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Major suspect in Khashoggi case seen in public for first time since murder

Jamal Khashoggi

Footage of Qahtani attending a social gathering in the Red Sea port city of Jeddah circulated on social media over the weekend, drawing condemnation – as well as praise from his backers.

Qahtani was hosted by a Saudi real estate developer and investor Ahmed al-Obaikan.

He appeared to be using a walking stick when Obaikan, his uncle, and other visitors greeted him.

Pro-government Saudi Arabian social media accounts hailed his return, calling him a “beloved” national figure.

One prominent Saudi account called on Elon Musk to reinstate Qahtani’s Twitter account, calling his ban “wrongful” and saying it was “influenced by the radical left agenda and the Washington Post”.

Qahtani was suspended from Twitter a year after being removed over his suspected role in Khashoggi’s murder, accusing him of manipulating the platform. The former official was head of the royal court’s media centre and oversaw a social media campaign where hundreds of fake accounts promoted the Saudi government.

“His first videos and photos, which emerged on Twitter today, are cherished by many, especially in Saudi Arabia. The affection and respect shown to him by Saudi people should be recognized,” tweeted Abdullah al-Khurayyef.

Qahtani disappeared from public view following the murder of Khashoggi in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul on 2 October 2018.

Hatice Cengiz, Khashoggi’s fiancee at the time of his murder, tweeted: “It seems that he is mentally and physically devastated. This is little for him in return what he has done against the innocent. Damn him and people like him.”

Turki al-Shalhoub, a Saudi journalist critical of his government, described Qahtani as the “dirty hand” of MbS.

“The criminal [Saud al-Qahtani] committed a crime that shook the world, brought calamities upon the state and tarnished its image… This murderous criminal is still at work and moves freely, while those who truly loved their country and defended the rights of citizens are being ravaged by imprisonment!” Shalhoub tweeted.

After bin Salman assumed the position of crown prince in 2017, Qahtani became one of the most powerful figures in Saudi Arabia. He was reported to have had a leading role in the Ritz Carlton purge of that year, and is alleged to have overseen the torture of imprisoned women’s rights activists, including Loujain al-Hathloul. He is also believed to have been a leading figure in the brief detention of then-Lebanese prime minister Saad al-Hariri in 2017.

Qahtani was reported to long have been angered by Khashoggi’s critical writings, and soon after the journalist’s disappearance US and Turkish intelligence sources began to identify him as the ringleader of the operation that killed him.

Middle East Eye revealed that Qahtani was part of the command structure of the Saudi death squad, which operated under the guidance and supervision of MbS.

The crown prince and Qahtani have denied involvement, with Riyadh describing the assassination as a rogue operation that went wrong.

Qahtani was banned from entering the US, UK and other European countries, and was among the 17 Saudis sanctioned by the US Treasury over Khashoggi’s murder, based on intelligence reports that he was involved in the operation.

A Saudi court cleared Qahtani of wrongdoing in 2021. Last year, a US district court dismissed a case brought against bin Salman and Qahtani over the murder, after the Biden administration advised that the crown prince should be given immunity as he had become prime minister.

Qahtani was also one of two people accused in a Turkish court case over the killing of Khashoggi. However, the case was suspended in April 2022 after a judge ruled that the trial be transferred to Saudi Arabia.

Sources have previously told Reuters that Qahtani remained influential behind the scenes after disppearing from public view.

Israel says direct flights to Saudi Arabia for Hajj won’t happen now

Hajj

Regional powerhouse Saudi Arabia gave its quiet assent to Persian Gulf neighbours United Arab Emirates and Bahrain forging ties with Israel in 2020. But it has held off on following suit, saying Palestinian statehood goals should be addressed first.

Still, Israeli and U.S. officials had predicted that the kingdom, home to Islam’s two holiest sites, might as a goodwill gesture let members of Israel’s 18% Muslim minority fly in directly for this year’s Hajj.

Riyadh never formally offered that, however.

With the pilgrimage now imminent – June 25 to July 2 – and Israel’s Transport Ministry reporting no airlines applying to run special flights to Saudi destinations, a top aide to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu acknowledged they would not happen.

“Perhaps for the next Hajj we will be in a position to help in this matter, and (direct) flights will depart from here,” National Security Adviser Tzachi Hanegbi told Kan radio, adding, “But it’s too early to say.”

The Joe Biden administration has described Israeli-Saudi normalisation as a U.S. national security interest.

It is also a major foreign-policy goal of Netanyahu, who regained power in December at the head of a hard-right government pledging to close ranks with Arab powers that share Israel’s worries about Iran.

