LATEST ARTICLES

Chinese-Speaking APT Deploys New TinyRCT Backdoor in Southeast Asia Campaign

0

Ravie LakshmananJun 26, 2026Cyber Espionage / Malware

A Chinese-speaking advanced persistent threat (APT) actor has been linked to a new custom backdoor called TinyRCT as part of cyber attacks aimed at government entities and critical infrastructure in Southeast Asia.

The activity, particularly aimed at state-owned enterprises in the energy and government sectors, has been attributed to a threat actor called CL-STA-1062, which Palo Alto Networks Unit 42 said shares overlaps with UAT-7237, a hacking group that was first flagged by Cisco Talos in August 2025 in relation to a campaign directed against web infrastructure entities in Taiwan.

Unit 42 said it also observed CL-STA-1062 campaigns in prior operations targeting strategic sectors in East Asia since March 2022, suggesting a broader but sustained focus in the region.

“From a technical standpoint, the attackers behind CL-STA-1062 rely on a hybrid toolkit,” Unit 42 said in a technical report. “While they frequently use common open-source tools such as SoftEther VPN, Mimikatz, and VNT, they have recently introduced TinyRCT, a bespoke, previously undocumented backdoor.”

TinyRCT is equipped to run arbitrary commands, enumerate files and exfiltrate them, capture the device’s screen, and delete itself from the compromised host.

In one campaign detected in September 2025, the threat actor is said to have infiltrated a Southeast Asian government entity and deployed a web shell to exfiltrate data from an MS SQL server. During the same attack, the threat actors have been found to conduct network reconnaissance on a separate government entity in the same country.

“This suggests an effort to identify lateral movement opportunities and broaden their access. In one case, we observed the attacker staging and exfiltrating an entire directory of web server source code from the government entity,” Unit 42 said, adding it detected the breach of at least 10 different organizations in Southeast Asia between October and December 2025.

Since at least mid-2025, CL-STA-1062 has trained its sights on the critical infrastructure, with the adversary scanning multiple entities in the region for vulnerabilities and then establishing a foothold via ASPX web shells that facilitate initial reconnaissance and outbound requests from the infected networks to attacker-controlled infrastructure, leading to the deployment of additional payloads.

This includes SoftEther VPN components and RAR archives containing the group’s toolset, including open-source utilities such as Yuze (a SOCKS5 proxy) and VNT (a VPN), often disguising them as VMware executables or an XDR agent (e.g., “XDRAgent.exe,” “vmtools.exe,” and “vmwared.exe”).

Further analysis of the campaign’s infrastructure has led to the discovery of a previously undocumented .NET backdoor dubbed TinyRCT (“PerfWatson2.exe”), a lightweight remote access trojan that enables system reconnaissance, command execution, file uploads, screenshot capture, remote control, and wipe traces of itself, while taking steps to avoid running in sandboxed environments.

It establishes a persistent communication channel with a remote server (“45.32.113[.]172”) over HTTP, but encrypts the exchanged data using AES-128 encryption in CBC mode.

“The malware operates on a beaconing model, with a default 10-second sleep interval between requests,” Unit 42 explained. “It polls the C2 server for instructions using GET requests, while it sends exfiltrated data via POST requests.”

As for how TinyRCT is delivered, it takes the form of a malicious archive named “chrome_setup.zip” containing a legitimate executable (“chrome_setup.exe”), a configuration file (“chrome_setup.exe.config”), and a rogue DLL (“MyAppDomainManager.dll”) that’s used to trigger an AppDomainManager injection attack to load the malicious DLL, which functions as a downloader by contacting “139.180.134[.]221” to retrieve “PerfWatson2.exe.”

“The combination of tools observed in this activity cluster reflects a pragmatic approach to tool selection and attack capabilities,” Unit 42 concluded. “The attackers behind this cluster continue to leverage common open-source tools such as SoftEther VPN and VNT to facilitate lateral movement.”

“Our discovery of the TinyRCT backdoor in the attackers’ infrastructure underscores their ability to customize tools to gain specific capabilities. The combination of targeting critical infrastructure and the development of custom malware suggests that CL-STA-1062 activity will continue to pose a threat to the region.”



