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Pakistan court extends ex-PM Imran Khan’s custody for 2 weeks

Imran Khan

The 70-year-old former cricket star has been at the centre of a political crisis since he lost a confidence vote in parliament in April 2022, and his conviction in a separate corruption case last month resulted in him being barred from contesting a national election due to be held in coming months.

In late August, a high court suspended Khan’s prison sentence for corruption just weeks after he was jailed, but a prior order for his remand in custody in the state secrets case prevented his release.

The latest extension of the remand order will keep Khan in jail until Sept. 26, lawyer Naeem Panjutha said in a post on X messaging platform.

In the state secrets case, Khan is charged with making public contents of a confidential cable sent by Pakistan’s ambassador to the United States and using it for political gain, according to a Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) document seen by Reuters.

Khan alleges that the cable proves the United States had pressed Pakistan’s military to orchestrate the fall of his government because he had visited Russia shortly before its invasion on Ukraine in February 2022.

Washington and the Pakistani military have denied Khan’s accusations.

In the corruption case, Khan was sentenced to three years jail for unlawfully selling state gifts during his time as prime minister from 2018 to 2022. As a result, the election commission barred him from contesting elections for five years, and although the prison sentence was suspended last month the conviction still stands.

Revived Iran-Saudi ties will be strong in all fields: Ambassador

Saudi Ambassador to Iran

Abdullah bin Saud al-Anzi made the remarks in an exclusive interview with IRNA late on Tuesday, on the sidelines of a ceremony at the Chinese embassy in Tehran on the 74th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China.

“These relations will be constructive, strong, and based on common interests, mutual respect, and good neighborliness,” he said.

The Saudi diplomat also appreciated the constructive role played by the People’s Republic of China in mediating an agreement on the resumption of relations between Tehran and Riyadh.

He noted that the agreement between Tehran and Riyadh had a great impact on many issues and was met with a positive reaction from the international community.

Al-Anzi also pointed out that Saudi Arabia’s King Salman has invited Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi for a visit to Riyadh, voicing hopes that the visit would be made at an appropriate time.

The Saudi ambassador arrived in Tehran on September 5 and submitted a copy of his credentials to Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian.

In March 2023, Iran and Saudi Arabia issued a joint statement in China announcing that they would resume their diplomatic relations after seven years of tensions.

Israel deprived life-saving healthcare to ‘two Palestinian children a day’ in 2023: Report

Palestinian Patients Israel

A staggering average of 60 young patients were not allowed to leave for the occupied West Bank to receive urgent medical attention each month, equivalent to over two children per day.

These denials have left children without access to critical surgeries and urgent medication, which are unavailable in the blockaded enclave.

“Some are desperately sick children who have no options other than leaving Gaza to survive,” said Jason Lee, Save the Children’s director in the occupied Palestinian territory, in a statement.

“Denying children healthcare is inhumane and an infringement of their rights.”

The London-based organisation announced that in May alone, Israeli authorities denied or left unanswered 100 children’s applications to request permits to exit through the Beit Hanoun (Erez) crossing, which Israel controls, in the north of the Gaza Strip.

During the same month, at least seven children were among 33 Palestinians killed in Israel’s attack on Gaza between 9 and 13 May 2023.

Because of the severe lack of medical equipment and personnel, a significant portion of patients in Gaza, notably those suffering from conditions such as cancer and chronic diseases, must obtain medical referrals covered by the Palestinian Authority (PA) to enable them to seek treatment in the occupied West Bank or Israel.

After they receive approvals and financial coverage for their medical treatment, patients are then required to apply for Israeli exit permits to be allowed to leave the strip through the Beit Hanoun, the only land crossing for Palestinians who want to move between Gaza and the rest of the occupied Palestinian territory.

One in 10 patients who seek exit permits from Gaza die within six months after their first application.

Yet, they endure a waiting period of almost five weeks for each application to undergo processing by Israeli authorities.

In 2022, three Palestinian children died after months of waiting for Israeli exit permits that would have enabled them to cross the border and access life-saving medical treatment in the occupied West Bank. Among them were 16-year-old leukaemia patient Salim al-Nawati and 19-month-old Fatima al-Masri.

Masri, who suffered an atrial septal defect (hole in the heart), was born after eight years of marriage and died after Israeli authorities left unanswered five applications her parents submitted to get her an exit permit.

“I submitted the first application at the end of [2021] and got an appointment on 26 December, but shortly before that date, I received a text message saying that her application was pending under review,” Masri’s father, Jalal, previously told MEE.

“I went through the same prolonged procedures again to submit another application and got another appointment on 13 February. Three days before the appointment, I received the same message again. So I submitted a third application to get another appointment on 6 March, which was delayed until 27 March and then 5 April. Fatima died 11 days before that date.”

