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Erdogan accuses Turkish opposition of seeking to divide country ahead of election

Erdogan

Erdogan made the remarks at a massive election rally in the southern Turkish province of Antalya on Tuesday, where thousands of supporters of the country’s ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) gathered.

“They just want to push Turkey into a pit from which it will not be able to recover for at least half a century, with its politics, economy, defense, diplomacy, and plunge it into a swamp,” Erdogan said.

He added this is not the first time that Turkey is exposed to ideological infighting, sectarian and ethnic strife, implying that foreign powers are endorsing the opposition bloc.

“They want to divide the country into camps again by deepening the separation of origin and sect, and turn brother against brother,” Erdogan said, adding, “They want to hand over the country to terrorist groups controlled by imperialists.”

“In short, their problem is not with us, but with Turkey, the Turkish nation, and Turkey’s gains,” he maintained.

The six-party opposition bloc, led by presidential candidate and Republican People’s Party (CHP) Chair Kemal Kılıcdaroglu, aims to reverse many of Erdogan’s policies on foreign affairs, economy, and civil rights.

The bloc has already unveiled plans to assign heads of six parties as vice presidents of Kemal Kilicdaroglu if they win the elections.

On Sunday, Erdogan accused Kilicdaroglu, his main rival, of cooperating with the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), as he visited the Teknofest aviation and space fair in Istanbul.

The PKK – designated as a terrorist group by Turkey, the United States, and the European Union – has been waging a decades-long armed insurgency against Ankara for greater autonomy for the Kurdish minority in the Turkish southeast.

Meanwhile, Kilicdaroglu has claimed that he will win in the first round of the upcoming presidential and general elections on May 14 by winning 60% of the votes.

“I will win in the first round with 60% of the votes. And I will be elected as the 13th president of (Turkey) on May 14. This will not extend to the second round and will end in the first round,” he said during an interview with Turkish daily newspaper, Sozcu.

Kilicdaroglu also claimed that the coalition will also win a majority in parliament, and promised to fight corruption and remove corrupt officials.

Turkey is to hold presidential and parliamentary elections on 14 May, a month ahead of schedule.

Erdogan, 69, has ruled Turkey since 2003, first as prime minister and later as president. He is facing criticisms over Turkey’s double-digit inflation and his government’s response to February’s devastating earthquake.

Kilicdaroglu has led Turkey’s main opposition party, the People’s Republic Party (CHP), for 13 years.

The 74-year-old former civil servant has promised to focus on reviving Turkey’s ailing economy and repairing democracy, saying that the nation “cannot afford to lose another five years” to Erdogan.

Most opinion polls have given Kilicdaroglu a slight lead.

Any candidate that can secure more than half the presidential vote on 14 May is the outright winner. Failing that, the race goes to a run-off two weeks later.

Many believe the May 14 elections will be intense, as the winner will not only rule Turkey but will also decide the future of the country for many years to come, including its foreign policy and economic strategy.

Report: Naval forces of Iran’s IRGC seize oil tanker in Hormuz Strait

IRGC Boat Persian Gulf

Fars News Agency released the report, without providing further details.

The IRGC has yet to comment on the report.

Tasnim News Agency said the seized tanker had “apparently” violated maritime law.

Meanwhile, the US Navy said in a statement the IRGC seized a Panama-flagged ship.
“A dozen IRGCN fast-attack craft swarmed the vessel in the middle of the strait,” a statement said, referring to the IRGC Navy.

The tanker, Niovi, was sailing from Dubai towards Fujairah, another port in the United Arab Emirates, when it was stopped by Iranian forces, it said.

Last week, the Iranian Navy seized a Marshall Islands-flagged oil tanker in the Sea of Oman and directed it toward Iran’s territorial waters after the tanker hit an Iranian vessel and tried to flee in violation of maritime regulations.

Iranian president arrives in Syria on key visit

President Ebrahim Raisi

Raisi was invited to Damascus, the Syrian capital, by Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. His plane touched down in the Damascus airport on Wednesday, and he was welcomed on the tarmac by Syrian Economy Minister Mohammad Samer al-Khalil.

Assad will welcome Raisi during an official ceremony shortly. Delegations from the two countries will then start meetings presided over by the two.

The two sides plan to discuss means of enhancing bilateral ties, and political and economic agreements are also planned to be signed.

Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian and Defense Minister Mohammadreza Ashtiani are among the officials accompanying Raisi on the trip.

