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Trump and Imran Khan’s Legal Cases Are They Political Hit Jobs?

Imran Khan and Donald Trump

Both Donald Trump and Imran Khan are powerful political heavyweights and former heads of government looking to make a political return, and they share a misfortune. Both have been involved in complicated politically motivated legal cases that, in the prosecutions’ opinion, have a dark political aim.

The powers that be in both nations, of course, reject that purpose, but the potential political significance of these cases is huge.

The courtroom appears to be taking the place of the hustings in certain democracies. This is especially visible in the case of Imran Khan, widely regarded as Pakistan’s most popular politician. He was found guilty of selling gifts obtained while in government and failing to declare the income.

Khan’s three-year prison sentence will bar him from running in elections later this year. The all-powerful army of Pakistan has insured that its ally-turned-critic would not retake power in those elections. To be certain, they have dismembered Imran Khan’s party, pushing PTI leaders to quit Khan, and crippled the country’s news media.

The battery of court proceedings confronting Donald Trump — he’s been indicted in three criminal instances, with a fourth reportedly on the way – is far more complex and serious. He appeared in court in New York last week and declared himself not guilty of the most serious accusation he faces: conspiring to overturn the outcome of the 2020 presidential election.

Trump

Trump’s drive for re-election

Trump, as one would expect from a political street fighter, is ranting that it’s all a political sham to undermine his drive for re-election and that he won’t get a fair trial. It is undeniable that Trump is the overwhelming favourite to win the Republican nomination and hence face Joe Biden in the November 2024 presidential election. The flurry of litigation has also bolstered his position among his supporters. Even his Republican competitors have alleged that the legal suits are politically motivated.

The biter bit is Donald Trump. During his first presidential campaign, he regularly referred to his opponent as ‘Crooked Hillary‘ and pushed his supporters to chant: Lock Her Up! Hillary Clinton allegedly committed the offence of using a private email server for official correspondence while serving as Secretary of State. The director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) decided that Clinton was ‘very irresponsible,’ but advised against prosecuting her because there was no criminal intent.

Trump has recently shifted his vitriol towards Joe Biden, whom he has branded as the most corrupt person ever, without providing any evidence. He has also made numerous references to the Biden ‘criminal family,’ attempting to draw the president into the debate about his son, Hunter Biden’s, sometimes erratic behaviour.

This is part of a populist pattern in which opponents are not only questioned about their programmes, competency, and political experience, but are also portrayed as corrupt and criminal. It coarsens politics and suffocates genuine democratic discourse.

Trump

Biden White House Denial

The White House maintains that it played no part in precipitating Donald Trump’s prosecution and that all choices were made independently of political pressure. That could be the case. Nobody wants prominent politicians to be exempt from prosecution. However, many Americans will believe that this flurry of legal action against a former president, which is expected to continue during the presidential election campaign, is intended to help Joe Biden’s re-election.

Democrats in the United States have done their fair share of vilification and mudslinging. Their inaugural impeachment attempt against President Trump in 2019, saying that he had invited foreign involvement in the presidential election, was particularly misguided.

It was never going to result in a conviction, and it gave the impression that the losing party was behaving dishonourably in defeat. And this took some of the moral high ground away from the second – and far more serious – move to impeach Trump in the aftermath of the Capitol building storming citing incitement to insurgency.

According to the Economist, only politics, not the law, can prevent Donald Trump’s return to power.

Imran Khan, Trump

Pakistan Court Indicts Former PM Imran Khan

Meanwhile, on Monday a Pakistani criminal court indicted former Prime Minister Imran Khan and his deputy in an official secrets act case, his party said, dealing another blow to the jailed former cricket star ahead of a general election in January.

The indictment stems from a confidential cable delivered to Islamabad early last year by Pakistan’s ambassador in Washington, which Khan is accused of making public.

Khan denies this and claims the information came from other sources.

The Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) said in a statement that a special court had indicted Khan and his party’s deputy leader, former Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Quershi, and that the hearing would begin on Friday. It stated that it would contest the indictment.

Khan said the cable was evidence of a US plot to force the Pakistani military to depose him in a parliamentary vote in 2022 because he had visited Moscow shortly before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Both the US and Pakistan’s militaries deny this.

Khan was pushed from office after losing a no-confidence vote in 2022, and he subsequently led rallies against the government and the military, accusing them of attempting to marginalise him.

The military, which has ruled directly for extended periods of time and exerted substantial influence over civilian governments, disputed this.

Khan has had scores of legal complaints brought against him, which he has dismissed as an attempt to remove him from politics. In one graft case, he was convicted and sentenced to three years in prison.