But Hanegbi, in a weekend newspaper interview, said normalisation was “a ways off” because, he argued, it would hinge on addressing strains between Riyadh and Washington.

“Since we thought a Saudi-U.S. agreement was the precursor for any (Israeli) peace deal with Riyadh, we assessed that … it would not have a high chance of being realised,” Hanegbi told Israel Hayom.

A source familiar with the matter stated Riyadh wants U.S. support for its civilian nuclear program in exchange for normalisation with Israel – which, for its part, has voiced misgivings over any such quid-pro-quo.

Visiting Saudi Arabia on June 8, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the administration would continue working on normalisation “in the days, weeks and months ahead”.

Israeli Foreign Minister Eli Cohen told Channel 14 TV he saw a “window of opportunity” through March 2024 for Washington to address Saudi demands for normalisation because after that, “the United States will be deep in the (presidential) election”.

World Bank says Iran has become world’s 3rd largest energy subsidizer

Iran Oil Gas

A report by the IRNA cited figures from the World Bank’s newly-released report, which has been compiled based on statistics from 2020, showing that the Iranian government had disbursed $41.72 billion in energy subsidies to its citizens in that year, trailing only behind Russia and Saudi Arabia.

Electricity received the largest share of the subsidy payments provided by the Iranian government in 2020, at some $26.51 billion.

An additional $15.21 billion was allocated to gasoline and other oil products in that year, and $10.44 billion to consumer subsidies for diesel.

In total, five countries; Iran, Russia, Saudi Arabia, India and Venezuela, accounted for nearly half of the world’s total energy subsidies.

They collectively allocated $211 billion in subsidies for fuel consumption to their citizens, equivalent to almost half of the world’s explicit subsidies.

Israeli soldiers kill Palestinian youth in West Bank after Jenin massacre

Israeli Troops in WB

According to Palestinian media, 20-year-old Zakaria Muhammad Zakaria al-Za’oul was seriously injured after Israeli forces’ live bullet hit him in the head during a Monday evening raid on Husan village.

The head of the village council was quoted as saying that the Palestinian youth was hit after the regime’s forces attacked the village, firing live bullets as well as tear gas and sound bombs. After being injured by a headshot, Zakaria was taken to hospital for treatment, where he was later pronounced dead.

Palestinian media also reported that two other young men were wounded by Israeli forces’ bullets during the raid. One of them was hit in the neck and the other in the stomach, while a third youth was arrested, whose identity has not been identified yet.

The new Israeli crime came after the regime’s forces killed at least five Palestinians and wounded dozens of others in heavy clashes with Palestinian resistance fighters during a raid in the occupied West Bank city of Jenin.

Israeli forces were backed by Apache helicopters in their raid on Jenin. The firing of missiles during the raid has been unprecedented in the past two decades.

According to Health Ministry officials, at least 90 Palestinians were wounded with live ammunition, 18 of whom in serious and critical condition, during the attack.

Tensions have been running high in the occupied West Bank over the past year, with the Israeli military conducting violent raids under the pretext of detaining what it calls wanted Palestinians.

As a result of these attacks, nearly 160 Palestinians, including 28 children, have lost their lives and many others have been arrested so far this year.

The regime’s forces have been also conducting near-nightly raids and killings in the northern part of the occupied West Bank, mainly in the cities of Jenin and Nablus, where new groups of Palestinian resistance fighters have been formed.

An official with the Palestine Liberation Organization has condemned the regime’s latest practices as “an open war” waged on Palestinians.

UN expresses deep concern over Israel’s unrelenting settlement expansion

Israeli settlement

The UN Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process Tor Wennesland said on Monday he was “deeply concerned” that Israel had decided to “alter settlement planning procedures that have been in place since 1996, which is expected to expedite settlement expansion.”

“I am also alarmed by the anticipated advancement next week of over 4,000 settlement housing units by Israeli planning authorities,” Wennesland added.

Media reports quoting Israeli sources said on Sunday authorities had tabled plans to approve the construction of 4,560 settler units in various areas of the West Bank. The plans were included on the agenda of an Israeli planning council that meets next week.

“I reiterate that the establishment by Israel of settlements in the Palestinian territory occupied since 1967, including East al-Quds, has no legal validity and constitutes a flagrant violation under international law,” Wennesland stated, urging Israel “to halt and reverse such decisions, which are a major obstacle to the achievement of the two-state solution and a just, lasting and comprehensive peace.”

“At a time of increased violence and fragility on the ground, the prolonged absence of a political process, and concerted international and regional efforts to support constructive dialogue between the parties, such steps only push Israelis and Palestinians further apart and risk destabilizing an already highly tense situation on the ground,” Wennesland added.

