Kyiv says struck ammo depots in southern and western Russia

Kyiv says struck ammo depots in southern and western Russia
Police experts work at a site of a Russian air strike, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kharkiv, Ukraine. (Reuters)
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Updated 21 September 2024
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Kyiv says struck ammo depots in southern and western Russia

Kyiv says struck ammo depots in southern and western Russia

KYIV, Ukraine: Kyiv said Saturday it struck two weapons depots in southern and western Russia — including a key site for Moscow’s forces — with Russian authorities announcing some evacuations and declaring a local emergency situation.
Kyiv also said a Russian nighttime strike on President Volodymyr Zelensky’s home city of Kryvyi Rig killed a 12-year-old boy and two elderly women.
The attacks came ahead of an upcoming trip by Zelensky to the United States, where he is due to present his plans on how to end the nearly 31-month-long war.
Kyiv’s army said it had hit an arms depot near the city of Tikhoretsk in the southern Krasnodar region, calling it one of Moscow’s “three largest ammunition storage bases” important to the Russian army’s logistics for its Ukraine invasion.
It also said it struck an arsenal in the western Tver region.
Authorities in Tver and Krasnodar said they had been attacked but Russia did not say exactly what was struck.
Krasnodar governor Vieniamin Kondratyev announced the evacuation of 1,200 people from villagers, saying a drone attack caused a fire that “spread to explosive objects” near Tikhoretsk.
He later said a state of a “local emergency situation” was introduced in Tikhoretsk — a city of some 50,000 people — in the southern region.
Authorities said most villagers were staying with relatives, while others were in temporary accommodation in Tikhoretsk.
“It is important that there is no threat to people. But it will take time to fully check the territory,” Kondratyev warned.
Videos on social media showed a massive explosion in the dark resembling fireworks at first before blowing up loudly.
Footage online later showed sirens ringing around Tikhoretsk, a city of some 50,000 people in daylight, with smoke rising into the air in the distance.
Authorities said villagers had been evacuated, with most staying with relatives while others were placed in temporary accommodation in Tikhoretsk.
Authorities published footage of villagers — mostly elderly people — arriving to a room with set-up beds, as well as volunteers greeting evacuees arriving by bus.
The local government said they are being provided with medical and psychological assistance.
The Krasnodar region is separated from occupied Ukraine by the Azov sea and has been relatively spared from the type of attacks on Russian border or other southern regions.
But over the last year it has seen increased assaults.
In the western Tver region, authorities announced the temporary closure of a major federal road after the Ukrainian attack near the city of Toropets.
In the central Ukrainian city of Kryvyi Rig, authorities said Russia had struck “private houses” at night, releasing images of brick houses razed to the ground.
“The boy killed by Russians in Kryvyi Rig was 12-years-old,” the head of the Dnipropetrovsk region, Sergiy Lisak, said on Telegram.
“The missile strike also ended the lives of two women, aged 75 and 79,” he added.
Authorities earlier said that a night-time strike had destroyed two houses and damaged “two dozen,” also damaging a school.
Kryvyi Rig, where Zelensky was born, has been targeted by Russia throughout its more than two-year-long invasion.
Ukraine also said two people were wounded in a Russian drone attack in the southern Kherson region on Saturday.


Legal battle intensifies over Gaza as ICJ rulings face defiance

Legal battle intensifies over Gaza as ICJ rulings face defiance
Updated 12 sec ago
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Legal battle intensifies over Gaza as ICJ rulings face defiance

Legal battle intensifies over Gaza as ICJ rulings face defiance
  • The two nations are spearheading the newly formed Hague Group, a coalition of nine countries

LONDON: The international legal battle over Gaza has deepened as South Africa and Malaysia announced a campaign to uphold rulings from the International Court of Justice and the International Criminal Court, responding to what they described as widespread defiance of international legal orders.

The two nations are spearheading the newly formed Hague Group, a coalition of nine countries — also including Belize, Honduras, Colombia, Bolivia, Chile, Senegal and Namibia — committed to defending the global legal framework, The Guardian newspaper reported on Friday.

Their initiative follows mounting frustration in the Global South over perceived Western double standards in the application of international law, particularly in the cases of Gaza, Ukraine and Mediterranean human smuggling.

South Africa’s Minister of International Relations Ronald Lamola, said: “The Hague Group’s formation sends a clear message: No nation is above the law and no crime will go unanswered.”

South Africa has taken a leading role in pursuing legal accountability for the war in Gaza, having filed a case at the ICJ accusing Israel of genocide.

Israel has fiercely rejected the claim but interim rulings from the ICJ in January last year mandated it to take immediate measures to prevent genocidal acts and allow humanitarian aid into the besieged enclave.

