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Celebrities flee Los Angeles blazes as Hollywood premieres scrapped

By - Jan 09,2025 - Last updated at Jan 09,2025

LOS ANGELES, United States — World-famous actors, musicians and celebrities were among the tens of thousands of people affected by terrifying wildfires tearing through Los Angeles on Wednesday.

The entertainment capital was besieged by out-of-control blazes burning on multiple fronts, with glitzy Hollywood events including a Pamela Anderson film premiere cancelled as hundreds of firefighters battled nearby flames whipped up by hurricane-force winds.

Dozens of homes were known to have been lost in the swanky Pacific Palisades area, a favorite spot for celebrities where multimillion dollar houses nestle on beautiful hillsides, while another inferno devastated parts of Altadena, to the east.

 

Mandy Moore, the singer and "This Is Us" actress, told followers on Instagram she had fled with her children and pets from the path of the Altadena fire.

"Trying to shield the kids from the immense sadness and worry I feel. Praying for everyone in our beautiful city. So gutted for the destruction and loss. Don't know if our place made it," she wrote.

Emmy award-winning actor James Woods posted a video on X showing flames engulfing trees and bushes near his Pacific Palisades home as he got ready to evacuate, and shortly afterward said all the fire alarms were going off.

"I couldn't believe our lovely little home in the hills held on this long. It feels like losing a loved one," Woods said.

"Star Wars" star Mark Hamill told his followers on Instagram that he had fled his Malibu home on Tuesday.

"Evacuated Malibu so last-minute there were small fires on both sides of the road as we approached PCH," he wrote, referring to the Pacific Coast Highway, a scenic road that connects seafront settlements.

The Luke Skywalker actor said he and his wife Marilou York, along with a pet dog, had gone to their daughter's Hollywood home to escape what he dubbed the "most horrific fire since '93."

 

Premieres cancelled 

 

Meanwhile, several major Hollywood events were abruptly called off due to the disaster.

Anderson's premiere for "The Last Showgirl" was scrapped due to the unfolding disaster, trade website Deadline reported, while Paramount also cancelled a glitzy red-carpet screening of the Robbie Williams musical film "Better Man".

 

Netflix pulled the plug on a press conference for its Golden Globe winner "Emilia Perez."

A live announcement to unveil this year's Screen Actors Guild nominations was abandoned on Wednesday morning.

And the Universal Studios theme park was closed for the day due to the extreme winds and fire conditions.

Steve Guttenberg -- star of 1984 comedy "Police Academy" -- was among those helping get people out of Pacific Palisades as the fire began spreading on Tuesday.

The "Cocoon" actor expressed frustration at how some of those fleeing the blaze had abandoned their cars on one of the only roads in and out of the ritzy neighbourhood.

"If you leave your car... leave the key in there so a guy like me can move your car so that these fire trucks can get up there. It's really, really important," he told a live television broadcast.

 

"Schitt's Creek" star Eugene Levy was also among those caught up in gridlock traffic while evacuating, The Los Angeles Times reported.

Reality TV personalities Heidi Montag and Spencer Pratt from "The Hills," an MTV show that ran until 2010, said they had lost their house after evacuating.

"I'm watching our house burn down on the security cameras," Pratt wrote on Snapchat.

 

EU ready to lead Ukraine support 'if US not willing'—Kallas

Ukraine assured that weapons will continue to flow

By - Jan 09,2025 - Last updated at Jan 09,2025

An artilleryman of the 155th Separate Mechanized Brigade of Ukrainian Armed Forces prepares to fire a French-made Caesar self-propelled howitzer toward Russian positions at an undisclosed location in the Donetsk Region on January 6, 2025

BRUSSELS, Belgium - The EU's foreign policy chief on Thursday said that she hopes the United States will keep supporting Ukraine after president-elect Donald Trump takes office and that if not, the EU was ready to take the lead.

