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Syria-Turkey normalization impossible until Ankara pulls out troops: Top diplomat

Syria

“Turkey has to withdraw its military forces,” Sabbagh told Sputnik.

“Any other aspects, yes, of course, we will be open to discuss with them, but not to do so and to insist on staying – that’s illegal occupation and then this will block all the efforts toward any kind of contacts and relations with Turkiye,” he added.

The United Nations Security Council is not mirroring the geopolitical composition of today’s world – the developing countries need to also have a representation within it, Sabbagh continued.

“The issue of the reform of the Security Council was also mentioned widely in the speeches of the leaders and I think this is very important because the realities of today’s international relations are not reflected correctly in the Security Council,” Sabbagh said.

“We need to see this expansion of the Security Council so in a way, which is reflecting today’s reality, and too, for the developing countries to have an important role in that.”

The speeches from developing countries during the 78th session of the United Nations General Assembly have demonstrated that the majority of them are getting tired of the Western hegemony, Bassam Sabbagh added.

“This year of the General Assembly was very important because we noticed from the speeches of the leaders, that most of the developing countries are tired from the Western hegemony,” Sabbagh added.

“The developing countries now are looking for a multipolar leadership. This polarization by the Americans is not accepted anymore.”

Fire engulfs police facility in Egypt, dozens injured

Egypt Fire

A huge fire that erupted at a police complex in the Egyptian city of Ismailia and wounded at least 38 people has been contained after several hours, according to state media.

No fatalities were immediately reported over the blaze that happened early on Monday, but hospitals were placed on alert.

The cause of the blaze, which broke out at the headquarters of the Ismailia Security Directorate before dawn, is not yet known.

Of 26 wounded who were transferred to a local hospital, 24 had suffered from “asphyxiation” and two from burns, local media reported citing the health ministry.

Videos on social media showed flames soaring from the city’s security directorate early, and it appeared the building’s main facade had collapsed.

The health ministry deployed 50 ambulances to the scene, which were joined by military emergency services including two planes, according to state media.

Later on Monday, state television announced that the fire was contained.

Deadly fires are a common hazard in Egypt, where many buildings are dilapidated and poorly maintained.

In August 2022, a fire caused by a short circuit killed 41 worshippers in a Cairo church, prompting calls to improve the country’s infrastructure and the response time of the fire brigade.

In March 2021, at least 20 people died in a fire at a textile factory in the capital, while in 2020, two hospital fires killed fourteen people.

Iranian daily criticizes President Raisi’s wife over ‘futile’ festivals

Ebrahim Raisi's Wife

The criticism by the Farhikhtegan daily on Monday came after Alamolhoda hosted the 1st International Khorsheed Media Festival, which was inaugurated on Saturday in the northeastern Iranian city of Mashhad, following a similar event tilted the 1st International Congress on Women of Influence held earlier this year in January, with the aim of sprucing up the Iranian and Muslim women’s image in the world.

The daily noted the Iranian president’s wife organized the events as United Nations member states voted in December last year to oust Iran from the UN Commission on the Status of Women (CSW), an intergovernmental body tasked with protecting women’s rights and promoting gender equality.

The daily blamed Iran’s “passive stance” for the removal, writing inviting some CSW members to the event could help flash a better image of Iran’s stance on women’s issues.

It asked Alamolhoda, who is also the daughter of influential cleric Ahmad Alamolhoda, to elucidate the achievements of recently-wrapped up Khorsheed Media Festival, which hosted over 100 foreign media activists and journalists from 45 countries as well as 120 domestic reporters.

“Now that the government and ruling system have come to the conclusion that they need to change the distorted image of Iran in the international media and are pursuing various international cooperation, is this image not supposed to be shown to the women inside in Iran, so they won’t imagine that it was just a gathering for giving awards and appreciating women only in name?” the daily asked.

Iran FM congratulates China national day

Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian

In a message on X social media, Hossein Amirabdollahian addressed Wang Yi to extend his felicitation on the occasion.

“On the National Day of the People’s Republic of China, I congratulate the nation, the government and the foreign minister of China, Wang Yi,” reads the message.