Before his trip, Raisi said that the Syrian government had to be strengthened, following a civil war that started in 2011.

He said it had now been proven that Iran’s stance of resistance worked.

The Iranian president said everyone in the region now knew that Iran was “a solid column” that could be relied on.

Iran has supported Assad’s government in the course of the civil war.

Raisi said Iran and Syria were now resolved to enhance their relations in the political, economic, and security areas.

“We are certain that a growth in the ties between Tehran and Damascus will be in the interest of the two nations and the region,” he said.

UN chief says ‘not right time’ to engage with Taliban

António Guterres

“The meeting was about developing a common international approach, not about recognition of the de facto Taliban authorities,” Guterres told reporters at a press conference on Tuesday in Doha, adding he would hold similar meetings in the future.

Representatives of some 20 countries participated in the closed-door conference aimed at coordinating with international players on issues facing Afghanistan such as humanitarian crisis, women’s rights and counterterrorism.

Guterres condemned the Taliban rulers’ attacks on women’s rights, including the ban on school and university education.

“Let me be crystal clear, we will never be silent in the face of unprecedented systemic attacks on women’s and girls’ rights. We’ll always speak out when millions of women and girls are being silenced and erased from sight,” he stated.

Since the Taliban took over in September 2021 in a swift and stunning victory, they have imposed strict conditions on women in the country that include stopping women from attending university and closing girls’ high schools.

The United States has imposed heavy sanctions on the country since Kabul fell to the Taliban, including commercial restrictions and freezing its assets, which the group says are making the situation for Afghans more dire.

The UN chief also noted that the international community was “worried” about the stability of Afghanistan under the Taliban, which took over the country in the wake of the withdrawal of US forces after 20 years of war.

“They relate to the persistent presence of terrorist organisations, a risk for the country, the region and further,” he continued, referring to the security threat posed by the ISIL (ISIS or Daesh) Afghan affiliate Islamic State in Khorasan Province (ISKP).

Taliban Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi, who is under a UN travel ban, has been given exemptions to travel to Islamabad for the scheduled meeting.

But the Taliban has criticised the two-day meeting, saying its exclusion was “discriminatory and unjustified”. Suhail Shaheen, the Taliban’s ambassador-designate to the UN, earlier told Al Jazeera that issues facing his country can be solved only through the participation of the Taliban authorities – the main party to the issue – in the UN meeting.

Shaheen on Sunday met diplomats from the United Kingdom and China in Doha.

Former US envoy to Afghanistan Zalmay Khalilzad told Al Jazeera on Monday that Guterres had opted not to extend the invitation to the Taliban due to “opposition from Western countries”.

A coalition of Afghan women’s groups on Sunday wrote an open letter to Guterres saying they would feel “outraged” if any country were to consider formal ties with the Taliban, citing the issues of women’s rights in the country.

The Taliban administration remains diplomatically isolated as no country has recognised it and many of its senior leaders remain under international sanctions.

When questioned by Al Jazeera about the circumstances under which he will be willing to meet with the Taliban, the UN chief said currently it was not the right moment to do so.

“When it is the right moment to do so, I will obviously not refuse that possibility,” he added.

Guterres stated Afghanistan is among the largest humanitarian crises in the world today, and vowed to stay in the country but said that UN funding was drying up.

“Ninety-seven percent of the people live in poverty,” he told reporters, adding, “Humanitarian aid is a fragile lifeline for millions of Afghans. The United Nations will not waver in our commitment to support the people of Afghanistan.”

President Raisi says Israel unable to defend itself against Iran

Ebrahim Raisi

“The Zionist regime’s threats amount to futile rhetoric, which no one in the world believes in. If the Zionist enemy took the slightest of actions against us, our first [counter]action would equal its (the Israeli regime’s) destruction,” the Iranian president told Lebanon’s al-Mayadeen television network in an interview on Tuesday.

“The Islamic Republic’s power is not a secret to anyone in the region. The Zionist regime’s first [potential] act of folly [against Iran] would also be its last,” Raisi reasserted.

“The Zionist regime would not be able to survive [even] the initial moments of Iran’s response,” he noted, saying the regime, itself, knew well that it was incapable of confronting the Islamic Republic.

The chief executive said Iran had reached the stage of self-sufficiency in the military sphere, describing the Islamic Republic as a “talked-about country” in the field of the defense industry.