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

“The Secretary-General reiterates that settlements are a flagrant violation of international law,” Farhan Haq, deputy spokesperson for the secretary general, said in a statement on Monday.

“The expansion of these illegal settlements is a significant driver of tensions and violence and deepens humanitarian needs,” Haq added.

“It further entrenches Israel’s occupation of Palestinian territory, encroaches on Palestinian land and natural resources, hampers the free movement of the Palestinian population, and undermines the legitimate rights of the Palestinian people to self-determination and sovereignty,” the UN chief stated, according to Haq.

Haq noted that Guterres was “deeply troubled” by Israel’s decision to amend settlement planning procedures that would speed up plans for new settlements in the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, as well as the advancement of more than 4,000 settlement housing units by Israel’s planning authorities.

The Israeli regime has already authorized new settlement outposts and pledged to construct new units in the West Bank.

Since taking office in January, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has approved the promotion of more than 7,000 new settler units. It also amended a law to clear the way for settlers to return to four settlements that had previously been evacuated.

Emboldened by former President Donald Trump of the United States and his all-out support, Israel stepped up its settlement expansion in defiance of United Nations Security Council Resolution 2334, which pronounced settlements in the West Bank and East al-Quds “a flagrant violation under international law.”

Live Update: Russia’s “Special Operation” in Ukraine; Day 482

Kyiv says EU will train 30,000 Ukrainian soldiers

Ukraine’s defence ministry says the European Union will train 30,000 soldiers this year, as a part of the EU Military Assistance Mission for Ukraine (EUMAM).

“In 2022, at the initial stage, the EU Mission purchased the necessary military property, equipment and ammunition to train Ukrainian servicemen,” the ministry said in a statement on the Telegram messaging app.

“In 2023, training events will take place on the territory of the member states of the European Union,” the ministry added.


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 stated 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 continued, 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.


Kremlin confident in China-Russia relationship following Blinken visit

The Kremlin said that a high stakes meeting between US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Chinese leader Xi Jinping will not threaten Beijing’s ties with Moscow.

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov emphasized the importance of fostering a “predictable relationship” between Beijing and Washington, acknowledging China’s “sovereign right” to engage with other nations.

“The level of strategic partnership with China allows us to be sure that building such relations with other countries will never be directed against our country,” Peskov added.

Blinken traveled to Beijing at the weekend in an attempt to smoothen diplomatic ties between the US and China, which have flared in recent years over geopolitical issues including Xi’s stance on the war in Ukraine.

Earlier this year, Western officials raised concerns that China could be considering providing Russia with lethal military assistance, an accusation denied by Beijing.

Following his two-day visit to Beijing, where he met with top Chinese officials including Xi, Blinken stated that both sides recognized the need to stabilize their bilateral relationship.


Russia says Ukraine plans to strike Crimea with HIMARS and Storm Shadow missiles

Russia’s defence minister Sergei Shoigu claimed that Ukraine plans to strike Crimea, with long-range HIMARS artillery and Storm Shadow missiles, according to a report from Russia’s TASS news agency.

“The use of HIMARS and Storm Shadow missiles outside the special operation zone will mean the full involvement of the United States and Great Britain in the conflict,” Shoigu said, adding that Russia will retaliate.


EU to unveil 50 billion aid package to Ukraine

The European Union was set to unveil  an aid package for Ukraine worth 50 billion euros ($55 bln), two officials told Reuters, ahead of a formal announcement.

One of the sources, a senior EU official, said the total included 33 billion euros in macro-financial assistance to help replenish Kyiv’s state coffers as it fights back against Russia.


Russia launches new wave of drone attacks on Kyiv: Ukrainian official

Russia launched “another massive air attack” on Kyiv Tuesday with attack drones, a senior Ukrainian military official said.

Serhiy Popko, the head of Kyiv’s city military administration, said in a statement that the “drones entered the capital in waves” and “from different directions,” prompting the air raid alarm to go off for over three hours.

“About two dozen enemy targets were identified and destroyed by the forces and means of our air defense in the airspace around Kyiv,” Popko added.


Russian shelling damages buildings in Zaporizhzhia city: Ukrainian official

Several buildings were damaged in Zaporizhzhia city and the surrounding suburbs by Russian shelling in the early hours of Tuesday, a local Ukrainian official said.

There were no casualties, according to Yurii Malashko, head of the Zaporizhzhia regional military administration.

Malashko stated that the strikes targeted “communications area, property and equipment belonging to an agricultural and farming enterprise, as well as a popular recreation area.”

