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Ansarullah official lauds Iran’s efforts to end Yemen’s suffering in face of Saudi war

Mohammed Abdul-Salam Amirabdollahian

Abdul-Salam, who is also head of Yemen’s national negotiating delegation, made the remarks in a Tuesday meeting with Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian at the Iranian embassy in the Omani capital of Muscat.

During the meeting, the high-ranking Ansarullah official also briefed the Iranian foreign minister on the unfolding developments in his country, negotiations with the Saudi government, cooperation with the United Nations, and the ongoing humanitarian crisis there.

For his part, Amirabdollahian praised the great Yemeni nation for their steadfastness and resilience, voicing the Islamic Republic’s support for any measure that would put an end to Yemen’s eight-year conflict.

Saudi Arabia initiated a brutal war of aggression against Yemen in March 2015, enlisting the assistance of some of its regional allies, including the United Arab Emirates, as well as massive shipments of advanced weaponry from the US and Western Europe.

The Western governments further extended their political and logistical support to Riyadh in their failed bid to restore power in Yemen to the country’s former Saudi-installed government.

The former Yemeni government’s president Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi resigned from the presidency in late 2014 and later fled to Riyadh amid a political conflict with Ansarullah. The movement has been running Yemen’s affairs in the absence of a functioning administration.

The war further led to the killing of tens of thousands of Yemenis and turned the entire nation into the scene of the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.

UN Middle East envoy ‘deeply alarmed by cycle of violence’ in West Bank

Israel Palestine

In a Twitter post, he urged “all sides to refrain from steps that could further enflame an already volatile situation”.

At least four Israeli settlers have been killed in a shooting by two Palestinian gunmen near an illegal settlement in the occupied West Bank – a day after a deadly raid carried out by Israeli troops.

Four other settlers were wounded on Tuesday, two seriously, in the attack near Eli in the northern West Bank, the Magen David Adom emergency services announced in a statement.

One of the gunmen was shot dead at the scene and Israeli forces later killed the second suspect near Nablus after he fled in a taxi.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said his government will use all options available to fight those trying to “hurt” his people.

“Our forces are now working in the field to hold the killers accountable. We have proven in recent months that we take revenge on all murderers without any exception,” he stressed, adding, “Whoever harms us will either end up in the grave or in prison. This is what will happen in this case as well. And I want to say to all those who see to harm us: All options are open.”

The violence comes a day after six Palestinians were killed in the Jenin refugee camp during a large-scale Israeli military incursion.

Hazem Qassem, a spokesman for Hamas, the group that governs the besieged Gaza Strip, described the shooting as a “response to the crimes of the [Israeli] occupation” in Jenin and elsewhere.

Hamas later said one of the attackers was a member of its armed wing.

The Palestinian Islamic Jihad also commended the attack, saying it was a natural response to growing Israeli aggression against the Palestinian people.

The armed group said it considered the shooting to be part of Palestinians’ “legitimate right to exercise self-defence”.

Iran football team crowned at 2023 CAFA Nations Cup

Iran Football Team

Team Melli defeated the Uzbek national team at the city’s Milliy Stadium on Tuesday with a sole goal scored by Sardar Azmoun at the beginning of the first half.

Iran defender Hossein Kan’anizadegan was sent off in the 90th minute after receiving the second yellow card.

The games marked the first edition of the biennial CAFA Nations Cup.

Iran had defeated Kyrgyzstan with a resounding five goals to one on Friday. Iran forward Mehdi Taremi scored a hat-trick and Azmoun found the back of the net twice in that game, while Mirlan Murzayev netted a consolation for Kyrgyzstan.

Before defeating Kyrgyzstan, Team Melli had beaten Afghanistan 6-1 in another emphatic victory.

Earlier on Tuesday, Oman defeated Kyrgyzstan 1-0 to finish in the event’s third place.

Taremi scored six goals in the tournament to become the event’s top scorer.

Live Update: Russia’s “Special Operation” in Ukraine; Day 483

Russia Ukraine War

DM: ‘Collective West’ waging a ‘real war’ against Russia

Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu said that that the “collective West” was waging a “real war” against Russia.