 

"I'm really sure that all the other members, and hopefully also the United States, are ready to continue with the support to Ukraine," Kaja Kallas said as she headed to a meeting of countries supporting Ukraine at a US base in Germany.

 

She added that "the European Union is also ready to take over this leadership if the United States is not willing to do so".

 

Speaking to journalists, she said that at this stage "we shouldn't really speculate" about future US support, adding that the US has significant interests in Europe and that it "is not in the interest of America that Russia will be the strongest force in the world". 

 

"So I'm sure that [when] the leadership takes office, they can also see the bigger picture," she added ahead of Trump's January 20 inauguration.

 

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Thursday backed the deployment of Western troops to Ukraine as one of the "best instruments" to "force Russia to peace".

 

"Our goal is to find as many instruments as possible to force Russia into peace. I believe that such deployment of partners' contingents is one of the best instruments," Zelensky told a meeting of Ukraine's allies in Germany, referencing discussions about possible Western troop deployments. 

 

France, Germany warn Trump against threatening 'sovereign borders' on Greenland

By - Jan 08,2025 - Last updated at Jan 08,2025

PARIS — France and Germany on Wednesday warned Donald Trump against threatening "sovereign borders" after the US president-elect refused to rule out military action to take Greenland, an autonomous territory of European Union member Denmark.

 

"There is no question of the EU letting other nations in the world, whoever they may be... attack its sovereign borders," French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot told France Inter radio.

 

"We are a strong continent. We need to strengthen ourselves more," he added.

 

In Berlin, German government spokesman Steffen Hebestreit said in response to Trump's remarks that "as always, the firm principle applies... that borders must not be moved by force".

 

Barrot described Greenland as "European territory". Greenland is associated with the European Union through Denmark, of which it is a self-governing territory, but withdrew from the European bloc in 1985 after securing autonomy.

 

Trump set off new alarm on Tuesday at a press conference when he refused to rule out military intervention over the Panama Canal and Greenland, both of which he has said he wants the United States to control.

 

"We need Greenland for national security purposes," he declared.

 

His comments coincided with a private visit by his son Donald Trump Jr. to the mineral- and oil-rich autonomous Danish territory on Tuesday.

 

"If you ask me: 'is the United States going to invade Greenland?' the answer is no," said Barrot.

 

But he added: "We have entered an era that is seeing the return of the law of the strongest."

 

"Should we be intimidated? Should we be overcome with worry? Evidently, no. 

 

"We need to wake up and reinforce ourselves, militarily, in competition, in a world where the law of the strongest prevails."

 

Barrot said he believed that the United States is "inherently not imperialistic" and said he "did not believe" that it is changing.

 

However French government spokeswoman Sophie Primas told reporters after a cabinet meeting that there was a "form of imperialism" in Trump's comments.

 

"Today we are seeing the rise in blocs, we can see this as a form of imperialism, which materialises itself in the statements that we saw from Mr Trump on the annexation of an entire territory."

 

"More than ever, we and our European partners need to be conscious, to get away from a form of naivety, to protect ourselves, to rearm," she added.

 

The German government spokesman refused to be drawn on whether Berlin takes Trump's threats against NATO allies Denmark and Canada seriously.

 

"I don't want to assess" the comments, Hebestreit told a news conference, adding only that the German government had "taken note" of them.

 

At the news conference, Trump called the border with the United States' northern neighbour Canada an "artificially drawn line" and promised to rename the Gulf of Mexico the "Gulf of America."

 

Hundreds rally for South Korea's Yoon as new arrest bid beckons

By - Jan 08,2025 - Last updated at Jan 08,2025

Supporters of impeached South Korea president Yoon Suk Yeol shout slogans as they attend a rally near his residence in Seoul on January 8, 2025 (AFP photo)

SEOUL — Hundreds of supporters of South Korea's impeached President Yoon Suk Yeol rallied outside his residence Wednesday as investigators prepared a fresh attempt to arrest him.