Since the victory of the Islamic Revolution, Iran’s enemies have stopped short of committing any mistake against the country, not because they do not seek to take such action, but because they do not have the required power to do so, he stated.

Raisi likewise discredited the Israeli regime’s threats against the regional resistance front, saying the regime was incapable of meeting even its own “internal security” demands, not to mention taking on the resistance.

“The current circumstances are in favor of the resistance and against the Zionist regime,” he continued, adding, “The Zionist regime’s threats are vain and hollow. This regime is today incapable of confronting the youths of the Palestinian resistance and the region.”

Iran, he, meanwhile, affirmed, has not and will not regret supporting the regional resistance front in the face of the occupying regime’s aggression.

Blast hits IRGC weapons depot in Iran’s Semnan, kills two members

IRGC

In a statement, the IRGC branch in the province’s Damghan County said three others were also wounded in the blast, which happened during the storing of defective ammunition at the weapons depot.

It identified the martyrs as Jamal Shabestani and Ali Alihosseini.

The statement said those wounded are receiving treatment at a hospital, without providing further details.

Palestinian groups, Israel agree to Gaza ceasefire

Khader Adnan

The “reciprocal and simultaneous” ceasefire went into effect at 3:30 am (00:30 GMT) and was brought about with efforts from Egyptian, Qatari and United Nations officials, two sources told the Reuters news agency on Wednesday.

Islamic Jihad spokesman Tareq Selmi said fighting had ended by dawn on Wednesday.

Hamas had engaged in talks with Egyptian, Qatari and UN officials to end Israeli “aggression on Gaza”, the group announced in a statement earlier on Wednesday.

Hamas said its leader, Ismail Haniyeh, held talks with officials from both countries and the UN to end Israel’s attacks, which saw Israeli fighter jets and tanks attack targets in Gaza late on Tuesday, and Palestinian fighters fire rockets into Israel, following the death of Adnan after he spent 87 days on hunger strike in an Israeli jail.

A Palestinian source told Al Jazeera Arabic that the ceasefire was the result of several parties entering talks to prevent Israel’s attack on Gaza from escalating. Hamas also praised the performance of the Palestinian armed groups that had jointly responded to Adnan’s death, Al Jazeera Arabic reported.

A joint statement by factions in Gaza on Tuesday, including Hamas and Islamic Jihad, said the rocket fire was an “initial response” to Adnan’s death.

The Israeli military announced at least 30 rockets were fired from Gaza. Two landed in the small Israeli city of Sderot just east of Gaza. Israel’s Magen David Adom emergency service said three people were wounded by shrapnel in the Sderot area.

Israeli air raids targeted several sites in Gaza, which with a population of more than 2 million people is one of the most densely-populated areas in the world, according to security sources and Palestinian witnesses.

Issam Adwan, a journalist and resident of Gaza, told Al Jazeera he had heard several explosions near his home and refuted claims by Israeli forces that they only targeted military sites and not civilians.

“We have lived and experienced a significant increase… by Israeli warplanes targeting densely-populated areas even with those claims of Israeli authorities targeting [only] Hamas military sites – like they usually claim,” Adwan added.

European Union foreign policy chief Josep Borrell urged Israel earlier on Tuesday to halt “unilateral measures” that could raise tensions further “and jeopardise the very possibility of a future just and sustainable peace based on the two-state solution”, the EU’s foreign service said after Borrell met with Israeli Foreign Minister Eli Cohen in Brussels.

In the West Bank city of Hebron, shops observed a general strike to mourn Adnan’s death. Some protesters burned tires and hurled stones at Israeli soldiers who fired tear gas and rubber bullets at them. There were no reports of injuries.

Adnan was arrested 12 times and spent about eight years in Israeli prisons, most of it under so-called “administrative detention” in which Israeli authorities can hold Palestinians in prison for renewable six-month intervals without trial or charges.

Since 2011, Adnan had conducted at least three hunger strikes to protest his detention without charges from Israeli forces.

Adnan’s lawyer, Jamil Al-Khatib, and a doctor with a human rights group who recently met Adnan in prison accused Israeli authorities of withholding medical care.

“We demanded he be moved into a civilian hospital where he could be properly monitored. Unfortunately, such a demand was met by intransigence and rejection,” Al-Khatib told Reuters.

Adnan, 45, was a baker and a father of nine from Jenin in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

Jonathan Kuttab, an international human rights lawyer and co-founder of the Palestinian rights group Al-Haq, stated Adnan was an example of a man whose “will was not broken and could not be broken” by Israeli forces.