Source link

How did Colombia’s election split a nation in two?

0

Colombia elected its first right-wing president in years by a razor-thin margin.

Source link

Swing-district Democrat Cait Conley under pressure after AOC endorsement

0

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

A Democratic House hopeful vying for one of the nation’s most competitive districts is staying silent after Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., voiced support for her campaign. 

Ocasio-Cortez, a leftist firebrand with growing influence in the Democratic Party, congratulated former Biden administration official Cait Conley on her primary victory in a social media post Wednesday.

“I look forward to working together as a delegation as we fight for working families across New York,” Ocasio-Cortez wrote.  

The post also celebrated a Democrat vying to succeed retiring Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., alongside three socialist candidates backed by New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani.

RISING SOCIALIST STARS ON TRACK TO CONGRESS: WHO ARE DARIALIZA AVILA CHEVALIER, BRAD LANDER AND CLAIRE VALDEZ?

Brad Lander standing with Zohran Mamdani and Bernie Sanders at a rally in Brooklyn

Brad Lander, former New York City comptroller and U.S. House candidate, stands with Zohran Mamdani, New York mayor, and Sen. Bernie Sanders, Independent of Vermont, at a Get Out The Vote rally at Kings Theater in Brooklyn on June 18, 2026. (Adam Gray/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Conley has yet to comment on Ocasio-Cortez’s support or address the trio of far-left candidates — longtime New York official Brad Lander, State Assembly member Claire Valdez, D-N.Y., and activist Darializa Avila-Chevalier — who have called for abolishing Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), are outspoken critics of Israel and have vowed to advance the Palestinian cause in Congress. 

Conley’s general election opponent, Rep. Mike Lawler, R-N.Y., insists she should have to answer for it.

“Which is it, Cait: do you reject AOC and the candidates who want to abolish ICE, defund the police, and tear down our borders, or do you embrace them?” Lawler campaign manager Ciro Riccardi said in a statement to Fox News Digital.

“The Hudson Valley deserves an answer, and so far all we’ve heard is your damning silence,” he continued.

Lander and Avila-Chevalier previously called for defunding the police, while the latter has continued to advocate for abolishing prisons and stopping all deportations. Avila-Chevalier also reposted a tweet denying Israel’s right to exist and helped form a pro-Palestinian group at Columbia University that called for “the total eradication of Western civilization.”

The three Mamdani-backed candidates are expected to double the ranks of the left-wing group known as “the Squad,” an informal bloc closely aligned with Ocasio-Cortez, who also supports abolishing ICE. 

Fox News Digital reached out to the Conley campaign for comment.

Compilation image of Cait Conley and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., a leader of the Democratic Party’s leftist flank, voiced support for Democratic House candidate Cait Conley after she won a contested primary Tuesday. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images; Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc. via Getty Images)

DEM CANDIDATE CLEARS CROWDED FIELD TO FACE TRUMP-BACKED INCUMBENT IN NY

The scrutiny comes after Conley avoided criticizing the socialist candidates during an interview with MS NOW on Thursday.

Asked about socialist candidates who support prison abolition and have suggested the United States deserved 9/11, Conley talked about her own background rather than directly addressing the question. 

“I joined the Army and went to West Point because of 9/11 because I watched the suffering and pain that we as a nation, we as a state, we as the Hudson Valley, experienced that day,” Conley said. “And so when you talk about the American government’s responsibility to the people, it is to keep it safe.”

“While, you know, folks were elected down in New York City, in New York-17, Democratic voters chose a West Point grad and 16-year Army combat veteran to be their representative in this fight this fall,” Conley added, referring to herself.

Aber Kawas, a socialist and pro-Palestinian activist who won a Democratic primary for a New York State Senate seat Tuesday, appeared to justify 9/11 in a resurfaced 2017 video.

Conley has previously faced scrutiny over her role on former President Joe Biden’s national security team. Lawler has argued that she downplayed her alleged involvement in the former president’s botched 2021 Afghanistan withdrawal, which coincided with her time on the National Security Council.