 

Yoon has refused questioning and resisted arrest since his bungled December 3 martial law decree plunged South Korea into its worst political crisis in decades.

 

Investigators secured a new arrest warrant Tuesday after an initial seven-day order expired. Several hundred members of his base rushed to the presidential residence in central Seoul in response, braving sub-zero temperatures.

 

"A large number of people are coming out to join us. Despite the cold weather, many stayed up all night last night, braving the chill," Lee Hye-sook, a 57-year-old Yoon supporter, told AFP outside the residence.

 

"Witnessing their resilience against the wind and cold, I am confident that President Yoon Suk Yeol will return, and we will prevail."

 

Some supporters left flowers outside and ribbons with the Trump-style slogan "Make Korea Great Again", while others waved American flags at the gates of the compound from where the suspended leader has resisted arrest.

 

Despite a cold weather warning that temperatures were expected to fall to -10 degrees Celsius, the suspended president's supporters were defiant, shouting "impeachment is invalid".

 

Rival protesters calling for Yoon to be punished waved glowsticks ,  commonly seen at K-pop concerts ,  and held placards that read, "Detain, arrest insurrectionist Yoon Suk Yeol".

 

Yoon's legal team said on Wednesday he remains inside the residential compound, after investigators cast doubt a day earlier on his whereabouts.

 

"Last night, I personally visited the official residence, met the president there, and left," said his lawyer Yoon Kap-keun, who is unrelated.

 

The Corruption Investigation Office [CIO], which is leading the probe into the president, has kept secret the duration of the new warrant.

 

Yoon would become the first sitting South Korean president to be arrested if investigators are able to detain him.

 

Yoon's legal team said they would not comply with the current warrant, but only a stronger one from a different court if approved, accusing investigators of targeting an allegedly liberal-leaning judge for the initial orders.

 

 Barbed wire, barricades 

 

An AFP journalist saw Yoon's guards walking behind rows of buses and locked entrance gates covered in barbed wire at the residential compound on Wednesday. 

 

CIO chief Oh Dong-woon said on Tuesday the force would "prepare thoroughly" to make sure their second arrest attempt was successful.

 

Acting president Choi Sang-mok warned against violence in the event of another standoff.

 

"Under no circumstances should there be any injuries to citizens or conflicts among government agencies. Please ensure every precaution is taken," Choi said in a meeting with officials.

 

South Korea's Constitutional Court has slated January 14 for the start of Yoon's impeachment trial, which would proceed in his absence if he does not attend.

 

His legal team said he planned to attend the trial at some stage and lawyer Yoon Kap-keun told reporters on Wednesday "the president's position... remains unchanged".

 

"Of course, issues related to security and safety must be resolved in advance," he said.

 

National Assembly Speaker Woo Won-shik wrote on X it was distressing to watch Yoon mobilise force to stop his arrest because the "whole world" was watching.

 

Investigators are trying to work out how to tackle an expected wall of security after being stopped by hundreds of Presidential Security Service [PSS] guards last week.

 

"The number of PSS personnel cannot be disclosed as it is confidential information," a service spokesperson told AFP.

 

On Wednesday parliament voted down two bills to investigate Yoon and his wife for different charges, failing to get the two-thirds majority they needed.

 

The impeached Yoon is being investigated on charges of "insurrection" and, if formally arrested and convicted, faces prison or, at worst, the death penalty. 

 

The Constitutional Court has up to 180 days from December 14, when it received the case, to determine whether to dismiss Yoon or restore his presidential powers.

 

Quake in China's Tibet kills 95 with tremors felt in Nepal, India

By - Jan 07,2025 - Last updated at Jan 07,2025

 

BEIJING — A devastating earthquake in China's remote Tibet region killed at least 95 people and collapsed "many buildings" on Tuesday, state media reported, with tremors also felt in neighbouring Nepal's capital Kathmandu and parts of India.