These strikes come as Russia appears to be moving personnel and heavy military equipment from other parts of Ukraine to the southern Zaporizhzhia region, according to multiple authorities.


Biden warns of ‘real’ nuclear threat

President Joe Biden has claimed there is a “real” threat that Russia will use tactical nuclear weapons, soon after the Kremlin announced that it had stationed some of its arsenal on the territory of its closest ally.

Speaking to a group of donors in California on Monday, Biden suggested that Russia’s moves in Belarus could be a sign that it is preparing to use its smaller-yield tactical nukes, despite recent comments from the White House acknowledging no “imminent indication” of any such attack.

“When I was out here about two years ago saying I worried about the Colorado river drying up, everybody looked at me like I was crazy,” he said, adding “They looked at me like when I said I worry about [Russian President Vladimir] Putin using tactical nuclear weapons. It’s real.”

The statement came after the president slammed Russia’s deployments as “totally irresponsible” over the weekend. He previously told reporters he felt “extremely negative” about the decision.


Ukraine has not lost any positions, It’s only gained new ones: Zelensky

Ukraine has not lost any of its positions, only gained new ones, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Monday.

“In some areas our warriors are moving forward, in some areas they are defending their positions and resisting the occupiers’ assaults and intensified attacks,” he stated, adding, “We have no lost positions. Only liberated ones.”

Zelensky noted “a significant political decision by the UK regarding sanctions” was made Monday.

He said the UK will “maintain sanctions against Russia until the aggressor compensates for all the damage” done to the Ukrainian people.

“And it is very important that the assets of the aggressor state and all those associated with it […] are used to compensate for the damage caused by the Russian war and terror,” the president added.


Ukraine’s health ministry says water in regions affected by dam collapse remains highly contaminated

Ukraine’s health ministry said water in the regions affected by the Nova Kakhovka dam collapse remains highly contaminated.

“In reservoirs of the Kherson, Odesa and Mykolaiv regions, individual indicators significantly exceed the established hygiene and sanitary standards,” said a health ministry statement released on Monday.

The Odesa region is “under the greatest danger” at the moment, the statement read.

About 40 surface water monitoring points have been set up along the river channel in the flood zone and along the seacoast in Odesa, Mykolaiv, and Kherson regions, according to the statement,. The most dangerous pollutants in the water were salmonella, rotavirus, worm eggs, and E. coli.

The Ministry of Health urged the residents against swimming and fishing in the waters of Odesa, Mykolaiv, and Kherson regions.

Russia and Ukraine continue to blame each other for the dam collapse. Russia cited security concerns for declining the United Nation’s help in the Russian-occupied flooded areas.

Vladimir Saldo, Russian-appointed governor of the Kherson region, said Monday that 8,100 people have been evacuated from the region since the start of the rescue operation — including 583 children and 290 people with low mobility. Saldo also said medical assistance and monetary compensation were being given out in affected areas.

Oleksandr Prokudin, head of the Kherson region military administration in the Ukrainian-controlled areas, said the situation on the left bank of the Kherson region — currently occupied by Russians — was “critical” and said the Russians failed in the evacuation efforts.

“People are trapped in the water. Officially, 11 people died of drowning in Oleshky alone. However, this figure is underestimated, as Russia is trying to hide the fact that civilians died,” he added.

Last week, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky called for international support to help rescue victims of the dam collapse in Russian-occupied areas of Ukraine and accused Russia of not providing “any real help to the people in the flooded areas.”


Ukraine meets two of seven conditions to launch EU membership talks

A European Union report will this week say that Ukraine has met two out of seven conditions to start membership negotiations, two EU sources said, with the bloc’s executive set to highlight progress made despite the ongoing conflict.

In a highly symbolic move, the EU granted Ukraine formal membership candidate status a year ago – four months after Russia waged war.

But the EU set seven conditions – including on judicial reform and curbing endemic corruption – to launch accession negotiations.

One of the officials said the conditions met are related to judicial reform and media law, and added that the focus in the report was on the positives.

“There is progress. The report will be moderately positive,” said the person, who spoke under condition of anonymity, adding, “It’s not about embellishing reality, but recognising progress. There have been prominent anti-corruption cases to name, for example.”


Russia requests UNSC meeting on collective west’s weapons supplies to Ukraine

Russia has requested a meeting of the UN Security Council on the weapons supplies by the collective West to Ukraine, First Deputy Permanent Representative to the United Nations Dmitriy Polyanskiy stated on Monday.

“Today, we requested a meeting over the supplies of Western weapons to Ukraine and the consequences to the diplomatic efforts,” Polyanskiy wrote on his Telegram channel.

The Russian diplomat added there will be interesting witnesses on the issue during the meeting.