The battleground race is expected to be one of the most hotly-contested races in the country, with national Republicans expected to aggressively defend Lawler’s bid for a third House term.

Rep. Mike Lawler walking outside the U.S. Capitol

Rep. Mike Lawler, R-N.Y., leaves the U.S. Capitol after the last vote of the week on Jan. 9, 2026. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc. via Getty Images)

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

The nonpartisan Cook Political Report rates the contest as a “toss-up” after shifting the race in favor of Democrats earlier this year. 

In 2024, former Vice President Kamala Harris narrowly won the purple district, where Democrats hold a sizable voter registration advantage. 



Source link

New York City will freeze rent for 1m apartments in big victory for Mamdani | New York

0

A New York City housing board has voted to freeze rent for approximately 1m apartments.

In a major victory for Zohran Mamdani, the mayor who campaigned on a pledge to freeze rent, the Rent Guidelines Board voted 7-1 on Thursday to freeze increases on one- and two-year leases. The decision will provide relief to tenants in more than 1m rent-stabilized apartments, representing over 40% of the city’s rental housing.

Mamdani hailed the vote, calling it a “historic victory for New York City tenants”. He added: “After reviewing the data and hearing from New Yorkers across the city, the independent RGB has delivered a freeze on one-year leases, and the first-ever freeze on two-year leases in our city’s history. This is the relief that working people across our city deserve.

“I’m grateful for the board members’ thoughtful consideration of the data, including tenants’ ability to pay, cost of living and building operating costs. I’ll continue working to deliver a more affordable city by building and preserving affordable housing, lowering building operating costs like insurance, and ensuring tenants know their rights,” he added.

Among the board’s nine members, six were appointed by Mamdani. One member, Christina Smyth, who had been appointed by Eric Adams, resigned shortly before the vote, saying in a statement that she was “resigning because the process I was appointed to take part in is not administered the way the law requires”.

“The Rent Guidelines Board has stopped being a fact-finding body. It has become a body that starts with an answer and vibe codes its way backward to justify it … This rebuilt board was required to deliver a rent freeze. Everything since has been theater,” Smyth added.

Responding to Smyth’s resignation, the Rent Guidelines Board chair, Chantella Mitchell, defended the board’s process, saying in a statement: “I was surprised to receive Christina’s resignation this morning. I want to take this opportunity to affirm the independence with which this year’s board members have served, along with the rigor and integrity demonstrated by the RGB staff in preparing and presenting data.”

The vote has drawn mixed reactions. Ann Korchak, board president of the Small Property Owners of New York, criticized the decision, calling it an “absolute farce”.

“Proceeding with one of the most consequential rent votes in recent times with half of its owner representation undermined the balance and fairness of this process … The resignation of the only principled RGB member and the board’s only meaningful advocate for small owners validated our greatest fear, that the majority Mamdani-appointed RGB would cave to the political demands of city hall,” Korchak said.

The Libertarian party of New York tweeted in response that “rent freezes exacerbate the housing crisis”.

“NYC already has decades of rent regulations contributing to chronic shortages. Adding a freeze on top of that doubles down on the same mistake by punishing property owners rather than fixing the real problem: artificial scarcity created by government barriers to building,” they continued.

Meanwhile, the Legal Aid Society hailed the decision, saying: “We commend the board for their vote tonight to freeze the rent for the more than 2 million New Yorkers who currently reside in rent-stabilized housing … At a time of historic unaffordability across the five boroughs – marked by an increased cost of living, low citywide vacancy rates, and record-breaking market-rate rent prices – a rent freeze is a prudent, evidence-based response to the challenges facing tenants across the five boroughs.”

The rent freeze marks a significant policy victory for Mamdani, who has consistently argued that rising housing costs have made New York City increasingly unaffordable for working-class and middle-income residents.

