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Russia on Pelosi’s visit: World has no place for US hegemony

Nancy Pelosi
US House Speak Nancy Pelosi (M) with her delegation arrives in Taiwan as she is welcomed by Taiwan Foreign Minister Joseph Wu (L) at Taipei Songshan International Airport, despite serious objections over the visit from China.

In a statement on Tuesday, the same day that Pelosi arrived in Taiwan, the Russian Foreign Ministry said the provocative visit was “in keeping with the US’s aggressive policy of comprehensive containment of” China.

“We believe relations between both sides of the Taiwan Strait are exclusively China’s domestic affair. The Chinese side is entitled to take any measures necessary to protect its sovereignty and territorial integrity in terms of the Taiwan issue,” it said.

The ministry added that Russia’s stance on Taiwan continued to be based on the “one China” policy, according to which Beijing has sovereignty over Taiwan.

“We operate on the premise that there is only one China, and the PRC government is the only legitimate government representing all of China, and that Taiwan is an inalienable part of China,” it said, using an abbreviation for the People’s Republic of China.

The Russian ministry also called “on Washington to refrain from actions… that undermine regional stability and international security, and to recognize the new geopolitical reality, which has no place for US hegemony.”

Pelosi arrived in Taiwan on a highly provocative trip meant to ignore Chinese sovereignty on Taiwan and bypass the Beijing government. The trip took place over the objections of the US President Joe Biden administration, the US military, and American analysts.

Iran’s human rights chief slams ‘Europe’s inaction’ on cruel US sanctions

Kazem Gharibabadi

Kazem Gharibabadi, secretary of Iran’s High Council for Human Rights and the Judiciary chief’s deputy for international affairs, said on state television on Tuesday evening that 25,000 Iranians had so far fallen victim to acts of terror, while the ‘most cruel sanctions’ had been placed on the nation by Washington.

“The role of Europe [in this situation] should not be ignored. The Europeans did not take even a single step toward a removal of the sanctions over the past years,” the official said.

Gharibabadi pointed to a report published in May by UN Special Rapporteur on the Negative Impact of Coercive Measures on the Enjoyment of Human Rights Alena Douhan, following a visit to Iran.

As Douhan said, he added, “Sanctions have affected all aspects of Iranian lives.”

Elsewhere, he commented on the case of former Iranian official Hamid Nouri, who has been jailed in Sweden for around three years.

He described Nouri’s imprisonment as a “fully political dossier” which has no legal basis.

Various legal, political and diplomatic measures have been taken with regard to the case, the official said, warning that Sweden shoulders an “international responsibility” in the case.

Iran air defenses do not allow any airspace intrusion: Senior cmdr.

Iran air defenses

Alireza Sabahifard, the Air Defense Force’s commander, paid a visit to a detection and intelligence command center and the Velayat radar site, which provide protection to the skies over a large swath of land in the eastern and central regions of the country, to inspect their combat readiness.

The commander emphasized the significant and valuable role that the Army’s Air Defense Force plays in strengthening the country’s national power.

“Defense sites and positions do not allow any flying object to enter the airspace of our country without permission,” he said, referring, as a case in point, to the downing in 2011 of the American the RQ-170 Sentinel spy drone near the Afghan border.

‘Iran defense ministry collaborating with 5k knowledge-based firms’

Defense Minister Brigadier General Mohammad Reza Ashtiani

In remarks after opening the exhibition of the “Iranian Defense Ministry’s capabilities in production and knowledge-based economy”, held in Tehran on Tuesday,the defense minister said the ministry has focused its plans on manufacturing homegrown products, deepening knowledge and technology, and enhancing cooperation among various local sectors.

At present, the Defense Ministry is cooperating with more than 5,000 knowledge-based companies, he added.

Highlighting the ministry’s efforts to “create power and boost the industrial and defense capabilities of Iran”, the general stated the spillover of non-military products will be utilized to raise the level of industries in the country.

Brigadier General Ashtiani also noted that some 1,100 products used in various sectors have been put on display in the exhibition.

Live Update: Russia’s “Special Operation” in Ukraine; Day 161

Russia Ukraine War

Ukraine says Russia creating strike group aimed at Zelensky’s hometown

Russia has started creating a military strike force aimed at taking President Volodymyr Zelensky’s hometown of Kryvyi Rih, Ukraine’s military has said, as it warned that Moscow could be preparing new offensive operations in the country’s south.

In its regular update on the war in the south, Ukraine’s southern military command described the situation as tense and said Russia attacked along the frontline on Tuesday.