‘Hot battles continue’ in the east: Ukraine

Ukrainian Deputy Defence Minister Hanna Maliar stated that the situation in the east of the country is “difficult” as “hot battles continue”.

“The enemy has raised its forces and is conducting an active offensive in the Lyman and Kupiansk directions, trying to seize the initiative from us. High activity of enemy shelling is recorded. Hot battles continue,” Maliar said on Telegram.

“The enemy does not abandon his plans to reach the borders of [the] Donetsk and Luhansk regions. Currently, this is the enemy’s main offensive line,” she added.

Earlier on Monday, Maliar claimed Ukraine had recaptured eight settlements since Kyiv began its counteroffensive two weeks ago.


NATO arsenals ‘empty’: Secretary General

NATO needs a “more robust” industry in order to refill the stocks of weaponry and ammunition emptied by a year of supplying Kiev, the bloc’s Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said on Monday, at an industrial conference in Germany.

The US-led military bloc “must continue to support Ukraine” as it has done since 2014, Stoltenberg insisted at the Day of Industry in Berlin, hosted by the Federation of German Industries (BDI).

“We also need a more robust defense industry,” the secretary general argued, adding, “Our weapons and ammunition stocks are depleted and need to be replenished. Not just in Germany, but in many countries across NATO.”

He stated that he met with representatives of the military industry last week and discussed how best to ramp up production and streamline supply chains, adding that this was “key to sustain our support for Ukraine”.

Stoltenberg also repeated his argument that only a Ukrainian victory on the battlefield can result in a just and lasting peace. Kiev’s forces had attempted a large-scale offensive on the Southern front over the past week, with heavy losses in manpower, as well as in weaponry provided by the West.

The US and its allies have sent over $100 billion worth of weapons, equipment and ammunition to Kiev in the last year, after the conflict escalated. They insist this does not actually make them a party to the hostilities with Russia.

Explosive device discovered in Iran’ s Hashtgerd, 4 foreigners arrested

Iran Police

Fars News Agency said the explosive device was found near high voltage electricity posts and a gas reduction station.

It added that four foreign nationals were arrested in this connection.

There are no further details available.

Iran nuclear chief says Tehran managed to expand all radioactive generating systems despite bans

Mohammad Eslami

Mohamamd Eslami was speaking at a meeting with the members of the academic board of the Khajeh Nasir Industrial University in Tehran on Monday.

He noted that despite the US-led sanctions on Iran, the AEOI and the Islamic Republic’s nuclear industry have made great achievements.

Eslami also described the development of managerial knowledge and skills as well as the strengthening of engineering capacity as missing links in Iran, where university graduates mostly lack these skills.

The director of the AEOI added that the problem should be resolved so that the university graduates can be attracted to the field.

Qatar and UAE resume diplomatic relations after six years

Qatar UAE

The UAE Foreign Ministry said the move was done based on “the keenness of the two countries to strengthen bilateral relations” and the al-Ula Agreement, which was signed in Saudi Arabia in 2021 by the leaders of the Persian Gulf Cooperation Council to ease years of tensions.

Qatar, meanwhile, said its foreign minister and prime minister, Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani, spoke to his Emirati counterpart Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed on Monday as the two states reopened their diplomatic missions. Qatar’s consulate in Dubai is also reopening.

In 2017, the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Bahrain cut all ties with Qatar and enforced a stringent boycott following disagreements over foreign policy. The boycotting states accused Doha of sponsoring terrorism, a charge the Qataris denied.

In recent years, however, the Middle East has witnessed a wide regional reconciliation process, with Saudi Arabia and Egypt resuming relations with Qatar in 2021.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who is a close ally of the Qatari government, similarly reconciled with the UAE and Saudi Arabia in recent years. Ankara been opposed to the UAE over several crises across the Middle East and North Africa, including in Libya, where the two sides backed different warring parties.

Meanwhile relations between Turkey and Saudi Arabia hit a nadir after journalist Jamal Khashoggi was killed by Saudi agents in Istanbul in 2018, an operation Ankara linked to the government of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

However, last year, Erdogan met the crown prince in the Saudi city of Jeddah, further easing tensions.

One accusation levelled at Qatar in 2017 by its Persian Gulf detractors was that Doha was too close to Iran. In April, Saudi Arabia and Iran signed a landmark agreement in Beijing, and have reopened embassies and consulates in their respective countries.

Iran tourism: Gorgeous natural scenery of Asalem-Khalkhal Road

This road is a high region with matchless views consisting of peaks, Zagros slopes and Hyrcanian forests of the city of Talesh in Gilan Province.

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