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Australia reviews visa of US influencer filmed picking up wombat

Australia is reviewing the visa status of an American content creator who posted a video of herself taking a baby wombat away from its mother.

In the now-deleted video, Sam Jones is seen picking up the marsupial and running across a road as its mother follows from behind.

“I caught a baby wombat,” Jones, who describes herself as an “outdoor enthusiast” and “hunter” on social media, is heard saying in the video.

“OK, momma’s right there and she is pissed, let’s let him go,” Jones then says, before putting the animal back on the other side of the road.

It is not clear when or where the video was shot.

On Thursday, Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said that his department was reviewing the incident to determine if Jones had breached the conditions of her stay.

“I can’t wait for Australia to see the back of this individual, I don’t expect she will return,” Burke said in a statement.

Al Jazeera was unable to reach Jones, who set her Instagram account to private following the controversy, for comment.

The video prompted a swift backlash in Australia, with Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Foreign Minister Penny Wong among those joining the condemnation.

“They’re not kangaroos. They don’t run fast. They are gentle, lovely creatures,” Albanese told reporters.

“To take a baby wombat from its mother, and clearly causing distress from the mother, is just an outrage.

Ikimi-Led PDP Disciplinary Committee Recommends Anyanwu’s Suspension

The Tom Ikimi-led disciplinary committee of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has recommended the expulsion of the party’s embattled national secretary, Senator Samuel Anyanwu, from the party.

A letter signed by Ikimi and dated March 10, 2025, which was received by office of the PDP Acting National Chairman, Umar Damagum, on Wednesday, March 12, revealed that despite being given the opportunity, Anyanwu failed to appear before the committee to defend himself against the petition filed by the PDP Young Generation Caucus.

The petitioner had accused Anyanwu of engaging in anti-party activities contrary to the provisions of Article 58 (1) (f) of the PDP Constitution.

READ ALSO: Supreme Court Reserves Judgment In Anyanwu’s Suit&nbsp,

The petitioner also accused Anyanwu of engaging in conduct likely to disrupt the peaceful, lawful and efficient conduct of the business of the party contrary to provisions of Article 58 (1) (h) of the PDP Constitution 2017, by inviting security agents and other persons and thugs to interfere in the ordinary business of the party at the Headquarters of the party, &nbsp, on 29th January and 1st February 2025.

Having submitted their recommendations, the National Executive Committee of the party (NEC) Is expected to take the final decision on the matter.

The Committee had in Februaryinvited a former governor of Benue State Samuel Ortom, Senator Samuel Anyanwu, and others.

This followed a meeting of the committee in Abuja where it “considered five (5) petitions received so far”.

It said, “following a detailed review of the petitions noted that the first set of petitions was against some key members of the National Working Committee (NWC)”.

“The Committee came to the conclusion that in order not to jeopardize the ongoing reconciliatory efforts of the Governors ‘ Forum and the Board of Trustees, took a decision to step down those three (3) of the petitions against the top NWC members”, the chairman of the PDP committee Tom Ikimi said in a statement issued after the meeting.

“The second set of petitions which were set down for enquiry are those against former Governor of Benue State, His Excellency Dr. Samuel Ortom and 10 others and the petition against Distinguished Senator Samuel Anyanwu.

” Accordingly, the National Disciplinary Committee resolved to invite the affected persons to appear before the Committee on Wednesday, 12th February 2025 at the Legacy House, Maitama, Abuja. “

Anyanwu has also been in a tussle with Sunday Ude-Okoye for the position of the National Secretary of the party.

The High Court and Court of Appeal decisions on the dispute favoured Ude-Okoye, with Anyanwu challenging the decision at the Supreme Court.

On Monday, the Supreme Court reserved judgment in the appeal filed by&nbsp, Anyanwu, challenging his sack from office.

Anyanwu, in the appeal, is seeking to set aside the judgment of the Court of Appeal, Enugu, which upheld the Federal High Court judgment that removed him as the Secretary of the party.

Families of Duterte’s drug war victims grieve, seek justice in Philippines

Manila, Philippines – It has been almost eight years since brothers Crisanto and Juan Carlos disappeared one morning in Quezon City, a sprawling northern district of Metro Manila.

Within a day, their lifeless bodies were discovered riddled with bullets. But the pain of their brutal killing has continued to haunt their mother, Llore Pasco, over all these years.

On that morning in May 2017, Crisanto, a 34-year-old father of four, had left home early to pick up a licence to work as a private security guard. Not long after, Juan Carlos, 31, a part-time utility bill collector, would follow his brother out of their home.

They would never come back.

