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Iran’s national volleyball team gets tepid welcome in Bologna, Italy

Iran men's national volleyball team

Despite regulations that the host has to cater to the visiting players, the Iranian players were reportedly not even served dinner at the hotel.

The Iranian team is in Italy to face Poland in the quarter-finals of the 2022 Volleyball Nations League (VNL) on July 30.

Iran, Italy, Poland, the United States, France, Japan, Brazil, and the Netherlands moved on from the preliminary stage of the league in the men’s group.

Iran’s national team is ranked ninth in the latest ranking by the world volleyball governing body FIVB.

The achievement comes after Iran’s remarkable performance in VNL matches.

In the latest FIVB ranking, Poland, France, and Brazil are the first to third top teams respectively.

Russian diplomat amid media storm: Iran has openly rejected nukes

Iran Nuclear Program

“To be precise, #Iran produces uranium enriched to 60 % for a long time already in response to the #US maximum pressure policy started by Trump and continued by Biden. But the highest Iranian authorities clearly stated long ago that Tehran rules out production of nuclear weapons,” Mikhail Ulyanov said in a tweet.

He was responding to a media storm around the comments by the director of Iran’s Strategic Council on Foreign Relations who told al-Jazeera on Sunday that Iran is “capable of” making a nuclear bomb “but does not intend to do so”.

“Capable does not mean willing or planning,” Ulyanov said.

He added that the current situation with the nuclear program of Iran is “the product of maximum pressure policy of Trump/Biden”.

Iran has time and again said it has no intention to produce nuclear weapons or any other weapons of mass destruction.

Analyst: Any German misstep could send Europe into black hole

Scholz and Merkel

Abdolreza Faraji Rad, Iran’s former ambassador in Norway, in an interview with ILNA, said, “From the beginning of the Ukraine conflict, it was obvious that the Europeans would be the main losers, because they rely on Russia in terms of energy and economy, and that Germany used to get gas from Russia through the Nord Stream pipeline.”

He added, “The bitter reality is German people, who are considered hardworking people, but are now worried about the energy issue in their country and it is even likely that some of them will be unemployed in the coming months due to the economic woes.”

Faraji Rad said any increase in fuel including gasoline prices would lead to the fall in German Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s popularity rate in Germany or the collapse of the government.

Ha added Scholz’s predecessor, Angela Merkel, could have steered Europe through the current turbulence more smoothly.

The senior analyst also noted that tougher days are ahead for Europe due to the cold spells in the winter and the disruption in Russian gas supplies, stressing the German chancellor needs to take an initiative to stop the war or the tremors will be felt across Europe.

Russia launched a devastating war on Ukraine on February 24 after warning that the United States was using Ukraine to threaten Moscow through the NATO military alliance.

Moscoe has threatened to cut gas supplies to Europe, raising the alarm over deadly consequences in winter.

Iranian MP: US lifting IRGC from “terror list”, must to revive nuclear deal

IRGC

Mohammad Esmaeil Kowsari told Entekhab website that, as a precondition to restore the deal, the United States has to lift all nuclear-related sanctions on Iran, including those on Iran’s Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC), which has remained a sticking point during the inconclusive talks.

The Iranian parliamentarian said the US refuses to give an assurance, because it still considers itself a superpower, “While America’s era as a superpower is over as it cannot even support its allies,” citing Washington’s failure to adequately support Ukraine in the war with Russia.

Highlighting the deep-seated distrust among Iranians towards US politicians, Kowsari said Washington has never reciprocated Iran’s good-will gestures, including the voluntary rollback of its nuclear activities.

He said US President Joe Biden, just like his predecessors, is a tool in the hands of major cartels in the world.

Yemen’s Houthi says Biden showed loyalty to Israel in ME tour

US President Joe Biden

Al-Houthi made the remarks in a televised speech on Sunday in commemoration of Eid al-Ghadir, which marks the anniversary of the appointment of Imam Ali (AS) by Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) as his successor almost 14 centuries ago.

Houthi stated Biden made his Middle East tour in hope of being treated by everyone as the one who leads humanity around the globe.

“However, he has openly declared his affiliation to Zionism,” he continued, adding, “The US is follower of Zionism and is reflecting its orientations and positions.”

The Ansarullah chief said “mercenary regimes” in the region have misled the Islamic Ummah on the issue of distinguishing friend from foe, adding, “These regimes introduce the Zionists as those whose leadership and rule must be accepted by the Islamic Ummah.”