The top Iranian diplomat added, “The successful cooperation between China and Iran in the Shanghai Cooperation Organization and BRICS international alliances, regional interactions and the promotion of bilateral ties have shown the significance of reciprocal capacities.”

The Iranian foreign minister also wished prosperity for the Chinese nation and government.
China marks its national day officially known as National Day of the People’s Republic of China on October 1 each year.

Probe finds Iraq wedding fire caused by ‘gross negligence’, ‘lack of safety measures’

Iraq Wedding Fire
A man holds up a photo of a fire victim as he walks with the procession.

The blaze ripped through a venue hosting a large crowd of people on Tuesday in the town of Hamdaniya, also known as Qaraqosh, in the northern province of Ninevah.

Earlier this week, authorities said that indoor fireworks had set alight ceiling decorations and engulfed the hall, built from highly combustible materials.

The venue was designed for a capacity of 400, but the owner and three staff members had allowed 900 people to attend, the probe found.

“The fire was accidental and unintentional and occurred due to gross negligence,” the findings said.

The results of the investigation were announced by Interior Minister Abdul Amir al-Shammari at a news conference on Sunday.

“Using flammable decoration helped the fire spread quickly and transformed the hall into a fireball,” Shammari stated.

He added that the blaze trapped people inside the hall and that rescue teams struggled to reach them due to there being only a few small doors.

At least 150 people were wounded during the fire, suffering from burns, smoke inhalation and crush injuries when trying to flee the scene.

An eyewitness, 55-year-old Amer Karoomi Hanna, told Middle East Eye on Wednesday that he was at home when he heard about the fire.

“I arrived at 10.30pm and the fire was still raging in the hall. My friends had told me about it and I came quickly. I have no relatives, but everyone is like family in Qaraqosh. There are no strangers in this town,” he stated.

“I saw people walking around, tired, trying to extract the wounded. There was a large number of people in the hall,” he added.

The investigation recommended that legal action be taken against local officials.

Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani visited victims on Thursday and said he would hold those responsible to account.

At least 14 people, including the venue owner, 10 employees and three people suspected of setting off fireworks, were arrested by authorities.

Hamdaniyah is home to 26,000 Christians and is one of the main centres of Iraq’s Christian community.

20 PKK targets in Iraq destroyed after Ankara attack: Turkey

Turkey Blast

A Turkish interior ministry statement on Sunday said some 20 targets of the banned Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) group were “destroyed” in the aerial operation, including caves, shelters and depots.

The military ramped up air strikes in Iraq’s PKK bases in Gara, Hakurk, Metina and Qandil, the statement added.

The strikes came hours after a suicide bomber detonated an explosive device near an entrance of the interior ministry building in Ankara, injuring two police officers. A second assailant was killed in a shootout with police.

A news agency close to the PKK said the group claimed responsibility for the suicide attack.

A statement from the ANF news agency announced the PKK planned the bombing to coincide with the opening of the parliament. It added the attack was carried out by “a team of ours linked to our Immortals Battalion” group.

The PKK is designated as a terrorist organisation by Turkey, the United States and the European Union.

According to the state-run Anadolu Agency, the two attackers had seized the vehicle from a veterinarian in the central province of Kayseri, a city 260km (161 miles) southeast of Ankara.

CCTV footage showed a vehicle pulling up to the interior ministry’s main gate and one of its occupants quickly walking towards the building before being engulfed in an explosion, while the other remains on the street.

The blast killed one of the attackers and authorities “neutralised”, or killed, the other, the interior minister said of the incident that rattled a central district that is home to ministerial buildings and nearby parliament.

The suicide attack occurred hours before the Turkish parliament was set to reopen after its three-month summer recess with an address by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who stated the blast was “the latest attempt” to inflict terror on the Turks.

“Those who threaten the peace and security of citizens have not achieved their goals and never will,” he added.

The PKK and Daesh have carried out such attacks in tourist areas and city centres of Turkey in the past.

The bomb on Ataturk Boulevard was the first in Ankara since March 2016, when 37 people were killed after a bomb-laden car exploded at a crowded central transport hub.

Police said they carried out controlled explosions for “suspicious package incidents” in other parts of Ankara.

