Seven people have died and thousands have been forced to evacuate their homes due to flooding in South Korea.

A third day of torrential rain has caused landslides, power cuts, and damage to infrastructure across the country.

Early on Saturday, officials said that water had overtopped a dam in the central North Chungcheong province.

Prime Minister Han Duck-soo has asked the military to assist with rescue efforts.

As well as those confirmed killed, three people are currently missing and several are reported injured, with the overall number of casualties expected to rise.

Thousands of people have been affected by evacuation orders issued by various local governments.

The Yonhap News Agency reported that some 6,400 residents were evacuated after the Goesan Dam began to overflow at around 06:30 local time on Saturday (22:30 BST on Friday).

A number of low-lying villages near the dam, as well as many of the roads connecting them, were said to have been submerged, leaving some residents trapped in their homes.

Korail, the country’s national rail operator, has announced the suspension of all slow trains and some bullet trains, and said other bullet train services would be disrupted.

Late on Friday, a train was derailed in North Chungcheong after a landslide threw earth and sand onto the tracks.

One engineer was injured in the incident, but the train was not carrying passengers at the time.

Red alerts have been issued for 15 cities across Italy as extreme heat continues to affect southern Europe.

The alerts, which indicate risks even for healthy people, apply to tourist hotspots including Rome, Florence, and Bologna for the coming days.

More high temperatures are expected in Europe next week as another heatwave approaches.

The European Space Agency (ESA) says Italy, Spain, France, Germany and Poland may see extreme conditions.

The ESA monitors land and sea temperatures via its satellites.

Periods of intense heat occur within natural weather patterns, but globally they are becoming more frequent, more intense and are lasting longer due to global warming.

The Italian government has advised anyone in the areas covered by Saturday’s red alerts to avoid direct sunlight between 11:00 and 18:00, and to take particular care of the elderly or vulnerable.

Meanwhile, Greece has hit temperatures 40C (104F) or more in recent days. The Acropolis – the country’s most popular tourist attraction – was closed during the hottest hours of Friday to protect visitors.

There are also fears in the country of a greater risk of wildfires, especially in areas with high winds. It suffered major wildfires in 2021 in another exceptional heatwave.

High temperatures have also been reaching into central parts of Europe, with Germany and Poland among countries affected.

Czech Republic’s meteorological office issued a warning that temperatures over the weekend could go above 38C, which is exceptionally high for the country.

In the UK, however, heavy showers and gusty winds are expected in parts of England on Saturday.

Meteorologists said this was because the southern shift of the jet stream, which was fuelling the hot weather in Europe, was also drawing low-pressure systems into the UK – bringing unsettled and cooler weather.

Volunteers from the Hellenic Red Cross handing out water bottles in Athens on Friday

The current heatwave in Europe has been named Cerberus by the Italian Meteorological Society, after the three-headed monster that features in Dante’s Inferno.

Italian weather forecasters are warning that the next heatwave – dubbed Charon after the ferryman who delivered souls into the underworld in Greek mythology – could push temperatures back up above 40C next week.

Heatwaves are also being seen in parts of the US, China, North Africa and Japan.

Italy is one of the countries experiencing soaring temperatures

Greece’s culture ministry announced the closure of the Acropolis on Friday from 12:00 to 17:00 (9:00-14:00 GMT), saying similar measures were likely to follow on Saturday.

The complex sits on a rocky hilltop with little shade, and temperatures there are usually hotter than in the surrounding areas.

Several other tourist sites around the Sacred Rock where the Acropolis stands remained open throughout the day.

In recent days, the Greek Red Cross has been deployed to provide water bottles and help people feeling nauseous and dizzy in the heat.

People have been advised to drink at least two litres of water a day and to avoid coffee and alcohol, which are dehydrating.

Last month was the hottest June on record, according to the EU’s climate monitoring service Copernicus.

The hottest temperature ever recorded in Europe was 48.8C in Sicily in August 2021.