The day after their disappearance, their mother told Al Jazeera how she and other relatives were shocked to learn from a television news report that her two sons had been killed, accused by police of robbery. It took a full week and a hefty $1, 500 fee for Pasco to recover their bodies from the morgue.

Their funerals were followed by years of agony as Pasco lived without hope for justice ever being done.

So on hearing the news this week of the arrest of the country’s former President Rodrigo Duterte over his brutal war on drugs, she was overcome with emotion.

“I felt so nervous and scared, but also excited”, said Pasco, a part-time food vendor and massage therapist.

“My eyes were filled with tears. At long last, after so many years of waiting, it’s happening. This is it”, she told Al Jazeera.

The International Criminal Court (ICC), which issued the arrest warrant for Duterte, was her one last hope for justice, said Pasco, a leading member of Rise Up for Life and for Rights, a group of mothers and wives of those killed in the country’s drug war.

Pasco told how she had “little to no hope” of finding justice for the killing of her sons in the Philippines.

On Tuesday, the international police organisation (Interpol) served the ICC’s warrant against Duterte at Manila airport, on charges of “crimes against humanity” related to thousands of killings of suspected drug users and dealers during his time in power.

Later the same day, the government of the Philippines allowed Duterte to be flown to The Hague-based international court.

According to police records, more than 7, 000 people were killed in official antidrug operations ordered by Duterte while he was in office from 2016 to 2022.

Human rights groups say the actual number of killings could be closer to 30, 000, including those who were killed by gunmen, some of whom later turned out to be undercover police officers.

Duterte arrived in the Netherlands on Wednesday afternoon, where he was officially handed over to the ICC’s jurisdiction.

Amid criticism and protest from Duterte’s supporters, Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr said the surprise arrest was in compliance with his country’s “commitments to Interpol”.

Christine Pascual was at work in a hair salon when she heard the news about Duterte’s arrest.

“My client was asking me why I was crying while I was doing her hair”, Pascual told Al Jazeera, adding that memories of her late son, 17-year-old Joshua Pascual Laxamana, came rushing back at that moment.

“I went through so much anguish and pain from the time Joshua was killed until the time I started demanding justice for his death”, she said.

Laxamana, a professional online gamer, was on his way home from a tournament in the northern Philippines when he was shot and killed by police.

Records showed that he allegedly fired shots at officers and tried to flee on a motorcycle. But Laxamana did not know how to drive a motorcycle and his family have always maintained that he never used drugs or handled weapons, as the police claimed.

“For years, we’ve been very disappointed that nothing’s happening about my son’s case and other cases of extrajudicial killings”, Pascual said.

“So we were very surprised to hear the news about Duterte’s arrest. We are very happy that now he will have to face us in court”, she said, while also acknowledging that the two police officers involved in her son’s death would likely never be prosecuted.

“My family will never be the same because Joshua is now gone”, she added.

‘ Unbearable pain ‘

Luzviminda Siapo, the mother of another victim of the war on drugs, said she felt a sense of relief after learning that Duterte has been taken to The Hague.

“Seeing Duterte being arrested and taken to prison at The Hague, I feel like I have already attained a little amount of justice”, Siapo told Al Jazeera.

“For all that he has done, and for all the deaths that he caused, I wonder what he will reap in return”?

Duterte should also be thankful that he has only been arrested and will be accorded due process at the ICC – something that was denied to her slain son, Siapo said.

Her son, Raymart Siapo, was just 19 when he was abducted and shot twice in the head by several masked gunmen. His body was left in a village near Manila Bay.

According to news reports at the time, Raymart had a dispute with a neighbour that resulted in false accusations being made to authorities that the teenager was involved in selling marijuana.

A day after the damning accusation was made, unknown suspects came looking for Raymart, forcing him onto a motorcycle and taking him to an adjacent neighbourhood, where he was ordered to get off and run for his life.

Born with deformed feet, the teenager did not get far when the gunmen proceeded to shoot him dead.

“I feel an unbearable pain losing a child to the drug war”, Siapo told Al Jazeera.

Catholic priest Flavie Villanueva comforts relatives of victims of the country’s drug war and extrajudicial killings before a mass following the arrest of former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte on Tuesday]Lisa Marie David/Reuters]

Children as ‘ collateral damage ‘

Family members of others killed in the drug war came together on Wednesday, during a news conference organised by the Rise Up group and the National Union of People’s Lawyers.

At the event, Emily Soriano, the mother of a slain 15-year-old son, Angelito, said that while she welcomed Duterte’s arrest, she wanted others prosecuted and jailed, including those who gave direct orders to carry out the police operation that resulted in the death of her child.

