as much knowledge as a second year university student would be able to extract scopolamine with 90 per cent purity from a Borrachero tree and manufacture it for use with only a few readily available chemicals. Explaining the ease with which it can be administered, he said: "If it's sprayed onto the face and if it's not cleaned properly, then it gets into your bloodstream fairly easily. "It can also be given, for example, in fruit juice...if it's given in grapefruit juice it's a lot more effective because grapefruit juice stops the metabolism of the drug in the body. "You can get a business card, soak it in, let it dry and then give it to somebody and then when they touch it would obviously be under their skin unless they go and wash their hands very quickly." Prof Afarinkia added: "In these cases it causes a very strange state when people basically accept everything that is said to them. "Scopolomaine belongs to a class of so-called 'truth serums' that you may have heard about in spy novels and basically that means people are open to suggestions. "So if they said 'can you tell me the latest secrets', people volunteer it, they wouldn't actually remember it afterwards." Dr Sarah Cockbill, a retired consultant pharmacist who has acted as an expert witness in medical legal cases for the past 13 years, said the severity of symptoms depended on the dosage, the health and age of the victim and whether any adulterants had been added to it. She said: "It puts the brain to sleep, so you are a zombie, you don't know what you're doing, how much of it and where. "People do just wander round in what looks like a trance until the symptoms wear off, but again that is dose dependent and a lot of people have more severe reactions to a small dose." On the risk of longer term brain damage, she added: "If you're putting your brain to sleep, it wouldn't be the most unusual thing for there to be some long lasting damage when they finally come around." Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

Gangs prey on tourists with deadly ‘zombie’ drug

Gangs prey on tourists with deadly 'zombie' drug Colombian gangs are using a deadly drug once used by the CIA as a truth serum to ki...
Minneapolis police chief continues to work toward changeNew Foto - Minneapolis police chief continues to work toward change

Five years after themurder of George Floydby Minneapolis police officerDerek Chauvin, the city is still reckoning with the calls for police reform that followed. Police chief Brian O'Hara, who wassworn in in November 2022, has been adamant about implementing changes from within that lead to safer streets and more positive interactions with Minneapolis police. Still, O'Hara said Floyd's death is still an "open wound" in the city. While police data shows shootings are trending down, Minneapolis is one of the few major cities where violent crime has not improved much since 2020, according to an analysis of the Major Cities Chiefs Association violent crime report. Crime in the city "skyrocketed" after Floyd's death and the protests that followed, O'Hara said, while "the numbers of the police force just diminished." "People have a very, very basic need to feel safe, and that has been taken away for a lot of people because of everything that's happened since," said O'Hara. The officer shortage continues to strain the department. In 2024,O'Hara told CBS Newsthat the Minneapolis Police Department was short by about 200 officers. "I go to these crime scenes. I've been standing there, boys, teenagers, men are dead in the street, and moms behind the crime scene tape wailing, and I'm going through my head thinking, 'We've had so many murders already this week, what happens if someone else dies?'" O'Hara said. "We don't have enough homicide investigators. I mean, it's been that critical at times. The urgency of the problem is real." Still, O'Hara is determined to make a difference with the resources he does have. He has focused on "getting back to the basics" and ensuring that "everything we do revolves around both reducing crime while earning trust with the community." O'Hara has also worked to "restore some pride in this profession" to try to draw more officers back to the job, and tried to change the culture in the department. Minneapolis police have also adjusted arrest tactics and are working on community engagement and officer training. "In my experience, the people who are here today are dramatically different from the impression that I had of this department in 2020," O'Hara said. Earlier this week, the Justice Department announced it was ending investigations of six police agencies andcanceling consent decrees proposed for Louisville and Minneapolis. O'Harasaid that reform effortswill continue, even without the federal oversight. The Minneapolis City Councilapproved the consent decreein January. Minneapolis resident Omar Mohammed told "CBS Saturday Morning" that he was impressed with the changes he has seen over the past few years. "The new chief did a great, great job, because what I see now is, before, police used to pull over everybody, the kids on the street, they used to use a lot of difficult stuff, you know?" Mohammed said. "A lot of big things changed, that's what I see." Here's how much Qatar's plane gifted to Trump administration will cost to retrofit 4 women arrested for allegedly aiding escaped New Orleans inmates Biggest takeaways from RFK Jr.'s MAHA report

Minneapolis police chief continues to work toward change

Minneapolis police chief continues to work toward change Five years after themurder of George Floydby Minneapolis police officerDerek Chauvi...
Nine of a doctor's 10 children are killed in Israel's latest strikes in GazaNew Foto - Nine of a doctor's 10 children are killed in Israel's latest strikes in Gaza

