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EU bought almost €30bn worth of Russian energy in 2023: Report

This figure represents a threefold drop compared with the previous year, when the EU purchased over €90 billion worth of Russian energy.

The bloc continues to import Russian oil, petroleum products, and natural gas. Though Brussels banned purchasing oil and petroleum products from Russia, temporary exemptions were provided for the import of Russian seaborne oil by Bulgaria and for use of the Druzhba oil pipeline, which supplies Hungary, Slovakia, and the Czech Republic. Meanwhile, Russian pipeline gas and LNG were not affected by the restrictions.

Overall Russian exports to the 27-member bloc amounted to €50.64 billion last year, while Russia imported €38.32 billion from the EU, according to figures seen by RBK.

Since February 2022, when the Ukraine conflict began, Brussels has imposed 12 packages of sanctions on Russia, which have gradually narrowed the scope of trade. The European Commission claims the restrictions have effectively curtailed approximately €147 billion of the bloc’s “pre-sanction” trade turnover with Russia.

However, this has led to a situation where “all of the big items are already sanctioned”, a senior EU diplomat told Politico magazine during negotiations about the latest package of restrictions, adding that “the other big ones are not available, like nuclear or LNG”.

The EU’s share in Russia’s trade turnover has decreased by more than half – from 36% to 15%, Russian Minister of Economic Development Maksim Reshetnikov said earlier this month, adding that the country’s trade with friendly nations had risen from 46% to 77%.

The 13th package of EU sanctions on Russia, which is currently being prepared to coincide with the second anniversary of the beginning of Moscow’s military operation on February 24, is expected to target around 200 entities and individuals but not include any import bans.

The Financial Times has reported that Hungary, which has been a consistent critic of restrictions on Russia and of EU military aid to Ukraine, refused to sign off on the new measures during a meeting of the bloc’s ambassadors.

Satellite images show Egypt building mysterious wall near Gaza: Report

Gaza War

The Associated Press reported about the construction work on Friday, citing satellite photos showing ground being cleared and a wall going up.

Egyptian officials have refused to discuss the project’s purpose, but the reports suggested that it could be a “fortified buffer zone” to accommodate Gazans fleeing a major Israeli military operation planned in the Palestinian border city of Rafah.

The construction work began earlier this month, as the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) started preparations for a ground assault on Rafah, Gaza’s last refuge for civilians fleeing Tel Aviv’s war with Hamas. An estimated 1.4 million Gazans have sought shelter in Rafah since the war began in October. The IDF has leveled much of the besieged enclave as it hunts for Hamas fighters, killing nearly 29,000 people, according to an estimate by local health authorities.

Cairo has insisted that Israel not force Palestinian refugees into its territory. However, with so many civilians crammed into Rafah and Israel vowing to finish off Hamas, the Egyptian side is apparently preparing for the possibility of a humanitarian crisis that could jeopardize its 1979 peace agreement with Israel. Rafah has already been targeted by airstrikes in recent days, killing hundreds of people.

The New York Times, citing an unidentified contractor commissioned by the Egyptian military, reported that the wall will close off an area of five square kilometers in a buffer zone near Gaza’s southern border. It will be about five meters (16 feet) high.

Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant claimed on Friday that the IDF would not try to force Gazans into Egypt.

“We respect and value our peace agreement with Egypt, which is a cornerstone of stability in the region as well as an important partner,” he added.

Gallant’s statement came one week after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered his military to make plans for both evacuating civilians from Rafah and destroying Gaza’s last Hamas stronghold. He suggested in an ABC News interview that areas cleared out by the IDF north of Rafah could be used to shelter displaced people.

Hezbollah leader warns Israel will pay ‘in blood’ for killing Lebanese civilians

Seyyed Hassan Nasrallah

Israeli air raids on Wednesday killed at least 10 civilians, including five children, in southern Lebanon. Three Hezbollah fighters were also killed.

In a televised speech on Friday, Nasrallah said, “The response to the massacre should be continuing resistance work at the front and escalating resistance work at the front.”