The sentence was suspended, but he remains in prison on other charges, including encouraging violence and keeping state secrets. According to lawyers, a guilty finding under the Official Secrets Act could result in up to 14 years in prison or perhaps the death penalty.

Khan’s party, the hearing on Monday took place on the grounds of Adyala Jail, near Islamabad, where Khan is being kept, with no media or public access.

Khan is barred from running in the forthcoming general election due to his graft conviction, but his legal team is appealing for him to be released on bail before the poll.

Nawaz Sharif, Khan’s former opponent, launched his party’s election campaign on Saturday after returning home from a four-year self-imposed exile, promising to combat inflation.

Politics

U.N. Special Rapporteur Calls on Thailand’s Banks to Cut-Off Myanmar Junta

UN Special Rapporteur on human rights in Myanmar Tom Andrews speaks during a press conference after a meeting with Thailand's Parliamentary Committee

The U.N special rapporteur for human rights in Myanmar has said the Bank of Thailand, commercial banks, and the anti-money laundering office are working on measures to stop the Myanmar Junta from acquiring weapons through Thailand’s banking system.

Tom Andrews the U.N. special rapporteur for human rights in Myanmar, said that some banks commercial in Thailand had aided Myanmar Junta’s by facilitating transactions that supplied military equipment to the Junta through the international banking system.

He called on the Bank of Thailand and financial institutions to do more to stop Myanmar’s junta acquiring weapons which they use on civilians to maintain power.

The special rapporteur was in Bangkok to address a parliamentary committee on security, he called on the Thai government to stop financial transactions that help supply weapons to Myanmar’s junta in line with a plan promoted by the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) that sets out an end to violence as a first step toward peace.

In his 2023 report “The Billion Dollar Death Trade,” Andrews noted that Singapore had implemented a clear policy opposing the transfer of weapons to Myanmar.

Thailand's Banks

Thai Baht – File Image

Thailand’s Banks Lacked Clear Policy

As a result, exports of weapons and related materials from Singapore-registered entities using the formal banking system dropped from almost U.S. $120 million in fiscal year 2022 to just over $10 million over the next 12 months.

However, he said Thailand had no explicit policy position opposing weapons transfer to the Myanmar Junta, which saw exports from Thai-registered entities more than double in 2023, from just over $60 million to nearly $130 million.

He called on Thai Government to conduct a thorough investigation into transfers as Singapore had done into its companies’ dealings.

Andrews told the the committee that five Thai commercial banks and Thai-based companies were assisting Myanmar’s junta obtain weapons, dual-technology items and jet fuel, enabling Military Junta to conduct atrocities against the people.

But said he had found no evidence that the Thai government was involved or was aware of the transactions or that Thai commercial banks had knowledge.

Thailand's Banks

Photo courtesy of The Nation

Banks Condemn Myanmar Junta Violence

Meanwhile representatives from Thailand’s central bank, anti-money laundering office and the commercial banks named in the report were also present at the parliamentary meeting at government house in Bangkok.

A representative of the Bank of Thailand said officials were working with the commercial banks and the anti-money laundering office to make sure that enhanced oversight was properly practiced.

The Thai Bankers Association that was also at the parliamentary meeting said it did not have the means to investigate and monitor such irregularities beyond Thailand’s borders.

Mr. Pongsit Chaichatpornsuk, a Thai Bankers Association representative told the committee that If government security agencies tell us, we will stop transactions. We don’t support arms procurement by Myanmar Junta or any military government to violate human rights.

Thailand, which shares a long border with Myanmar and hosts many thousands of refugees fleeing conflict there, has tried to promote dialogue between Myanmar’s military rulers and opposition forces but no progress has been made.

This Article was first published in RFA

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Politics

People Rushing Sign Online Petition to Impeach South Korea’s President Crash Site

South Korea's President

The Speaker of the National Assembly of South Korea said in a statement that an online petition calling for South Korea’s President Mr. Yoon Suk-yeol’s impeachment crashed due to the enormous number of individuals attempting to sign the petition. Saying the National Assembly would resolve the matter as quickly as possible.

Since the petition was launch on the National Assembly’s website on June 20, more than 811,000 people have signed it. The petition urges Parliament to introduce legislation to impeach President Yoon on the grounds that he is unfit for office.

Late on June 30, National Assembly Speaker Mr. Woo Won-shik issued an apology for the disturbance and stated that Parliament would take action to protect the public’s fundamental rights.

People attempting to access the petition on July 1 experienced delays of up to four hours. At one point, an error message indicated that more than 30,000 individuals were waiting to access the site.

South Korea’s Parliament Hesitant

The online petition accuses Yoon of corruption, escalating the risk of conflict with North Korea, and endangering South Koreans’ health by failing to prevent Japan from leaking treated radioactive water from the destroyed Fukushima nuclear power plant.