Speaking alongside President Vladimir Putin at an event in the Kremlin for graduating military academy students, Shoigu added that the Russia military would do everything to ensure the security of the country.


Counteroffensive ‘slower than desired’: Zelensky

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky told the BBC that Kyiv’s counteroffensive has been “slower than desired”.

In an interview, he told the British broadcaster, “Some people believe this is a Hollywood movie and expect results now. It’s not.”

“Whatever some might want, including attempts to pressure us, with all due respect, we will advance on the battlefield the way we deem best,” he added.

Since the counteroffensive began two weeks ago, Ukraine has reported recapturing eight villages in the south.

But Ukrainian troops are yet to reach the heaviest Russian defensive fortifications, which are set back from the 1,000km (600-mile) long front line.


Russia will continue improving its armed forces: Putin

Russia will continue improving its armed forces based on the “invaluable” experience gained in its “special military operation” — a term Russian officials and leaders use to refer to the invasion — in Ukraine, President Vladimir Putin stated Wednesday.

“The most important task here is the development of the nuclear triad, which is a key guarantee of Russia’s military security and global stability. Already about half of the units and formations of the Strategic Missile Forces are equipped with the latest Yars complexes,” he said during an address to graduates from Russia’s military academies in the Kremlin.

“The troops are being re-equipped with modern missile systems with a hypersonic avant-garde warhead. In the near future, the first launchers of the Sarmat complex with a new heavy missile will take up combat duty,” he added.

Putin met with graduates of universities and academies of the Ministry of Defense, the Ministry of Emergencies, the Federal Security Service, the Federal Protection Service, the Russian Guard, the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the Investigative Committee and the Federal Penitentiary Service, according to the Kremlin.


Dislodged mines could end up on Black Sea beaches: UN

A UN official says mines dislodged by the Kakhovka dam breach could float downstream and end up on the beaches of the Black Sea.

Head of UN Mine Action at the United Nations Development Programme in Ukraine, Paul Heslop, told reporters in Geneva that PMF-1 mines, also known as “butterfly” mines, were light enough to float downstream for a large distance.

“I would not be surprised to see that those mines have either got down as far as the sea or over the coming months, as the water is continuing to flow, will be transported down there,” he said, adding, “Unfortunately, we could see anti-personnel pressure mines washing up on beaches around the Black Sea.”

Henslop stated heavier anti-tank mines were less likely to float long distances.

On June 6, an explosion at the Kakhovka dam unleashed floodwaters across the Kherson region, killing over 50 people and destroying homes and farmland.


Ukraine needs $6.1bn in the next 12 months to recover: PM

Ukraine needs over $6 bn more in the next 12 months to help recover from Russia’s war, Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal said.

“We still need another $6.125 bn,” he told the Ukraine Recovery Conference in London.

“We have set an ambitious goal of securing pledges for this amount as a result of this conference,” he added.


“Real projects” needed for Ukraine’s recovery: Zelensky

Ukraine needs “real projects” to aid its recovery and reconstruction, President Volodymyr Zelensky said Wednesday.

Speaking at the Ukraine Recovery Conference in London by video link, he told the donor conference “we must move from vision to agreements, and from agreements to real projects.”

Zelensky stated that the Ukrainian delegation in London – led by Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal – would “present concrete things that we propose to do together during my [Zelensky’s] term” in office.

The two-day donor conference is being held in the UK capital.

Representatives of more than 60 states, 30 international organizations and 400 businesses are in attendance, British Foreign Secretary James Cleverly said as he opened the conference on Wednesday.

In April, Zelensky told a World Bank forum that it would take “hundreds of billions of dollars” to rebuild his country.


US to send $1.3 billion more aid to Ukraine: Blinken

The United States will send an additional $1.3 billion in financial assistance to Ukraine, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken announced Wednesday.

Speaking at the Ukraine Recovery Conference in London, he said the support will “overhaul its energy grid” and modernize other critical infrastructure.

“Recovery is about laying the foundation for Ukraine to thrive as a secure, independent country, fully integrated with Europe, connected to markets around the world,” Blinken stated.