“He had no means of resisting them other than his non-violent reaction, which is ‘I refuse to eat until you kill me’,” Kuttab told Al Jazeera, adding, “The Israelis are trying to keep several million Palestinians under their control and they are trying to break their will; they’re trying to break their determination.”

Adnan was “under administrative detention. Even under the apartheid regime in South Africa they didn’t have such a thing as administrative detention”, he continued.

Russia’s “Special Operation” in Ukraine; Day 434: Zelensky says Ukraine to launch counteroffensive against Russia ‘soon’

Russia Ukraine War

White House announced new arms package for Ukraine

The White House has announced a new shipment of heavy artillery and rocket ammunition for Ukraine ahead of its planned offensive.

Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre announced “a new package of security assistance to help Ukraine continue to defend itself”.

This includes ammunition for the highly accurate US-made HIMARS multiple rocket systems, “as well as additional howitzer, artillery and mortar rounds and anti-armor capabilities,” she said.

Jean-Pierre cited “extensive work by the US government over the past few months to fulfill Ukraine’s request ahead of its planned counter-offensive”.


Russia’s Medvedev calls for ‘elimination’ of Ukraine’s Zelensky

Russia’s former President Dmitry Medvedev has called for the “physical elimination” of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky after Moscow accused Kyiv of a drone attack on the Kremlin.

“After today’s terrorist attack, there are no options left aside the physical elimination of Zelensky and his cabal,” Medvedev stated.


Zelensky denies allegedly attacking Kremlin

President Volodymyr Zelensky denies attacking the Kremlin or Russian President Vladimir Putin.

“We don’t attack Putin, or Moscow, we fight on our territory,” Zelensky told a news conference in Helsinki.

Earlier on Wednesday, Russia accused Ukraine of a failed attempt to assassinate Putin in a drone attack on the Kremlin.


Nordic states back Ukraine’s NATO and EU aspirations

The Nordic countries support Ukraine’s efforts to join the EU and NATO.

“The Nordic countries will continue their political, financial, humanitarian and military support for as long as it takes,” the leaders of Finland, Sweden, Norway, Denmark and Iceland said in a joint statement with President Volodymyr Zelensky.


US secretary of state says he “can’t in any way validate” reports of alleged Kremlin drone attack

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said he had seen reports from Moscow of an alleged drone attack by Ukraine on the Kremlin, but he “can’t in any way validate them.”

“We simply don’t know,” Blinken said Wednesday at a Washington Post Live event.

“I would take anything coming out of the Kremlin with a very large shaker of salt,” he added.

“We’ll see what the facts are. And it’s really hard to comment or speculate on this without really knowing what the facts are,” Blinken continued.

The White House has also said it was aware of reports that Russia accused Ukraine of attacking the Kremlin with drones but could not authenticate or confirm the allegations.

“We are aware of the reports but are unable to confirm the … authenticity of them at this time,” White House spokesperson Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters.

Ukraine has denied any knowledge of the alleged drone attack in Moscow.


Sixteen people killed in strike in Kherson: Ukraine

The Ukrainian prosecutor’s office stated that 16 people were killed in a Russian attack on Ukraine’s Kherson region.

It added that 12 of those were killed in the city of Kherson, where a further 22 people were wounded.

Ukrainian officials said Russian forces attacked a superstore and a railway station on Wednesday morning.


EU countries finalise deal to buy ammo for Kyiv

After weeks of disputes between countries, European Union countries finalised a scheme to jointly buy ammunition for Ukraine.

Sweden, the current holder of the EU’s rotating presidency, said the ambassadors approved the decision “to support the Ukrainian Armed Forces through 1 billion euros ($1.10 billion) for joint procurement of ammunition and missiles”.

Details of the compromise were not immediately available.

The joint procurement scheme is part of a broader EU drive to get one million artillery shells and missiles to Ukraine over the next 12 months after Kyiv said it urgently needs such munitions to fight Russia’s invading forces.


Russian official urges no negotiations with Zelensky

The speaker of Russia’s parliament, Vyacheslav Volodin, demanded using “weapons capable of stopping and destroying the Kyiv terrorist regime” in response to an alleged drone attack on the Kremlin on Wednesday.

In a statement posted on Telegram, Volodin said that Russia should not negotiate with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky after the attack, which Kyiv denied.