 

Videos published by China's state broadcaster CCTV showed houses destroyed with walls torn apart.

 

Rescue workers waded through rubble strewn across the ruins in the aftermath, footage showed, while some gave locals thick blankets to keep warm in subzero temperatures.

 

The quake struck rural, high-altitude Tingri county, about 80 kilometres north of Mount Everest near China's border with Nepal, at around 9:00 am Tuesday.

 

Sangji Dangzhi, whose supermarket in Tingri suffered considerable damage, described the situation as "very serious", with ambulances taking people to hospital throughout the day. 

 

"Here the houses are made from dirt so when the earthquake came... lots of houses collapsed," the 34-year-old told AFP by phone.

 

Surveillance images published by CCTV showed people running through a store's aisles as shelves shook violently, sending objects like toys tumbling to the ground.

 

Some 95 people have been confirmed dead and 130 others injured as of 3:00 pm (0700 GMT), Xinhua news agency said.

 

More than a thousand houses have been damaged, it reported earlier.

 

The China Earthquake Networks Centre [CENC] measured the quake's magnitude as 6.8, while the US Geological Survey reported it as 7.1.

 

When tourist Meng Lingkang arrived in the town of Lhatse, 65 kilometres from the epicentre, where he had booked a restaurant, "the buildings had cracked open".

 

"Some of the older houses collapsed, and a large part of the buildings made from bricks had cracked open, with big fissures," the 23-year-old told AFP.

 

Videos geolocated by AFP to Lhatse showed debris scattered in front of street side eateries.

 

"There were quite a few [rescue vehicles]. One after the other they arrived," Meng added.

 

 

 

North Korea's Kim says new missile will deter 'rivals'

By - Jan 07,2025 - Last updated at Jan 07,2025

This picture taken on January 6, 2025 and released from North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) via KNS on January 7, 2025 shows the launch of a hypersonic missile at an undisclosed location in North Korea (AFP photo)

SEOUL — North Korean leader Kim Jong Un said a new hypersonic missile system tested this week would help deter the country's Pacific rivals, state media reported Tuesday, as Washington's top diplomat visited the region.

 

The test came two weeks before the inauguration of US president-elect Donald Trump, who previously tried to woo North Korea, and coincided with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken's visit to the South.

 

"The hypersonic missile system will reliably contain any rivals in the Pacific region that can affect the security of our state," Kim, who oversaw the launch, said in comments carried by the Korean Central News Agency [KCNA] on Tuesday.

 

KCNA cited the use of a "new compound of carbon fibre" in the missile's engine, which experts warned could allow Pyongyang to hit further targets with technology to which only the United States, Russia and China currently have access.

 

The launch also used a "new comprehensive and effective method" for its flight and guidance control system, KCNA said.

 

Blinken visited on Monday strategic ally South Korea, a fierce rival of the North with whom it technically remains at war. The top US envoy, now in Tokyo, was expected to address issues surrounding Pyongyang in talks with Japan.

 

It was North Korea's first launch since November, when it test-fired what it said was its most advanced and powerful solid-fuel intercontinental ballistic missile [ICBM].

 

Kim said in a statement the missile launched on Monday flew for 1,500 kilometres beyond the 1,100-kilometre figure given by South Korea's military , and travelled at 12 times the speed of sound before landing in the ocean. 

 

"This is clearly a plan and effort for self-defence, not an offensive plan and action," Kim said.

 

However, he added the missile's performance could "not be ignored worldwide", saying it was able to "deal a serious military strike to a rival while effectively breaking any dense defensive barrier".

 

"The development of the defence capabilities of the DPRK aiming to be a military power will be further accelerated," Kim said, using the acronym for the North's official name.

 

The launch was a message to the United States to engage in dialogue based on Pyongyang's new game-changing technology as Trump prepares to enter the White House, analysts said.

