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Live Update: Russia’s “Special Operation” in Ukraine; Day 171

Russia Ukraine War

Russia claims full control of Pisky village in Donetsk region: Report

Russian forces have taken full control of Pisky village in Ukraine’s Donetsk region, the Interfax news agency reports citing the Russian defence ministry.

Russian and pro-Russian forces had reported that they had taken full control of Pisky more than a week ago.

The ministry also announced Russian forces had destroyed a US-supplied HIMARS rocket system near Ukraine’s Kramatorsk and a depot with ammunition for the system, Interfax reported.


End of war means return of Crimea to Ukraine: Zelensky’s adviser

Ukrainian presidential adviser Mykhailo Podolyak says for the war to end, his country would seek the return of Crimea as well as the punishment of Russian leaders who began the war.

“Russia started war against Ukraine in 2014 with Crimea seizure,” Podolyak tweeted.

“Obviously, it must end with Crimea liberation and legal punishment of ‘special military operation’ initiators,” he added.


Ukraine says Russia blocking access to medicines

Ukraine’s health minister has accused Russian authorities of committing a crime against humanity by blocking access to affordable medicines in areas its forces have occupied since the war began last February.

In an interview with The Associated Press news agency, Viktor Liashko said Russian authorities have repeatedly blocked efforts to provide state-subsidised drugs to people in occupied areas.

“Throughout the entire six months of war, Russia has not [allowed] proper humanitarian corridors so we could provide our own medicines to the patients that need them,” Liashko stated.

“We believe that these actions are being taken with intent by Russia, and we consider them to be crimes against humanity and war crimes that will be documented and will be recognised,” the minister added.

The World Health Organization (WHO) announced it recorded 445 attacks on hospitals and other health care facilities as of August 11 that directly resulted in 86 deaths and 105 injuries.

The Ukrainian government has a programme that provides medications to people with cancer and chronic health conditions. The destruction of hospitals and infrastructure along with the displacement of an estimated seven million people inside the country have also interfered with other forms of treatment, according to UN and Ukrainian officials.


Moscow warns of end to Russia-US relations if assets seized

Any possible seizure of Russian assets by the United States will completely destroy Moscow’s bilateral relations with Washington, said a senior foreign ministry official.

“We warn the Americans of the detrimental consequences of such actions that will permanently damage bilateral relations, which is neither in their nor in our interests,” Alexander Darchiev, the head of the North American Department at the Russian foreign ministry, told TASS.

It was not immediately clear which assets he was referring to.

Darchiev also added the US influence on Ukraine had increased to the degree that “Americans are increasingly becoming more and more a direct party in the conflict”.


Two more ships carrying 15,000 tonnes of grain leave Ukraine

Two more ships carrying sunflower seed and corn sailed from Ukrainian ports, Turkey’s national defence ministry announced.

The Barbados-flagged ship FULMAR S, carrying 12,000 tonnes of corn, left the Chornomorsk port for Iskenderun, Turkey.

The other ship, Marshal Islands-flagged THOE, sailed from the Chornomorsk port with 3,000 tonnes of sunflower seed, for Tekirdag, northwestern Turkey.

On July 22, Turkey, the UN, Russia, and Ukraine signed a deal in Istanbul to reopen three Ukrainian Black Sea ports for exporting Ukrainian grain stuck due to the Russia-Ukraine war, which is now in its sixth month.


Two bridges to Russian-occupied territory in Kherson out of use: UK

The two primary road bridges giving access to the pocket of Russian-occupied territory on the west bank of the Dnieper in Kherson Oblast are now probably out of use for the purposes of substantial military resupply, the British military intelligence has announced.

Even if Russia manages to make significant repairs to the bridges, they will remain a key vulnerability, the UK’s Ministry of Defence said.

“Ground resupply for the several thousand Russian troops on the west bank is almost certainly reliant on just two pontoon ferry crossing points,” the ministry added in an intelligence update.

With their supply chain constrained, the size of any stockpiles Russia has managed to establish on the west bank is likely to be a key factor in the forces’ endurance, according to the update.


Almost one-third of Ukraine needs to be cleared of ordnance

Some 27 percent of Ukraine’s territory will need to be cleared of mines and explosives, according to the latest estimates by the ecology ministry nearly six months since Russia began its invasion and bombardment of its neighbour.