CAIRO (AP) — The bodies of 79 people killed by Israeli strikes have been brought to hospitals in the past 24 hours,Gaza's Health Ministry said Saturday — a toll that doesn't include hospitals in the battered north that it said arenow inaccessible. The dead over the past day in Israel's renewed military offensive included nine of a doctor's 10 children, horrified colleagues and the Health Ministry said. Alaa Najjar, a pediatrician at Nasser Hospital, was on duty at the time and ran home to find her family's house on fire, Ahmad al-Farra, head of the hospital's pediatric department, told The Associated Press. Najjar's husband was severely wounded and their only surviving child, an 11-year-old son, was in critical condition after Friday's strike in the southern city of Khan Younis, Farra said. The dead children ranged in age from seven months to 12 years old. Khalil Al-Dokran, a spokesperson for Gaza's Health Ministry, told the AP that two of the children remained under the rubble. There was no immediate comment by Israel's military on the strike. Earlier Saturday, a statement said Israel's air force struck over 100 targets throughout Gaza over the past day. The Health Ministry said the new deaths brought the war's toll to 53,901 since the Hamas-led attack on Oct. 7, 2023, that sparked the 19 months of fighting. The ministry said 3,747 people have been killed in Gaza since Israel resumed the war on March 18 in an effort to pressure Hamas to accept different ceasefire terms. Israel's pressure on Hamas has included a blockade of Gaza and its over 2 million people since early March. This week, thefirst small number of aid trucks enteredthe territory and began reaching Palestinians since the blockade began. But they were far fewer than the about 600 trucks a day that had been entering during the ceasefire. Warnings of famine by food security experts, andimages of desperate Palestiniansjostling for bowls of food at the ever-shrinking number of charity kitchens, led Israel's allies to press the government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to allow some aid to return. Netanyahu's government has sought a new aid delivery and distribution system by a newly established U.S.-backed group, but theUnited Nations and partnershave rejected it, saying it allows Israel to use food as a weapon and violates humanitarian principles. Israel may now be changing its approach to let aid groups remain in charge of non-food assistance, according to aletter obtained by the AP. Israel accuses Hamas of siphoning off aid but the U.N. and aid groups deny there is significant diversion. The Oct. 7 attack on southern Israel that sparked the war killed some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and militants abducted 251 others. Israel's retaliatory offensive, which has destroyed large swaths of Gaza, has killed mostly women and children, according to the Health Ministry, which doesn't differentiate between civilians and combatants in its count. Israel said it will continue to strike until Hamas releases all of the 58 remaining Israeli hostages and disarms. Fewer than half of the hostages still in Gaza are believed to be alive. Hamas has said it will only return the remaining hostages in exchange for more Palestinian prisoners, a lasting ceasefire and an Israeli withdrawal from the territory. Netanyahu has rejected those terms and has vowed tomaintain control over Gazaand facilitate what he refers to as the voluntary emigration of much of its Palestinian population. ___ Follow AP's war coverage athttps://apnews.com/hub/israel-hamas-war

Nine of a doctor's 10 children are killed in Israel's latest strikes in Gaza

Nine of a doctor's 10 children are killed in Israel's latest strikes in Gaza CAIRO (AP) — The bodies of 79 people killed by Israeli ...
France seizes British fishing boat in English ChannelNew Foto - France seizes British fishing boat in English Channel

A British fishing boat has been detained by French authorities after allegedly being caught operating without a licence in the English Channel. The Lady T, which is based in Eastbourne, East Sussex, was being held in Boulogne-sur-Mer on Saturday and now risks being confiscated. The vessel was intercepted by the Pluvier, a French navy ship, on Thursday and the catamaran's skipper is now facing prosecution forfishing for whelks without a licence. The incident has come days after Sir Keir Starmer, the Prime Minister, was criticised over adeal with the EU over fishing rights,which was seen to favour the French. A spokesman for France's Maritime Prefecture said: "On Thursday, May 22, the French Navy's public service patrol vessel, the Pluvier, conducted a fishing inspection in the French Exclusive Economic Zone, off the Somme Bay. "During this operation, which was part of the State's maritime enforcement, a British fishing vessel was inspected by sailors from the Navy patrol vessel while fishing without a license in French waters. "As the offence was proved, the fishing vessel was diverted during the night of May 23 to the port of Boulogne-sur-Mer, following the instructions of the Delegate for the Sea and Coastline, acting on behalf of the Regional Prefect, who oversees the fisheries police, for the purpose of initiating prosecution under the authority of the Public Prosecutor." The spokesman added: "This operation demonstrates the vigilance of State services in protecting fisheries resources and their determination to enforce regulations. "It sends a clear signal to those who might be tempted to fish illegally in French waters." On Saturday, the Lady T was moored behind the Bassin Loubet fish market in Boulogne. The ship's skipper, who refused to give his name, said: "I have nothing to say to you, I won't answer." The 10m boat is now forbidden to leave the port until further notice. Another British-flagged vessel was intercepted and detained in French waters last Saturday – less than 48 hours before the Government wasaccused of "surrendering" to the EU on fishing rights. The Francesca TO 80, registered in Truro, Cornwall, was spotted 30 nautical miles off the island of Batz, off Roscoff, Brittany. She was escorted to the port of Brest after inspectors suspected the crew of unlicensed fishing in French waters. This also constituted an offence under the Rural and Maritime Fishing Code, it was alleged. Under Sir Keir's new deal, European trawlers will be granted access to British waters for a further 12 years. A previous agreement, which was reached under Boris Johnson, saw the UK regain 25 per cent of EU fishing quotas, but this was set to run out next year. Now, the EU will maintain unfettered access to the UK's coastal waters until 2038. Nigel Farage, theReform UK leader, said the 12-year dealon access for European boats "will be the end of the fishing industry". Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

France seizes British fishing boat in English Channel

France seizes British fishing boat in English Channel A British fishing boat has been detained by French authorities after allegedly being c...

 

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