“[Russia] has begun creating a strike group in the Kryvyi Rih direction. It’s also quite likely that the enemy is preparing a hostile counter-offensive with the subsequent plan of getting to the administrative boundary of [the] Kherson region,” it added.

The steel-producing city of Kryvyi Rih where Zelensky grew up lies around 50 km (30 miles) from the southern frontline.

Russian forces currently control swaths of Ukraine’s south that they captured in the early phases of Moscow’s invasion, but Kyiv has noted it will mount a counter-offensive to recapture those territories. Ukraine said on Tuesday its forces had already recaptured 53 villages in the Russian-occupied Kherson region.


UN will launch fact-finding mission after 53 POWs killed in prison

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres said he will launch a fact-finding mission into an attack in the front-line Ukranian town of Olenivka that killed prisoners held by Moscow-backed separatists.

Russia and Ukraine, who have exchanged blame over the reported deaths of 53 prisoners, both requested an investigation, Guterres told reporters.

He added the terms of reference for the mission, which would need agreement from Russia and Ukraine, were being prepared.


Switzerland imposes sanctions on Russian gold in line with EU

Switzerland’s Federal Council has imposed further sanctions against Russia over the war in Ukraine, in line with the European Union’s latest measures on gold and gold products.

The Council announced that it had made two new exceptions with respect to transactions related to agricultural products and oil supplies to third countries, which the EU has as well, in order to avoid any disruptions in payment channels.


Russia ready for peace on own terms: Kremlin

Ukraine can end the ongoing conflict at any time by conceding to Russia’s non-negotiable terms, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Wednesday.

“Russia is ready [for a peace deal], the Ukrainian side is well-aware of our terms. One way or another, they will be fulfilled,” the official told journalists.

Peskov went on to explain that back in late March the two countries were close to settling their differences in a way that was acceptable to Russia, but the draft agreement prepared during a meeting in Istanbul was torpedoed by the Ukrainian side.

Kiev broke off talks with Moscow after accusing Russia of committing war crimes, an allegation that Russia said was based on fabricated evidence. The Ukrainian leadership has since insisted that negotiations can only be resumed after Russia is defeated on the battlefield with the help of Western weapons.


Russian official says era of ‘constructive cooperation’ with West has ended

A Russian foreign ministry official has stated the era of constructive cooperation between Moscow and Western countries is “irrevocably over”, regardless of the outcome of the war in Ukraine.

“Regardless of the duration and outcome of Russia’s special military operation in Ukraine, we can already state now that the thirty-year era of generally constructive, though not problematic, cooperation with the West is irrevocably over,” Alexey Drobinin, the director of the foreign policy planning department of the Russian Foreign Ministry, said in an article published in the ministry’s International Affairs journal.

Drobinin added that Russia has entered an “acute phase of confrontation with an aggressive alliance of unfriendly states led by the United States”.

“The enemy’s aim is to inflict a strategic defeat on our country and to eliminate it as a geopolitical competitor,” he continued.


Russian-installed official says Ukraine used Western arms to attack nuclear plant

A Russian-installed official in Ukraine has accused Kyiv’s forces of repeatedly using Western arms to attack Europe’s largest nuclear power plant, which is now controlled by Moscow’s troops.

Yevgeny Balitsky, the head of the Russian-installed administration of the Zaporizhia region, said that the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) was due to visit the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant. There was no immediate comment from the IAEA on Balitsky’s claim.

“We are ready to show how the Russian military is guarding the plant, and how Ukraine, which receives weapons from the West, uses those weapons including drones to attack the nuclear power plant,” Balitsky added.

The Zaporizhzhia plant, which has two of six reactors operating, has been the subject of repeated warnings from Ukraine, the West and Russia. It was shelled on March 4 in an attack Russia and Ukraine blamed on each other.

Washington has accused Moscow of using the site as a “nuclear shield” in attacks on Ukrainian forces.


Zelensky calls on China to “join united world” and oppose Russia

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has appealed to China “to join the united world” and oppose Russia amid the war in Ukraine.

The president discussed China when answering questions from students during a virtual address to the Australian National University on Wednesday.

Zelensky admitted Beijing’s “neutrality is better” than if China would join Russia, believing “the nation, the people of China will do the prudent choice.”

He went on to say it is “important that China wouldn’t help Russia.”

Speaking about the condition of Russia-Ukraine relations in the future, Zelensky stated it “depends only on Russia” and that “the question belongs only to them.”


Inspection of first Ukraine grain shipment completed: Ukrainian official

Oleksandr Kubrakov, Ukraine’s infrastructure minister, noted the delegation from the Joint Coordination Centre (JCC) has completed its check of the first grain-carrying ship to leave Ukrainian ports in wartime.