Extreme weather resulting from warming climate is “unfortunately becoming the new normal”, the World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) has warned.

Labour needs to be “bolder” and “more ambitious”, rather than “tinkering around the edges”, the head of the UK’s second largest union

Unite leader Sharon Graham warned that otherwise “apathy” would be the winner at the next general election.

The union gives more money to Sir Keir Starmer’s party than any other.

Ms Graham saw off a bid this week by some members to end Unite’s affiliation to Labour, which guarantees the party nearly £1.5m a year.

She argued it would be the worst time to leave the Labour Party when it was “within touching distance of power, because that would reduce union influence”.

Ms Graham’s membership spans public and private sectors, so what influence does she want to exercise?

Next Saturday, Labour’s National Policy Forum meets behind closed doors in Nottingham.

It brings together trade union representatives with MPs, grassroots members, and some shadow ministers.

Although any policies agreed there are not guaranteed to be included in the next election manifesto, trade unions can make very clear where their priorities lie.

For Unite, taking energy companies and the struggling steel industry into public ownership are near the top of its agenda.

During a number of meetings with the Labour leadership, Ms Graham has pressed her case that it would be cheaper to buy a steel industry that has lost much of its market value, than to bail out its private owners.

The Labour leader was publicly urged to do this when he spoke at Unite’s policy conference in Brighton this week.

But while he has talked of “preserving” the industry if Labour wins power, he would not commit to acquiring it for the state.

People power

Ms Graham is now intending to take a less conventional approach to policy-making.

The plan is for “hundreds of organisers” to go to marginal seats and talk to voters there about the case for taking key industries into public hands.

The message will be reinforced by Unite-funded billboards.

The hope is that then voters will press local Labour parties and local candidates to commit to backing nationalisation.

“We will take our ideas to the people,” Ms Graham told me.

“The real decision-makers are the voters. If they push those ideas, politicians tend to move when they speak to voters.”

Keir Starmer addressing the

Her over-arching criticism is that Labour’s leadership is not setting out a distinctive enough alternative to the government, and feels too constrained by the state of the economy.

She argued that “we need be as bold as the 1945 Labour government” which created the NHS. “There wasn’t much money about then, I can tell you,” she said.

The next Labour government could leave a lasting legacy, she suggested.

“People will say they remember when energy companies were privatised and when they paid massive bills, and it was a Labour government that stopped all that.”

The Labour leadership would argue that unless the party is trusted on the economy, many of the things trade unions want – like increased employment rights – simply won’t happen.

Its strategists also believe that it has to be seen to be moving away from Corbyn-era policies to win back voters who abandoned the party in 2019.

‘Maximum leverage’

But Ms Graham told me that abiding strictly by shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves’s “fiscal rules” had led to “inertia”, and people were beginning to ask: “What’s the difference?” between government and opposition.

“If Labour are saying what’s happening now is awful, and it is absolutely awful, they have to come out with solutions to that.”

While Labour is criticising the number of children in poverty, its shadow ministers have been told they can’t commit, for example, to provide free school meals for all primary children, because that would be a spending commitment.

Ms Graham said the party must “talk about what they can do to change Britain. People want something to vote for.”

She told her members this week that maintaining Unite’s financial link to Labour would give her “maximum leverage” with the party.

But so far she hasn’t moved policy on energy and steel. So by guaranteeing funds to Sir Keir Starmer, wasn’t she actually reducing her bargaining power?

“The affiliation fee is what you pay to be part of the club. But most of the money we gave Labour traditionally was outside the affiliation fee,” she said.

For example, the union donated an additional £3m to Labour before the last election.

But Ms Graham warned there were “no blank cheques”.

“I want to see some movement if we are going to give what we usually give… We would be better off with a Labour government, but I am very, very disappointed with the lack of ambition.”

