No survivors in crash of Russian helicopter with 22 on board in far east

A Russian heavy transport helicopter 255, lands at the airport in the town of Khojaly (Ivanyan), in Azerbaijan's controlled region of Nagorno-Karabakh, on October 2, 2023. (AFP)
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Updated 01 September 2024
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No survivors in crash of Russian helicopter with 22 on board in far east

Searchers found no survivors among the wreckage of a Russian helicopter that crashed in the far eastern peninsula of Kamchatka with 22 people on board, state news agency TASS said on Sunday.
The Mi-8T helicopter had taken off from a base near the Vachkazhets volcano. The Kamchatka peninsula, some 7,100 km (4,400 miles) east of Moscow, was hit by a cyclone over the weekend, with heavy winds and rain, but it was not clear if that was the cause of the crash.


Barack Obama compares Minnesota crackdown to behavior seen ‘in dictatorships’

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Barack Obama compares Minnesota crackdown to behavior seen ‘in dictatorships’

  • Thousands of federal agents including ICE agents carried out weeks of sweeping raids and arrests
  • ‘The rogue behavior of agents of the federal government is deeply concerning and dangerous’
WASHINGTON: Former US president Barack Obama on Saturday condemned the operations of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers in Minnesota, comparing their behavior to conduct seen “in dictatorships.”
Thousands of federal agents including ICE agents carried out weeks of sweeping raids and arrests in what the Trump administration claims were targeted missions against criminals, until the operation was ended this week.
Obama had criticized the actions of ICE agents as unlawful last month, but went further in an interview with left-wing political commentator Brian Tyler Cohen released Saturday.
“The rogue behavior of agents of the federal government is deeply concerning and dangerous,” he said.
He called the behavior of federal officers, which included two fatal shootings that sparked mounting pressure on President Donald Trump’s mass crackdown, as the sort that “in the past we’ve seen in authoritarian countries and we’ve seen in dictatorships.”
But Obama, the only Black president in American history, said he had found hope in communities pushing back against the operations.
“Not just randomly, but in a systematic, organized way, citizens saying, ‘this is not the America we believe in,’ and we’re going to fight back, and we’re going to push back with the truth and with cameras and with peaceful protests,” he said.
“That kind of heroic, sustained behavior in subzero weather by ordinary people is what should give us hope.
“As long as we have folks doing that, I feel like we’re going to get through this.”
Trump’s pointman Tom Homan on Thursday announced the end of the aggressive immigration operation in Minnesota that triggered large protests and nationwide outrage.
In the wide-ranging podcast interview, Obama also criticized a lack of shame and decorum in the country’s political discourse, responding for the first time to a post on President Donald Trump’s social media that depicted him and first lady Michelle as monkeys.