Houthi warned against plots by hypocrite elements to present the enemies of Israel as the main enemy of the Islamic Ummah, saying, “This is a very dangerous deviation.”

He also added Takfiri terrorist groups in the region are walking in the same direction that serves the Zionists.

Elsewhere in his remarks, the Ansarullah leader called for putting an end to the dominance of global arrogance and their influence on Muslim nations, stressing the importance of righteous governance.

Biden touched down in Israel on Wednesday for his first trip to the occupied territories as the US president and was welcomed by the regime’s caretaker Prime Minister Yair Lapid, former premiers Naftali Bennett and Benjamin Netanyahu, and Israeli president Isaac Herzog.

The US president spent two days in occupied al-Quds for talks with Israeli leaders before heading to the West Bank, where he met Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas on Friday.

Afterward, he took a direct flight from Israel to the Saudi Arabian port city of Jeddah on the Red Sea for talks with Saudi officials and to take part in a summit of Persian Gulf Cooperation Council.

Biden met Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and other regional leaders during the high-profile visit, amid speculation that Biden would be aggressively pushing for normalization between Riyadh and Tel Aviv.

The United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Sudan, and Morocco in 2020 became the first Arab countries in decades to normalize relations with Israel in a deal brokered by former US president Donald Trump.

Saudi Arabia is yet to jump on the bandwagon, despite claims that it is committed to the 2002 so-called Arab Peace Initiative, which conditions normalizing ties with Israel on the establishment of an independent, sovereign Palestinian state within the 1967 borders.

The kingdom in November 2020 granted permission for Israeli airlines to use its airspace, hours before the first Israeli flight to the UAE was set to take off.

Palestinian leaders, activists, and ordinary people have repeatedly rejected Arab-Israeli normalization deals as “a stab in the back” of the Palestinian cause.

Surviving Persian cheetah cub turns 77 days old

Persian cheetah cub

The mother of the litter, named Iran, gave birth to the three cubs in the Touran Wildlife Refuge on May 1 in the first birth of its kind in captivity.

The first cub died apparently from “congenital malformation of the left lung” and the second offspring died two weeks later, according to Department of Environment officials.

Officials took extra measures and put the third cub in intensive care to prevent the repeat of the past two experiences.

More photos of the cup are available here:

Iran praises Iraq’s efforts in advancing regional talks

Iran and Iraq FMs Hossein Amirabdolahian & Fuad Hussein

Amirabdollahian and Hussein discussed on Sunday bilateral and international issues, including Iran-Saudi Arabia talks.

The Iranian top diplomat expressed Tehran’s readiness to continue consultation and opinion exchange with the Iraqi counterpart to pursue issues of common interest in bilateral and regional areas.

Hussein shared his evaluation with Amirabdollahian on the recent Jedda meeting where Iraq was represented.

The Iraqi foreign minister stated that Baghdad had the required conversations for regional cooperation in the meeting and would continue efforts in line with peace and stability of the region.

Russia’s “Special Operation” in Ukraine; Day 145: Ukraine says over 38k Russian soldiers killed in war

Russia Ukraine War

Ukraine claims Russia has fired 3,000 missiles since war started

The Ukrainian Air Force claimed Russia has fired 3,000 missiles since the invasion of Ukraine started on Feb. 24.

“As of today, the enemy has already fired about three thousand missiles of various types over Ukraine,” the Ukrainian Air Force said in a Facebook post Monday.

“These are cruise missiles, air-to-surface missiles, operational-tactical missiles (Tochka-U, Iskander), as well as Onyx missiles of the Bastion coastal complex,” it added.

The Ukrainian Air Force also noted that recently, Moscow had started using more Soviet-era projectiles.

“Increasingly, the enemy is using old Soviet missiles, such as X-59, X-22, X-31 and others, against the positions of the Ukrainian army and civilian objects,” the post said, adding, “And in recent weeks, the enemy began to hit ground targets with anti-aircraft missiles from the S-300 complex, the main purpose of which is to destroy air targets.”


3 Russian bases hit in Kherson in last 24 hours: Ukrainian officials

Ukrainian officials have given further details of targets struck in Russian-occupied Kherson in the south of the country.

Serhii Khlan, adviser to the head of the Kherson civil-military administration, said the third target to be hit in the last 24 hours was in the district of Beryslav on the north bank of the river Dnieper.