Soriano singled out Senator Ronald dela Rosa, who once served as the chief police enforcer during Duterte’s drug war.

Dela Rosa has repeatedly defended the legality of Duterte’s war on drugs. He once famously quipped that children killed in the crossfire during police operations were “collateral damage”, adding that “sh** happens”.

Soriano said that dela Rosa and other police officers are just as guilty as Duterte.

“Good for Duterte that he is being accorded due process. He’s still enjoying his bed”, she said between tears.

“What about my son who was killed? My son’s remains have been rotting in the cemetery for more than eight years now”.

Soriano insisted that her son was not a drug user and that he happened to be at a house targeted by authorities, which led to his killing.

During that operation, six other people were killed, including two other teenagers and a pregnant woman.

“It’s been a very painful experience to lose a son who is not really a drug addict. There have been so many who jumped to conclusions that they were addicted to drugs. But they do not know the truth”, Soriano said.

Duterte’s antidrug policy was also a war against the poor, she added.

Late on Wednesday at The Hague, ICC Prosecutor Karim Khan hailed the arrest of Duterte, noting that it “means a lot to the victims” and proves that “international law is not as weak as some may think”.

“When we come together and build partnerships, the rule of law can prevail, warrants can be executed”, Khan said.

Khan also said that his office has been investigating the situation in the Philippines for some years, adding that the allegations of crimes against humanity also cover those cases committed before Duterte was elected president in 2016 and while he was still the mayor of the southern city of Davao.

Khan also stressed that despite his arrest, “Mister Duterte is presumed innocent”.

Students light candles during a protest following the arrest of former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, in Quezon City, Philippines, March 11, 2025. REUTERS/Lisa Marie David
Students light candles during a protest following the arrest of former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte in Manila]Lisa Marie David/Reuters]

Norris ‘feels’ that McLaren are favourites

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Australian Grand Prix

Venue: Albert Park, Melbourne Dates: 14 March-16 March Race start: 04: 00 GMT on Sunday, 16 March with first practice at 01: 30 on Friday

Lando Norris acknowledges that McLaren start the Formula 1 season as favourites but says the view among his rivals is “short-sighted”.

Mercedes driver George Russell and world champion Max Verstappen both believe McLaren start the year with a pace advantage based on the evidence of pre-season testing.

Asked if he thought that McLaren were favourites going into the Australian Grand Prix this weekend, Norris said: “I feel like we are now. I know there’s a lot of expectation and it’s what everyone says.

” I’m quite surprised so many people are so short-sighted, especially people you wouldn’t expect to be, making so many conclusions before you even start the season.

“Everyone just wants to play that game of looking like the underdog and playing it down”.

Norris said that McLaren’s status as favourites was the consequence of one race-distance run he did on the second day of testing last month but insisted that the top four teams would be closely matched, as they were last year.

“I feel like we’re in a similar playing field to the top other three teams”, Norris said in Melbourne on Thursday. “I still think it’s us top four but there are many things that other people didn’t see (in testing) where other people have been extremely strong, including Red Bull, including Mercedes, including Ferrari.

” I know how much fuel and stuff Ferrari had for a lot of the testing and you’d be surprised at how quick they’re going to be this weekend.

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‘ Racing against Max is a unique situation ‘

Norris flirted with a title battle with Verstappen last season but ultimately fell short. The advantage the Red Bull driver built up in a dominant first five races was too big to close.

The 25-year-old Briton said: “I learned a lot of things last year. I clearly wasn’t quite ready to deliver on everything that we needed to deliver on from a racing point of view.

” That’s just because racing against Max is a unique situation and you don’t get to experience it in any other way of life until you really get to that point.

“Had it been a battle against different drivers, I don’t know if it would have been the same. It definitely probably wouldn’t have been as hard.

” That’s probably a fair assessment because I do think Max will be the hardest guy to race against. He’s always going to be the one who’s going to be most willing to push the limits and push the boundaries like he did. So I learned that aspect of Max.

“And I learned where I stood in that situation, which was not at the right level. And I learned from those things. And I think already into the last couple of races, I improved on a lot of those situations”.

Norris said he believed he was in a better position this year to fight strongly all season.

“I’m just excited to have another crack at it and see what I can do and go up against any driver”, he said.

“I don’t think I’m just going to be racing against Max this year. I think it’s going to be Charles]Leclerc], Lewis]Hamilton]. It’s going to be Oscar]Piastri, Norris ‘ McLaren team-mate].