However, a recent Oxfam survey of nongovernmental agencies operating in Gaza found that 89 percent of agencies reported deteriorating access to aid since the ICJ’s orders were issued. The ongoing humanitarian crisis and Israel’s apparent noncompliance have intensified calls for international enforcement mechanisms.

Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said the campaign was not about punishing Israel but about defending the integrity of global legal institutions.

“These rulings strike at the very foundations of international law, which the global community has a duty to defend,” he said.

The growing resistance to ICJ rulings has drawn attention to broader concerns over the erosion of international law. UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has issued a report outlining steps that member states could take to ensure Israel’s compliance, including reaffirming the ICJ’s finding that its continued occupation of Palestinian territories is illegal and should end within a year.

Switzerland has been tasked with convening a conference in March for the 196 signatories of the Geneva Conventions to reaffirm the legal obligations regarding occupied Palestinian territory. A conference in June in New York is set to discuss the feasibility of a two-state solution.

But enforcing ICJ rulings remains a challenge. Newly appointed US Secretary of State Marco Rubio has endorsed a congressional bill proposing sanctions against any individuals or entities cooperating with ICC investigations targeting the US or its allies. The bill could extend to family members, further complicating efforts to hold Israel accountable.


Divers returning to the Potomac River for DC plane crash recovery, investigation

Divers returning to the Potomac River for DC plane crash recovery, investigation
Updated 5 min 40 sec ago
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Divers returning to the Potomac River for DC plane crash recovery, investigation

Divers returning to the Potomac River for DC plane crash recovery, investigation
  • Investigators have already recovered the cockpit voice recorder and flight data recorder

ARLINGTON: Divers are expected to return to the Potomac River on Friday as part of the recovery and investigation after a midair collision killed
67 people in the US’ deadliest aviation disaster in almost a quarter century.

Investigators have already recovered the cockpit voice recorder and flight data recorder of the American Airlines plane that collided with an Army helicopter as the plane was landing Wednesday night at Ronald Reagan National Airport next to Washington, DC. Officials are scrutinizing a range of factors in what National Transportation Safety Board Chairwoman Jennifer Hommendy has called an “all-hands-on-deck event.”
All aboard the two aircraft were killed, with officials examining the actions of the military pilot as well as air traffic control after the helicopter apparently flew into the path of the American Airlines jet.
Air crash investigations can take months, and federal investigators told reporters Thursday they would not speculate on the cause.
Authorities were still looking for the helicopter’s black box recorder, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said Friday on Fox News Channel. Other factors in the crash, including the helicopter’s altitude and whether the crew was using its night vision goggles, are still under investigation, Hegseth said.
At least 28 bodies have been pulled from the Potomac River. The plane carried 60 passengers and four crew members, and three soldiers were aboard the helicopter.
One air traffic controller was responsible for coordinating helicopter traffic and arriving and departing planes when the collision happened, according to a report by the Federal Aviation Administration that was obtained by The Associated Press. Those duties are often divided between two people, but the airport typically combines the roles at 9:30 p.m., once traffic begins to slow down. On Wednesday the tower supervisor directed that they be combined earlier.
“The position configuration was not normal for the time of day and volume of traffic,” the report said.
A person familiar with the matter, however, said the tower staffing that night was at a normal level. The positions are regularly combined when controllers need to step away from the console for breaks, during shift changes or when air traffic is slow, the person said, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal procedures. The FAA has long struggled with a shortage of air traffic controllers.
Officials said flight conditions were clear as the jet arrived from Wichita, Kansas, carrying, among others, a group of elite young figure skaters, their parents and coaches, and four union steamfitters from the Washington area.
A top Army aviation official said the crew of the helicopter, a Black Hawk, was “very experienced” and familiar with the congested flying that occurs daily around the city.
“Both pilots had flown this specific route before, at night. This wasn’t something new to either one of them,” said Jonathan Koziol, chief of staff for Army aviation.
The helicopter’s maximum allowed altitude at the time was 200 feet (about 60 meters), Koziol said. It was not immediately clear whether it exceeded that limit, but Hegseth said altitude seemed to be a factor in the collision.
Koziol said investigators need to analyze the flight data before making conclusions about altitude.
Flights at Reagan National resumed around midday Thursday.
Wednesday’s crash was the deadliest in the US since Nov. 12, 2001, when an American Airlines flight slammed into a residential area of Belle Harbor, New York, just after takeoff from Kennedy Airport, killing all 260 people aboard and five people on the ground.
The last major fatal crash involving a US commercial airline occurred in 2009 near Buffalo, New York. Everyone aboard the Bombardier DHC-8 propeller plane was killed, along with one person on the ground, bringing the total death toll to 50.