Devastated by 16 years of an Israeli-led blockade and recurrent military attacks, Gaza’s healthcare system faces immense challenges, with the entry of vital medical supplies, equipment and medications severely restricted by Israel.

According to the Palestinian Ministry of Health in Gaza, around 224 drug items (43 percent of the essential medicine list) and 213 medical disposables (25 percent of the essential list) were at zero stock in May.

While tens of thousands of patients are granted medical referrals outside of Gaza by the PA each year, almost a third of them are denied exit permits by Israel.

In 2022, around 33 percent of the 20,295 patient permit applications submitted to Israeli authorities were denied or delayed. This includes a minimum of 29 percent of applications filed on behalf of child patients, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO).

However, permit denials are not the only challenge Gaza patients face throughout the prolonged process of getting proper medical treatment outside of the strip.

In the majority of cases, approximately 62 percent of the time, Israeli authorities denied or delayed permit applications for caregivers and companions who are meant to accompany patients during their medical journeys.

Moreover, 225 patients underwent security interrogations by Israel, of whom only 24 were granted exit permits.

The coastal enclave, home to more than two million residents, has 36 hospitals providing an average of 1.26 hospital beds for every 1,000 people, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health.

Iranian nomads: hardworking, brave people with no fixed abode

Iranian nomads

They are always on the move in different seasons as they migrate to find better pastures to feed their cattle.

Nomads’ main abode is Siah-Chador, which literally means “a black tent.” Made of goat hair, these black tents are strong, coarse and resistant to humid weather and cold.

Bakhtiari nomads are hard-working people who have always played a role in defending the country.

Stories of their bravery and sacrifices have been handed down from generation to generation.

The following images depict the lifestyle of these brave men and women:

READ MORE:

Iran “deploying military hardware to Iraq borders” as deadline to disarm terrorists in Kurdistan nears

Iranian Forces

The images show the IRGC’s Ground Force sending part of its armored equipment to the northwestern borders.

Iran and Iraq clinched a security deal in early 2023, which sets September 19, 2023 as the deadline for the Iraqi government to disarm terrorist groups from Iraq’s Kurdistan region.

The Iraqi government has undertaken to disarm terrorist groups operating on Iraqi soil and in the Kurdistan region. Under the deal, the groups’ military garrisons will be evacuated and closed, and the terror groups will be relocated to camps designated by Baghdad.

Iran has emphasized that the September 19 deadline will not be extended, whatsoever.
Meanwhile, Iraq has given assurances that it will not allow its territory to be used to harm the regional countries, including Iran.

The IRGC has in the past pounded the positions of the terror groups in northern Iraq.

Biden to meet Netanyahu at UN but not at White House: Report

Biden and Netanyahu

The less formal one-on-one comes amid a push by thousands of Israeli academics and artists for Biden and the secretary general of the UN to shun Natanyahu amid his controversial judicial overhaul.

But Biden also faces cross-currents at home, where Republicans including former President Donald Trump have accused him of allowing distance to grow between the historic allies amid ongoing tension points and Netanyahu’s coalition with right-wing parties.

The decision to meet Netanyahu on the sidelines of the UN – where traditionally the president meets multiple leaders – follows an internal debate and a pressure campaign by the Israelis, Axios reported.

But the White House has told Netanyahu he’ll get a White House meeting later this year, the Times of Israel reported.

Biden has stated Netanyahu, who came back to power nine months ago, is heading an ‘extreme’ Israeli government.

Officials said Netanyahu pushed through Israeli’s ambassador to Washington Micahel Herzog for the meeting, and sought a confab inside the Oval Office, where the men have met previously, according to the report.

The meeting isn’t officially confirmed for the UNGA meetings next week.

With no White House meeting on his agenda, Netanyahu is set to fly to Silicon Valley in California in advance of his trip to New York.

Israel’s Supreme Court this week heard its first challenge to Netanyahu’s judicial overhaul, which critics say would weaken the high court and diminishes checks on Netanyahu’s executive power.

UN warns human rights in Afghanistan in ‘state of collapse’

Volker Turk’s remarks came during an interactive dialogue held by the Human Rights Council in Geneva on Tuesday.

The collapsing human rights situation is “acutely affecting” the lives of millions of women, men, girls and boys, Turk said.

While noting that human rights violations in the country are not new, he stated the dynamic imposed by the Taliban since they took power two years ago particularly targeted women and girls, excluding them from most aspects of public and daily life.

The nation has fallen into a serious humanitarian and financial crisis, with two-thirds of the population now in need of assistance, he added.

He stressed that Afghanistan had set a devastating precedent, being the sole country globally where women and girls are not permitted to attend secondary or tertiary education.

“Over the past two years, there had been a systematic erosion of the laws and institutions that once provided protection for human rights. Laws were now made by edicts rather than through consultative processes. The laws that had protected women from violence and created an enabling environment for the media had been suspended,” the UN official said.