US urges Pakistan to continue working with ‘IMF for sustainable economic recovery’

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Tuesday welcomed the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) approval of a programme to support Pakistan, saying that Washington stood by the people of Pakistan.

“We stand by the Pakistani people during these hard times and welcome the International Monetary Fund’s approval of a programme to support Pakistan,” Blinken wrote on his official Twitter handle.

“We urge Pakistan to continue working with IMF toward macroeconomic reforms and sustainable economic recovery,” he further said on the microblogging site.

His comments came after the global lender deposited $1.2 billion into the State Bank of Pakistan’s (SBP) account earlier today, boosting the cash-strapped nation’s hope for economic stability as it teetered on the brink of default for several months.

The IMF’s executive board late last night approved a $3 billion Stand-By Agreement (SBA) under a nine-month programme, which came after eight months of tough negotiations over fiscal discipline.

Pakistan reached a staff-level agreement with the lender last month, securing a short-term pact, which got more than expected funding for the crises-hit country of 230 million.

In a televised address from Islamabad, Finance Minister Ishaq Dar said Pakistan would receive the balance amount after two reviews — the second in November and the third in February.

This inflow will increase Pakistan’s foreign exchange reserves, he said, noting that during the ongoing week, the central bank’s reserves have moved up by around $4.2 billion.

“Our foreign exchange reserves will close at around $13-$14 billion on July 14 […] and the SBP will release the exact numbers later on,” the finance minister said.

In a statement, the IMF said its executive board gave the green light to the nine-month standby arrangement in order “to support the authorities’ economic stabilisation programme.”

“Pakistan is on the road to development […] we must all make efforts to make gains through this,” Dar added.

The South Asian nation has suffered from a balance-of-payments crisis as it attempts to service crippling external debt amid a fraught political environment — following the removal of the country’s former prime minister Imran Khan.

Inflation has rocketed, the rupee has reached a record low against the dollar, and the country is struggling to afford imports, causing a severe decline in industrial output.

Pakistan has brokered close to two dozen arrangements with the IMF, most of which have gone uncompleted.

In the days before the decision was approved, Pakistan received $3 billion in deposits from Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

The money from the two Gulf countries boosted Pakistan’s foreign reserves to $7.5 billion — more than double last week’s account balance.

US doesn’t interfere in Pakistan’s political matters: Ambassador Blome

PESHAWAR: Donald Blome, the United States ambassador to Pakistan, said the US doesn’t interfere in Pakistan’s political matters,

The ambassador’s remarks came during a ceremony in Peshawar where the US Agency for International Development (USAID) provided $5 million worth of equipment to the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) Board of Revenue, augmenting its capacity for accurate land measurements, said a communique.

Following the recent International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) approval of a programme for Pakistan’s support, the US has been welcoming towards the agreement between the country and the money-lending institution.

Earlier this week, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken also welcomed the approval of the loan tranche stating that Washington stood by the people of Pakistan.

“We stand by the Pakistani people during these hard times and welcome the International Monetary Fund’s approval of a programme to support Pakistan,” Blinken wrote on his official Twitter handle.

“We urge Pakistan to continue working with IMF toward macroeconomic reforms and sustainable economic recovery,” he further said on the microblogging site.

Meanwhile, during the ceremony attended by Blome, USAID provided equipment worth $5 million to the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Board of Revenue to augment its capacity for accurate land measurements.

The US has been partnering with the KP government to strengthen transparency and accuracy in the land records and registration system, promoting economic growth and investment in the seven subdivisions of the newly merged districts.

The United States also announced a new partnership to empower the Ombudsperson Secretariat by providing training to ombudsperson staff on women’s rights and land settlement regulations, it said. This initiative aims to raise awareness about the ombudsperson’s crucial role in safeguarding women’s rights to property and inheritance.

Indonesian president warns ASEAN ‘can’t be proxy’ of any country

Indonesian President Joko Widodo on Friday said ASEAN cannot become a proxy for other countries, as US-China tensions rise over issues in the Asia-Pacific.

