World
Kim Jong-Un unveils insane ‘biggest statues in the world’ of dad and grandfather | World | News

Kim Jong-Un has commissioned statues of North Korea’s former Supreme Leaders Kim Jong Il and Kim Il Sung. Kim showed off the giant statues at a meeting of the Workers‘ Party of Korea, the country’s only ruling party.
Kim took over from his father Kim Jong Il in 2011 and has continued the cult of personality and nuclear ambitions established under the former leader’s rule.
Jong Il was the son of North Korea’s founder Kim Il Sung
The pair are often portrayed together in state-produced propaganda artwork.
The ruling North Korean family are eager to stress the continuity of the Kim dynasty with each generation portrayed as the natural successor.
Visitors to the secretive and closed-off are often treated to a visit to the Mansu Hill Grand Monument.
In April 1972, Kim Jong Il had the monument constructed to mark Kim Il Sung’s 60th birthday.
Initially, the giant monument featured the “Great Leader” overlooking Pyongyang alone.
Later a statue of Kim Jong Il was added after his death.
The statue was initially Kim Jong Il wearing a long coat though this was changed to a parka which the dictator was often seen wearing.
According to South Korean reports, the high cost of the monument’s construction was raised through forced donations by North Korean workers who were working overseas.
Kim Jong-Un has continued the legacy of his predecessors, threatening the rest of the world with nuclear weapons and refusing to democratise the famine-stricken country.
World
Everything you need to know about Ghislaine Maxwell at Epstein hearing | World | News


Ghislaine Maxwell refused to answer questions from the House Oversight Committee on Monday (Image: US DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE/AFP via)
Everything you need to know after Ghislaine Maxwell stays silent at Epstein hearing
- Appearing via videolink from a Texas federal prison, Ghislaine Maxwell refused to answer questions from the House Oversight Committee. She invoked her Fifth Amendment rights against self-incrimination during the probe into Jeffrey Epstein’s sex trafficking ring, frustrating lawmakers who sought details on potential co-conspirators and their crimes.
- Maxwell’s lawyer, David Markus, utilised the hearing to openly campaign for a pardon from President Donald Trump. Markus stated that Maxwell would be prepared to “speak fully and honestly” if granted clemency, suggesting she possesses information that could explain the innocence of high-profile figures.
- The defence team asserted that Maxwell alone can explain why figures like Donald Trump and Bill Clinton are “innocent of any wrongdoing.” By withholding her testimony, her legal team positioned her as the gatekeeper of the “truth” regarding the well-connected financier’s associates.
- Committee Chairman James Comer expressed deep disappointment, noting that Maxwell should not be entitled to immunity. Despite a subpoena issued last year, Maxwell’s silence has blocked the committee from gathering further evidence on how Epstein exploited underage girls for years.
- Maxwell is currently serving a 20-year sentence for sex trafficking. While her initial appeals were rejected, her attorneys continue to push for a conviction overturn, citing “substantial new evidence” of constitutional violations during her 2021 trial, which prosecutors described as a case against a “dangerous” predator.
World
JD Vance sparks fury in Italy as 40 car motorcade takes him down tiny street | World | News

JD Vance has been slammed on social media after requiring a 100-car motorcade through narrow streets in Milan to meet Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni. The enormous motorcade featured numerous Chevrolet Suburbans that struggled to navigate the cramped city streets.
One person responded on X: “Some Scandinavian PMs bike to work or take the subway, the Romanian and Moldovan presidents just go by regular commercial flights. More or less the same goes for most European heads of state. JD Vance had 14 planes fly in this motorcade and his security detail to Italy.”
Another wrote: “JD Vance went to meet Meloni in a 40-car motorcade full of Suburbans through the tiny streets of Milan.”
A third commented: “His 100-vehicle motorcade required 14 planes to transport. Milanese streets are tiny and athletes can’t reach venues due to VANCE-generated traffic jams.”
Another added: “Vance has been a vocal critic of ‘entrenched elites’ and government waste, yet his own security footprint is one of the largest in history.”
Vance and his family reportedly travelled to Milan with a fleet of 14 aircraft and a motorcade of 100 vehicles.
Eleven planes are designated for staff, former athletes and security, one plane is exclusively for food supplies, and two are transporting the 100 armoured vehicles.
This follows a frosty reception for the US vice president from Italians at the Olympics Opening Ceremony. On Thursday, he and his wife Usha were met with boos when they appeared on the big screen.
He then also held a meeting with Meloni, a staunch European ally of Donald Trump‘s administration.
The meeting coincides with Italy’s announcement this weekend that they will not be joining Trump’s Board of Peace due to a “constitutional limit”.
World
Jimmy Lai has been sentenced in high-profile Hong Kong security trial | World | News


