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50-Foot-Tall Artificial Christmas Tree Earlier Set On Fire, Replaced

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Fox News has replaced a 50-foot-tall artificial Christmas tree that was set on fire a day earlier outside its headquarters in New York City.

A man was arrested on Wednesday and charged with setting fire to the original tree in the early hours. The police said that security at the headquarters had observed the man, Craig Tamanaha, climbing the structure before the fire broke out around 12:15 a.m.

Mr. Tamanaha, 49, was arrested and later charged with seven counts including criminal mischief, reckless endangerment and arson.

The fire did not cause any injuries, and the police said on Wednesday that the authorities were still investigating the cause. But the spectacle surprised onlookers, including a network host who announced the fire in a live broadcast.

“This is the Fox Square in New York, outside of Fox headquarters,” the host, Shannon Bream, told viewers shortly after midnight. “It appears that our giant Christmas tree there, just a couple of minutes ago, was completely engulfed in flames.”

A few minutes later, as a live feed showed smoke billowing above the tree, Ms. Bream said that the fire seemed to have been put out. “But we’re going to monitor the situation to try to figure out what sparked this whole thing,” she added.

The tree had been ceremonially lit in the network’s “All-American” Christmas special, which was broadcast on Sunday.

In a companywide memo on Wednesday that was provided by Fox News Media, Suzanne Scott, the company’s chief executive, condemned the vandalism and said that the tree would be replaced.

“We will not let this deliberate and brazen act of cowardice deter us,” Ms. Scott said. “We are in the process of rebuilding and installing a new tree as a message that there can be peace, light and joy even during a dark moment like this.”

The police said they believed that Mr. Tamanaha was homeless, and that they were investigating whether drugs or mental illness had played a factor.

He was last arrested in March for smoking the synthetic drug known as K2, the police said.

It was not immediately clear whether Mr. Tamanaha had retained a lawyer.

Fox reported this month that the original tree, on the Avenue of the Americas in Manhattan, was 50 feet tall and had been decorated with 10,000 ornaments and 100,000 lights.

The lighting ceremony last weekend was part of an annual tradition that began in 2019. The tree and its replacement were both supplied by American Christmas, a company based in Mount Vernon, N.Y.

“This holiday season serves as a reminder that at the end of the day, there will always be more that unites us than divides us,” Dana Perino, a Fox News host and a former press secretary for President George W. Bush, said during a live tree-lighting ceremony at the site on Thursday.

Ms. Perino thanked the New York Police Department and the Fire Department for responding to the fire.

Ms. Perino added that Fox News Media and the Fox Corporation had both made a $100,000 donation to Answer the Call, a nonprofit organization that provides financial assistance to the families of officers from the N.Y.P.D., the F.D.N.Y. and other cities agencies who have been killed in the line of duty.

Officials in Oakland, California said this week that they were investigating an episode in which at least one person set fire to a 52-foot Christmas tree in Jack London Square early Monday.

An aerosol can was found near the tree after the fire was extinguished, The Sacramento Bee reported.

The authorities in Chicago are also investigating the apparent arson this month of a Christmas tree at the corner of Garfield Boulevard and Martin Luther King Drive, The Chicago Tribune reported.

The tree, installed as part of local charity’s project to light up the city’s South Side for the holidays, is the third to be vandalized at the site in three years.

Two of the cases are suspected arsons.

A police spokesman said a gasoline canister had been found at the scene after the latest fire.

France To Open early Classified Algerian War Archives

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The French Government says it will open classified police files from the Algerian war 15 years ahead of schedule in order to look the truth in the eyes and confront it.

Speaking to News correspondents, Culture Minister Roselyne Bachelot said they have things to rebuild with Algeria which can only happen based on the truth.

The files cover judicial proceedings by the French police and military forces during the 1954-1962 war of independence and are likely to confirm widespread use of torture and extra-judicial killings by French forces.

The announcement comes as France seeks to defuse a major diplomatic crisis between the two countries.