On Friday, Mamdani also made another major policy announcement, this time aimed at supporting the transgender community. His office unveiled a $15m investment in transgender healthcare, including a direct access fund for providers of youth gender-affirming care, as well as a new call and text line connecting New Yorkers with resources. The investment will also go towards funding for research gaps in healthcare access and outcomes for transgender and gender non-conforming New Yorkers.

“Every New Yorker should have the freedom to live as themselves and access the healthcare they need,” Mamdani said, adding: “As the federal government attacks transgender people and attempts to intimidate patients, families and providers, New York City is stepping up. We will protect care, support the providers delivering it and make clear that trans New Yorkers belong in this city. Healthcare is a human right, and we will do everything in our power to defend it.”



Source link

OpenAI says 97.9 percent of its employees are now using agents

0


AI and ML

Codex, it’s not just for developers, really

A company can learn a lot about the market by looking at its own employees. OpenAI says that its team members are switching from chatbots to agents as their primary form of AI interaction, a trend also detected (though less pronounced) among external organizations and users. Instead of one-off ChatGPT prompts, workers are asking Codex agents to tackle multi-step tasks that take long periods of time. And those doing so are increasingly non-developers.

OpenAI insists that its findings have implications for other companies, labor researchers, and policymakers, not the least of which would be a brighter revenue picture for OpenAI. Longer running tasks consume more tokens, and to the extent those can be billed, that should help diminish hundreds of billions in debt obligations. 

“We find that agentic AI usage is growing rapidly: the number of active users has grown more than fivefold in the first half of 2026, with the most rapid increase occurring outside the initial audience of software developers,” said company researchers and academics in a paper [PDF] titled, “The Shift to Agentic AI: Evidence from Codex.”

OpenAI did not immediately respond to a request to clarify whether it incentivizes or encourages employees to use its AI tools – through internal communiques, token allocations, token use leaderboards, or tying tool usage to performance metrics. But we’ll take it on faith that when there’s enough Kool-Aid on-premises, employees may just develop a taste for it regardless of whether their jobs depend on Kool-Aid consumption.

“Through August 2025, the average OpenAI worker spent less than 10 percent of their tokens on Codex,” the biz explained in a blog post accompanying its paper (that suggests employee token allocations). “Now, every department, including non-technical departments such as Legal and Recruiting, uses Codex as their primary AI tool for work.”

Within OpenAI, 97.9 percent of employees are now using Codex, up from around 40 percent in August 2025. External organizations have also seen a usage uptick, to 17.3 percent presently. With individuals, Codex isn’t much to speak of – about 0.7 percent.

The thing about Codex is that, as an agent, it can operate for long periods of time. “Since the start of the year, the share of individual Codex users who submit at least one request for a task estimated to require more than eight hours for an experienced human to complete has increased nearly tenfold,” the paper says.

We note that comparing the time a human might take for a task (as estimated by an LLM-as-judge) to the time an AI model takes is only part of the picture if the workflow isn’t entirely automated. Generating code at, say, 10x the rate a person might manage may expand the time required for code verification and deployment.

OpenAI also points out that, since August 2025, non-developer usage of Codex has risen 137x for individuals, 189x for organizational users, and 12x within OpenAI.

The company concedes that technical usage remains the dominant mode, but insists that adoption by non-devs shows how a broader set of knowledge workers can take on coding or technical tasks, such as automation, data transformation, and data analysis.

“In June 2026, the median OpenAI employee in a legal role generated 13 times more monthly output tokens across Codex and ChatGPT than they did in November 2025,” the paper says.

Given that the number of US federal lawsuits filed against OpenAI and associated entities only grew about 11 percent (35 to 39) between the last six months of 2025 and the first six months of 2026, it looks like OpenAI’s legal team, with its 13x token surge, is making the company’s case for the productivity benefits of AI tools. ®



Source link

Carney announces contest to revamp uninhabitable Canadian PM residence | Canada

0

10 Downing Street has two things: mice and a chief mouser. For more than a decade, an officially recognized feline has kept the residence’s rodent infestation to a minimum.

Over a similar period, the official residence of Canada’s prime minister has seen an unchecked explosion of rodents.