Breaking down the financial aid, Blinken outlined how $657 million will help modernize Ukraine’s rail lines, ports and other critical infrastructure, $100 million will be used to help digitize national systems “to boost speed and to cut corruption” and $35 million will go to Ukrainian businesses.

More than $520 million of the total amount will go toward helping Ukraine “overhaul its energy grid,” Blinken added.

This comes after the UK also announced additional financial aid, including a $305 million of bilateral assistance and up to $318 in an expansion of British International Investment in Ukraine.

Among the businesses pledging their support at the two-day conference are are Virgin, Sanofi, Philips, Hyundai Engineering and Citi.


European Union has “special responsibility” toward Ukraine: European Commission president

The European Union has a “special responsibility” toward Ukraine, the European Commission president told a two-day donor conference Wednesday.

Speaking to more than 400 companies from 38 countries, Ursula von der Leyen told the conference that “we need the private sector to step in” to invest in Ukraine.

She also highlighted a proposal by the European Commission on Tuesday for a four-year financial assistance package for Ukraine, which she said would be financed with grants from the European budget, loans raised on capital markets and, eventually, with “proceeds from the immobilized Russian assets.”

Speaking at the Ukraine Recovery Conference in London, von der Leyen said the Commission would make a proposal regarding these Russian assets “before the summer break, because the perpetrator must be held accountable.”

Von der Leyen added that she had “no doubt … [Ukraine] will be part of our union.”

Ukraine’s fiscal gap is about 60 billion euros ($65.5 billion), von der Leyen said, adding that she had proposed to EU member states that they “cover 45% of this gap – this is in total 50 billion euros ($54.6 billion) for Ukraine.”


UK PM announces new war risk framework to help Ukraine rebuild

UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak announced a new framework for war risk insurance in a speech to the Ukraine Recovery Conference in London on Wednesday.

“This is a huge step forward towards helping insurers to underwrite investments into Ukraine, removing one of the biggest barriers and giving investors the confidence they need to act,” Sunak said.

Sunak also added in his speech that Russia should pay for “the destruction they have inflicted” in Ukraine.

The UK prime minister went on to praise Ukraine’s “incredible spirit” and said the war, which “brought a 29% fall in Ukraine’s GDP last year,” had “only proved how much Ukraine has to offer.”


‘No grounds’ to extend grain deal: Kremlin

The Kremlin reiterated that there are “no grounds” to extend the Black Sea grain deal, adding that the agreement was not being properly implemented.

On a call with reporters, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the UN had been forced to acknowledge that “unfortunately, they are not managing to exert the necessary influence on the countries of the collective West in order to fulfil this Russian part of the agreement”.

Peskov was referring to a list of Russian demands, including removing what Moscow says are obstacles to exporting its grain and fertilisers.


Turkey should begin ratifying Sweden’s NATO bid: Minister

Swedish Foreign Minister Tobias Billstrom says Turkey’s parliament should begin to ratify Stockholm’s bid to join NATO as it has met its obligations to join the military alliance.

“Our judgement is that we have done what was expected of us, now it is time for the Turkish parliament to start the ratification process,” Billstrom told the Reuters news agency on the sidelines of a meeting in parliament.

Billstrom added that Sweden remains hopeful that it will be able to join by the time of NATO’s summit in Vilnius in mid-July, adding that it had no “Plan B”.

Last year Sweden and Finland both applied to join NATO following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

While Finland joined NATO in April, Turkey and Hungary are blocking Sweden’s membership citing security concerns.


Ukraine says military ‘gaining ground’ near Melitopol and Berdyansk

Ukrainian forces are gaining some ground towards Melitopol and Berdyansk in the Zaporizhzhia region, Andriy Kovalev, spokesperson for the General Staff of the Ukrainian Armed Forces, has said.

“They had partial success, they are gaining ground,” Kovalev was quoted as saying in a post on Ukraine’s Military Media Center’s Telegram channel, adding that the gains were near the settlements of Mala Tokmachka and Robotyne, among others.

Ukraine continues to hold back the advance of Russian troops in the east of the country, with “especially heavy fighting” taking place near the city of Lyman in the Donetsk region, he added.