 


Medicine shortage sparks worry in Central Asian Kyrgyzstan

Medicine shortage sparks worry in Central Asian Kyrgyzstan
Updated 31 January 2025
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Medicine shortage sparks worry in Central Asian Kyrgyzstan

Medicine shortage sparks worry in Central Asian Kyrgyzstan
  • Landlocked Kyrgyzstan is one of the poorest of former Soviet republics and brings in most of medicines from Russia, India and Pakistan
  • Many Kyrgyz have to build up considerable savings in order to receive treatment abroad, a practice that authorities have promised to end

BISHKEK: Kyrgyzstan announced on Friday it was facing a shortage of medicines, particularly for treating serious illnesses in the Central Asian country, that imports almost all pharmaceutical products.
Landlocked Kyrgyzstan is one of the poorest of the former Soviet republics and brings in most of its medicines from Russia, India and Pakistan.
Many Kyrgyz have to build up considerable savings in order to receive treatment abroad — a practice authorities have promised to end.
In 2023, the Kyrgyz government set up a state-owned company — Kyrgyzpharmacy — to centralize the distribution to hospitals of medicines needed to treat cancer, blood diseases and epilepsy.
The measure — which involved buying medicines directly from manufacturers — was designed to combat corruption.
“The company needs 3.5 billion Som — more than 38.5 million euros ($40 million) — to guarantee the purchase of medicine and increase volumes,” said Health Minister Alymkadyr Beishenaliev.
The government has also launched a network of state-run pharmacies designed to bring down the price of medicines — which is higher than in most other ex-Soviet states.
The health minister acknowledged on Friday that most of them were not profitable and announced he had sacked the head of Kyrgyzphamarcy, at the request of President Sadyr Japarov.
Members of parliament have warned about the shortage of medicines, criticized the state of the medical infrastructure and suggested raising funds for children with cancer.
On Thursday, parliamentary speaker Nurlan Shakiyev said: “Supply of medicines to the population is a thorny issue.”
He noted the public was “concerned about a significant increase in the price of essential and sought-after medicines.”


Sweden releases 5 arrested following the killing of an Iraqi who carried out Qur’an burnings

Sweden releases 5 arrested following the killing of an Iraqi who carried out Qur’an burnings
Updated 31 January 2025
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Sweden releases 5 arrested following the killing of an Iraqi who carried out Qur’an burnings

Sweden releases 5 arrested following the killing of an Iraqi who carried out Qur’an burnings
  • Salwan Momika staged several burnings and desecrations of Islam’s holy book in Sweden
  • Momika was killed in a shooting Wednesday night at an apartment building

STOCKHOLM: Swedish prosecutors said Friday they have ordered the release of five men who were arrested after the fatal shooting of an Iraqi man who carried out several Qur’an burnings.
Salwan Momika staged several burnings and desecrations of Islam’s holy book in Sweden in 2023. Videos of the Qur’an burnings got worldwide publicity and raised anger and criticism in several Muslim nations, leading to riots and unrest in many places.
Momika was killed in a shooting Wednesday night at an apartment building in Sodertalje, near Stockholm. Five people were arrested in the following hours on suspicion of murder.
Prosecutor Rasmus Öman said in a statement Friday that the suspicions they committed a crime have weakened and he no longer sees a reason to keep them in custody.
The statement added that the suspicions have not yet been dismissed completely and investigators are still looking into what exactly happened and who was behind the killing.


Kremlin declines to comment on reports N.Koreans withdrawn from front

Kremlin declines to comment on reports N.Koreans withdrawn from front
Updated 31 January 2025
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Kremlin declines to comment on reports N.Koreans withdrawn from front

Kremlin declines to comment on reports N.Koreans withdrawn from front
  • Citing US and Ukrainian officials, the New York Times on Thursday reported that the North Korean troops had been pulled back from the front and had not been seen fighting there
  • Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters: “There are a lot of different arguments out there, both right and wrong“

MOSCOW: The Kremlin on Friday declined to comment on reports that North Korean soldiers fighting with Russia’s army had been pulled back from the front line.
Western, South Korean and Ukrainian intelligence agencies say Pyongyang had deployed more than 10,000 troops to support Russia’s forces fighting in its western Kursk region, where Ukraine is mounting a cross-border offensive.
Citing US and Ukrainian officials, the New York Times on Thursday reported that the North Korean troops had been pulled back from the front and had not been seen fighting there for around two weeks, after suffering heavy casualties in combat.
Ukrainian presidential adviser Mykhailo Podolyak on Wednesday said that “some North Korean units have been pulled back from the front line in the Kursk region, according to reports from Ukraine’s Special Operations Forces.”
Asked on Friday about the reports, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov declined to comment.
“There are a lot of different arguments out there, both right and wrong,” he told reporters.
“It’s not worth commenting on every time,” he added.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has published footage of what he said were captured North Korean soldiers taken by Ukraine’s forces in the Kursk region.
Kyiv and the West decried the deployment of North Korean fighters as a major escalation in the three-year conflict.