 

"It sends a clear message to the Trump administration, suggesting that in order to engage in dialogue, North Korea's strategic position must be acknowledged," Hong Min, a senior analyst at the Korea Institute for National Unification, told AFP.

Tensions mount in Venezuela ahead of Maduro swearing-in

By - Jan 07,2025 - Last updated at Jan 07,2025

Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro takes a picture during a celebration with the Three Kings in Miraflores presidential palace in Caracas on January 6, 2025 (AFP photo)

 

CARACAS — Venezuela's embattled opposition on Monday vowed to overcome "fear" and thwart President Nicolas Maduro's plans to be sworn in for another term, with defiant leaders renewing calls for mass protests and visiting the White House to rally international support.

 

Maduro, 62, has ruled the oil-rich nation for over a decade since the death of his larger-than-life mentor Hugo Chavez, retaining an iron grip on power with the help of police, paramilitaries and the armed forces.

 

On Friday, Maduro is to be sworn in for a third six-year term, after swatting aside allegations he stole a July election from now-exiled opposition candidate Edmundo Gonzalez Urrutia, who claims to have won in a landslide.

 

Ex-diplomat Gonzalez Urrutia, 75, visited the White House early Monday, meeting outgoing US President Joe Biden in a last-gasp effort to pressure Maduro into ceding power.

 

The White House said Biden and Gonzalez Urrutia agreed that his "campaign victory should be honored through a peaceful transfer back to democratic rule."

 

There was also a warning from Washington that Biden would be "closely" following the regime's response to protests planned on Thursday, the eve of Maduro's investiture.

 

"Venezuelans should be allowed to express their political opinions peacefully without fear of reprisal from the military and police," the White House said. 

 

Caracas promptly labeled Biden's support for the opposition "grotesque", as it severed diplomatic ties with Paraguay for expressing similar support for the opposition.

 

 

 

Russia says captured key town in eastern Ukraine

By - Jan 06,2025 - Last updated at Jan 06,2025

Ukrainian servicemen of the 24th Mechanized Brigade rest in a shelter in Chasiv Yar, Donetsk region on January 2, 2025, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine (AFP photo)

MOSCOW — Russia said Monday its forces had captured the "important logistics hub" of Kurakhove in eastern Ukraine in what would be a key advance after months of steady gains in the area.


Moscow has been pressing hard in eastern Ukraine, and the claimed capture of the industrial town is a major boost for its forces just two weeks before US President-elect Donald Trump comes to power, having vowed to strike a peace deal.

Both sides are looking to secure a better position on the battlefield before his January 20 inauguration. Moscow said Kyiv had launched its own counter-offensive on Russian territory over the weekend.

Russian units "have fully liberated the town of Kurakhove,  the biggest settlement in southwestern Donbas," the defence ministry said on Telegram.

Ukrainian forces did not confirm the claim, saying only that Russia was "conducting assault operations in the urban area of Kurakhove".

"Measures are under way to identify and destroy enemy assault groups trying to infiltrate our combat formations," the army said.

Ukraine's General Staff said on Facebook that its forces "repelled 27 attacks in the Kurakhove sector".

The industrial town of Kurakhove, which had a pre-conflict population of around 22,000 people, is located next to a reservoir and is home to a power station.

In a visit close to the town last November, AFP journalists saw abandoned houses, shattered by bombs, and empty supermarket shelves as residents fled in the face of Russia's grinding advance and daily bomb attacks.

The Russian defence ministry said Monday that Ukrainian forces had turned it into "a powerful fortified area with a developed network of long-standing firing positions and underground communications".

It called the town "an important logistics hub" and said its capture would allow Russian forces to seize the rest of the Donetsk region "at an accelerated pace".

It also said Ukraine's supply operations in the wider area would be "significantly hampered".

Russia's defence ministry also on Monday claimed to have captured the small village of Dachenske, south of Pokrovsk, another major city that its troops are targeting.