Three drones downed in Moscow region: Russian defence ministry

Russian air defences have downed three drones in the Moscow region, the defence ministry says, in what it calls an attempted Ukrainian attack.

The ministry announced that Russian defences had used electronic jamming to cause the drones to lose control and crash, without causing any casualties or damage.

Moscow regional governor Andrei Vorobyov had previously stated two drones were intercepted as they approached military warehouses.


Zelensky says Ukraine forces ‘destroying enemy’ in east, south

President Volodymyr Zelensky said that Ukraine’s forces were destroying Russian forces in the two main theatres of the conflict, the east and south of the country.

“At this time, our soldiers in the south and east are actively destroying the enemy, physically cleansing Ukraine,” Zelensky stated in his nightly video message.

“A defence against terror means destroying terrorists. And it is a guarantee that the state of evil will never have the opportunity to bring evil to Ukraine,” he added.

Referring to a conference to take place in London on post-war recovery, Zelenskyy said rebuilding Ukraine was “a vehicle and a guarantee of security” and a means of “protecting against any repetition of Russian aggression.”


US blames Russia’s war on Ukraine for ‘record-breaking’ increase in number of refugees

The United States envoy to the United Nations has blamed Russia for a “record-breaking” increase in the number of refugees due to its war in Ukraine.

“President Vladimir Putin’s unjustifiable war in Ukraine is primarily responsible for the record-breaking increase in the number of refugees,” said Linda Thomas Greenfield in a statement on World Refugee Day.

“The destruction of the Kakhovka dam two weeks ago in Ukraine’s Kherson Region has placed countless more in urgent need,” she continued.

As the fighting in Sudan continues to trigger massive movements of people, the world is facing an “unprecedented” global displacement crisis as war, conflict, disasters and political instability are forcing record numbers of people to flee their homes, Greenfield added.


European Union proposes $55 billion financial aid package for Ukraine

The European Union proposed a four-year financial assistance package for Ukraine worth $55 billion, the union’s commission president said in a news conference Tuesday.

The assistance will be administered through loans and grants, EU President Ursula von der Leyen said. It aims to provide Ukraine with “perspective and predictability” as well as “incentivize other donors to step up” their support.

“It will allow us to calibrate our financial support according to the evolution of the situation on the ground because we all know that a war requires at most flexibility from us,” von der Leyen noted.

Norway, which is not part of the European Union, also recently announced it will allocate funds for Ukraine.

In a news release, the Norwegian Foreign Ministry said Oslo will provide 250 million Norwegian kroner (approximately $23 million) for Ukraine’s “nuclear safety and security.” And around $9.3 million will be provided to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), “to ensure that IAEA experts can maintain a presence in Ukraine.”

Norway is also increasing funding for “nuclear safety and security cooperation” with Ukraine by $14 million. The funding will be administered by the Norwegian Radiation and Nuclear Safety Authority (DSA) and will be used “to reduce the risk of radiological incidents.”


Ukraine’s “main strike is still ahead”: Deputy DM

Ukraine’s Deputy Minister of Defense said on Tuesday that Ukrainian forces “are gnawing our way meter by meter” to advance, also noting that the main strike of the counteroffensive “is still ahead.”

“There are some directions, where we advance and the enemy is on defensive, but also on some axis, the enemy is trying to conduct offensive, while we are on defensive. We gradually advance step by step. So one can say we are gnawing our way meter by meter,” Deputy Defense Minister Hanna Maliar stated in an interview with Ukrainian media.

“The tasks that are being given to the military are being fulfilled, so the gradual advance in all directions, where the offensive began is taking place,” Maliar continued, adding, “However, the main strike is still ahead.”

Maliar said that Ukraine’s offensive is ongoing in several directions in the south; meanwhile, she claimed that Russia’s main offensive is in the east.

The Secretary of Ukraine’s National Security and Defense Council, Oleksii Danilov, stated on Tuesday that one of Ukraine’s main priorities right now is “to exhaust” and destroy Russian artillery and armament systems.

“The destruction of the Russian control points, ammunition storages, fuel, food products, supply routes – these tasks are being performed by the Ukrainian defenders excellently. The number of destroyed Russian military equipment is the highest since the beginning of the war,” Danilov said in a social media post.