“Our women and our children who were killed in these days, the enemy will pay the price of spilling their blood in blood,” Nasrallah added.

He also highlighted that the killings had increased Hezbollah’s determination and stated the group would increase its “presence, strength, fire, anger” and expand its operations.

Israel “must expect that and wait for that”.

Hezbollah has been trading fire with the Israeli military across Lebanon’s southern border in support of its Palestinian ally Hamas, which launched a cross-border assault from the Gaza Strip into Israel on October 7. This was followed by heavy Israeli bombardment of Gaza from the land, air and sea.

The cross-border attacks have killed at least 200 people in Lebanon, including more than 170 Hezbollah fighters, as well as 10 Israeli soldiers and five civilians.

Hezbollah officials have announced they will stop attacking Israeli military posts when Israel’s assault on Gaza ends.

But there are growing fears of another full-blown conflict between Israel and Hezbollah with tens of thousands displaced on both sides of the border and regional tensions soaring.

The United Nations secretary-general’s spokesperson Stephane Dujarric has called for the violence to stop and countries like France have also delivered a written proposal to Beirut and Israel aimed at ending hostilities and settling the disputed Lebanon-Israel frontier. But there are few signs that those efforts will bear fruit in the immediate term.

On Friday, at the Munich Security Conference, where world leaders and security analysts have gathered to discuss solutions to solve global crises, Lebanon’s caretaker prime minister, Najib Mikati, urged calm and stressed attacks on civilians needed to end.

“Just two days ago, a family of seven innocent individuals was targeted in south Lebanon. The killing and targeting of innocent children, women, and older adults is a crime against humanity,” he said.

Israeli Foreign Minister Israel Katz told the conference that Hezbollah was just a proxy that Iran was manoeuvring as it saw fit and that Israel would not let instability in the north continue endlessly.

“If a diplomatic solution is not found, Israel will be forced to act in order to remove Hezbollah from the border and return our residents to their homes,” he said, referring to some 70,000 displaced Israelis,” he added.

“In such a case, Lebanon will also pay a heavy price,” he warned and called on world leaders to pressure Hezbollah and Iran to stop the attacks.

At a news conference in Beirut last week, Iran’s Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian told reporters that Iran and Lebanon’s position was that “war is not a solution”.

However, he noted that amid Israel’s attacks on southern Lebanon, “Hezbollah and the resistance in Lebanon have courageously and wisely carried out their deterring and effective role.”

Amirabdollahian added that Tehran will continue “its strong support to the resistance in Lebanon, as we consider Lebanon’s security as the security of Iran and the region”.

Biden blames Putin over Navalny death

Biden

The US president put the blame for Navalny’s death squarely on Putin, adding “I hope to God it helps” push US lawmakers to send more aid to Ukraine.

Biden said “history is watching” lawmakers in the House of Representatives, who have not moved to take up a Senate-passed bill that would send a $60bn military aid package to Ukraine, whose troops US officials say are running out of critical munitions on the battlefield.

“The failure to support Ukraine at this critical moment will never be forgotten,” Biden continued, adding, “And the clock is ticking. This has to happen. We have to help now.”

He also criticized House Republicans for letting the chamber enter a two-week recess without moving on the Ukraine funding.

“What are they thinking? My God,” Biden stated.

“This is bizarre, and it’s just reinforcing all of the concern – I won’t say panic but real concern – about the United States being a responsible ally.”

The Russian Foreign Ministry said on Friday the US and its European allies seem to have used prepared talking points to immediately blame Russia for the passing of Navalny in his Siberian prison,

Navalny, 47, collapsed during his daily walk and was later pronounced dead. The cause of death is still being established.

Western reactions “once again demonstrated their hypocrisy, cynicism and lack of principles”, the Foreign Ministry in Moscow said in a statement.

The Federal Penitentiary Service of Russia for Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Region announced Navalny’s death at 2:19pm Moscow time, and “a torrent of carbon-copy accusations began pouring in literally 15 minutes later”.

President of the European Council Charles Michel said the EU “holds the Russian regime solely responsible for this tragic death”.