FILE – Democracy advocate Jimmy Lai leaves the Hong Kong’s Court of Final Appeal in Hong Kong on Feb. 9, 2021. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung, File) (Image: Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)
Jimmy Lai, the former Hong Kong media mogul and outspoken critic of Beijing, was sentenced on Monday to serve 20-years in prison in one of the highest-profile cases prosecuted under a China-imposed national security law that has effectively stifled dissent in the city.
In December, three government-appointed judges found Lai, 78, guilty of conspiring with others to collude with foreign forces to endanger national security and conspiracy to publish seditious articles. Lai, who denied all charges, faced a maximum sentence of life imprisonment under Hong Kong’s security law, which Beijing insisted was essential for maintaining stability in the Chinese special administrative region.
AP reported Lai as smiling and waving at supporters in the courtroom, while his wife was accompanied by Hong Kong’s outspoken Roman Catholic Cardinal Jospeh Zen.
The democracy campaigner’s arrest and trial have sparked concerns about the erosion of press freedom in what was formerly an Asian stronghold of media independence. The government maintains the case is unrelated to press freedom, arguing that the defendants exploited news reporting as a cover for years to carry out acts that damaged China and Hong Kong.
‘We will never stop fighting’
Lai’s sentencing could intensify Beijing’s diplomatic tensions with foreign governments. His conviction has attracted criticism from the U.S. and the U.K.
U.S. President Donald Trump said he felt “so badly” after the verdict and noted he spoke to Chinese leader Xi Jinping about Lai and “asked to consider his release.”
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer‘s government has also called for the release of Lai, who holds British citizenship. Lai’s daughter, Claire, expressed to The Associated Press her hope that the regime will see the wisdom in releasing her father, a devout Roman Catholic.
She affirmed their faith is firmly placed in God. “We will never stop fighting until he is free,” she declared.
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Critic punished for doing his job
Lai is the founder of Apple Daily, a now-defunct newspaper renowned for its critical coverage of the governments in Hong Kong and Beijing. He was apprehended in August 2020 under the security law, which has been utilised in a prolonged crackdown on many of Hong Kong’s prominent activists.
Throughout his 156-day trial, prosecutors alleged that he conspired with six former Apple Daily employees, two activists and others to solicit foreign forces to impose sanctions or blockades or engage in other hostile activities against Hong Kong or China. Lai defended himself for 52 days during the trial, maintaining that he had not advocated for foreign sanctions following the introduction of the law.
In December, the judges concluded that Lai was the orchestrator of the conspiracies and remained unwavering in his intent to destabilise the ruling Chinese Communist Party. They took exception to what they termed his “constant invitation” to the United States to topple the Chinese government under the guise of aiding Hong Kongers.
Urania Chiu, a law lecturer at Oxford Brookes University, stated that the case is notable for its wide interpretation of seditious intent and the application of the term “collusion with foreign forces” to certain media activities. The implications are particularly concerning for journalists and those in academia, she noted.
“Offering and publishing legitimate critiques of the state, which often involves engagement with international platforms and audiences, may now easily be construed as ‘collusion,'” Chiu said.
Lai is currently serving a nearly six-year prison sentence over fraud allegations in a separate case and has been in custody for more than five years. In January, lawyer Robert Pang reported that Lai was suffering from health issues including heart palpitations, high blood pressure and diabetes.
Although Lai’s condition was not life-threatening, Pang argued that his client’s health, age and solitary confinement, which the prosecution claimed Lai requested, would make his sentence “more burdensome.”

Lai is the founder of Apple Daily, a now-defunct newspaper renowned for its critical coverage of China (Image: Copyright 2023 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)
Former colleagues’ agonising choice
The prosecution stated that a medical report indicated Lai’s general health condition remained stable. The Hong Kong government had previously stated that no abnormalities were found in a subsequent medical exam following his complaint of heart problems.
The former Apple Daily staff and activists implicated in Lai’s case pleaded guilty, a move that could potentially lessen their sentences due to be delivered on Monday. Under the security law, reporting on others’ offences may result in reduced penalties, and some of the staff members served as prosecution witnesses.
The convicted journalists include publisher Cheung Kim-hung, associate publisher Chan Pui-man, editor-in-chief Ryan Law, executive editor-in-chief Lam Man-chung, executive editor-in-chief responsible for English news Fung Wai-kong, and editorial writer Yeung Ching-kee.
The two activists found guilty in the case, Andy Li and Chan Tsz-wah, also testified for the prosecution.
Before dawn, dozens of individuals queued outside the court building to secure a place in the courtroom, with some arriving as early as Thursday.
Former Apple Daily employee Tammy Cheung expressed her spiritual support for them by being present. Cheung hopes the defendants will soon be released from prison, suggesting it would be wonderful if they could reunite with their families before the Lunar New Year next week.
“Whatever happens, it’s an end – at least we’ll know the outcome,” she said.
China are enacting a ‘rule of fear’ on Hong Kong says expert
What to know about Jimmy Lai
Lai established Apple Daily in 1995, two years before Hong Kong’s handover to Chinese sovereignty following 156 years under British colonial administration. The publication cultivated a devoted readership through occasionally sensationalist reporting, investigative exclusives and brief, animated video content.
Coverage championing the city’s pro-democracy movement, including the anti-government demonstrations that engulfed Hong Kong in 2019, resonated strongly with democracy advocates.
Lai became amongst the first high-profile individuals detained under the security law in 2020. Within twelve months, several of Apple Daily’s senior journalists faced arrest as well.
Police operations, criminal proceedings and the freezing of its financial resources compelled the newspaper’s shutdown in June 2021. Its final edition achieved sales of one million copies.
By 2022, Hong Kong had plummeted 68 positions to 148th amongst 180 territories in the press-freedom rankings published by media freedom organisation Reporters Without Borders. The city’s most recent position stood at 140th, a dramatic decline from 18th place in 2002.
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