Russia may sabotage undersea cables: NATO

NATO’s intelligence chief David Cattler said there is a heightened risk Russia may sabotage undersea cables to punish Western nations for supporting Ukraine.

“There are heightened concerns that Russia may target undersea cables and other critical infrastructure in an effort to disrupt western life to gain leverage against those nations that are providing security to Ukraine,” Cattler told reporters.

“The Russians are more active than we have seen them in years in this domain,” he added.


‘Another threat from Kremlin’: Zelensky’s spokeswoman

Spokesperson to President Volodymyr Zelensky, Luliia Mendel, commented on the Kremlin’s allegation of an attempted drone attack on the Kremlin.

On Twitter, Mendel said, “Another threat from the Kremlin. At the beginning of the war, it made several attempts to assassinate Volodymyr Zelensky and kept silent about this.”

“How much trust do we have in Russian information about alleged Ukrainian drone attacks on the Kremlin? After years of lies and provocations?” she asked.

The Kremlin also announced that the attempt was aimed at harming Russian President Vladimir Putin.


Ukraine denies targeting Putin in alleged Kremlin drone strike and accuses Moscow of a “trick”

Ukraine says it has no knowledge of an attempted drone strike on the Kremlin in Moscow, adding that it does not use its means to attack other countries.

“We do not have information on so called night attacks on Kremlin,” the spokesperson for Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, Serhiy Nykyforov, told CNN on Wednesday, when asked about Moscow’s claim that it had foiled a Kyiv-ordered drone strike in the Russian capital.

“As President Zelensky has stated numerous times before, Ukraine uses all means at its disposal to free its own territory, not to attack others,” Nykyforov added.

Russia referred to the incident as an “act of terrorism,” blaming Ukraine, an accusation Nykyforov said was better directed at Moscow.

“A terror attack is destroyed blocks of residential buildings in Dnipro and Uman, or a missile at a line at Kramatorsk rail station and many other tragedies,” he continued, adding, “What happened in Moscow is obviously about escalating the mood on the eve of May 9.”

May 9 marks Victory Day, which celebrates the defeat of Nazi Germany in 1945.

“It’s a trick to be expected from our opponents,” Zelensky’s spokesperson said.

Ukrainian presidential adviser Mykhailo Podolyak also denied Kyiv had any involvement and said it makes no sense for Ukraine to have carried out the the alleged strike.

“First of all, it absolutely does not solve any military goals. And it is very unhelpful in the context of preparing for our offensive actions. And it definitely does not change anything at a battlefield,” he stated, adding, “This would allow Russia to justify mass strikes on Ukrainian cities, civilians and infrastructure facilities. Why would we need that? What’s the logic?”

“I think it is absolutely obvious that simultaneous ‘announcement of an attack on Kremlin’ and detention of so-called Ukrainian saboteurs in Crimea on a different charge clearly signals Russia is preparing a large-scale terrorist provocation in the coming days,” he continued, providing no evidence for his statement.

Podolyak also said Moscow’s claims were an attempt at controlling the narrative ahead of a much-anticipated Ukrainian counteroffensive.

“Russia without a doubt is very afraid of Ukraine starting an offensive on the front line and is trying to seize the initiative, distract the attention and create distractions of a catastrophic nature,” he noted, adding, “So, Russian statements on such staged operations need to be taken as an attempt to create pretext for a large-scale terrorist attack in Ukraine.”


Eight people dead after strike in Kherson: Ukraine

Eight people were killed in an attack on a hypermarket and a railway station in Kherson, Ukrainian officials said.

Three were killed in an artillery strike as people shopped in the hypermarket, the Ukrainian prosecutor’s office announced.

Local officials stated one person was also killed when the city railway station was bombarded, three energy workers were killed while carrying out repairs in a nearby village and a man was killed in a residential building in another settlement.

“When the enemy can achieve nothing on the battlefield, its strikes at peaceful cities,” Ukrainian military spokesperson Serhii Cherevatyi said.


Ukraine’s offensive has already begun: Wagner boss

The head of Russia’s Wagner Group says Ukraine’s counteroffensive has already begun, with his witnessing heightened activity along the frontline.

In a statement published by his press service on Telegram, Yevgeny Prigozhin said that the “active phase” of the counteroffensive would begin in the coming days.


Ukraine will launch offensive ‘soon’: Zelensky

President Volodymyr Zelensky says Ukraine will launch a counteroffensive against Russian forces soon and that he was sure Kyiv would be supplied with modern warplanes.

