Waikato Times

Briefs

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Iraq moves on Kurds

Iraqi state media say federal troops have entered disputed territorie­s occupied by the nation’s Kurds. The move comes three years after Kurdish militias seized the areas outside their autonomous region to defend against an advance by the Islamic State extremist group. Al-Iraqiya TV says the military, antiterror­ist units and federal police have taken control of some areas around the oil-rich city of Kirkuk. It says they advanced without firing a shot. The manoeuvre comes three weeks after Kurds voted for independen­ce in a controvers­ial but symbolic referendum that Baghdad has so far refused to acknowledg­e. It says the vote organised by the country’s autonomous Kurdish authority was unconstitu­tional. A commander of the local Kurdish police force says Kurds remain in control of Kirkuk province’s oil wells.

Sessions backs pledge

The US Justice Department is sending a federal hate crimes lawyer to Iowa to help prosecute a man charged with killing a transgende­r teenager last year. LGBT advocates have long been sceptical of Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ pledge to prosecute acts of violence against transgende­r people. But the rare move, outlined in recently filed court papers, is a sign he intends to do so even as the Trump administra­tion has taken other steps to erode the rights of transgende­r people broadly. The case involves 23-year-old Jorge Sanders-Galvez. He is charged with killing 16-year-old Kedarie Johnson in Burlington, Iowa, in March 2016. Authoritie­s have not disclosed a motive. But Johnson’s relatives told local news outlets they believed the shooting was a hate crime.

Migrants rescued

Spain’s maritime rescue service says it has saved 168 migrants from several small boats trying to cross the Mediterran­ean Sea from North Africa. The service says its ships intercepte­d nine different boats carrying a total of 168 migrants at the weekend. Many migrants from Africa die trying the perilous voyage to Europe in small craft unfit for the open sea. Those boats often belong to human trafficker­s.

Flight crew panic

Passengers on an Indonesia AirAsia flight to the holiday island of Bali described a panicked flight crew announcing an emergency and oxygen masks dropping from the ceiling before the airliner turned back to the Australian city of Perth. Flight

QZ535 reportedly plummeted

20,000 feet 25 minutes into the flight from Perth on Sunday when a technical issue caused the cabin to lose pressure. It returned safely on Sunday to Perth Airport where many of the 145 passengers spoke to media about the fear and confusion on board. ‘‘The panic was escalated because of the behaviour of staff who were screaming, looked tearful and shocked,’’ passenger Clare Askew said. A passenger named Leah said: ‘‘I actually picked up my phone and sent a text message to my family, just hoping that they would get it. We were all pretty much saying goodbye to each other.’’ Engineers were examining the plane. The plane was in the air for more than an hour. Passengers said they didn’t know what was happening because most of the plane’s onboard announceme­nts weren’t in English.

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