Nests and vast quantities of feces were found throughout 24 Sussex, the 35-room mansion overlooking Ottawa. They took over the attic, basement and crawl spaces. Decomposing carcasses filled the walls of the decrepit building.

Now, the prime minister, Mark Carney, has announced a competition for the country’s leading architecture firms to revive the storied building “to a standard worthy of the country that it serves”.

The Royal Architectural Institute of Canada will design the framework and bring together an independent jury of experts in architecture, heritage conservation and design, which will recommend the winning design to cabinet.

“24 Sussex Drive will be built by Canadians for Canadians,” Carney said on Friday, telling reporters that the winning design would be announced on 1 July 2027: Canada Day.

“At a time when much of the world is buffeted by crisis, Canada’s history, our institutions and our traditions matter more than ever,” he said, standing outside the uninhabitable building. The prime minister said that while foundations of identity largely take the form of language, culture and laws, buildings can stand as testaments “made of timber and stone … in which we recognize ourselves”.

Originally named Gorffwysfa (Welsh for “the place of peace”), the sprawling estate has housed 11 prime ministers since the government took it over in 1951. But its shortcomings have long plagued heads of government.

Jean Chrétien, prime minister from 1993 to 2003, brought reporters to witness the need for buckets to catch rainwater from a leaky roof. Only after a storm blew off sections of the roof did he finally get the needed repairs.

“It’s a symbol of the public office of the head of our federal government and of the democratic traditions that office represents. And yet it has not been cared for with the respect that it deserves,” he said. “Now it’s in critical condition.”

Years of negligence have left the official residence of the prime minister plagued with mold, cracked windows, failing plumbing and an electric system widely seen as a fire hazard.

In 2023, National Capital Commission (NCC), the group tasked with preserving heritage buildings in Ottawa, shut down the residence because of the voluminous safety hazards. The following year, it said it had stripped away the asbestos, mould, lead and rodents carcasses, leaving the building empty but with an estimated C$40m cost to fully renovate and upgrade. On Friday, Carney said it was difficult to estimate a cost because much of that would rely on the final design.

Last month, former governor general Mary Simon, whose term recently came to an end, said it was inappropriate for a prime minister to live on the grounds of Rideau Hall.

But Rideau Cottage, the a 158-year-old building meant originally for the secretary of the governor general, was chosen out of necessity for former prime minister Justin Trudeau and his family, given the inhospitable state of 24 Sussex.

Carney has continued the tradition, residing at Rideau Cottage.

Carney told reporters that while 24 Sussex has long been a symbol of the country, it “must also be a home, and the women and men who will lead our country in the future will need a residence for their families”. He was adamant that he would never live in the residence, given the starkly contrasting timelines for reconstruction and politics.

“I and all public officials are stewards of the offices we hold. We don’t own them. We serve them to serve Canadians and we have a responsibility to leave things better than we found them.”

Legendary architect Moshe Safdie, who envisioned many of the country’s most acclaimed buildings, will chair the jury assessing design plans.

“It’s an extraordinary site with extraordinary potential,” Safdie said. “Something wonderful can be developed here.”



Source link

Access Denied

0


Access Denied You don’t have permission to access “http://news.sky.com/story/nicholas-rossi-the-us-rapist-who-faked-his-death-and-fled-to-scotland-to-escape-justice-dies-13558108” on this server.

Reference #18.f3680117.1782492305.1c45f5bc

https://errors.edgesuite.net/18.f3680117.1782492305.1c45f5bc



Source link

Mistrial declared for Palisades Fire suspect allegedly inspired by Mangione

0

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

A federal judge declared a mistrial for the man accused of deliberately igniting the Palisades Fire after jurors failed to reach a unanimous verdict.

Jonathan Rinderknecht was arrested in October 2025 and charged with destruction of property by means of fire and pleaded not guilty after being charged in the Palisades Fire in January 2025. Ten of the California jurors thought Rinderknecht was not guilty, while two thought he was.