Foreign ministers from the Southeast Asian bloc have gathered in Jakarta for talks about regional issues from the disputed South China Sea, which Beijing claims almost in its entirety, to the crisis in Myanmar, where China is its junta’s main ally.

Disagreements over the waterway have pitted some members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) against Beijing and boosted sympathy for US opposition to China’s growing assertiveness. Others have backed Beijing.

“ASEAN cannot be a competition, it can’t be a proxy of any country, and international law should be respected consistently,” Widodo told the ministers.

“We in ASEAN are committed to strengthening the unity and solidity as well as centrality in ASEAN to guard the peace and stability in the region.”

Tensions between the world’s two largest economies have soared in recent years over a host of issues, including China’s drills around self-ruled Taiwan and sweeping US export restrictions on advanced semiconductors.

The Jakarta meetings have been joined by both China and the United States, whose top diplomats met Thursday on the sidelines in the Indonesian capital.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken warned China’s Wang Yi of consequences after a cybersecurity breach blamed on China again threatened to undermine a nascent stabilisation of ties, a US official told AFP.

Wang told Blinken that the United States should not interfere in China’s affairs and “work with” Beijing to improve their relationship, according to the Chinese foreign ministry.

ASEAN has been divided on the Myanmar crisis and how to engage with its pro-China junta since the 2021 coup plunged the country into violent turmoil.

The bloc issued a much-debated communique on Thursday that repeated its condemnation of violence. It reiterated that a five-point peace plan agreed with the junta, but largely ignored since, must remain the basis for resolving the conflict.

Myanmar remains an ASEAN member but its rulers have been barred from top-level summits over a lack of progress on the plan, which aims to end violence and resume talks between the military and the anti-coup movement.

“The Indo-Pacific should not be another battleground. Our region must remain stable, and we intend to keep it that way,” Indonesia’s Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi told ministers at the start of an 18-nation East Asia Summit ministerial meeting on Friday.

Record-breaking heat bakes US, Europe, China

Extreme heat advisories have been issued for more than 100 million Americans with the National Weather Service forecasting particularly dangerous conditions in Arizona, California, Nevada and Texs

At the same time, several European nations, including France, Germany, Italy, Spain and Poland, are also baking in searing temperatures.

The mercury may soar as high as 48 degrees Celsius (118.4 degrees Fahrenheit) on the islands of Sicily and Sardinia, the European Space Agency said – “potentially the hottest temperatures ever recorded in Europe.”

North Africa has also been sweltering and the Moroccan meteorological service issued an extreme heat red alert for southern parts of the country.

Some regions of China, including the capital Beijing, are also experiencing sweltering temperatures and a major Chinese power company said its single-day power generation hit a record high on Monday.

Last month was already the hottest June on record, according to the US space agency NASA and the European Union’s Copernicus Climate Change Service.

Extreme weather resulting from a warming climate is “unfortunately becoming the new normal,” warns Secretary-General Petteri Taalas of the World Meteorological Organization (WMO).

Excessive heat is one of the deadliest meteorological events, according to the WMO. One recent study estimates over 61,000 people died from heat during Europe’s record-breaking summer last year.

Death Valley

A contributing factor to the higher temperatures this year may be the climate pattern known as El Nino.

El Nino events, which occur every two to seven years, are marked by warmer-than-average sea surface temperatures in the central and eastern Pacific near the Equator, and last about nine to 12 months.

North America has already seen a series of extreme meteorological events this summer, with smoke from wildfires that continue to burn out of control in Canada causing extraordinary air pollution across large parts of the United States.

The US northeast, particularly Vermont, has also recently been pummelled by torrential rains which have caused devastating floods.

According to climate scientists, global warming can cause heavier and more frequent rainfall.

Meanwhile, residents of much of the southern United States have been experiencing unrelenting high temperatures for weeks.