By law, Parliament must assign every petition signed by more than 50,000 people to a committee, which will then decide whether to put it to a vote in the assembly.

However, the opposition Democratic Party, which has a majority in Parliament, is hesitant to turn the petition into an impeachment bill, according to media reports, with a spokesperson stating that the party has yet to address the topic.

The Parliament can impeach a president with a two-thirds majority. The Constitutional Court then deliberates the motion and decides whether to remove or reinstall the president.

Meanwhile, on Monday Reuters reported North Korea criticized a joint military exercise performed this month by South Korea, Japan, and the United States, according to official media, saying such drills demonstrate the three nations’ alliance has evolved into “the Asian version of NATO”.

On Thursday, the three countries began large-scale combined military drills named “Freedom Edge” featuring navy destroyers, fighter fighters, and the nuclear-powered US aircraft carrier Theodore Roosevelt, with the goal of strengthening defenses against missiles, submarines, and air strikes.

The drill was designed at a three-way meeting at Camp David last year to boost military cooperation amid concerns on the Korean peninsula caused by North Korea’s weapons testing.

Pyongyang will not overlook the strengthening of a military bloc led by the United States and its allies, and it would respond aggressively and decisively to defend regional peace, according to North Korea’s foreign ministry, as reported by KCNA.

 

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Joe Biden Assures Donors He Can Still Win Presidential Election Despite Debate Concerns

Joe Biden Assures Donors he Can Still Win Presidential Election Despite Debate Concerns

(CTN News) – US President Joe Biden has convinced Democratic donors that he can still defeat Donald Trump in the November presidential election, following a dismal debate performance that raised concerns about his prospects.

On Saturday, the 81-year-old president attended a series of fundraising events in New York and New Jersey, defending his performance in CNN’s Presidential Debate.

On Thursday, Joe Biden conceded, “I didn’t have a great night, but neither did Trump” at one event.

“I promise you we’re going to win this election,” the politician declared.

Joe Biden’s debate performance was marked by difficult-to-follow and wobbly responses, generating further concerns among some Democrats about whether he is the ideal candidate to run in this high-stakes race.

Former Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Joe Biden’s debate performance “wasn’t great,” while his former communications director, Kate Bedingfield, termed it “very disappointing.”

The president acknowledged the worry but committed to fighting harder.

New Jersey’s Democratic governor, Phil Murphy, attended the fundraiser alongside Mr. Biden and the First Lady, telling Mr. Biden, “We are all with you 1,000 percent.”

The Joe Biden team acknowledged that the debate did not go as planned but maintained he would not step aside for another nominee.

On Saturday, campaign chairwoman Jennifer O’Malley Dillon stated that internal post-debate polling revealed that “voters’ opinions were not changed”.

“It will not be the first time that overblown media narratives have driven temporary dips in the polls,” she told reporters.

Former President Barack Obama, a friend of Mr. Biden, admitted on social media that “bad debate nights happen”.

“This election is still a choice between someone who fought for ordinary folks his entire life and someone who only cares about himself,” said Mr. Obama.

Hours later, Mr Trump told his supporters that he saw the discussion as a “big victory” for his campaign.

“Joe Biden’s problem is not his age,” Trump, 78, added. “It is his competence. He’s quite incompetent.

Politicians were not the only ones who criticized Mr Biden’s performance.

A prominent editorial in the New York Times condemned his decision to run again as a “reckless gamble” and advised him to conduct some soul-searching this weekend.

It urged Democrats to “acknowledge that Joe Biden can’t continue his race and create a process to select someone more capable to stand in his place” .

Voters in the US have expressed misgivings about voting for any candidate after Thursday’s debate.

Lori Gregory, a long-time Democrat, told the BBC she “could not handle” watching the discussion, asking, “Is this the best our country can do?”

Republican Crystal Myers-Barber said it was “painful to watch,” but she also thought “Trump came across very level-headed and presidential, and Biden came across very weak.”

Democrat Shana Ziolko said she was “frustrated” by the debate and believed there was no obvious winner.

A post-debate poll conducted by liberal pollster Data for Progress revealed that 62% of potential voters who saw or read about the debate believed Trump won. Only 30% of those polled believed Mr Biden had won the debate.

Until more polling is done, fundraising could be another indicator of Joe Biden’s sustained popularity.

In a memo, chairwoman Jennifer O’Malley Dillon stated that the campaign had raised more than $27 million (£21.3 million) between the Thursday debate and Friday evening.

“After Thursday night’s debate, the Beltway class is counting Joe Biden out. “The data in battleground states, however, tells a different story,” she explained.

“This election was incredibly close before Thursday, and by every metric we’ve seen since, it remains just as close” , she commented.

Source: BBC

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