“The Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission was no more. Corporal punishment and public executions had resumed, and there were ongoing reports of extrajudicial killings, torture and arbitrary arrests. Compounding all of this was a deeply troubling lack of accountability for perpetrators of human rights violations,” he added.

Turk urged the international community to not turn its back on the people of Afghanistan, underlining that it has a human rights crisis of the first order.

He encouraged states to proactively help address the challenges facing the Afghan economy.

He also called on the de facto authorities to fundamentally bring Afghanistan back to the international order with full respect for its international human rights obligations.

Iran says not to fully return to JCPOA as long as other parties fail to fulfill commitments

Mohammad Eslami

“As long as the other parties [to the JCPOA] fail to live up to their commitments and sanctions are not fully lifted, it is natural that we will continue the current trend,” said Mohammad Eslami on Wednesday.

“The three European countries cannot expect us to fully implement the JCPOA while they fail to fulfill their obligations,” he added.

Elsewhere in his remarks, he referred to some issues raised in connection with the Safeguards Agreement, saying these issues have been brought up “out of animosity.”

“They are accusations and fabrications, and have been around for 22 years now,” he explained.

Iran scaled down its commitments under the JCPOA after other signatories to the deal failed to keep their side of the bargain.

Iran oil prices rose by an average of $6.1 per barrel in August: OPEC

Iran Oil

OPEC figures cited in a Tuesday report by the Fars news agency showed that Iran had supplied oil to customers in August at prices that were higher than average OPEC and Brent prices.

Iranian crude oil prices rose to $87.58 per barrel in August from $81.48 reported in July, showed the data.

Average OPEC price in August was $87.33 per barrel while the price of Saudi Arabia’s light crude was $89.55, OPEC figures showed.

The data is consistent with earlier reports suggesting Iran had managed to supply record volumes of crude oil to Asian customers in August while being able to earn more from the shipments despite US sanctions.

Experts say Iran has been offering discounts on its oil prices to encourage more purchases by Asian customers.

OPEC data showed that Iranian oil shipments had been traded at prices in August that were even higher than the price of the Brent which is a benchmark of crude prices in the international markets.

The Brent price rose by $6.05 in August compared to July to reach $86.14 per barrel, OPEC figures showed.

Data by international tanker tracking services shows Iran’s oil exports, including the exports of condensates, reached an average of nearly 2 million barrels per day (bpd) from a total output of 3.15 million bpd in August.

That comes as OPEC data, cited in a separate report by Fars on Tuesday, showed that Iran’s total oil output in August had reached 3 million bpd, up by 0.143 million bpd from July.

Putin, Kim meet at Russia’s space launch facility

Putin and Kim

The president of Russia has personally greeted the leader of North Korea at Vostochny Cosmodrome, according to a video of their handshake shared by the Kremlin on Wednesday.

Putin arrived at Vostochny following a two-day visit to the Eastern Economic Forum in Vladivostok. The North Korean leader traveled to the facility onboard his armored train, after crossing into Russian territory on Tuesday morning.

“I am very glad to see and welcome you again in Russia. This time, as we agreed, at the Vostochny Cosmodrome,” Putin said while seated alongside Kim.

“Of course, we need to talk about issues of economic cooperation, humanitarian issues, and the situation in the region. We have a lot of questions [to discuss].”

Kim thanked Putin for his invite to the country and said the two countries have “many issues” that they can cooperate on.

“As you said, the agenda between our countries, including the political, economic, and cultural issues; and there are many issues that our two countries need to cooperate and for us to receive help on in our war of independence as the people of our countries anticipate,” Kim stated.

“In this situation, I believe this moment will serve to raise our bilateral relations to the next step, to a new height,” Kim added.

The North Korean leader went on tell Putin it was an honor the meeting was being held “at this special place, a space launch site which is like the heart of the space power, which your country has the status of, and giving this opportunity for us to have a deeper understanding of space power’s today and tomorrow.”

Kim also praised Russia for having “stood up against the hegemonic forces” to defend its sovereignty and security, a veiled reference to the US and the West, and said he has expressed “the full and unconditional support to all that Russia does in response.”

“And that in the frontline of anti-imperialism and independence, I will always be standing with Russia, I’m using this opportunity to make it clear,” the North Korean leader continued.

Footage from Russia also shows Kim’s sister Kim Yo Jong standing alongside him at the Vostochny Cosmodrome space center in Russia.

Commenting on the agenda of the Russian-North Korean summit, Kremlin Press Secretary Dmitry Peskov said the upcoming talks are set to focus on a number of “sensitive issues,” as well as bilateral economic and cultural cooperation, and the overall situation in the region.

The Kremlin spokesman added the negotiations would be held both with Russian and North Korean delegations present and in a one-on-one format.

Ahead of the meeting, US officials warned that a potential arms deal could see Pyongyang provide weapons for Moscow to use in the war against Ukraine.