Speaking at a news conference in Finland, NATO’s newest member, Zelensky, also said that one of the reasons he came to Helsinki was that Kyiv wanted to become a member of the military alliance.

“I believe that this year will be decisive for us, for Europe, for Ukraine, decisive for victory,” he told reporters during a joint press conference with his Finnish counterpart Sauli Niinisto.

While Ukraine has specifically asked for advanced fighter jets, Niinisto said that due to Finland’s geographical location — with its long border to Russia — it “couldn’t give up” its existing jets before the delivery of new ones, scheduled for 2025 onward.

But Zelensky stated he was “sure we’ll have aircrafts” and pointed out that so far Ukraine has first had to prove itself on the battlefield before getting more advanced military support.

“We will conduct offensive actions, and after that we will receive aircrafts,” he added.


Russia claims Ukraine targeted Putin in an attempted drone attack on Kremlin

Moscow alleges Ukraine flew two drones toward the Kremlin last night in what it claims was an attempt to kill President Vladimir Putin.

The Russian president was not in the building at the time, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said. Ukraine has not commented on the claims.

The Kremlin added the attack was foiled.

“No one was injured as a result of their fall and scattering of fragments,” state media RIA Novosti reported.

The Kremlin Press Service called the drone attack an “attempt on the president’s life” and a “terrorist act.”

“Russia reserves the right to take retaliatory measures where and when it sees fit,” it added.


Zelensky to travel to Berlin on May 13

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is expected to travel to Berlin on May 13, the German newspaper Tagesspiegel report.

According to the report, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz will receive the Ukrainian president with military honours on May 14 before flying to Aachen later in the day to receive the 2023 Charlemagne Prize.

The prize was created in 1950 after the Second World War and is given to those whose exceptional work is performed in the service of European unity.


3 killed and 5 wounded in supermarket attack in Ukrainian city of Kherson

The Ukrainian Ministry of Internal Affairs has announced that three people have lost their lives, and a further five were injured as a result of a Russian missile strike on a supermarket in the city of Kherson.

Writing on Telegram, the Ministry said the rocket hit at 11 a.m. local time (4 a.m. ET) in the “only working hypermarket” in the city.

The injured include employees and shoppers.


Zelensky travels to Finland and will attend a Nordic-Ukrainian Summit

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky will pay an official visit to Finland on Wednesday, Finnish President Sauli Niinisto announced.

In a press release, Niinisto said Zelensky will travel to Helsinki for “official discussions” that will include “Ukraine’s defence struggle and Finland’s support for Ukraine.”

The statement also went on to say that a Nordic-Ukrainian summit will be held between the prime ministers of Sweden, Norway, Finland, Denmark and Iceland.

The summit, Niinisto statement added, would “discuss the situation of Russia’s war of aggression in Ukraine, the Nordic countries’ continued support for Ukraine, the developments in Ukraine’s relationship with EU and NATO and Ukraine’s initiative for a just peace.”

Sergiy Nikoforov, Zelensky’s spokesperson, confirmed on Facebook that the president is traveling to Finland on Wednesday.

Finland ascended to NATO membership in April. The development marked a major shift in the security landscape in northeastern Europe that added some 1,300 kilometers (830 miles) to the alliance’s frontier with Russia.


Grain initiative extension talks to start on Friday in Istanbul: Turkish official

The Deputy Defense Minister of Turkey, Russia and Ukraine will meet in the Turkish capital on May 5 for talks about the extension to the grain deal, which expires on May 18.

Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi Akar, said in a statement on Wednesday, “during the meeting, some issues, especially the grain initiative, will be discussed.

“It is our hope that the grain deal will continue as it is. Because this agreement is very important for regional peace and stability and for countries in need. In this context, we can say that the parties are willing to extend the deadline,” he added.

“Our wish is to extend this initiative without any problems,” he continued.

Russian state media outlet RIA Novosti quoted an unnamed Russian Foreign Ministry official as saying a deal “is yet to be agreed” upon.

Ukraine has not commented on the meeting proposal.

Last month, Russia threatened to scrap the Black Sea grain deal, viewed as critical for solving the world hunger crisis, if the Group of Seven nations bans exports to the country.


Russia launches new wave of drone attacks across Ukraine

Russia on Wednesday launched another wave of drone attacks against multiple regions of Ukraine, including the capital, Ukrainian authorities said.