So far Ukrainian authorities have cleared more than 620sq kilometres (240sq miles) of land that were littered with thousands of explosive devices, including 2,000 bombs dropped from the air.

Nearly 300,000sq km (116,000sq miles) are still seen as “contaminated”, according to data released by Ukraine’s Emergency Services. Making that area safe could take a decade, the government announced.


First Africa-bound grain ship arrives in Ukraine port since invasion

The first Africa-bound grain ship since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine docked in Pivdennyi port on Friday, Ukraine’s infrastructure minister said.

“The cargo ship Brave Commander arrived at the Pivdennyi Sea Port. Very soon [Ukrainian] grain will be delivered to Ethiopia,” infrastructure minister Oleksandr Kubrakov wrote on Twitter.


Ukraine can hit ‘almost all’ Russian supply lines in occupied south: Military official

Ukraine’s military said its artillery hit a Russian ammunition depot near a key bridge in the south on Friday and added it now had the ability to attack nearly all of Moscow’s supply lines in the occupied region.

The military announced the attack killed 11 Russian soldiers in the depot in the village of Vesele, about 80 miles (130km) down the vast Dnieper River from the Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant.

Natalia Humeniuk, spokesperson for Ukraine’s southern military command, said Ukraine has nearly all of Russia’s southern supply routes under “fire control,” meaning that Ukraine is able to hit them with ranged weapons at will.

“Our forces are controlling the situation in the south, despite the enemy trying to bring in reserves even though almost all their transport and logistical arteries have been hit or are under our fire control,” she added in a national broadcast.


Russia economy contracts by 4 percent in second quarter

Russia’s gross domestic product (GDP) contracted by 4 percent in the second quarter compared with the same period a year earlier, as economic sanctions by the West take their toll on the economy, the national statistics agency has reported.

In the period from April to June, GDP “amounted to 96 percent of the level attained in the same period of 2021, preliminary estimates show”, Rosstat said in a statement, publishing the first full quarterly data since Moscow launched its military offensive in Ukraine in late February.


India: No pressure on it to limit energy purchases from Russia

India has said there was no pressure on it from Western countries or anywhere else over its energy purchases from Russia.

“Our decisions on what we do regarding purchase of oil or other things related to that will be guided by our energy security requirements, our perspective will be guided by energy security,” India’s foreign ministry spokesperson Arindam Bagchi told a news conference.

India, the world’s third-biggest crude importer, overtook China to become the biggest buyer of Russian oil in July based on seaborne volumes, having bought very little from the country before the start of the war in Ukraine in February.

Author Salman Rushdie stabbed in NY

Salman Rushdie

A man rushed to the stage at the Chautauqua Institution in western New York state and attacked Rushdie as he was being introduced, an eye witness said.

Rushdie fell to the floor when the man attacked him, and was then surrounded by a small group of people who held up his legs, seemingly to send more blood to his upper body, as the attacker was restrained, according to the witness attending the lecture who asked not to be named.

A State Trooper present at the event took the attacker into custody, police confirmed.

Rushdie was taken by helicopter to a hospital but his condition was not yet known, police announced.

“We are dealing with an emergency situation,” a Chautauqua Institution spokesperson told Reuters.

Rushdie is the author of “The Satanic Verses”, a blasphemous novel about Islam published in 1988 which sparked Muslims’ outrage across the globe.

Following the publication of the book, Imam Khomeini, the founder of the Islamic Republic, issued a fatwa (religious decree), calling for Rushdie’s death.

Iran has said the decree is in place but that it will not assign anybody to carry out the decree.

Health minister: Iran ready to export Covid vaccine

Iran’s Covid-19 vaccine

Bahram Einollahi added that Iran is facing no Coronavirus vaccine shortages. Einollahi added that Iran is now capable of expanding its overall exports given a boost in its pharmaceutical products and medical equipment.

Einollahi then pointed to sanctions on Iran, saying the bans imposed by the country’s enemies have failed in preventing Iran’s economic progress.