Kursk 'operation'

The capture of Kurakhove comes at a critical juncture in the conflict.

Trump has promised to bring a swift end to nearly three years of fighting, without proposing any concrete proposals for a ceasefire or peace deal.

In an interview with US podcaster Lex Fridman released Sunday, Zelensky said Trump would be crucial to any possible end to the conflict.

"Trump and I will come to an agreement and... offer strong security guarantees, together with Europe, and then we can talk to the Russians," Zelensky said, according to the published translation of the interview held in Kyiv over the New Year.

Trump "has enough power to pressure him, to pressure Putin", Zelensky said.

Ukraine is also trying to strengthen its position in the final two weeks before Trump's inauguration, upping attacks on Russian territory with US-supplied weapons.

Russia on Sunday said Kyiv had launched a fresh "counterattack" in the Kursk border region, five months after Ukraine's forces initially seized swathes of the area in a shock cross-border incursion.

On Monday, Russia's defence ministry said its troops "continue to defeat Ukrainian army units on the territory of the Kursk region" and had prevented an attempted "breakthrough" near the village of Berdin.

The Ukrainian army has not commented on the operation, simply saying in its daily report that fighting was under way in the Kursk region without elaborating.

"Russia is getting what it deserves," Ukrainian presidential chief of staff Andriy Yermak said, without elaborating.

The extent of the operation or whether Ukraine had secured fresh territorial gains was not clear.

Kyiv seized dozens of villages in the Kursk region shortly after its incursion started on August 6, 2024, but its advances stalled after Moscow rushed reinforcements to the area, including thousands of troops from its ally North Korea.

 

Mass push in Germany to ban fireworks after New Year's chaos

By - Jan 06,2025 - Last updated at Jan 06,2025

Police officers put out the fire in the streets after the fireworks for the New Year's celebrations in Berlin, Germany, Wednesday, Jan. 1, 2025 (AFP photo)

BERLIN — Almost 1.5 million Germans backed a police union push Monday to ban fireworks on New Year's Eve after the latest celebrations were again marred by deaths, injuries and arrests.


Critics have long sought to end Germany's raucous use of pyrotechnics to ring in the New Year, citing safety concerns but also air pollution and the traumatic effects on domestic pets.

This year, five people died across Germany in accidents linked to legal and illegal fireworks, including powerful home-made devices, with many more people sustaining injuries.

More than 100 police officers were reported injured nationwide, including about 30 in the capital Berlin, which is known for its especially intense use of rockets and firecrackers, sometimes aimed at law enforcement personnel.

"This massive violence against our colleagues must stop," the national police union GdP's Berlin chapter said in a petition handed over to the interior ministry on Monday.

The petition, which had gathered over 1.4 million signatures, called for a ban "so that we don't have to talk about dozens of injuries again next year".

It added that "for years, the debate about banning fireworks has arisen a few days before New Year's Eve and... for the rest of the year, hardly anyone talks about it.

"We can't let that happen this year."

About 400 people were detained in Berlin alone on New Year's Eve for offences related to fireworks.

In Berlin's Schoeneberg district, the explosion of a pyrotechnic device damaged about 40 apartments, panicking residents and leaving the flats temporarily uninhabitable.

And a visiting Palestinian social media influencer was arrested at the airport on Saturday after a video circulating online allegedly showed him shooting a firework through a Berlin apartment window.

Alice Weidel, co-leader of Germany's far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party, had reposted the video on social media platform X, denouncing "migrant violence" in Germany.

Interior Minister Nancy Faeser had last week called for tougher penalties for people who misuse fireworks.

"Hooligans and violent criminals who attack emergency services and endanger people's health with highly dangerous explosives will only respond to a tough line," she told the Bild daily, calling for up to five years' jail for offenders.

However, the government for now appears in no mood to completely outlaw Germany's love affair with fireworks.

A spokesman for Faeser on Monday said the problems were limited to big cities and that there was "no majority in favour of a general ban" in the German parliament.