“The evidence is strong that Jonathan Rinderknecht is responsible for igniting the fire on January 1, 2025, which eventually became the Palisades fire,” United States Attorney Bill Essayli said in a post on X. “We fully intend to retry this case before a new jury and obtain guilty verdicts on all charged counts.”

On Thursday afternoon, jurors said they had reached a verdict only to come back 30 minutes later to say that they had no verdict.

LISTEN TO THE NEW ‘CRIME & JUSTICE WITH DONNA ROTUNNO’ PODCAST

Firefighter battling Palisades Fire in Mandeville Canyon and suspect Jonathan Rinderknecht standing

A firefighter battles the Palisades Fire in Mandeville Canyon in Los Angeles on Jan. 11, 2025. Jonathan Rinderknecht, the suspect facing charges related to the blaze, is shown at right. (Jae C. Hong/AP; Department of Justice/Reuters)

“Would an additional instruction or the re-reading of any testimony help the jury in their deliberations?” the judge asked.

“There is nothing the court can do to assist the jury in their deliberations. Additional instructions or rereading the testimony would not help in deliberations. Unfortunately, we cannot reach a unanimous verdict,” the jury replied.

In total, estimates say the fire caused $35 billion and $45 billion in damage and led to the deaths of 12 people.

During the trial, behavioral analyst Kevin Kelm testified he believes Rinderknecht’s behavior is similar to someone who is driven by “societal revenge.”

Kelm said that in cases of societal revenge, the suspect typically focuses on personal problems such as finance, relationships, work, lifestyle or anything they’re not capable of dealing with on a daily basis. He said Rinderknecht’s use of ChatGPT was to make a “dystopian image” of the world, where he designed an image representing a barrier between rich people and other individuals who don’t have as much money.

Rinderknecht was partly inspired by Luigi Mangione, who is accused of killing UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, prosecutors say.

LIKE WHAT YOU’RE READING? FIND MORE ON THE TRUE CRIME HUB

Jonathan Rinderknecht seated inside federal court in Orlando, Florida, shown in a courtroom sketch.

Jonathan Rinderknecht appears in federal court in Orlando, Florida, on Oct. 9, 2025. He faces charges for allegedly starting a New Year’s Day fire that killed 12 people in Pacific Palisades, California. (Neftali Melendez)

“In the months leading up to the fire, he had become increasingly angry with his life and society at large,” prosecutors wrote in a court filing. “For example, in the weeks and hours leading up to the fire, defendant fixated on Luigi Mangione, who allegedly murdered the UnitedHealthcare CEO in New York City on December 4, 2024.”

Rinderknecht searched the terms “free LuigiMangione,” “lets take down all the billionaires” and “reddit lets kill all the billionaires” on Dec. 12 and 13, 2024, federal prosecutors said.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

Luigi Mangione standing in a courtroom in Manhattan Criminal Court in New York City

Luigi Mangione appears at a pretrial hearing in Manhattan Criminal Court in New York City on June 17, 2026.  (Pool via Barry Williams for New York Daily News)

“When investigators asked defendant why someone might commit arson in the Pacific Palisades, he responded that it would be out of resentment of the rich enjoying their money as ‘we’re basically being enslaved by them’ and compared such an act of ‘desperation’ to the murder for which Mangione was charged,” prosecutors wrote.

Mangione’s attorney, Karen Friedman Agnifilo, told Fox News Digital in a statement: “As we have stated before in multiple public court filings, Mr. Mangione does not support violent actions and does not condone past or future political violence. These repeated attempts to connect him to unrelated acts or to insinuate that he condones or supports these acts are irresponsible, dangerous and prejudicial.”

Fox News’ Amanda Gillilan contributed to this report.



Source link

Senior Trump official’s claims about UK free speech arrests rejected by No 10 | Police

0

Claims by a senior official in the Trump administration that British police were making thousands of “freedom of speech” arrests have been rejected by the UK government.

Sarah B Rogers, who has become the public face of the US state department’s hostility to European liberal democracies, was accused by MPs of echoing far-right memes and conspiracy theories during a speech at an international rightwing conference in London. She also referenced the death of Henry Nowak and a recent incident in which a child was thrown into a zoo’s crocodile pit.