” It’s going to be the Red Bull drivers and the Mercedes drivers too. So, I’m looking forward to all of the battles. And of course, the more about the others, the more wars there can be on track between others, the better for us. “

Verstappen, who is aiming to win a fifth consecutive drivers ‘ title, said he was concerned by the pace McLaren had shown in testing.

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WBO orders champion Usyk to face Parker next

Reuters

World heavyweight champion Oleksandr Usyk has been ordered by the WBO to begin negotiations with Joseph Parker for a mandatory title defence.

Parker, 33, retained his interim WBO title in February with a second-round knockout win against Martin Bakole.

Ukrainian Usyk is the WBC, WBA (Super) and WBO heavyweight champion thanks to his second successive victory against Tyson Fury in December.

Usyk, 38, and Parker have 30 days to find an agreement or the WBO will order purse bid proceedings.

Britain’s Daniel Dubois, who holds the IBF heavyweight belt, is already in talks to face Usyk for the undisputed heavyweight title.

Dubois was set to face Parker on 22 February but withdrew because of illness and is not looking to reschedule that fight.

New Zealand’s Parker held the WBO title between 2016 and 2018, beating Andy Ruiz Jr to claim the vacant belt before losing it to Anthony Joshua following two successful defences.

After suffering the third defeat of his career against Joe Joyce in 2022, Parker has won six in succession, including a victory against former WBC champion Deontay Wilder.

Usyk is yet to lose in 23 fights as a professional, winning 14 by knockout.

Saudi Arabia has hosted most of the big heavyweight bouts in recent years, with Usyk’s two most recent contests against Fury taking place in Riyadh.

Usyk was undisputed champion at cruiserweight before stepping up to heavyweight and achieving the same feat.

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Russian forces recapture Kursk, raising questions about US-Ukraine cutoff

Russia pushed Ukrainian forces out of most of the territory they controlled in the Russian region of Kursk during the past week, raising questions about whether a weeklong US intelligence cutoff materially helped the Russian counterattack.

The US said it had restored intelligence sharing and military aid to Ukraine on Tuesday night, after Ukraine agreed to a ceasefire plan discussed in Riyadh for nine-and-a-half hours.

Russian efforts to recapture Kursk intensified on March 6, a day after the White House cut off military and intelligence assistance to Ukraine.

Russian forces attacked 32 times in Kursk, said Ukraine’s general staff.

According to Russian military reporters, Russia had prioritised that front, moving some of its best drone operators there and deploying electronic warfare to prevent Ukrainian drone counterattacks.

The effort became clearer on Friday, March 7, when Russian forces attacked the Ukrainian border areas in Sumy for the first time since the beginning of the full-scale Russian invasion in 2022, in an attempt to encircle Ukrainian forces in Kursk from the south and cut off their supply lines.

]Al Jazeera]

On Saturday, Russian forces captured several settlements north of Sudzha, the main Ukrainian stronghold in Kursk, and began to fire upon Sudzha itself. One Russian operation involved infiltrating the industrial zone by making soldiers crawl inside a gas pipeline.

The UK’s Daily Telegraph newspaper reported Ukraine was considering a withdrawal to avoid encirclement, but Ukrainian commander-in-chief, Oleksandr Syrskii, on Monday said, “There is no threat of encirclement of Ukrainian units in the Kursk region”.

He did, however, send drone and electronic warfare reinforcements.

By Tuesday, Russia’s defence ministry announced it had recaptured more than 100sq km (40sq miles) in Kursk, including a dozen settlements.

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told media on Wednesday that Sudzha had been liberated.

“The data from our military shows that our troops have been successfully progressing in the Kursk region as they liberate those areas that have been controlled by]Ukrainian] militants”, he said.

Later on Wednesday, Russian President Vladimir Putin visited Kursk for the first time in months and a day later, the Kremlin claimed Moscow’s operation in Kursk was in its final stage.

Ukraine caught Russia off-guard in its August counter-invasion last year, and succeeded in leveraging a single division of 11, 000 soldiers to pin down an estimated 78, 000 Russian soldiers, slowing Russia’s advances in east Ukraine, embarrassing Putin and forcing him to reportedly seek the help of 12, 000 North Korean mercenaries last November.

The Institute for the Study of War, a Washington-based think tank, assessed that Russian forces had managed to recapture 655sq km (250sq miles) by last month, more than half the Kursk territory Ukraine had held at the height of its operation.

INTERACTIVE-ATTACK_ON_KURSK_MARCH_12_2025-1741771491
]Al Jazeera]

Ukraine launched surprise offensives in early January and February to consolidate its positions, demonstrating the importance it placed on Kursk as an active defence.