Ukraine’s Air Force Command said 21 of 26 drones fired by Russia had been destroyed, with no casualties or extensive damage reported yet.

The capital was hit with drones on Wednesday for a third time in six days, according to Serhii Popko, head of the Kyiv city military administration

“The enemy’s tactics also remain usual and unchanged — with the onset of darkness, the terrorist country launched its barrage munitions from different directions,” Popko stated.

Another drone attack set fire to a building in the Dnipropetrovsk region, according to regional military chief Serhiy Lysak. He added the Ukrainian air force had shot down seven drones over Dnipropetrovsk and emergency services were working to determine the impact of the attack.

Three drone strikes hit the Kirovohrad region, setting an oil depot on fire.


Russia arrests seven Ukrainian intelligence agents: State media

Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) says seven people connected with Ukrainian intelligence services have been detained in Crimea, state-owned news agency TASS reported.

In a statement, FSB said attacks against Russian-backed Crimea Governor Sergey Aksyonov and other officials had been thwarted.

“The FSB has broken up the activities of an agent network of Ukrainian military intelligence planning to carry out major sabotage and terrorist attacks in Crimea,” the security service was quoted as saying.

Crimea has come under repeated attacks since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. Kyiv has repeatedly declared its intention to retake the Crimean Peninsula, which Russia illegally annexed in 2014 to an international outcry.


Fuel depot on fire near crucial Crimea bridge

A fuel storage facility is ablaze near a critical bridge linking Russia’s mainland with Crimea though the cause of the fire is unclear.

The incident comes days after Moscow blamed Ukraine for a drone strike that set fire to an oil depot on Crimea’s Sevastopol city. Flames and black smoke billowed over what appeared to be large tanks emblazoned with red warnings of “Flammable” in videos posted on Russian social media.

“The fire has been classified as the highest rank of difficulty,” Veniamin Kondratyev, governor of the Krasnodar region across the Sea of Azov from Ukraine, said on the Telegram messaging app

No casualties were reported.

Kondratyev added the blaze broke out in the village of Volna. The hamlet is close to the Crimean bridge over the Kerch Strait, a major artery for Russian forces, as it links the mainland to the Crimean peninsula that was annexed in 2014 from Ukraine.


US sending $300 million in new arms aid to Ukraine including air-launched rockets

The United States is sending a $300 military aid package to Ukraine, including, for the first time, short-range air-launched rockets, deepening its involvement in the war in defiance of repeated warnings by Russia.

Two US officials said on Tuesday the package includes Hydra 70 rockets, which are unguided projectiles fired from aircraft, Reuters reported.

It also includes artillery rounds, 155-mm Howitzer cannons, anti-tank missiles and mortars as Ukrainian officials say they are planning a counteroffensive.

The Pentagon has also sent at least 20 High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems (HIMARS) to Ukraine. HIMARS systems, which are made by Lockheed Martin, are intended to be a “core component of Ukraine’s fighting force in the future,” according to a senior US defense official told reporters.

The funds for the new military shipment to Ukraine were provided once more by using the Presidential Drawdown Authority, or PDA, by which the President of the United States can legally authorize the shipment of military equipment and services from US stocks without gaining congressional approval in response to an emergency.

The package brings the total amount of US military aid to about $36 billion dollars.


China should push Russia to end war in Ukraine: US envoy

The United States wants to see China press Russia to end its war in Ukraine, US Ambassador to China Nicholas Burns stated Tuesday.

“What we need to see from China is to push Russia to withdraw its troops and so that Ukraine can have all of its territory back and can be fully sovereign again in all aspects of that word,” Burns said at an event at the foreign affairs think tank Stimson Center, which he attended virtually.

“It’d be helpful if China pushed Russia to cease bombing of Ukrainian schools, and Ukrainian hospitals, and Ukrainian apartment buildings. We’ve seen a tremendous loss of life just in the last month or two under this vicious Russian aerial assault and drone attacks on Ukrainian civilians,” he continued, adding, “So I think that’s what we would like and I’m sure that’s what the European countries would like, that’s what Ukraine wants from China.”

Burns said the conversation between Chinese President Xi Jinping and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky was “a good first step,” but it’s unclear if any action will follow it.

“We would like to see China be much more tough-minded in its advice to the Russians. We’d like to see action to end the war as quickly as possible in terms, of course, that the Ukrainian government can accept,” he noted.

Burns added that the US has been watching the issue of China potentially providing lethal aid to Russia “very carefully now for many months.”

