
-
Snooker star Zhao: from ban to Chinese sporting history
-
Zhao makes history as China's first World Snooker champion
-
Brazilian ritual root gets second life as potential anti-depressant
-
Israel says 'most' Gazans to be displaced in expanded operation
-
Israel strikes Yemen after Huthi attack on Ben Gurion airport
-
'It's time': Popovich passes Spurs torch to Johnson
-
Cummins heroics in vain as rain forces Hyderabad out of IPL playoff race
-
Huthis say US, Israel bomb Yemen after strike on Israeli airport
-
Lewandowski on bench for Barca's showdown with Inter, says coach Flick
-
Pricing birdsong: EU mulls nature credits to help biodiversity
-
Scholz vows continued German support in last call with Zelensky
-
UK kicks off party to mark 80 years since end of WWII
-
Global film industry reels from Trump tariff announcement
-
Cardinals assemble to elect pope and set course for church
-
Meta content moderator cuts over 2,000 jobs in Spain: union
-
Pakistan conducts second missile test, India readies civil defence drills
-
Pro-EU or pro-Trump? Romania faces decisive choice in vote
-
Nazi surrender site sets the scene for Wim Wenders short film
-
French court backs Olympics choreographer in cyberbullying case
-
Romania run-off pits pro-Trump nationalist against centrist mayor
-
South Africa's Rabada back in IPL after serving drug ban
-
Pride and excitement as UK crowds celebrate 80 years since WWII's end
-
Ex-French interior minister Darmanin apologises for 2022 Champions League fiasco
-
Zhao on brink of becoming China's first World Snooker champion
-
Stars come out for Met Gala, showcasing Black dandyism
-
Jury selection begins in Sean 'Diddy' Combs sex crimes trial
-
Martinez rushing to be ready for Barca showdown, says Inter's Inzaghi
-
Warren Buffett to remain as Berkshire Hathaway board chair
-
UK royals lead celebrations to mark 80 years since WWII end
-
Top Spanish court drops tax complaint against ex-king Juan Carlos
-
Who are the Middle East's Druze religious community?
-
Russian reporter critical of Ukraine war escapes to France
-
France names first Concorde jet a historical monument
-
France, EU take aim at Trump's assault on science, seek to lure US researchers
-
Catholic Church's direction in the balance as vote conclave looms
-
German coalition deal signed on eve of Merz govt launch
-
UK begins four days of events to honour last WWII veterans
-
Cassocks competition: whose outfit will new pope wear?
-
Traditional culture, fancy dress meet at Hong Kong's raucous bun festival
-
Spain foreign tourist numbers break record in early 2025
-
Catholic Church's direction in the balance as conclave looms
-
France, EU leaders take aim at Trump in bid to lure US scientists
-
Olympic 100m medallist Kerley denies battery, admits to 'altercation'
-
Man Utd have 'big responsibility' to win Europa League: Amorim
-
Israel cabinet approves plan for Gaza 'conquest'
-
Alexander-Arnold confirms Liverpool exit after 'hardest decision'
-
Francis's popemobile converted into clinic for Gazan children
-
Spain's blackout highlights renewables' grid challenge
-
Trent Alexander-Arnold announces Liverpool departure
-
Top French chefs warm to AI in the kitchen

US Capitol riot panel to vote on Trump criminal charges
Lawmakers investigating last year's deadly assault on the US Capitol are set to vote at their final public meeting Monday on whether to recommend criminal charges against former president Donald Trump.
The decision will be the culmination an 18-month probe by a House of Representatives select committee that interviewed more than 1,000 witnesses and held explosive public hearings on the storming of Congress on January 6, 2021.
At least five people died after a mob whipped up by Trump's false claims of a stolen election and directed to march on Congress by the defeated president ransacked the seat of US democracy in a thwarted bid to prevent the transfer of power to President Joe Biden.
The committee is expected to urge the Justice Department to pursue Trump on at least three charges related to the violence -- inciting an insurrection, obstructing an official proceeding and conspiring to defraud the United States.
The referrals would be largely symbolic, as the panel has no control over charging decisions, which rest with the Justice Department.
Jack Smith, a largely independent special prosecutor appointed by Attorney General Merrick Garland, is leading his own investigation into Trump related to the 2020 election.
But the lawmakers' move would nevertheless be historic, as Congress has never made a criminal referral against a current or former president.
It would also be a major blow to Trump amid a series of missteps in the weeks since he announced a comeback bid for the White House.
Charges could eventually result in prison time and a ban from public office for the 76-year-old tycoon, who still wields considerable power in the Republican Party.
"I think that the evidence is there that Donald Trump committed criminal offenses in connection with his efforts to overturn the election," Democratic committee member Adam Schiff, a former federal prosecutor, told CNN on Sunday.
- 'Congress cannot remain silent' -
The seven Democratic and two Republican panel members are winding down their work before the end of the year, and have compiled their findings into an eight-chapter report set to be released on Wednesday.
The executive summary is expected to be issued Monday.
The committee maintains that Trump "oversaw and coordinated a sophisticated seven-part plan to overturn the presidential election and prevent the transfer of presidential power."
Investigators say the plot began with Trump's campaign to spread allegations that the election was marred by widespread fraud.
He is accused of trying to corrupt the Justice Department and of pressuring his vice president Mike Pence, state election officials and legislators to help overturn the election by violating the Constitution and the law.
Trump is also accused of summoning and assembling the mob in Washington, and directing it toward the Capitol despite knowing it was armed with assault rifles, handguns and numerous other weapons.
And he ignored pleas for from his team to take action to stop the violence, lawmakers say.
The committee's case was bolstered by a federal judge in California who found it "more likely than not that President Trump corruptly attempted to obstruct the Joint Session of Congress on January 6."
Lawmakers are also mulling criminal referrals of other figures in Trump's inner circle, including lawyer John Eastman, one of the key architects of the defeated president's bid to cling to power.
"We're focused on key players... where there is sufficient evidence or abundant evidence that they committed crimes," committee member Jamie Raskin told reporters last week.
"And we're focused on crimes that go right to the heart of the constitutional order such that the Congress cannot remain silent."
Authorities say some 140 officers were assaulted during the riot. Around 900 people have been arrested on suspicion of taking part in the attack and more than 800 have been charged with crimes ranging from trespass and assaulting police to seditious conspiracy.
Trump has repeatedly disparaged the House panel on his own Truth Social platform, calling the members "Democrats, misfits and thugs."
Y.Kobayashi--AMWN