Chancellor Olaf Scholz, who faces elections on February 23, in an interview with Stern magazine also said that he found the idea of a nationwide fireworks ban "somewhat strange".

 

US lawmakers to certify Trump win, four years after Capitol riot

By - Jan 06,2025 - Last updated at Jan 06,2025

The Dome of the U.S. Capitol Building is visible as U.S. Capitol Police officers stand guard in a winter storm in the nation's capital on January 6, 2025 in Washington, DC (AFP photo)

WASHINGTON — Donald Trump was set to cap a historic political comeback on Monday as Congress certifies his election victory, in a remarkable turn from four years ago, when a mob he had summoned to Washington ransacked the US Capitol.


The president-elect spent much of his campaign facing prosecution over the 2021 insurrection, when his supporters -- fueled by his false claims of voter fraud -- rioted to halt the certification of his defeat to Joe Biden.

But Trump, 78, was voted back into office in November and all indications are that Monday's ceremony will go much more smoothly, even with a major winter storm blanketing the capital and much of the country in snow.

"CONGRESS CERTIFIES OUR GREAT ELECTION VICTORY TODAY - A BIG MOMENT IN HISTORY," Trump posted on his social media platform Truth Social.

Monday marks the final blow to efforts to have the Republican leader face justice over the riot, the culmination of a multi-pronged alleged criminal conspiracy that prosecutors said Trump led -- before they dropped all charges upon his election.

Trump has vowed to pardon an unspecified number of the rioters -- around 900 of whom have admitted federal charges from trespassing and vandalism to assaulting police -- describing them as "hostages."

In a Washington Post op-ed, Biden slammed Trump's allies for downplaying the violence of 2021 and urged Americans to be "proud that our democracy withstood this assault."

"We cannot accept a repeat of what occurred four years ago," he said. "An unrelenting effort has been underway to rewrite -- even erase -- the history of that day."

Vice President Kamala Harris will certify the election result -- and her own defeat -- just as her predecessor Mike Pence did in 2021 when, in a desperate bid to cling to power, Trump demanded that he reject Biden's victory.

Lawmakers in both parties have occasionally used the certification process to challenge election results, but more than half of House Republicans rejected the results in 2021.

 'Emotional trauma'

No Democratic leaders have followed the Republican example this time around and objections to certifying Trump's victory are not expected on Monday.

Trump was impeached for inciting the 2021 insurrection after delivering a raucous speech outside the White House early in the day, demanding that supporters march on the Capitol and "fight like hell."

Thousands attacked the citadel of American democracy -- battering police with metal bars and flag poles, smashing windows, sending lawmakers running in fear and chanting "Hang Mike Pence!"

Four people died -- two from heart attacks, one from a potential overdose, and a rioter fatally shot by police as she tried to force her way into the House chamber. Four police officers committed suicide subsequently.

Republican Speaker Mike Johnson has vowed to investigate the House committee that probed the riot and found that Trump had instigated it after the failure of a host of other schemes to overturn an election he knew he had lost.

Meanwhile US Attorney General Merrick Garland said in a statement the Justice Department had over the last four years charged more than 1,500 people suspected of involvement in the "unprecedented attack on a cornerstone of our system of government."

The certification -- which launches a two-week countdown towards Trump's January 20 inauguration -- has been designated for the first time as a national security special event, with 500 National Guard personnel on standby.

But the federal government and Washington public schools were closed Monday with up to a foot (30 centimeters) of snow expected.

"Four years ago today, our nation watched in horror as a terrorist mob stormed the Capitol grounds and desecrated our temple of Democracy in a violent attempt to subvert the peaceful transfer of power," Democrat Nancy Pelosi, who was House speaker at the time of the rebellion, said in a statement.

"The January 6th insurrection shook our Republic to its core - and left behind physical scars and emotional trauma on members of our congressional community and our country that endure to this day."

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