Rogers, who has publicly attacked policies on hate speech and immigration by US allies and promoted far-right parties abroad, centred her speech on the notion of “Da Yookay” – a viral meme heavily associated with the online far right.

Speaking at the Alliance for Responsible Citizenship (ARC), which was also addressed this week by Nigel Farage and Kemi Badenoch, Rogers listed what she said were examples of the Britain that people saw online. “In ‘Da Yookay’, you can be remanded without bail for an inflammatory tweet, while a psychopath who seizes a three-year-old and feeds him to crocodiles walks free.

“In ‘Da Yookay’ the moral sense of jurors won’t save you, because jury trials for speech crimes are abolished. In ‘Da Yookay’, a girl can escape from a rape gang, flag down a police constable and discover the cop is in league with the rapists.

“In ‘Da Yookay’ you get a free car for pretending to be disabled. In ‘Da Yookay’ cops defer to a murderer who calls his victim racist. Then they handcuff you as you bleed to death if you’re white.”

Rogers told the audience that she was not there to tell them “as your minders do, that it’s all misinformation”.

Rogers is undersecretary of state for public diplomacy, a US state department role that was created in 1999 to strengthen relationships between the US and foreign publics.

Her intervention at ARC marks the most explicit criticism of the UK government by a US official on British soil. She also claimed: “Some people look at Britain’s thousands of speech arrests per year and see only tyranny.”

A UK government spokesperson said on Friday: “Our world-renowned justice system operates without fear or favour to protect all our citizens, and we completely reject this characterisation.”

Max Wilkinson, the Liberal Democrats home affairs spokesperson, said repeated attempts by Trump officials to undermine the UK’s democracy and justice system were out of hand and ministers should contact counterparts in the US. “Echoing bizarre online conspiracy theories about the UK is something we might expect from a hostile state rather than a Nato ally,” he added.

Citing gun violence in the US and deportations of children, the Labour MP Stella Creasy, also hit back, saying figures like Rogers “should spend less time reading Twitter conspiracy theories about the UK and more time fixing their own problems”.

Keir Starmer suggested earlier this month that the US was trying to interfere in British democracy after JD Vance, the US vice-president, blamed the murder of the British teenager Henry Nowak on mass immigration.

More than 4,000 delegates from 85 countries attended the three-day conference, which has emerged as a force shaping policies on the right both in the Britain and abroad. It is headed by the influential Conservative peer Philippa Stroud, a former adviser to Iain Duncan-Smith and, with him, was one of the architects of the universal credit overhaul of welfare.

ARC’s advisory board includes the Reform MP Danny Kruger and James Orr, a Cambridge theologian who is a senior advisor to Nigel Farage. Other themes promoted by ARC include calls for action to tackle a “demographic decline” in the west and encourage people to have more children.

Kruger told delegates in a keynote speech that Britain’s cultural and political crisis was a battle to defend what he called the “English settlement” – a civilisational inheritance rooted in scripture, national sovereignty and the rule of law.

Appearing a day after Badenoch, the Conservative party leader, Farage made an explicit pitch for support at the gathering in west London, likening “family breakdown” to “community breakdown” as populations grew more diverse.

Attenders over the past week have included delegates from members of the European far-right groups: Alternative für Deutschland, Vlaams Belang from Belgium, Spain’s Vox and the Netherlands’ Party for Freedom.

Also on stage as an official participant in one event was Carl Benjamin, a provocative British rightwing political commentator known by his online pseudonym Sargon of Akkad and for speculating about whether he would rape the Labour MP Jess Phillips.



Source link

Access Denied

0

Access Denied You don’t have permission to access “http://hindi.news18.com/cricket/abhishek-sharma-world-record-becomes-the-first-ever-batter-in-universe-to-score-5-half-centuries-in-20-ball-or-fewer-ind-vs-ire-10606156.html” on this server.

Reference #18.490dde17.1782492515.1e02dd2c

https://errors.edgesuite.net/18.490dde17.1782492515.1e02dd2c