EU leaders to call on China to help stop Ukraine war: Official

EU leaders plan to call on China next week to help bring an end to the war in Ukraine, engage in global challenges, such as climate change, and rebalance its economic relations with the EU, a senior EU official has said, according to the Reuters news agency.

EU leaders will meet for a summit in Brussels on June 29-30 with China and economic security among the main topics. The call to China is set out in draft conclusions prepared ahead of the summit and could still change.

The official said the draft conclusions were in line with the Group of Seven (G7) declaration from May but with more specific EU-China issues, such as rebalancing the economic relationship and the need for reciprocity.


Kakhovka dam destruction causes $1.3bn in damage: Ukraine

The breach of the Nova Kakhovka hydroelectric dam has caused 1.2 billion euros ($1.3bn) of damage, Ukraine’s environment minister says, warning that mines unearthed by flooding could wash onto other European countries’ shores.

Speaking by video link to a meeting of EU environment ministers, Ruslan Strilets stated assessment of the damage was ongoing but the dam collapse was already the largest environmental disaster since Russia’s February 2022 invasion.


‘Ukraine’s counteroffensive needs to be as effective as possible’: Macron

French President Emmanuel Macron reaffirms Europe’s support to Ukraine, in light of Kyiv’s counteroffensive.

Speaking alongside Italian Prime Minister Georgia Meloni in Paris, he said that “Ukraine’s counteroffensive needs to be as effective as possible.”


‘Let NATO fight if it doesn’t want to freeze the conflict in Ukraine’: Lavrov

Russian Foreign minister Sergey Lavrov says that if NATO opposes freezing the conflict in Ukraine, then the military alliance can continue fighting, according to a report from Russia’s state-owned TASS news agency.

“If NATO, through the mouth of Stoltenbeg [the military alliance’s chief], once again declares that they are against freezing, as they say, the conflict in Ukraine, then they want to fight. Well, let them fight,” Lavrov told journalists in Minsk.

“We have long understood the goals of NATO in the situation around Ukraine. These goals were formed for many years after the coup. Now, NATO is trying to implement them,” he added.

On Monday, at a joint news conference with the German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, NATO’s secretary general Jens Stoltenberg had said, “We all want this war to end. But a just peace cannot mean freezing the conflict and accepting a deal dictated by Russia.”


German chancellor asked China to use ties with Moscow to end war in Ukraine

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said he called on Beijing to use its influence on Russia to halt Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.

“Now it is important to avoid a frozen conflict,” Scholz said during a joint press conference with China’s premier Li Qiang on Tuesday in Berlin.

“It is important that China continues not to supply weapons to the aggressor,” Scholz said, adding that a ban of nuclear weapons was important.

Earlier this year, Western officials flagged concerns that Beijing could be considering bolstering Russia’s military with lethal aid, an allegation refuted by Chinese officials.

Scholz and Li will continue the bilateral government consultations Tuesday afternoon with German Economy Minister Robert Habeck and Zheng Shanjie, China’s chairman of the National Development and Reform Commission at the economic forum.

In 2022, China was Germany’s most important trading partner for the seventh time, according to the Federal Statistical Office.

Iran FM urges regional security mechanism in Persian Gulf

Amirabdollahian Qatari Emir

Hossein Amirabdollahian raised the issue in a Tuesday meeting with the Qatari sheikh in Doha.

The two sides discussed issues of mutual interest at bilateral, regional and international levels.

Amirabdollahian underlined the Islamic Republic of Iran’s readiness to work with Qatar toward expanding relations in different bilateral areas and to speed up the implementation of previous trade and economic agreements between Tehran and Doha.

The Iranian foreign minister expressed pleasure with the excellent relations between the two countries.

He also said it is necessary that trade, economic and cultural ties be boosted to the level of political relations between Iran and Qatar.

Amirabdollahian also called for enhancing talks and cooperation among the 8 Persian Gulf countries in order to put in place a collective mechanism for the purpose of preserving their joint interests and security.