“The base of the invaders was destroyed, where they also placed both equipment and ammunition depots,” Khlan added.

Separately, Natalia Humeniuk, spokesperson for Operational Command South, told CNN that “at 5 a.m., our units struck a concentration of enemy, weapons and equipment, as well as an ammunition warehouse in the Raiske district [near Nova Kakhovka on the south bank of the river] and an ammunition warehouse in the Beryslav district.”

Ukrainian forces have been targeting Russian ammunition sites and command posts in Kherson on an almost daily basis over the past two weeks in an effort to disrupt Russian supply lines.


Turkey will ‘freeze’ Finland, Sweden’s NATO bids if promises unkept: Erdogan

Turkey’s president said Ankara will “freeze” Finland and Sweden’s NATO membership bids if the Nordic countries do not keep promises on “terrorism” made last month.

“I want to reiterate once again that we will freeze the process if these countries do not take the necessary steps to fulfil our conditions,” Recep Tayyip Erdogan told reporters.

“We particularly note that Sweden does not have a good image on this issue,” he added.

Finland and Sweden applied for membership of the transatlantic military alliance in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, but were initially met with opposition from Turkey, which accused the Nordic countries of supporting groups it deems to be “terrorists”.

The three countries signed an accord at the NATO summit in Madrid last month to lift Ankara’s veto in exchange for pledges on “counter-terrorism” and arms exports.

Countries seeking to join the NATO alliance must have their membership applications approved by all 30 existing member states, and ratified by the countries’ respective parliaments.


Ukraine accuses Russia of mistreating captured foreign fighters

Ukraine’s foreign ministry has accused Russia of illegally mistreating foreign fighters captured by Moscow’s forces and using them for political purposes.

The ministry also called on Moscow to ensure foreigners taken prisoner of war while battling on Kyiv’s behalf amid the conflict were given humane treatment.

It urged Russia to adhere strictly to the provisions of international humanitarian law, including the 1949 Geneva Conventions which define international legal standards for humanitarian treatment.

The ministry also said “all foreign citizens and stateless persons” fighting for Ukraine on Ukrainian territory had been voluntarily accepted for military service, and that international humanitarian law should apply to them.


Germany rejects Russian explanation for gas supply cut

Germany’s government has said that a turbine at the centre of uncertainty about future gas deliveries through a major pipeline from Russia to Europe was only supposed to be installed in September, underlining its insistence that there should be no technical obstacle to the gas flow.

“We don’t see technical reasons,” Economy Ministry spokeswoman Beate Baron told reporters in Berlin.

“Our information is that this turbine is a replacement turbine that was earmarked for use in September but, again, we are doing everything to take away possible pretexts for the Russian side,” she added.

Meanwhile, Germany’s biggest importer of Russian gas said it had received a letter from Russia’s Gazprom claiming “force majeure” – events beyond its control – as the reason for past and current shortfalls in gas deliveries, a claim that the customer rejected.

Gazprom reduced gas deliveries through the Nord Stream 1 pipeline to Germany by 60 percent last month. The state-owned gas company cited alleged technical problems involving equipment that partner Siemens Energy sent to Canada for overhaul and couldn’t be returned because of sanctions imposed over Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Nord Stream 1 shut down altogether for annual maintenance on July 11. German officials are concerned that Russia may not resume gas deliveries at all after the scheduled end of that work on Thursday, and could cite another alleged technical reason not to do so.


Italy eyes increased gas supplies from Algeria

Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi has stated that gas supplies from Algeria to Italy will become more significant in the coming years as Rome seeks to reduce its reliance on Russia for energy.

Draghi added Italy was a “privileged partner” of Algeria and that the two countries were also cooperating in the development of renewable energy following a meeting with Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune in Algiers.


EU reaches deal with Azerbaijan to double gas imports by 2027

The European Commission has signed a deal with Azerbaijan to double imports of Azeri natural gas to at least 20 billion cubic metres a year by 2027.

“Today, with this new Memorandum of Understanding, we are opening a new chapter in our energy cooperation with Azerbaijan, a key partner in our efforts to move away from Russian fossil fuels,” Ursula von der Leyen said.

The EU is seeking alternative suppliers to Russia because of the invasion of Ukraine.

Azerbaijan is already increasing deliveries of natural gas to the EU from 8.1 billion cubic metres (bcm) in 2021 to an expected 12bcm in 2022, the Commission added.