“First ship RAZONI carrying corn was successfully inspected by delegation from a special Joint Coordination Center. The ship is ready to continue its journey to the port of Tripoli in Lebanon,” Kubrakov tweeted.


Rail linking Kherson and Crimea ‘highly unlikely’ to remain operational

A rail link connecting Kherson with Crimea is “highly unlikely” to remain operational due to a Ukrainian attack on a Russian ammunition train, the UK Ministry of Defence says.

In its daily briefing it also announced there will “likely” be an increase in civilians attempting to flee Kherson and the surrounding areas as hostilities continue and food shortages worsen.

“This will create pressure on transport nodes and routes, likely resulting in measures to control movements being implemented,” the ministry added in its daily brifing.


G7 considers “prohibition” on transportation of Russian oil globally unless purchased at or below set price

The G7 is considering further options to stop Russia “profiting from its war of aggression and to curtail Russia’s ability to wage war,” according to a statement from the forum’s foreign ministers on Tuesday.

Such options could include “a comprehensive prohibition of all services that enable transportation of Russian seaborne crude oil and petroleum products globally” unless the oil was purchased at or below a set price, the statement added.

The foreign ministers stated Russia is using energy as “a tool of geopolitical coercion” and that they would work together to reduce G7 countries demand on Russian energy, while protecting the most vulnerable groups from the impacts of supply disruptions and rising prices.


US slaps sanctions on Russian businessmen, heads of freed Ukrainian regions

The US authorities have imposed restrictions against a number of Russian entrepreneurs, officials, heads of the leadership of liberated Ukrainian regions and other persons, according to statements released by the Department of State and the Department of the Treasury on Tuesday.

In particular, sanctions have been imposed against businessmen Andrey Guryev, Viktor Rashnikov, Anton Urusov and Natalya Popova, as well as the Olympic champion in rhythmic gymnastics Alina Kabaeva, according to documents. They are regarded as representatives of “elites close to the Kremlin.”

Guryev is the founder and former Deputy Chairman of PhosAgro, Russia’s producer of fertilizers. His son has also been put on the sanctions list. Rashnikov is the majority owner and chairman of the Board of Directors of MMK. Restrictions have also been imposed against the company. Kabaeva is the current head of the National Media Group, Popova is First Deputy Director of Innopraktika, a technology company in Russia, whereas Urusov is Vice President of Russian Direct Investment Fund, which was sanctioned earlier, according to the Department of the Treasury’s statement.

Three oligarchs have been put on the sanctions list, among them Dmitry Pumpyansky, Andrey Melnichenko, and Alexander Ponomarenko, according to the Department of State.

Restrictions have also been imposed against Vladimir Saldo, head of the Kherson Region’s Military-Civilian Administration, his deputy Kirill Stremousov, head of the government that have been formed in the region, Sergey Yeliseyev, as well as Mariupol Mayor in the DPR Konstantin Ivashchenko. Those persons undermine the political stability in Ukraine, according to the Department of State.

The US State Department also announced it was placing visa restrictions on 893 Russian officials and members of the military for playing a role in actions against Ukraine, as well as 31 foreign officials from unnamed nations over support for Russia’s annexation of Crimea.

The department was also imposing sanctions on 24 Russian defense and technology companies in an effort to “further isolate Russia’s defense and high-technology industries and limit their contributions to Moscow’s war machine,” U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in a separate statement.


US responsible for Ukrainian ‘war crimes’: Russian MoD

Washington bears “political, criminal, and moral responsibility” for “war crimes” committed by the Ukrainian military, Russia’s Defense Ministry said on Tuesday.

The statement came in response to an interview by a top Ukrainian spy, who revealed that Kiev consults with Washington before using US-made HIMARS multiple launch rocket systems and that Washington actually has veto power over decision-making.

“All this irrefutably proves that Washington, contrary to the statements of the White House and the Pentagon, is directly involved in the conflict in Ukraine. It is the Biden administration that is directly responsible for all the Kiev-approved missile attacks on residential areas and civilian infrastructure in the settlements across Donbass and other regions that caused mass civilian casualties,” Defense Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov has stated.

According to Moscow, US-supplied HIMARS systems have repeatedly been used by Kiev forces to target facilities that were not legitimate military targets. Arguably the most dire recent example of this strategy was an attack on a penal colony in Elenovka in the Donetsk People’s Republic, which was housing Ukrainian POWs, including fighters with the notorios neo-Nazi Azov regiment. The attack left at least 50 prisoners dead and another 73 injured.