The top Iranian diplomat appreciated Qatar’s efforts and initiatives to resolve regional issues and problems and reaffirmed Iran’s continued support for Doha’s constructive actions to this end.

Sheikh Tamim for his part said he was pleased with the good, very strong and sincere ties between his country and Iran.

The Qatari emir noted that Iran has a special place in the region and Qatar has no limits for expanding ties with Iran.

Sheikh Tamim further expressed pleasure with the progress in ties between Tehran and Doha, adding that it is necessary that both sides step up their joint efforts to achieve the goals set during trade and economic talks between him and Raisi.

He then invited President Raisi of Iran to visit Qatar.

Four Israeli settlers killed in West Bank shooting

Israel Palestine

Four people were confirmed dead and four others were wounded, two seriously, on Tuesday in the attack near the illegal Eli settlement, in the northern West Bank, the Magen David Adom emergency services said in a statement.

One of the gunmen was shot dead at the scene and Israeli forces later killed the second suspect near Nablus after he fled in a taxi. The Israeli military said a civilian “neutralised” one gunman.

The Israeli military announced the gunmen arrived by car and opened fire on a restaurant, and then targeted the petrol station.

The Palestinians were identified as Mohannad Faleh Shhadeh and Khaled Mostafa Sbah – both from the village of Urif near Nablus.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called an “urgent security consultation”. His far-right allies have been calling for a large-scale military operation in the occupied West Bank for months now.

Netanyahu later issued a threat of a violent response.

“We have proven in recent months that we take revenge on all murderers, without exception. Whoever harmed us will either end up in the grave or in prison. This is what will happen in this case as well,” he stated.

The incident comes a day after six Palestinians were killed in Jenin refugee camp in the occupied West Bank during a large-scale Israeli military incursion. At least 91 people were wounded during the nine-hour raid.

Hazem Qassem, a spokesman for Hamas, the group that governs the besieged Gaza Strip, described Tuesday’s shooting as a “response to the crimes of the [Israeli] occupation” in Jenin and elsewhere.

Hamas later said one of the shooters was a member of its armed wing.

The Palestinian Islamic Jihad also commended the attack, saying it was a natural response to growing Israeli aggression against the Palestinian people.

The armed group said it considered the shooting to be part of Palestinians’ “legitimate right to exercise self-defence”.

Israeli settlements, illegal under international law, house between 600,000 and 750,000 Israeli settlers across the West Bank and East Jerusalem, despite Palestinians seeking the land as part of a future state.

Earlier on Tuesday, United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called on Israel to immediately “cease all settlement activities” in occupied Palestinian territory, describing Israel’s plans to advance the building of settlements as driving “tensions and violence” and being a major obstacle to a lasting peace.

Iranian Pres.: West Asia resistance front is now stronger than ever

Raisi and Haniyeh

Raisi added that today, the resistance front is more powerful than ever before and its enemies are weak.

The president also said the resistance front now has the upper hand in the fight against the Zionist regime and that the balance of power has changed in favor of the front not only in Palestine but at the international level.

Raisi stressed that today, even those who supported talks with the Zionist regime have arrived at the conclusion that negotiation with the regime is futile.

He added that this is while Iran and the resistance front always believed that the Israeli regime never remains committed to any treaty and deal.

In an apparent reference to the US, Raisi said those who are seeking to normalize ties between the Zionists and regional countries should know that this will not bring security to Tel Aviv.

Ismail Haniyah for his part thanked Iran for its support for the liberation of al-Quds on behalf of himself and the Palestinian people.

He said the resistance front is now spreading not just in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank but among supporters of Palestine outside Palestinian territories.

He cited solidarity and unity among all Palestinians as a great achievement of the resistance front.

Flooding in 10 Iranian provinces claims 19 lives, leaves 3 missing

Iran Flood

Babak Mahmoudi, the head of the Relief and Rescue Organization, said the Red Crescent Society issued an alert to all operational centers in the country due to the intensity of the rains, which led to injuries and stranded citizens in 23 provinces and 76 cities of the country.

The Society, he added, provided relief and rescue services in 148 operational areas including 9 cities and 123 villages.