Ukrainian military analyst Petro Chernyk expressed the view that “Putin gave a firm order to kick our group out of there by May 9, and if this does not happen, then for him it will really be a very serious ideological defeat”, in an interview, referring to the anniversary of the capture of Berlin by Soviet forces in 1945. Ukraine’s incursion on Russian soil was the first since the second world war.

A Ukrainian government source told Time magazine the role of the US intelligence cutoff had been key in the Russian advance, as Ukraine was unable to detect Russian bomber and fighter jet takeoffs or use US intelligence to set targeting coordinates for its most precise weapons.

After then-US President Joe Biden allowed Ukraine to use US-made ATACMS rockets to strike deep inside Russia last November, Maria Zakharova, Russia’s foreign ministry spokesperson, had said the move amounted to “direct involvement of the US and its satellites”.

Europe to the rescue?

Europeans scrambled to find alternatives to US government intelligence and the Starlink satellite system Ukrainian forces use to communicate and coordinate counter-battery fire.

Four satellite operators in France, Spain, the UK and Luxembourg told the Financial Times on Friday they were offering services to replace Starlink.

Maxar Technologies, the commercial satellite imaging company, said European governments were able to pass on its images to Ukraine even though the US had stopped doing so.

Europe also tried to step up its deliveries of weapons to prevent Ukraine from suffering setbacks similar to those of early 2024, when US military aid was suspended for six months.

Ukrainian Defence Minister Rustem Umerov on Saturday met with eight Nordic and Baltic countries – Denmark, Iceland, Norway, Sweden, Finland, Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania – to coordinate weapons deliveries.

“We are waiting for important decisions that will help Ukraine strengthen its defence capabilities”, he said.

INTERACTIVE-WHO CONTROLS WHAT IN EASTERN UKRAINE copy-1741771511
]Al Jazeera]

Ukraine was in talks with Poland and Lithuania to step up joint production of weapons and ammunition.

Umerov signed two key private sector agreements – one with Germany’s Diehl Defence, which manufactures the IRIS-T air defence system, which he said would “increase threefold the supply of missiles and air defence systems”, and one with Britain’s Anduril for advanced roving munitions drones paid for by the International Fund for Ukraine.

Germany, which has supplied 37 billion euros ($40bn) in military and financial aid under Chancellor Olaf Scholz, announced on March 6 that it would up its defence spending by up to 1 trillion euros ($1.09 trillion) under an expected coalition between the Christian Democrats and Scholz’s Social Democrats. Polls suggested three-quarters of Germans supported this.

Ukraine has also been expanding its domestic defence industrial base impressively, and now supplies 40 percent of its own weapons.

Ukraine’s defence ministry said it would triple its purchase of domestically made first-person view drones this year.

“The capabilities of the domestic defence industry in 2025 amount to approximately 4.5 million FPV drones, and the Ministry of Defence plans to purchase them all”, said Gleb Kanevsky, head of procurement. These figures did not include long-range drones used to strike deep inside Russia.

Deep strikes inside Russia and Ukraine

Those deep strikes continued last week, despite the US intelligence cutoff.

Ukraine said a massive Ukrainian drone operation had succeeded in striking Moscow and the Diaghilev air force base in Ryazan on Tuesday. State wire service RIA Novosti reported a total of 337 drones were used, 91 of them over Moscow. Russian authorities reported three people were killed and 18 wounded.

Ukraine’s general staff said they struck the Ryazan refinery on Sunday, which they said produced jet fuel. The following night, the staff said they struck the Novokuybyshev refinery in the Samara region, which they said produced fuel for Russia’s northern grouping of forces. Andriy Kovalenko, head of the Center for Countering Disinformation, said the plant was one of the 10 largest in Russia.

Kovalenko also said Ukrainian forces had struck the NLMK metallurgical plant at Novolipetsk, in Kursk. Its rolled steel was used in ships and submarines, combat vehicle hulls, missiles and aircraft, Kovalenko said.

INTERACTIVE-WHO CONTROLS WHAT IN SOUTHERN UKRAINE-1741771518
]Al Jazeera]

Russia also struck Ukraine with one of its largest drone swarms of the war.

At least 11 people were killed when Russia conducted a combined strike using an Iskander ballistic missile, Tornado multiple launch rockets and Geran drones in the town of Dobropillya on March 7. The toll was high because the Russian drones attacked in two waves to kill first responders.

The Dobropillya attack was part of a nationwide shower of 67 missiles and 194 drones.

French-donated Mirage jets went into combat for the first time in the war, knocking out Russian Kh-101 missiles.