It was triggered in October when President Emmanuel Macron accused Algeria’s “political-military system” of rewriting history and fomenting “hatred towards France”.The trauma of the Algerian War has poisoned French politics for more than half a century.

A key strand of today’s far-right nationalism has its roots in the war and former president Charles de Gaulle’s abrupt decision to grant Algeria independence in 1962 — for which he faced assassination bids and attempted military coups.

Asked about the likelihood that incidents of torture will be uncovered in the archives, Bachelot said: “It is in the interest of the country that they are recognised.

Macron, France’s first leader born after the colonial era, has made a priority of reckoning with its past and forging a new relationship with former colonies.

UN Halts Food Aid In Two Ethiopian Towns After Looting

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The World Food Programme, WFP, has suspended distribution of food aid in two northern Ethiopian towns after gunmen looted its warehouses.

The United Nations said Looters from rebel Tigrayan forces held aid staff at gunpoint in the town of Kombolcha and stole large quantities of essential food supplies, including some for malnourished children.

A spokesman for the UN, which runs the WFP, said its staff there had faced extreme intimidation during days of looting in the industrial hub of Kombolcha in Amhara.

He said that such harassment of humanitarian staff by armed forces is unacceptable and undermines the ability of the United Nations and humanitarian partners to deliver assistance when it is most needed.

The spokesman also accused military personnel of commandeering three WFP humanitarian trucks and using them for their own purposes.

The lack of security has led to the decision to halt food distribution in Kombolcha and nearby Dessie, two strategic towns in Amhara that sit on the road to the capital Addis Ababa.

The Tigrayan rebels have not commented on the allegations that their fighters stole food aid.

Northern Ethiopia is facing mass starvation amid an ongoing civil war between Tigrayan and government forces.

UN says after more than a year of fighting, more than nine million people are in need of critical food supplies in the Tigray, Amhara and Afar regions.

The Ethiopian government recently announced that it had recaptured the towns from the Tigray rebels but the rebels said the army had only recovered areas they had abandoned.

US Wins Appeal Over Extradition Of Wikileaks Founder Assange

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The US government has won its appeal against a court decision that halted the extradition of Wikileaks founder Julian Assange.

The case will now go back to the Westminster Magistrates Court where the extradition request would need to be sent to the UK Minister of Interior, Priti Patel for review.

The 50-year-old has been in custody since April 2019, when he was sentenced to 50 weeks behind bars, can still request permission for a final ruling on Friday’s verdict from the UK’s Supreme Court..

He was ordered to remain in custody pending the outcome of the High Court’s decision over concerns he would abscond. He has spent more than two years jailed in Belmarsh maximum security prison.

Before the 2019 sentence, he was hauled out of the Ecuadorian Embassy by British authorities after his citizenship was revoked.

Assange’s fiancee, Stella Moris, said their legal team would appeal “at the earliest possible moment,” while saying it was a “grave miscarriage of justice.”

Before proceedings Moris expressed hope that he would be home for Christmas in a post on Twitter. “I hope the High Court will bring this abusive and vindictive extradition to an end today so that that our children will be able to spend Christmas with their father.

Rights groups have expressed disapproval at the court’s decision, especially with Friday marking International Human Rights Day.

Melzer said he had personally investigated Assange’s case and said there had been gross rights violations.

The UN experts also suggested that Assange’s legal team highlight press freedom and human rights violations by cross-appealing January’s ruling.

Nationwide ‘Silent Strike’ In Myanmar Protests Military Rule

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A large protest, one of their biggest nationally coordinated protests in months, termed ‘silent strike’ has been staged in Myanmar, calling on people across the country to shut their businesses and stay at home on International Human Rights Day.

The “silent strike” by Opponents of military rule was staged in cities and towns from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., and comes amid increasing violence in the country.

The political crisis was triggered by the army’s seizure of power in February and ouster of the elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi.

On Tuesday, there was a widely reported massacre in the country’s northwestern Sagaing region in which soldiers were accused of rounding up and killing 11 civilians whose charred bodies were later discovered by fellow villagers.

The military-installed government has denied its soldiers were involved, but it is staging an offensive in northwestern Myanmar against persistent resistance from anti-military militias.