“The Joe Biden administration, together with Zelensky, bears political, criminal, and moral responsibility for the massacre in Elenovka and other war crimes in Ukraine,” Konashenkov added.

The explosive interview with a Ukrainian senior intelligence official, Major General Vadim Skibitsky, was published by The Telegraph newspaper on Monday. The spy revealed Kiev’s troops were getting feedback from Washington and London before launching HIMARS rockets. This allows “Washington to stop any potential attacks if they were unhappy with the intended target,” The Telegraph noted.


Zelensky says fighting in parts of Donbas region is ‘just hell’

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has stated that despite US supplies of rocket artillery, Kyiv’s forces could not yet overcome Russian advantages in heavy guns and personnel.

“This is very much felt in combat, especially in the Donbas. … It is just hell there. Words cannot describe it,” he added in a late-night address.


First grain ship to leave Ukraine anchors off Turkish coast

The first grain-carrying ship to leave Ukrainian ports in wartime has safely anchored off Turkey’s coast.

The first ship, the Razoni, carrying 26,527 tonnes of corn to Lebanon, anchored near the Bosphorus entrance from the Black Sea at around 18:00 GMT, some 36 hours after departing from Ukraine’s Odesa port.

A delegation from the Joint Coordination Centre (JCC) in Istanbul, where Russian, Ukrainian, Turkish and UN personnel work, is expected to inspect the ship at 07:00 GMT on Wednesday, according to Turkey’s Defence Ministry.


Ukraine has recaptured 53 settlements in Kherson region: Governor

Ukraine has recaptured 53 settlements in the mostly Russian-occupied southern region of Kherson since the start of Moscow’s invasion, the regional governor has claimed.

Russia captured swaths of southern Ukraine in the first phase of its invasion. Ukraine is now pledging to conduct a major counter-offensive to retake land and has used Western-made long-range weapons to hit Russian supply lines.

“As of now, 53 settlements have been confirmed as liberated,” acting governor Dmytro Butriy stated on national television.

That figure was nine settlements more than the number he gave on Monday, which appeared to indicate a quickening tempo of Ukrainian gains in the region.


Canada says imposing further sanctions on Russia

Canada has announced it was imposing more sanctions on Russia that would impact 43 military officials and 17 entities.

“The Russian war machine’s egregious actions will not be forgotten, and Canada will continue to work with its partners in the international community to hold it to account,” Canadian Foreign Minister Melanie Joly said in a statement.

Canada has imposed sanctions on more than 1,150 individuals and entities in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on February 24.


UK adds two new designations under Russia sanctions regime

The British government announced it had sanctioned two former board members of oil company Rosneft: Didier Casimiro and Zeljko Runje.

The British sanction list said both were now subject to an asset freeze for “obtaining a benefit from or supporting the government of Russia by working as a manager of a government of Russia-affiliated entity”.


Lebanon prosecutor allows departure of ship accused by Ukraine of stealing grain

Lebanon’s top prosecutor has lifted his seizure order on a ship docked in Lebanon accused by Ukraine of carrying stolen flour and barley and allowed it to sail after finding “no criminal offence committed”, a senior judicial source told Reuters.

The ship, the Laodicea, remains unable to sail for the time being due to another seizure order issued by a judge in the northern city of Tripoli, where the ship is docked, on Monday, the source noted.

Iran says has 3 remote-sensing satellites in line to be launched

Iran Zoljanah satellite carrier

Hassan Salarieh told IRIB that the Space Organization of Iran had been pursuing “very detailed and comprehensive plans, which have been constantly updated over the past years.”

In the field of remote-sensing, communications and navigation satellites, “very precise and organized plans” have been drawn up, he added.

The remote-sensing applications of satellites include Earth observation, he explained, adding that this type of spacecraft can capture “highly up-to-date, accurate and real time images from the surface of the Earth.”

“We have three remote-sensing satellites in line to be launched and hope that the launch will take place at the earliest,” he said.

Generally, the official said, the space technology has various applications in different fields, including monitoring natural hazards, evaluating the lands under cultivation for agricultural purposes, keeping watch on borders, road traffic, seas and ports, and keeping water resources in check.

Salarieh said the country has been making efforts to develop its space industry on its own as it hardly gets to benefit from the relevant experiences of other countries due to the tough sanctions in place against the Islamic Republic.

Kremlin spokesman: Moscow wants quick revival of Iran nuclear deal

Kremlin

Speaking to reporters on Tuesday, Peskov however warned that the West’s unfriendly steps against Moscow may indirectly impact a number of the deal’s provisions.

“Naturally, we would like for this deal to be revived as soon as possible,” he said.