The incident came almost a year after six people were killed and 81 wounded in an explosion in a busy pedestrian street in central Istanbul. Turkey blamed Kurdish fighters for that.

During a series of bloody incidents in 2015 and 2016, Kurdish, Daesh and other groups either claimed or were blamed for several attacks in major Turkish cities.

Tasnim: Iranian top judiciary official’s sons arrested on corruption charges

Mohammad Mosadegh

The suspects are involved in a case of large-scale embezzlements from banks that started eight months ago, the news agency reported, adding eight people linked to the case have so far been arrested.

Tasnim further said that Iran’s judiciary chief Gholam Hossein Mohseni Ejei has referred the legal proceedings of the case to the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC)’s Intelligence Unit “for certain considerations”, and has ordered the case be handled with no leniency.

After several sessions, the court has issued the final verdict for the main suspect, ruling that 20 thousand billion tomans ($4.73 million) should be returned to the country’s banking system.

US bent on creating chaos for Afghanistan’s neighbors: Iran envoy

Iran Afghanistan Border

Hassan Kazemi Qomi said on Sunday that the US is continuing to make troubles in Afghanistan two years after it was forced to withdraw its troops after the Taliban group took control of the country.

“(The US) is after creating anxiety and disturbance for countries in the region, including for Afghanistan’s neighbors,” Qomi was quoted as saying in an interview with the IRIB News.

The ambassador made the remarks in Kazan, in southwest Russia, where he attended a fifth regional consultation meeting on Afghanistan known as the Moscow Format.

He added the 13 countries attending the meeting were almost unanimous in their position that the security and economic challenges in Afghanistan are mainly the result of 20 years of occupation by the US and allied countries of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.

He accused the US of providing indirect support to the so-called Daesh of Khorasan, which is the regional offshoot of the ISIS terrorist group, to create insecurity in Central Asia and to pave the way for setting up a military base in the region with the pretext of fighting terrorism.

“Neighboring countries (of Afghanistan) reached the conclusion that they should change the conditions in Afghanistan through a collective move and a regional initiative and with cooperation with the rulers in Kabul,” Kazemi Qomi continued.

The long-serving Iranian diplomat said countries attending the Moscow Format meeting in Kazan also decided to form a regional contact group to coordinate their actions and policies on Afghanistan.

“With the formation of the contact group we can put into operation (the outcomes of) talks on Kabul and the economic and security cooperation around the borders and inside the Afghan territory,” he stressed.

Live Update: Russia’s “Special Operation” in Ukraine; Day 585

Russia Ukraine War
Ukrainian honour guards lay flowers at the grave of a soldier.

Not all 27 EU foreign ministers are in Kyiv, despite official’s claim

Not all 27 European Union foreign ministers are present in Kyiv, despite an earlier statement by the bloc’s foreign policy chief outlining plans for their “historic” meeting in the Ukrainian capital Monday, according to CNN.

Several foreign ministers have already made on-camera addresses on the sidelines of the meeting, including those from Bulgaria, Romania, the Netherlands, Portugal, Belgium, Cyprus, Denmark, Italy, Croatia and France.


Kyiv is working with Washington after aid shutdown decision: Ukraine’s foreign minister

Kyiv is working with Washington after Congress did not include new Ukraine aid in a last-minute deal to avoid a government shutdown, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said Monday.

Though US President Joe Biden lauded the deal reached by lawmakers, he also acknowledged the lack of new funding for Ukraine, vowing Washington “will not walk away” from Kyiv. Meanwhile, a bipartisan group of leaders in the US Senate also promised to vote on more aid for Ukraine.

Kuleba said Monday that Ukraine was “now working with both sides of Congress to make sure that [the decision] does not repeat again, under any circumstances.”

“We do not feel that US support has been shattered, because the US understands that what is at stake in Ukraine is much bigger than just Ukraine,” he continued, adding, “It’s about the stability and predictability of the world, and therefore I believe that we will be able to find the necessary solutions.”

Speaking alongside Kuleba ahead of a European Union foreign ministers’ meeting in Kyiv Monday, EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said the bloc will continue to support Ukraine and is “discussing with our American allies and friends for them too to continue supporting Ukraine.”