Daniel Swain, a climate scientist at the University of California, Los Angeles, said the temperature in Death Valley could equal or surpass the record for the hottest air temperature ever reliably measured on Earth.

The WMO’s official record is 56.7C (134F) recorded in Death Valley, in the southern California desert. But that was measured in 1913 and Swain stands by the figure of 54.4C (130F) from 2020 and 2021.

‘Exceptionally high’

The oceans have not been spared from the warm early summer either.

Water temperatures off the southern coast of Florida have surpassed 32C (90F), according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

As for the Mediterranean, surface temperatures will be “exceptionally high” over the coming days and weeks, the WMO said, exceeding 30C (86F) in some parts, several degrees above average.

Warming ocean temperatures can have devastating consequences for aquatic life both in terms of survival and migration and can also negatively impact the fishing industry.

At the other end of the planet, Antarctic sea ice hit its lowest recorded level for a month of June.

The world has warmed an average of nearly 1.2C (1.9F) since the mid-1800s, unleashing more intense heatwaves, more severe droughts in some areas and storms made fiercer by rising seas.

The WMO’s Taalas said the current heat wave “underlines the increasing urgency of cutting greenhouse gas emissions as quickly and as deeply as possible.”

France to fete India’s Modi at Bastille Day celebration

Modi and President Emmanuel Macron will watch French and Indian soldiers march down the tree-lined Champs-Elysee avenue in Paris, while French-made Rafale fighter jets India bought in 2015 will take part in the fly-past over the Arc de Triomphe.

Modi began a two-day visit to Paris on Thursday.

 

The parade comes after New Delhi gave initial approval to purchase an extra 26 Rafale jets for its navy and three Scorpene class submarines, deepening defence ties with Paris at a time the two nations are seeking allies in the Indo-Pacific.

The total value of the purchases is expected to be around 800 billion rupees ($9.75 billion), according to a source familiar with the details, although that was still subject to negotiations.

France has been one of India’s closest partners in Europe for decades. It was the only Western nation to not impose sanctions on New Delhi after India conducted nuclear tests in 1998.

 

India has relied on French fighter jets for four decades now. Much before buying Dassault Aviation’s Rafale, India bought Mirage jets in the 1980s and those still comprise two squadrons of the air force.

The ageing fleet of India’s Russian-made planes, Moscow’s inability to perform maintenance work, and delays in India’s indigenous manufacturing plans have necessitated the two new defence deals.

Later on Friday, Macron will host Modi at the Elysee Palace for talks before a state banquet at the Louvre Museum.

For France, the strategic partnership with India is crucial as it seeks to consolidate its alliance network in the Indo-Pacific region after being dealt a blow by Australia when Canberra decided to ditch a big French submarine contract and form the AUKUS alliance with Britain and the United States.

Both India and France through its island territories have deep interests in the Indian Ocean and are concerned about China’s growing assertiveness in the region.

The two-day visit comes less than a month after President Joe Biden hosted Modi for a state visit, during which the US offered critical military technology including fighter jet engines and high-altitude drones to India.

Macron has treated only a few global leaders to the Bastille Day military parade.

He invited Donald Trump for the 2017 celebrations, and the then-US president was so impressed by the French march-past that he asked Pentagon officials to explore a similar parade in celebration of American troops.

Scotland’s top civil servant was told about the arrest of Nicola Sturgeon’s husband shortly after it happened, according to an email.

The email says John-Paul Marks was contacted by the chief constable at 08:00 on 5 April and told that Peter Murrell had been taken into custody.

Officers had arrived at the Glasgow home of Mr Murrell and Ms Sturgeon about 25 minutes earlier.

A police press release announcing the arrest was issued at about 09:30.

The email, which was sent by Mr Marks to First Minister Humza Yousaf at 09:20 that morning, has been released by the Scottish government under freedom of information laws.