Kremlin: Putin, Erdogan to discuss Ukrainian grain exports

Vladimir Putin and Recep Tayyip Erdogan will discuss the export of Ukrainian grain at their meeting in Tehran on Tuesday, a Kremlin aide has told reporters.

“The issue of Ukrainian grain shipment will be discussed with Erdogan … We are ready to continue work on this track,” Yuriy Ushakov, a foreign policy adviser to Putin, noted.

Ushakov’s remarks came amid expectations that Russia, Ukraine, Turkey and the United Nations will sign a deal later this week aimed at resuming the shipping of grain from Ukraine across the Black Sea.

Ukraine’s Black Sea ports, until now the main conduit for its agricultural exports, have been blocked since Russia began what it terms its “special military operation” in Ukraine in late February


Turkey says meeting on Ukraine grain exports expected this week

Officials from Russia, Ukraine, Turkey and the United Nations will most likely meet this week to discuss resuming Ukraine’s Black Sea grain exports, Turkey’s defence minister has said.

Hulusi Akar stated on Monday there was an agreement on “a plan” and “general principles” regarding the export corridor, and added a meeting between all parties to discuss the details of the proposal was “probable” this week.

He added technical matters like forming a monitoring centre in Istanbul, identifying safe routes, and checkpoints at port exits and entries were on the agenda.

Last week, Akar noted Russia, Ukraine, Turkey and the UN would sign a deal this week on the grain exports corridor, but UN chief Antonio Guterres warned there was still “a long way to go” before there would be peace talks to end the war.


Ukraine’s FM asks EU for more weapons and further sanctions against Russia

Ukraine’s foreign minister has called on the European Union to send additional weapons to his country and to impose additional sanctions on Russia.

“Today, I addressed EU ministers at the Foreign Affairs Council,” Dmytro Kuleba tweeted on Monday.

“My key message: weapons to Ukraine, sanctions on Russia, and accountability for Russia are the three ways to restore peace, enhance security, and protect stability in Europe,” he continued.

“Weapons: grateful for the extra €500 mln under the EPF and urge additional bilateral military aid,” Kuleba added.

Addressing the issue of further sanctions on Russia, the Ukrainian minister stated, “Energy embargo, price cap on oil, ban on all Russian TV channels.”

“I encourage EU states to support the Special Tribunal for the Crime of Aggression Against Ukraine,” Kuleba wrote.


Putin says Russia cannot be cut off from rest of world

President Vladimir Putin has said it will be impossible to cut Russia off from the rest of the world, and that the country must focus on developing its own technology and supporting fast-growing companies.

“Clearly, we cannot develop in isolation from the rest of the world, but we won’t. In today’s world, you can’t just, you know, circle everything with a compass and put up a huge fence, it’s just not possible,” Putin stated during a video conference with government officials.

The Russian leader also vowed Moscow would overcome the “colossal” high-tech problems his country is facing as a result of sweeping Western sanctions over the war in Ukraine.

“This is a huge challenge for our country,” Putin continued, adding, “Realising the colossal amount of difficulties we are facing, we will look for new solutions in an energetic and competent manner.”


Ukraine needs more external aid to prevent crisis: Official

Ukraine’s foreign partners need to increase their financial support for Kyiv to help it maintain financial stability during the war with Russia, an adviser to the President Volodymyr Zelensky’s office has said.

Tymofiy Mylovanov stated the current size of loans and other assistance provided was not enough to finance Ukraine’s needs, which had increased significantly because of the conflict while revenues had fallen.

“If we don’t cut expenditures, don’t increase inflows, in particular from international partners, if we don’t stabilise the situation, then … we may have a month or two to spare, and then we will have a crisis,” Mylovanov told national television.


EU seeking to double gas imports from Azerbaijan

European Union chief Von der Leyen stated the bloc wants to double its gas imports from Azerbaijan as it urgently seeks to reduce its reliance on Russian energy imports.

“The EU is turning to more reliable energy suppliers. Today I’m in Azerbaijan to sign a new agreement. Our goal: double the gas delivery from Azerbaijan to the EU in a few years,” she tweeted during a visit to the Caucasus country.


Russian shelling kills six in Donetsk: Emergency service

Six people have been killed by Russian shelling in the town of Toretsk, in eastern Ukraine’s Donetsk region, according to the country’s State Emergency Service.

Rescuers retrieved five bodies from the rubble of a two-storey house and another person died in hospital, the department announced in a Facebook post.