“I am sure that this decision will be reconsidered and all together will be on [Ukraine’s] side,” Borrell added.


EU meeting in Ukraine sends message of “unfettered support”: FM

The meeting of EU foreign ministers in Kyiv Monday, is a “historic event” that sends a strong “message of support” for Ukraine, the war-torn country’s foreign minister stated.

Speaking alongside EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said holding a meeting of the EU’s Foreign Affairs Council outside of the bloc’s borders for the first time sends “a message in itself.”

“A message of support, the unfettered support that the EU is extending to Ukraine, which we’re very much grateful for,” he added.

Borrell said the EU ministers would study a peace plan put forward by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.

“This is the kind of brainstorming that we need to do among us — and together with [Ukraine] — in order to look at the situation of the war against Ukraine, how the EU is supporting Ukraine, and how we will continue to do that,” Borrell stated.

He added that the EU foreign ministers had come to Kyiv to show “their commitment and the commitment of the European Union to continue to support Ukraine in the war of aggression of Russia against Ukraine.”

“These kinds of meetings are called informal because, first, they are outside of the premises of the European Union, and secondly because they are considered a high level political debate that has not the aim of reaching agreed conclusions and decisions.”


EU foreign ministers to hold “historic” meeting in Kyiv on Monday: Official

European Union foreign ministers will hold a “historic” meeting in Kyiv on Monday to offer support to Ukraine, the bloc’s foreign policy chief stated.

In a series of posts on X, formerly Twitter, Josep Borrell said it would be the “first ever meeting of all 27 Member States outside the EU.”

“We are convening a historic meeting of EU Foreign Ministers here in Ukraine, candidate country and future member of the EU,” Borrell continued, adding, “We are here to express our solidarity and support to the Ukrainian people.”


Musk mocks Zelensky over aid demands

SpaceX and Tesla CEO Elon Musk has ridiculed Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky over his demands for more financial support from the US and its allies amid the conflict with Russia.

Posting on his X (formerly Twitter) social media platform on Sunday, Musk shared the popular ‘stressed guy’ meme with Zelensky’s face photoshopped onto it and with a caption reading: “When it’s been five minutes and you haven’t asked for a billion dollars in aid.”

The ‘stressed guy’ meme features an image of a male student whose neck and forehead are bulging with veins while he sits beside a girl in a classroom. The picture is commonly shared for humorous descriptions of frustrating or uncomfortable situations.

Musk’s post comes after Zelensky attempted to drum up more support from the US during a visit to Washington in September. According to US Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, the Ukrainian president told him that “if we don’t get the aid, we will lose the war.”

The administration of US President Joe Biden has provided Kiev with around $46 billion since the beginning of the conflict with Russia in February 2022. However, no funding for Ukraine was included in the last-minute budget deal struck by Congress late on Saturday which allowed the US to avoid a federal government shutdown.

US House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, who was among the Republicans to oppose the Biden administration’s request to allocate $6 billion more to Ukraine, said that the priority must be protecting America’s borders.

The Zelensky government considered Musk among its backers early in the conflict with Russia, when SpaceX donated $80 million worth of Starlink satellite internet terminals to Ukraine. Kiev’s forces have relied heavily on the system for communications.

However, the billionaire was involved in a spat with Ukrainian officials and social media users last October after he proposed a peace plan to settle the conflict. Musk suggested that Russia should “redo elections of annexed regions under UN supervision,” while Ukraine would commit to neutrality and drop its claim to Crimea. Four former Ukrainian regions voted to join Russia a year ago, while Crimea held a similar referendum in 2014 after a Western-backed coup in Kiev.

Zelensky reacted to the idea by launching a social media poll, asking followers “which Elon Musk” they “like more” – the one “who supports Ukraine” or the one “who supports Russia.” Kiev’s then ambassador to Germany, Andrey Melnik, went further by telling the US billionaire to “f**k off.” A few days after the row, the Ukrainian military reportedly began experiencing problems with Starlink services.