Earlier, Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky claimed that Navalny was “obviously killed by Putin.”

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen piped up after that, followed by German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, and finally French President Emmanuel Macron.

Iran, Iraq agree to counter, prosecute terrorists

Mohseni Ejei

“The two sides agreed to prosecute terrorists and pursue the case of the U.S. assassination of top Iranian commander Lieutenant General Qassem Soleimani and senior Iraqi commander Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis,” said Iranian Judiciary Chief Gholamhossein Mohseni-Eje’i at the close of a trip to Iraq.

The United States’ military assassinated general Soleimani and al-Muhandis in a targeted drone strike on 3 January 2020 in the Iraqi capital, Baghdad.

“During this visit, plans were also made to establish special branches in Iraq to take care of the problems facing Iranian businesspeople and tackling the problems of Iranian expatriates,” the Iranian Judiciary chief added.

Mohseni-Eje’I heading a high-ranking judicial delegation arrived in Baghdad on Tuesday at the official invitation of Faeq Zeydan, the head of Iraq’s Supreme Judicial Council.

During the trip, meetings were held to further upgrade Tehran-Baghdad judicial ties.

Israeli settlement expansion in West Bank hits record high: Report

Israeli settlement

Since the outbreak of the war on Gaza on Oct. 7, 2023, Peace Now revealed in a statement that the number of settlements has risen.

The statement revealed that the formation of the Netanyahu government in December 2022 created “unprecedented conditions for the expansion of settlements”.

“In 2023, settlers established at least 26 new illegal outposts, with at least ten of them established during the war since Oct. 7, 2023 and at least 18 of them being agricultural farms,” it added.

The statement also highlighted the alarming trend of forced displacement, saying that “in direct relation to the establishment of outposts, approximately 1,345 Palestinians were forced to flee from their homes due to violent attacks by settlers”.

“Twenty-one Palestinian communities were displaced and uprooted, 16 of them during the war since Oct. 7, and 5 communities prior to that,” it elaborated.

Additionally, the statement outlined that “in 2023, the Israeli government promoted plans for the construction of 12,349 housing units in settlements in the West Bank”.

Moreover, it noted that in 2023 “15 illegal outposts underwent the process of legalization”.

Estimates indicate about 700,000 Israeli settlers live in roughly 300 illegal settlements in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem.

All Jewish settlements in the occupied territories are considered illegal under international law.

Tensions have been running high across the West Bank since Israel launched a deadly military offensive against the Gaza Strip following an Oct. 7 Hamas attack.

At least 394 Palestinians have since been killed and 4,400 others injured by Israeli army fire in the occupied territory, according to the Health Ministry.

Israel stands accused of genocide at the International Court of Justice over its deadly onslaught on the Gaza Strip, which has left more than 28,800 people dead.

In an interim ruling in January, the Hague-based court ordered Tel Aviv to stop genocidal acts and take measures to guarantee that humanitarian assistance is provided to civilians in Gaza.

World media body says nearly 75% of journalists killed in 2023 died in Israel’s war on Gaza

Gaza War

Killings of reporters would have dropped globally year-on-year had it not been for the deaths in the ongoing war on Gaza, the CPJ said in its annual report.

“In December 2023, CPJ reported that more journalists were killed in the first three months of the Israel-Gaza war than have ever been killed in a single country over an entire year,” the organisation announced.

In total, it documented 77 journalists killed in the war on Gaza last year while doing their jobs: 72 Palestinians, three Lebanese and two Israelis.

The Palestinian victims account for nearly 75 percent of all journalists killed worldwide.

“This war is unprecedented in terms of the threat to journalists,” Jodie Ginsberg, president of the CPJ, told Al Jazeera from New York.

“What’s important to remember about this war is that Gazan journalists are the only journalists able to report on what’s happening inside Gaza. International journalists have not been able to get in, have not been allowed in, except on very, very controlled trips that are overseen by the Israeli army.”

“So we are entirely reliant on those [Palestinian] journalists, who are risking their lives to bring us this story,” she added.