In it, Mr Marks tells Mr Yousaf that it was “routine” for Chief Constable Sir Iain Livingstone to inform him of all high-profile Police Scotland (PS) action.

He wrote: “The Chief Constable (CC) contacted me at 8am this morning to update on Operation Branchform.

“Following agreement with the Crown Office, PS have arrested a suspect and taken him into custody to be interviewed under caution.

“I informed you after the event and after this PS action had occurred as is routine, with the explicit permission of the CC.

“In terms of any and all liaison from SG (Scottish government) Ministers or senior SG officials on Operation Branchform, I have agreed with the CC that this should be via me only without exception”.

Nicola Sturgeon has said she had no prior warning that her husband Peter Murrell was to be arrested

Mr Marks is the Scottish government’s permanent secretary – its most senior civil servant.

A subsequent email was sent by him to the first minister shortly after the arrest of then-SNP treasurer Colin Beattie on 18 April.

Mr Marks again wrote that he formally informed Mr Yousaf of the arrest after it had happened, on the advice of the chief constable.

The email was sent at 09:02, just minutes after the arrest of Mr Beattie had been made public in a police press release.

Both Mr Murrell and Mr Beattie were subsequently released without charge pending further investigation, as was Ms Sturgeon following her arrest on 11 June.

The ongoing Operation Branchform investigation is examining the funding and finances of the SNP, and was launched in response to concerns about what happened to £660,000 of money that was donated to the party by activists.

Ms Sturgeon and Mr Yousaf have both previously said they had no prior warning in advance of the arrests, with Sir Iain Livingstone saying last month that any suggestion the government had been told before the arrests were made was “absolutely outrageous”.

Five more soldiers martyred in Zhob garrison attack, toll rises to nine

With five more soldiers scumbled to their injuries, the number of military personnel who embraced martyrdom climbed to nine as terrorists launched a “dastardly attack” on the Pakistan Army’s Zhob Garrison in Northern Balochistan, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) said in a statement on Wednesday.

Earlier today, the military’s media win said that four soldiers were martyred and five critically injured in the terrorists’ attack.

In the wee hours of Wednesday, a group of terrorists launched a dastardly attack on the garrison, the ISPR said, adding that the initial attempt to sneak into the facility was “checked by soldiers on duty”.

Upon interception, a heavy exchange of fire took place between the terrorists and soldiers, with the militants being “contained into a small area at the boundary”.

“Security forces remain determined to thwart all such ghastly attempts at destroying the peace of Balochistan and Pakistan,” the ISPR added.

Later tonight, the army’s media wing announced that the clearance operation at the Zhob Cantt has been completed, adding that five terrorists have been killed during the operation.

“However, five soldiers while fighting gallantly got critically injured earlier succumbed to injuries and embraced shahadat [martyrdom] taking the figure to a total of 9 shaheeds.”

The ISPR said that the security forces and the nation remain resilient and determined to thwart all such dastardly attempts of the enemy aimed at destroying the peace of Balochistan and Pakistan.

Terror activities in the country have soared by 79% during the first half of 2023, a statistical report released by the independent think tank Pakistan Institute for Conflict and Security Studies (PICSS) showed.

The report voiced alarm, stating that at least 271 militant attacks took place during the last six months, resulting in the loss of 389 lives and injuring 656 individuals.

The situation in the same timeframe last year was way better as compared to the current, as the first half of 2022 saw 151 attacks and 293 deaths, and 487 injuries.

These figures represent a staggering 79% increase in militant attacks during the first half of this year compared to the corresponding period last year.

Furthermore, the latter half of 2022 recorded 228 attacks, resulting in 246 fatalities and 349 injuries. Thus, the first six months of 2023 witnessed an 18% rise in attacks compared to the latter half of 2022, accompanied by a 58% increase in fatalities and an 88% increase in injuries.

Pakistani security forces have also stepped up their response against terrorism and killed at least 236 militants across the country while 295 suspected militants were also arrested during the first six months of 2023.