During rescue operations in the areas hit by flooding and heavy downpours, aid and rescue services were provided to 49,562 people in the past days, Mahmoudi added.

A search is also underway for three people who went missing in the provinces of Isfahan and Alborz, he said.

Moscow: Washington plotting to interfere in Russian elections

Sergey Lavrov

The US is not stopping its “vicious practice of interference in the internal affairs of sovereign countries,” Lavrov told the meeting of the ruling United Russia party.

“The forms of such interference are very diverse, including threats, blackmail and the organization of ‘color revolutions’. The bloody coup d’état in Ukraine that succeeded in 2014 was attempted again six years later in Belarus, unsuccessfully,” the foreign minister explained.

“This obviously won’t be the last step. They openly set the goal of undermining domestic political stability in our country – in the context of the 2024 presidential elections,” he added.

While the situation in the world is “not easy,” there is a clear strengthening of multipolarity, Lavrov added. New centers of growth and global decision-making are emerging in Eurasia, the Pacific, the Middle East, Africa and Latin America, based on the “natural, inalienable right of peoples to determine their own destiny.”

President Putin has said that the 2024 presidential election will be held “in strict accordance with the law,” and in compliance with all democratic and constitutional procedures. He is eligible to run for re-election, but has not yet announced if he intends to do so.

In March 2022, US President Joe Biden publicly declared that Putin “cannot remain in power,” though officials in Washington later stated he was expressing a personal sentiment and not an actual policy change.

Several months later, former national security adviser John Bolton openly advocated for “regime change” in Russia, urging the US to encourage “Russians themselves to exacerbate divisions among those with real authority,” in order to bring about a revolution.

UN expert says Taliban treatment of women could be ‘gender apartheid’

“Grave, systematic and institutionalised discrimination against women and girls is at the heart of Taliban ideology and rule, which also gives rise to concerns that they may be responsible for gender apartheid,” UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Afghanistan, Richard Bennett, told the Human Rights Council in Geneva.

The UN defines gender apartheid as “economic and social sexual discrimination against individuals because of their gender or sex”.

“We have pointed to the need for more exploration of gender apartheid, which is not currently an international crime, but could become so,” Bennett told reporters on the sidelines of the council’s 53rd regular session.

“It appears if one applies the definition of apartheid, which at the moment is for race, to the situation in Afghanistan and [uses] sex instead of race, then there seem to be strong indications pointing towards that.”

His assessment came as Afghan rulers have banned millions of women from education and employment as part of their increasing curbs on women’s rights since they took over the country in 2021.

Zabihullah Mujahid, the main spokesperson for Taliban administration, has taken exception to Bennett’s remarks.

He accused Bennett, along with the UN and some Western institutions, of “spreading propaganda against the Islamic Emirate”.

“Islamic laws are under implementation in Afghanistan, objecting to them is a problem with Islam,” he wrote.

The Afghan rulers have justified the restrictions on women based on their interpretation of Islam. But some senior Taliban leaders have criticised the ban on girl schools, saying Islam grants girls and women rights to education and work.

No other Muslim-majority country bans girls and women from education and work.

The Taliban took power in August 2021 after the United States-led forces withdrew from the country, ending two decades of war and occupation.

The administration has since curtailed women’s freedoms and rights, including their ability to attend high school and university. Only primary schools are open for girls. The Taliban has gone back on its promise to open high schools for girls after an infrastructure upgrade to ensure gender segregation.

In a report covering July to December 2022, Bennett found in March that the treatment of women and girls by the Taliban “may amount to gender persecution, a crime against humanity”.

“These serious deprivations of women’s and girls’ fundamental rights and the harsh enforcement by the de facto authorities of their restrictive measures may constitute [a] crime against humanity of gender persecution,” Bennett reiterated on Monday.

In April, Taliban authorities began enforcing a ban on Afghan women working for the UN after stopping women from working for aid groups in December.

Amnesty International and the International Commission of Jurists (ICJ) also issued a report in May. In it, they underscored how the Taliban crackdown on Afghan women’s rights, coupled with “imprisonment, enforced disappearance, torture and other ill-treatment,” could constitute gender persecution under the International Criminal Court (ICC).