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Zack Polanski’s criticism of Golders Green attack arrest will have ‘chilling effect’, says Met chief

30 April 2026 at 20:26

Mark Rowley defends officers who arrested suspect in Wednesday’s incident and calls on Green party leader to show solidarity

The Metropolitan police chief has said that Green party leader Zack Polanski sharing a post about the arrest of the Golders Green terror suspect will have a “chilling effect”.

Met officers arrested a 45-year-old man after two Jewish people were stabbed in the suburb of north-west London on Wednesday. Police said the suspect was shot with a stun gun to subdue him.

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© Photograph: Guy Smallman/Getty Images

© Photograph: Guy Smallman/Getty Images

© Photograph: Guy Smallman/Getty Images

Bodycam footage shows police taking down suspect in stabbing of 2 Jewish men. Here’s what we know

30 April 2026 at 19:10
The Metropolitan police of London, U.K. have released bodycam footage showing the moment when two officers arrested a man suspected of stabbing two Jewish men in north-west London neighbourhood, Golders Green. Read More

Stop Using AA Lithium Batteries in Portable Strobes and Speedlights

30 April 2026 at 17:13

Three camera flashes—Sony, Canon, and Nikon—are displayed upright side by side against a dark background with dramatic orange flames rising beneath and behind them.

This week, Canon published a Service Notice to its websites urging photographers not to use lithium or lithium-ion batteries in its Speedlites, battery packs, and macro twin light products, surprising many that this was suddenly an issue. The thing is, it's not sudden at all, and almost every manufacturer cautions against it.

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Box Office: ‘Mandalorian and Grogu’ Tracking for $80 Million Launch

30 April 2026 at 16:39
Directed by Jon Favreau, the movie is a big screen continuation of Disney+’s streaming series 'The Mandalorian.'

Partnering for Environmental Justice in Harlem

By: Guest
30 April 2026 at 15:55
Now in its fifth year, the annual conference was created to highlight the critical climate-driven health and environmental impacts affecting our shared community.

UK stole 25m years of life and labour through slavery in Barbados, says report

Experts put estimate for economic harm done by 200 years of chattel slavery at $2tn, but stress this is ‘not an invoice’

Britain stole 25 million years of life and labour through slavery in Barbados, according to research by a team of international experts.

Their report concludes that Barbados’s population of African descent have suffered damages estimated at up to $2tn (£1.5tn) from 200 years of chattel slavery.

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© Photograph: Joe Raedle/Getty Images

© Photograph: Joe Raedle/Getty Images

© Photograph: Joe Raedle/Getty Images

Labour calls on Jenrick to give £37,500 campaign donation to charity amid electoral law investigation

30 April 2026 at 13:08

Electoral Commission is investigating claims money given to MP came from US businessman now convicted of wire fraud

Labour has called on Robert Jenrick to give up almost £40,000 donated to his campaign to be Conservative leader in 2024 following allegations that the sum came from an impermissible foreign donor now convicted of fraud.

The party called for Jenrick to make a donation to charity after the Guardian revealed the Electoral Commission has been investigating claims that £37,500 out of £100,000 given to his campaign by a UK company Spott Fitness ultimately came from a company run by a US-based businessman, Gary Klopfenstein.

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© Photograph: Sean Smith/The Guardian

© Photograph: Sean Smith/The Guardian

© Photograph: Sean Smith/The Guardian

Rare National Service evasion case: Prosecutors push for maximum jail term for Singaporean over dual citizenship dispute

29 April 2026 at 22:31

SINGAPORE: The prosecution is asking for the toughest sentence available against a Singaporean who skipped National Service (NS), in what appears to be a rare full trial for such an offence.

Deputy Public Prosecutor Tay Jia En urged the court to impose up to three years’ jail, along with a S$3,000 fine, for related immigration offences. The accused, Edmond Yao Zhi Hai, had failed to report for enlistment in 1997.

The case has drawn attention because of Yao’s dual citizenship. His defence argued that serving NS would have cost him his Indonesian citizenship, placing him in a legal bind from a young age, Channel NewsAsia (CNA) reports (April 28).

Court rejects “good faith” argument from Yao’s defence

District Judge James Elisha Lee didn’t accept the defence’s explanation. He ruled that Yao and his mother would have known about his NS duties early on.

The judge also dismissed the claim that Yao believed he was treated as a foreigner. He noted that the Ministry of Defence’s Central Manpower Base (CMPB) had informed Yao of his obligations.

The offence itself is strict liability, the judge found, which means the prosecution needs only to show that Yao failed to enlist, not why. This effectively shut down the defence’s main argument that Yao acted in good faith.

Prosecution: dual citizenship doesn’t excuse the NS evasion offence

Prosecutors stated that Yao’s dual nationality shouldn’t affect sentencing. They argued that Singapore law applies to its citizens, regardless of other passports. They also described the case as highly serious, pointing to the long period of non-compliance and what they saw as a lack of remorse.

However, the defence took a different view. Lawyer Sunil Sudheesan said a jail term would ignore the reality of Yao’s situation. Serving NS in Singapore would have meant losing his Indonesian citizenship. He also argued that enforcement had been inconsistent, as authorities were aware of Yao’s status, yet didn’t act earlier.

Yao had travelled openly using his Indonesian passport and didn’t attempt to hide, the defence added.

How should Singapore treat citizens with competing legal obligations in another country?

Cases like this rarely go to trial, as most NS evasion matters are resolved earlier, usually with guilty pleas. This one, however, raises a more complex question: How should Singapore treat citizens with competing legal obligations in another country?

The prosecution’s stance suggests dual citizenship doesn’t dilute NS duties. The defence, on the other hand, presented it as a unique case with no established precedent, arguing that general deterrence doesn’t apply when the situation is so specific.

When two systems conflict, ignoring one rarely ends well

The court has adjourned Yao’s sentencing to May. The outcome could set a reference point for how similar cases are handled in future, even if they remain rare.

At its core, obligations tied to citizenship are not optional, even when another country’s rules pull in a different direction.

A simple lesson lies beneath the legal arguments: when two systems conflict, ignoring one rarely ends well, and addressing the conflict early would have saved years of uncertainty.

This article (Rare National Service evasion case: Prosecutors push for maximum jail term for Singaporean over dual citizenship dispute) first appeared on The Independent Singapore News.

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