“We have not seen evidence that the Chinese are doing that, but we continue to watch it,” he continued.

Beijing has claimed neutrality on the war in Ukraine, but has not condemned Russia’s invasion and instead bolstered its economic and diplomatic ties with Moscow over the past year.


Russian commissioner for children’s rights, wanted by ICC, says she is “not ashamed of anything”

A senior Russian official wanted by the International Criminal Court said that she is “not ashamed of anything” she has done in an alleged scheme to illegally deport Ukrainian children to Russia in an interview with Vice News.

Maria Lvova-Belova, the Russian commissioner for children’s rights, is being sought — along with Russian President Vladimir Putin — for the alleged “unlawful deportation and transfer of children” from occupied areas of Ukraine to Russia. An ICC arrest warrant for Putin and Lvova-Belova was issued in March.

During the interview, when asked if she views herself as a war criminal, she laughed and said, “It’s funny. I am a mother. That says it all. A war criminal? What are you talking about?”

According to American and European governments and independent investigators, Lvova-Belova has overseen an organized effort to forcibly deport Ukrainian children to Russia. Those reports allege many of those minors undergo political reeducation and are given to Russian families for adoption.

Lvova-Belova stated she herself is fostering a 16-year-old Ukrainian boy named Philip, who is from Mariupol.

“When it came to Philip, my heart called me to him. … We talked to him and my heart fluttered, and I realized that he was my child,” she added, claiming that despite some adapting, “We love each other madly. That is a fact.”

Lvova-Belova claimed that under Geneva conventions, children can be moved “from a zone that threatens their lives.” When challenged that the conventions say they should be moved to third countries, she said the self-declared Donetsk People’s Republic and Luhansk People’s Republic are evidence of third countries.

They “were not part of Ukraine; they were recognized as independent republics by our country,” she noted.

The separatist republics are now claimed by Moscow to be part of Russian territory, despite broad international condemnation of the annexation attempt.

Lvova-Belova claimed that there are no evacuation corridors for adults and children in Bakhmut, the eastern city that has been besieged for months by Russian forces.

“My staff and I just recently evacuated families with children from there. We were saving children. We took them to places where they can survive and be safe,” she claimed.

A number of international news organizations have curtailed their work inside the Russian Federation following the arrest of Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich in late March on what the US government, the WSJ and other media outlets have condemned as bogus espionage charges. Vice News said in the article that their journalists observed Lvova-Belova’s team filming them with mobile phones in the days preceding the interview.


Kremlin says it is not aware of Pope’s peace mission for Ukraine

The Kremlin said it knew nothing about a Vatican peace mission for Ukraine.

Pope Francis stated on Sunday that the Vatican was involved in discreet efforts to try to end the conflict between Russia and Ukraine, and that it was also ready to help repatriate Ukrainian children taken to Russia or Russian-occupied land.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters on Tuesday that Moscow had no information about the initiative.

Israel hits Gaza, Palestinian missiles launched in response

Palestinian armed groups fired rockets towards Israel on Tuesday following the death earlier in the day of Adnan, a Palestinian prisoner who was on hunger strike in an Israeli prison.

The Joint Operations Room (JOR), an umbrella body of armed factions in Gaza including Hamas and the Islamic Jihad, claimed responsibility for the rocket volley that left at least three wounded in Israel, according to medics.

The Israeli military said it identified 21 rockets launched from Gaza towards Israel, with only four of them intercepted by the Iron Dome anti-missile defence system.

Rockets hit residential areas in Sderot and other towns near the fence separating the Gaza Strip and Israel.

Magen David Adom, Israel’s ambulance service, announced three people were wounded. One person was seriously hurt by shrapnel while the other two, who were identified as foreign nationals, were lightly wounded.

The Israeli military hit back with tank artillery fire, smashing several locations inside Gaza.

Member of Tehran mayor office arrested on corruption charges

Alireza Zakani

That’s according to the head of the Urban Planning and Architecture Commission of Tehran City Council.

Speaking during the session of the Tehran Islamic Council on Tuesday, Mehdi Abbasi noted that there must be no discrimination in the fight against corruption.

He echoed remarks by the leader of Iran’s Islamic Revolution that the one who is corrupt cannot fight corruption.

Abbasi also stressed that some people were arrested in the Tehran Mayor’s office last year.

He said if anyone feels that such allegations are false and that there is no corruption in the municipality, “I will show evidence at the future meetings of the council.”