In Yangon, the country’s largest city, and elsewhere, photos on social media showed normally busy streets empty of traffic on Friday.

Usually crowded markets and plazas were quiet hours before the official start of the strike, which reaffirmed the widespread opposition to the army’s rule and its disregard for human rights.

However, few citizens paid a price for their defiance, as photos posted on social media showed fittings such as tables and chairs confiscated by security forces from some.

Since Thursday, authorities had announced in some neighborhoods that action would be taken against shops which close without an acceptable reason.

ICC Judges Confirm War Crimes Charges Against C.A.R Suspect

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Judges at the International Criminal Court have confirmed war crimes and crimes against humanity charges levied by prosecutors against a former commander of the “Seleka” faction in Central African Republic.

The decision paves the way for the case of Mahamat Said Abdel Kain to go to trial although Lawyers for Said, who was transferred to The Hague in January, say they will prove he is innocent.

An ICC statement said judges found “sufficient evidence to establish substantial grounds to believe that Said was a senior member of the Seleka coalition.

They say he is criminally responsible for crimes including torture of prisoners during his term at the Central Office for the Repression of Banditry, in the capital Bangui, between April 12 and Aug. 30, 2013.

The Central African Republic has been mired in violence since a coalition of mostly northern and predominantly Muslim rebels known as Seleka, in the Sango language, seized power in March 2013.

Their brutal rule gave rise to the opposing “anti-balaka” militias, several of whose former leaders also face charges at the ICC.

World Powers Test Iran’s Commitment To Talks

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World powers and Iran were holding extended talks on reviving their nuclear deal on Friday.

According to a European source, they were working from texts discussed five months ago and Iranian officials saying they were sticking to a tough stance from last week.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, the source appeared to suggest that Iran had agreed to continue talks from where they left off in June.

This would be put to the test in the next couple of days, the source said, but made no mention of Iran’s new proposals. Iranian officials denied it.

The talks resumed on Thursday with the United States and Israel which has been piling rhetorical pressure on Tehran about the possible economic or military consequences if diplomacy fails.

Iran’s top negotiator, Ali Bagheri Kani, said Tehran was standing firm on the position it laid out last week, when the talks broke off with European and U.S. officials accusing Iran of making new demands and of reneging on compromises worked out earlier this year.

Bagheri said last week that “all the issues that had been drafted during the previous negotiations until June can be negotiated”.

Under the original deal that then-President Donald Trump abandoned in 2018, Iran limited its nuclear programme in return for relief from U.S., European Union and U.N. sanctions. The West fears the programme would be used to develop weapons, something Tehran denies.

The indirect U.S.-Iranian talks, in which diplomats from France, Britain, Germany, Russia and China shuttle between them because Tehran refuses direct contact with Washington, aim to get both sides to resume full compliance with the accord.

Vietnam War Veteran Launches ‘Affordable’ Gold Steak Restaurant

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A Vietnamese hotel is offering diners the chance to try gold leaf-coated steaks, seeking to tap a wave of publicity after a government minister was caught on camera being fed the dish at a London restaurant, where steaks can cost over 1,000 pounds.

The Dolce Hanoi Golden Lake Hotel had a makeover last year using a tonne of the metal to gold-plate everything from bath tubs to toilets, all housed behind a gold exterior.

Now as part of a rebranding, the hotel has renamed one of its eating outlets the Golden Beef Restaurant and put the famed gold-encrusted “Tomahawk Wagyu” steak the Vietnamese minister ate in London on the menu, charging from around $45 a person.

“We have served more than 1,000 guests who came to try out the golden steak,” said Nguyen Huu Duong, chairman of Hoa Binh Group, which owns the hotel managed by U.S.-based Wyndham Hotels & Resorts Inc

Turkish celebrity chef Nusret Gokce, or “Salt Bae”, uploaded a video of himself last month feeding Minister of Public Security To Lam the gold-leaf encrusted Tomahawk steak, causing a stir in Vietnam. Steaks at Gokce’s restaurant sell for up to 1,450 pounds ($1,914).