The health minister added that before Iran’s Islamic Revolution of 1979, Iranians had to go abroad to seek treatment for ordinary diseases but now the nation has shown during the Covid pandemic that it performed way better than developed countries.

Iran is now producing several types of Covid vaccines which have proved to be effective in inoculating people against the viral disease.

Iranian experts began efforts to produce the jabs soon after the pandemic reached Iran and succeeded in doing so concurrently with developed countries like the US and Britain.

Four injured in suicide bombing in Saudi Arabia’s Jeddah

Saudi Security Forces

A Saudi Arabian man wanted in connection with a deadly 2015 bombing in the kingdom detonated an explosive device in Jeddah on Wednesday as security forces attempted to arrest him, killing himself and injuring four others, state media reported.

Saudi news agency SPA, reporting the incident on Friday, identified the man as Abdullah bin Zayed Al-Shehri.

Al-Shehri detonated the explosive belt on Wednesday night in Jeddah’s Al Samer neighbourhood, injuring three members of the security forces, who were seeking to arrest him, and a Pakistani national, SPA reported.

The injured, who were not named, were taken to hospital, SPA added, without giving details of their injuries.

According to Saudi state media reports, Al-Shehri was suspected of being a member of a domestic terrorism cell that coordinated the 2015 suicide bombing of a mosque in Abha frequented by security force members.

Eleven members of the security forces and four Bangladeshi nationals were killed in the attack, and 33 people were injured, state media reported at the time.

The Saudi Arabian government named Al-Shehri in early 2016 as one of six Saudi nationals wanted in connection with the bombing.

Saudi Arabia was the scene of a series of large-scale militant attacks in the 2000s, including on security forces and Western targets.

Such attacks were carried out by Islamic State, Al Qaeda and other groups. Though attacks have since mostly subsided, several people were wounded in a 2020 attack that used an explosive on a World War One remembrance ceremony in Jeddah.

Earlier this year, French prosecutors opened a terrorism investigation into a December 2021 explosion under a French vehicle involved in the Dakar rally sports race in Saudi Arabia.

Afghan FM: third parties should not be let harm Tehran-Kabul ties

Taliban Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi

Mottaqi made the comment in a meeting with a visiting Iranian delegation that involved Iran’s Special Envoy for Afghanistan Hossein Kazemi Qomi.

The Afghan foreign minister underlined the need for Afghanistan and Iran to strengthen their ties.

He pointed to trade ties between Iran and Afghanistan and called for efforts to expand those relations.

Mottaqi urged Iran to lift restrictions on Afghanistan businesspeople willing to do business in the Islamic Republic.

Kazemi Qomi told the Afghan foreign minister that Iran will soon resolve the issue. He said Iran believes the two countries must take necessary measures to boost economic relations.

The two sides also agreed that an Afghan delegation would travel to Iran to settle some disputes between Tehran and Kabul.

Islamic Solidarity Games: Iranian men, women stand 1st in table tennis

Iranian women table tennis

Noshad and Nima Alemian each defeated their Saudi rivals in the individual game category 3-1 and 3-0, respectively. In the double match, the Nima Alemian-Afshin Nouruzi team defeated the Saudi team 3-0.

The final match of women table tennis team of the Islamic Countries Solidarity Games was held between Iran and the host country, Turkey, and at the end the team of Head Coach Hamideh Iran-Manesh gained the championship, despite the wholehearted applaud of the spectators throughout the game for the home team.

In the first match, in singles field, Iran’s Mahshid Ashtari faced Uzgeh Yilmaz, whom she beat 3-2. In the second match Iran’s Neda Shahsavari, the Iranian team’s captain, in an exciting match beat Sible Altinkaya 3-nil, proving the Iranian team’s 2-0 superiority.

The third match was the couples’ competitions in which Neda Shahsavari and Shima Safaie from Iran face Simai Kulakchen and Sibel Altinkaya from Turkey, in a very close match, that ended 3-2 in Iran’s favor.

In the fourth match, too, Shima Safaie faced Uzge Yilmaz, which ended in favor of the Turkish side 3-2, and this the two teams each had two points.

In the last and very sensitive match Mahshid Ashtari faced Kulak Cheken, which ended 3-1 in Astari’s favor, to bring the Iranian team a precious gold medal.