Peskov added that there are certain new circumstances related to the unfriendly steps by the countries of the collective West against the Russian Federation which could indirectly affect some provisions of this agreement.

He said that this needs to be worked through.

Earlier, US President Joe Biden said Washington and its allies prepared a plan on returning to the agreement officially known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, JCPOA, in order to prevent Iran from obtaining “nuclear weapons.”

In 2015, the five permanent members of the UN Security Council and Germany reached a nuclear deal with Iran in order to address the crisis around its nuclear program.

In 2018, then-US president Donald Trump decided to pull out of the agreement, with Washington slapping its heaviest sanctions ever on Iran.

Biden has repeatedly indicated his support for reentering the nuclear deal. But he has slapped several sanctions on Iran.

Since last April, Russia, the UK, Germany, China and France have been conducting discussions with Iran on reviving the JCPOA. The talks have stalled due to differences between Iran and the US.

Swiss envoy pays tribute to Iranian singer Homayoun Shajarian

Swiss envoy praised Iran’s Homayoun Shajarian

In a tweet on Tuesday, Switzerland’s Embassy in the Iranian capital posted a picture of Shajarian as he received the letter from Ambassador Nadine Olivieri Lozano.

The Embassy also paid respect to Homayoun’s late father, Maestro Mohammad Reza Shajarian, Iran’s legendary classical singer.

Mohammad Reza Shajarian, the country’s most prominent and internationally-acclaimed vocalist in the area of traditional Persian music, died of cancer in 2020.

Homayoun joined Tehran Conservatory of Music, choosing Kamancheh as his professional instrument and was tutored by Ardeshir Kamkar.

In 1991, Homayoun accompanied his father in concerts of Ava Music Ensemble in the United States, Europe and Iran, playing Tombak.

Afterwards, he started accompanying his father also on vocals. His first independent work Nassim-e Vasl was released in 2003.

Homayoun performed live-stream concert on 24 May 2020 during coronavirus pandemic.

The singer returned to the stage in Tehran last month, as Covid-19 briefly let up in the country.

Iran says has enriched 470 kilograms of uranium to 20% purity

Iran Nuclear Program

Behrouz Kamalvandi also provided more details of the AEOI’s move to inject gas into centrifuges at an enrichment facility.

Kamalvandi said the organization launched 1,000 IR6 machines in line with the Strategic Action to Lift Sanctions and Preserve the Rights of the Iranian People Law.

He said the AEOI ordered the injection on Monday and it will take a few days to fully carry it out.

Kamalvandi noted that gas has been injected into two cascades of centrifuges and the aim is to reach the minimum level of 190k su.

Kamalvandi also said Iran has already coordinated the decision with the International Atomic Energy Organization, IAEA.

Kamalvandi added that Iran has also enriched uranium to 60% purity in coordination with the IAEA, which will be used for Radiopharmaceutical production.

Flooding damages historical district in Iran’s Yazd

Yazd historic areas

The condition of important historical sites in the global city of Yazd

Majid Oloumi, the deputy of Yazd’s World Heritage Center, said however that distinct sites in the area, such as the Masjed-e Jame’ (Congregational Mosque), Amir Chakhmaq Square, Dowlatabad Garden, and historical schools and shrines had been intact.

Even though the street where the Masjed-e Jame’ is located was flooded, the floodwaters did not enter the mosque because passageways to a qanat nearby were open, he said, adding that all such passageways in Yazd’s historical district were open, hence they limited damage.

Yazd historic areas

Oloumi said groups of professional repair and reconstruction experts, university students studying building preservation, and others were voluntarily surveying the damage.

He said since Yazd was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site, a report of the damage from the flooding had to be prepared and forwarded to the international organization.

He said the status quo had to be examined in order to avoid a repetition of such an accident.

Yazd historic areas

The level of damage to Yazd City from the flooding

Oloumi said the damage was about one percent, explaining that out of the nearly 20,000 historical houses in the world heritage zone of the city, some 200 buildings had been destroyed by anything from one to 50 percent.

Much of the damage, he added, was done to the non-residential areas where owners of structures were unknown.

The residential areas were largely unharmed because protection work had previously been carried out on them, including on the rooftops and gutters.

Yazd historic areas

The condition of the qanats

Oloumi said while urban development had blocked some of the city’s qanats, the flooding had caused no harm to the underground waterways. The “Zarch” qanat, for instance, is completely intact, he said.

He said if construction work had not been carried out on the path of the historical inland waterway of Yazd, strong flooding would not have hit the historical district of the city.

Yazd is one of the world’s first adobe cities and Iran’s first historical city. It was designated as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2017.