On February 7, the New York-based press freedom organisation noted the number of journalists killed in the war on Gaza had risen to 85.

The CPJ has previously attacked what it calls the “persecution” of journalists by Israeli forces and is investigating whether a dozen journalists killed in the Gaza conflict were deliberately targeted by Israeli soldiers, which would constitute a war crime.

Ginsberg said she was “disappointed … at the lack of public solidarity that we have seen” with Palestinian journalists during the ongoing war.

She added Western “hesitancy” to show solidarity with those targeted and killed in Gaza was “sadly unsurprising” given that Israel is “the country, the issue that has divided international media, international politicians more than anything”.

But she emphasised: “I think it’s really important that we let our colleagues inside Gaza as well as in the region know that we stand with them, that we are there to support them, so that we can make sure that press freedom and journalists are protected not just at this crucial moment in Gaza but also globally at a time when journalists are under threat everywhere.”

Worldwide, the CPJ report said the death toll of 99 reporters killed was the highest since 2015 and an increase of nearly 44 percent on 2022’s figures.

It added the greatest reductions in journalist fatalities in 2023 were registered in Ukraine and Mexico. Both went from 13 killings to two.

Fatalities remained stable in Somalia and the Philippines, the organisation said. However, it warned that Mexico – along with the Philippines and Somalia – was “one of the world’s deadliest countries for the press”.

“Compounding the situation, government agencies spy on reporters and rights defenders, and a significant number of journalists have had to leave their homes, and abandon their professions, due to violence,” the CPJ report warned.

In the Palestinian territories, even when journalists are not on the job, they face the risk of Israeli bombardment or arrest. Gaza’s Government Media Office announced at least 126 Palestinian media workers have been killed since Israel’s war began on October 7.

Journalists working in conflict areas are protected under international humanitarian law. Palestinian journalists accuse Israel of repeatedly violating that law by targeting the media.

“It’s very important that these killings are thoroughly investigated and that those responsible are held accountable,” Ginsberg told Al Jazeera.

She added her organisation was doing the work to document attacks against journalists in Gaza, which could later be used as evidence and presented to bodies such as the International Court of Justice or the International Criminal Court.

Iranian and Saudi FMs call for OIC emergency ministerial meeting over Gaza

Iran and Saudi FMs Hossein Amir Abdolalhian and Faisal bin Farhan

In a telephone conversation on Friday, Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian and his Saudi counterpart Faisal bin Farhan held talks over the latest efforts aimed at expanding bilateral ties as well as some regional and international developments, especially those of the Gaza Strip and Rafah.

Amirabdollahian pointed to the continuation of the Israeli regime’s crimes against the Palestinian people in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank and  the threats and actions of the regime against the Rafah region, which houses more than 1,300,000 Palestinian refugees.

Amirabdollahian said that what is unfolding in Gaza and the West Bank is being carried out with the full cooperation of the United States, adding that the atrocities in Rafah are being done with the green light of the White House.

Amirabdollahian said Iran does not view war as a solution, but in the absence of an immediate political solution, the negative impacts of the continuation of the Israeli regime’s genocide on the security and stability of the region would be inevitable.

Referring to the regional consultations and his recent telephone conversation, including the one with the Secretary General of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation, the Iranian foreign minister said it’s necessary to hold an emergency meeting of foreign ministers of this organization on the issue of Gaza.

Amirabdollahian and bin Farhan then highlighted the regional and international conditions and problems the Muslim world especially Palestine are grappling with and emphasized the need for a strategic view in the relations between Tehran and Riyadh.

The top Saudi diplomat welcomed Amirabdollahian’s proposal to hold an emergency meeting of the foreign ministers of the OIC member states in order to stop the Israeli regime’s genocide in Gaza and the West Bank, and it was decided that the two sides hold further consultations with other foreign ministers.

Bin Farhan criticized the indifference of the Zionist regime’s prime minister to global calls to stop the war and even defying the positions and pressure of the supporters of this regime.