Turkey naturally gained the silver and Uzbekistan and the Maldives jointly won the games’ bronze medal.

Now, both men’s and women’s Table Tennis Teams of Iran have stood first in the Islamic Solidarity Games 2021.

Iranian wrestlers win 5 gold medals at Islamic countries competitions

Iranian wrestlers

In the 5th edition of Islamic Solidarity Games 2021 underway, Konya, Turkey, Iran’s Ahmad Bazri defeated the Turkish wrestler Erhan Yaylacı on Thursday evening 7-1 and won the gold medal of the 92 kg weight category.

Bazri earlier defeated his Azerbaijani rival Osman Nurmagomedov 6-6 and ascended to the finals.

Still, in the 125 kg weight category, Mahdi Hashemi defeated Salim Ercan of Turkey 8-0 and snatched the gold medal.

Hashmi also knocked out his Turkmen rival Seferov 10-0 earlier and ascended to the finals of the competition.

At the weight of 65 kg, Morteza Qiyasi deafeted Omid Jalalof from Uzbekistan with the result of 4-2 and won the bronze medal.

Majid Dastan in the 61 kg category defeated Muhammad Bilal from Pakistan with a result of 6-3 and won the bronze medal.

In the final match of 70kg category, Hossein Abuzari was defeated by the world silver medalist from Kyrgyzstan, and the Iranian wrestler gained the silver medal.

At the 74 kg category, Mohammad Sadegh Firozpur, in the final match, lost 2-1 to Turan Bayramov from Azerbaijan and won the silver medal.

At the weight of 79 kg, Ali Savadkohi defeated the Mohamat Akdeniz barrier from Turkey with a score of 12-6 and won the gold medal.

At the weight of 86 kg, Alireza Karimi, while he was ahead with a score of 9-0 against Abubaker Abakarov from Azerbaijan, and due to his opponent’s inability to continue the match, he won the gold medal.

Mojtaba Goleiji at 97 kg won the gold medal.

Russia: Text of JCPOA revival deal ‘almost completely agreed’

Nuclear Negotiations in Vienna

In an interview with the Russian Izvestia Daily, Mikhail Ulyanov talked about the latest status of the talks in the Austrian capital between Tehran and the five other parties to the nuclear deal plus the US, which is joining the process indirectly.

“In principle, we can assume that the text has been agreed almost completely. The Iranian side had separate questions regarding just a few words, a few lines. Everything else is considered agreed,” he said.

“There will most likely be no lengthy negotiations in the foreseeable future. It all depends on whether all the states participating in the negotiations, including Iran in the first place, agree to the version of the package solution that was circulated on August 8,” he said.

Another option, he said, could be for Iranians some amendments to the text, which the Europeans and the US consider final.

“But, as always, the devil is in the details, and the last few lines theoretically — we already went through this during the Vienna negotiations — could become a stumbling block. I hope this doesn’t happen,” Ulyanov added.

The official rejected claims that Russia was against the restoration of the Iran nuclear deal.
A final deal, he argued, would both decrease tensions in the Persian Gulf and lift unilateral sanctions against Iran, adding, “Where is the negative for us? I don’t know.”

“Russia does not like illegitimate extraterritorial sanctions. We consider this an outrage and illegal action. We sympathize with the people of Iran, who have been under sanctions for so many years,” he said.

Archeologists find 5,600-year-old building near Iranian capital

Iran Flag

Hamid Karimi, the head of the local cultural heritage department, told Mehr News Agency that the ancient structure resembled an administrative building, but said more studies were needed to determine the type of the building.

The official said archeological research showed the city of Robat Karim itself dates back to some 7,000 years ago.

Archeologists find 5,600-year-old building near Iranian capital

President Raisi: South Kerman Province to be established

Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi

The Iranian president, who is in the southeastern Kerman Province on a provincial tour, assured the people in Jiroft on Friday that the new province will be created to better run the region.

President Raisi said, “Establishing South Kerman Province has long been delayed. After studying the issue, the government has put it on the agenda and pays attention to it.”

President Raisi arrived in Kerman Province at the head of a high-ranking delegation on Thursday for this 31st provincial tour since taking office in August 2021 to get a first-hand view of the problems and examine the capacities for development