Musk’s biography by historian Walter Isaacson, which came out in September, described an indecent last autumn in which the billionaire allegedly told his engineers to shut down satellite internet coverage in Crimea amid an attempted Ukrainian drone assault on the Russian peninsula. According to Isaacson, the tech entrepreneur concluded that “allowing the use of Starlink for the attack… could be a disaster for the world.”

Ukrainian presidential aide Mikhail Podoliak claimed that Musk was “committing evil and encouraging evil” with his decision, which he said was the result of “a cocktail of ignorance and big ego.”


Zelensky says “victory will come” at an event honoring soldiers

Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky said that “victory will come” in the country’s war against Russia in an event celebrating the country’s soldiers.

In an address marking Day of the Defenders, the national holiday honoring veterans and fallen soldiers, Zelensky stressed the of importance of unity and optimism as the fight continues.

“Our unity must enable us to go all the way to drive the occupier out of our land, and it will,” he stated.

“Never again will Ukraine pay with the future of its children, its sovereignty, and its will for illusory promises of peace,” the president added.

“Courage, resilience, unity are the things we must not lose in order to not lose Ukraine.”


Total amount of EU assistance to Ukraine reaches $89.8bn: Top diplomat

EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said that the European Union had allocated 85 billion euros ($89.8 billion) in support to Ukraine, of which over 25 billion euros had been provided in the form of military assistance.

“Our military support to Ukraine has reached the figure of 25 billion euros. And altogether – military, civilian, humanitarian [aid] – have reached the figure of 85 billion euros, which is… the highest amount in the world,” Borrell stated at a press conference in Kiev.


EU foreign policy chief, in Kyiv, says bloc is preparing long-term security pledges

European Union foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said during a visit to Kyiv on Sunday that Ukraine needed more military aid and he promised ongoing EU support.

“Ukraine needs more capabilities & needs them faster,” he said in a statement posted on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter.

He stated he had discussed “continuous EU military assistance” during his first in-person meeting with Defence Minister Rustem Umerov.

“We are preparing long-term security commitments for Ukraine,” Borrell added.


Ukraine is working with the US to ensure the budget decision will help Kyiv

The Ukrainian government is working with its partners in Washington to ensure that the budget Congress will work on over the next 45 days will include new funds to help Kyiv push back against Russia, a spokesman for Ukraine’s Foreign Ministry said.

Washington narrowly avoided a government shutdown with the passage of a stopgap funding bill on Saturday but it dropped funding for Ukraine.

A future shutdown could have a negative impact on Ukraine, the spokesman, Oleg Nikolenko, said on Facebook on Sunday.

Nikolenko said that the US budget currently includes about $1.6 billion for the defense industry and $1.23 billion for direct budget support, as well as funds for humanitarian and energy projects.

Erdogan: Turkey expects nothing from EU

Turkey Erdogan

“We have kept all the promises we have made to the EU, but they have kept almost none of theirs,” the Turkish leader stated in a speech to parliament, which gathered after a summer recess on Sunday.

Ankara “no longer expects anything from the European Union, which has kept us waiting at its door for 60 years,” he insisted.

Those in Brussels will “correct their mistakes” if they give up on their “unjust” approach to Turkey, especially when it comes to issuing visas to Turkish nationals, the president said.

“If they don’t, they will completely lose the right to expect anything from us,” he warned.

Turkey has complained in recent months that an increasing number of its citizens are having their Schengen visa applications rejected, although the EU has denied creating any additional obstacles for Turks. In his speech, Erdogan said the visa denials are “covert sanctions against us” by Brussels.

Turkey, most of whose territory is located in Asia, has been aspiring to become an EU member for decades. It officially applied for membership in 1987, and was recognized as a candidate in 1999. Accession talks opened in 2005, but were sluggish and ground to a halt in 2016. Brussels has been increasingly critical of Ankara in recent years, accusing Erdogan of attempts to consolidate power in a way that would contradict EU laws.

Earlier this month, the European Parliament approved a report censuring Turkey for curtailing “fundamental freedoms, human rights and civil liberties, as well as by its actions going against international law and good neighborly relations.”

Erdogan reacted to the paper by warning that Turkey may decide to “part ways with the EU” due to such treatment.