The foreign ministers of the Islamic Republic of Iran and Saudi Arabia underscored the need to increase cooperation between Tehran and Riyadh in various economic and commercial fields, especially between the private sectors of the two countries, within the framework of international law.

Russia prison service confirms opposition leader Alexey Navalny has died

Alexei Navalny

The 47-year-old began to feel unwell after a walk, and lost consciousness, according to a statement. Russian media outlets have indicated that doctors pronounced Navalny dead after 2pm local time.

“All the necessary resuscitation measures were carried out, but they failed to achieve a positive result,” the authorities outlined.

The cause of death is being established. However, according to an RT Russian service source, the opposition figure had a blood clot.

Navalny was jailed in early 2021, over a long-standing fraud case involving French retailer Yves Rocher. The previous summer he attracted major international attention after an alleged poisoning in Siberia, which led to his transfer to Germany. Upon returning, he was sentenced to the first of several prison terms.

Initially, he was placed in a high-security facility in Vladimir Region. In 2023 he was sentenced to 19 years “special regime” for “extremism”. Late last year he was transferred to the ‘Polar Wolf’ colony in Yamalo-Nenets, located 40km above the Arctic Circle.

The Kremlin said that President Vladimir Putin has been informed of Navalny’s death. Spokesman Dmitry Peskov referred questions to the Federal Penitentiary Service, adding that the cause was currently unclear.

Navalny’s lawyer, Leonid Solovyov refused to comment, but explained that his client had held on a meeting on Wednesday.

“Everything was normal then,” he insisted.

Navalny joined a court session via videolink on Thursday, TASS reported, citing the court press service.

A former Russian nationalist activist, Navalny first came to attention as one of the leaders of the “Russian march”, a far right rally previously held annually. He subsequently took a prominent role in the liberal-driven 2011-12 protests in Russia, which centered on Moscow’s Bolotnaya square. In 2013, he won 27% of the vote in a Moscow mayoral election.

Later, he established a broader movement – which produced reports on alleged corruption – and attempted to take part in the 2018 presidential contest.

Navalny, a native of Moscow, was married, with two children.

Israel PM rejects intl. pressure for Palestinian state

Benjamin Netanyahu

Netanyahu was responding to a report, which cited diplomatic sources as saying that the US and several Arab nations were discussing a plan for long-term peace between the Israelis and the Palestinians.

The proposal reportedly involves a ceasefire, the release of hostages held by Hamas and “a firm timeline for the establishment of a Palestinian state, that could be announced as early as the next several weeks”, the report said.

The Israeli leader took to X (formerly Twitter) early on Friday to clarify his stance on what he described as “talk of imposing a Palestinian state on Israel”.

“Israel will continue to oppose the unilateral recognition of a Palestinian state,” he wrote in Hebrew.

After the incursion by Hamas into Israel on October 7, in which around 1,200 people were killed and some 250 taken hostage, international backing for Palestinian statehood “would give a huge reward to unprecedented terrorism and prevent any future peace settlement”, Netanyahu insisted.

”Israel outright rejects international dictates regarding a permanent settlement with the Palestinians,” he stressed.

A peace deal in Gaza can only be achieved “through direct negotiations between the parties, without preconditions”, the prime minister added.

The report said that there are “fears that a looming Israeli attack on Rafah will throw the Gaza crisis into overdrive and bury both the hostage deal and long-term peace efforts”. The city at the enclave’s southern border with Egypt has become the last refuge for over a million Palestinians displaced by IDF attacks.

Netanyahu stated on Wednesday that Israel would “fight until complete victory and this includes a powerful action in Rafah as well, after we allow the civilian population to leave the battle zones”.

Relations between the US and Israel have reached a “boiling point” over the latter government’s insistence on continuing its campaign in Gaza, the Wall Street Journal has reported. American officials told the outlet that Washington had communicated to the Israelis that it would not support an assault on Rafah “under any circumstances”.

According to Gaza’s health ministry, nearly 29,000 people have been killed and more than 68,000 others wounded in Israeli airstrikes and ground operations in the Palestinian enclave since October 7.