Many in the Southeast Asian country questioned how such a high-ranking Communist Party official allowed himself to be filmed indulging in such expensive food amid a state crackdown on corruption. Vietnamese officials have not commented on the incident.

Now as part of a rebranding, the hotel has renamed one of its eating outlets the Golden Beef Restaurant and put the famed gold-encrusted “Tomahawk Wagyu” steak the Vietnamese minister ate in London on the menu, charging from around $45 a person.

How It Is Celebrated – Christmas in China

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In China, only about one percent of people are Christians, so most people only know a few things about Christmas. Because of this, Christmas is only often celebrated in major cities. In these big cities there are Christmas Trees, lights and other decorations on the streets and in department stores.

In China, Santa is known as ‘Sheng dan lao ren’ (Traditional: 聖誕老人, Simplified: 圣诞老人; means Old Christmas Man).

Only a few people have a Christmas Tree. If people do have a tree it is normally a plastic one and might be decorated with paper chains, paper flowers, and paper lanterns (they might also call it a tree of light). The Christmas Trees that most people would see would be in shopping malls.

The strange thing is that most of the world’s plastic Christmas Trees and Christmas decorations are made in China, but the people making them might not have decorations like them in their own homes at Christmas!

A tradition that’s becoming popular, on Christmas Eve, is giving apples. Many stores have apples wrapped up in colored paper for sale. People give apples on Christmas Eve because in Chinese Christmas Eve is called “Ping’an Ye” (平安夜), meaning peaceful or quiet evening, which has been translated from the carol ‘Silent Night’.

The word for apple in Mandarin is “píngguǒ” (苹果) which sounds like the word for peace.

Some people go Carol singing, although not many people understand them or know about the Christmas Story. Jingle Bells is a popular Christmas song in China!

People who are Christians in China go to special services. Going to Midnight Mass services has become very popular.

In Chinese Happy/Merry Christmas is ‘Sheng Dan Kuai Le or 圣诞快乐’ in Mandarin and ‘Seng Dan Fai Lok or 聖誕快樂’ in Cantonese. Happy/Merry Christmas in lots more languages.

How It Is Celebrated – Christmas In Colombia

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In Colombia, Christmas celebrations and preparations start on the evening of the 7th December which is known as ‘Día de las Velitas’ or ‘Day of the little Candles’. Houses and streets are decorated with candles, lanterns and lots of lights.

There are also big firework displays and music to dance to and foods like ‘buñuelos’ and ’empanadas’. This day is celebrated by Catholics around the world as The Feast of the Immaculate Conception but is especially popular in Colombia.

From December 16th until Christmas Eve, many Colombians take part in ‘novenas’.

These are special times when family, friends and neighbors come together to pray in the days leading up to Christmas.

They are known as the ‘Novena de Aguinaldos’ (Christmas Novena) and often a different house hosts the meeting every night. As well as the prayers, people sing carols and eat lots of yummy foods!

People like to decorate their homes with Christmas Trees and other decorations. It’s very common for there to be candles (normally red and white) and other lights displayed in windows or on balconies. Another very important Christmas decoration in Colombia is a nativity scene or ‘el pesebre’.

In early December, children write a ‘Carta al Niño Dios’ (letter to the baby Jesus) asking for what presents they would like. The letter is placed in the pesebre. They hope that Jesus will bring them presents on Christmas Eve.

The main Christmas meal is eaten on Christmas Eve night and it’s called ‘Cena de Navidad’.

The dishes often include ‘lechona’ (pork stuffed with rice and peas), ham, turkey or a chicken soup called ‘Ajiaco Bogotano’. Other popular foods around Christmas are ‘Buñuelos’ (cheesy fritters), arepas (a thick dish made from corn) and ‘hojuelas’ (a fried pastry with sugar and jam). A very popular Christmas dessert is ‘Natilla’ which is a set custard.

After the Christmas Meal, many people will go to a Midnight mass Church Service. Some people stay up all night, so Christmas Day is a day for relaxing and eating up leftovers!