Russia, which describes its offensive in Ukraine as a “special military operation”, has repeatedly denied deliberately targeting civilians during the war.

Donetsk is one of two regions – alongside neighbouring Luhansk – which together form the area known as the Donbas, where Moscow has focused its attacks in recent months.


Russian DM orders forces to destroy Ukrainian missiles: Report

Russia’s defence minister has instructed the country’s military to prioritise destroying Ukraine’s long-range missile and artillery weapons, the TASS news agency has reported.

Tass quoted Sergei Shoigu as telling the commander of the Vostok battlegroup during an inspection that Russian forces should “use surgical strikes” to “crush the enemy’s long-range missile and artillery means”.

The instruction came amid claims from Kyiv that it has carried out a string of successful strikes on 30 Russian logistics and ammunition hubs, using several multiple launch rocket systems recently supplied by the West.


Russians buying cheaper food items as incomes fall: Leading retailer

Russian shoppers are switching to cheaper food items driven by a drop in real disposable income, the country’s leading food retailer X5 Group has said, as high inflation crimps purchasing power.

Though a stronger rouble and a drop in consumer demand have helped Russia rein in inflation, which soared to 20-year highs in annual terms following Moscow’s move to invade Ukraine, consumer prices are still elevated.

Federal Statistics Service Rosstat announced last week that consumer prices have risen 11.60 percent so far this year. But food inflation in the second quarter of 2022 was running at 19.5 percent year-on-year, X5 said, up from 13.5 percent in the first quarter.

High inflation has been the key concern among Russian households for years as it dents living standards, something that this year will be aggravated by the economic crisis triggered by unprecedented Western sanctions against Russia.


Ukraine claims to have hit more ammunition sites in occupied Kherson

Social media videos and photos published early Monday showed large explosions in the Kherson region, close to the River Dnipro.

Serhii Khlan, an adviser to the head of the Kherson civil-military administration, told CNN that two warehouses in Russian-occupied territory had been struck – one in Chulakivka at 11pm local time Sunday and the other in Raiske near Nova Kakhovk at 5am local time Monday. He said detonations had continued for several hours In Raiske.

Ukrainian forces had previously targeted a large warehouse said to contain Russian munitions in Nova Kakhovka, setting off multiple detonations and sending a huge fireball into the sky.

The arrival of high-precision long-range artillery and rocket systems from western allies has allowed Ukrainian forces to target Russian supply lines and storage sites far behind the front lines.


At least 353 Ukrainian children killed as a result of Russia’s invasion

At least 353 Ukrainian children have died and more than 665 been injured due to Russia’s invasion, the Ukrainian Juvenile Prosecutor’s Office announced on Monday.

Most injuries were reported in Donetsk, Kharkiv and Kyiv, it said.

It added at least 2,138 educational institutions have been damaged, of which 221 have been completely destroyed.


Ukraine military says several Russian attempts to advance in Donetsk have been repulsed

The Ukrainian military announced Monday that shelling of its defenses across Donetsk is continuing, but renewed attempts by Russian forces to win territory have been foiled.

The General Staff said that north of the city of Sloviansk more than ten settlements had come under fire. Most civilians left the area weeks ago.

The Russians continued to shell areas along the border of the Luhansk and Donetsk regions and were persisting with a ground assault to the east of the city of Lysychansk, which they took last month.

Ukrainian forces still defending this pocket of territory in eastern Donetsk region are being attacked from two sides as the Russians try to close in on the town of Siversk. But the General Staff said that “our defenders successfully repulsed the assaults in the areas of Verkhniokamianske, Spirne and Serebrianka settlements,” all close to Siversk.

The Ukrainian military added Russian efforts to attack from the south, near Bakhmut, had also been rebuffed.

Overall, very little territory has changed hands in Donbas since the fall of Lysychansk as Ukrainian forces have adopted new defensive positions.

Oleksandr Honcharenko, the mayor of Kramatorsk, noted that early Monday, there had been four strikes on an industrial zone in the city. Kramatorsk is some distance from the front lines but one of several cities in the west of Donetsk region that are seeing an uptick in long-range Russian missile and rocket attacks.

In the south, the military stated the Russians had tried to carry out an airstrike in northern Kherson, parts of which were liberated in recent weeks.

“After attacking our positions, the [enemy] immediately retreated under the onslaught of fire,” Operational Command South reported.

It claimed that Ukrainian aircraft had hit Russian weapons and ammunition near Davydiv Brid, on the border of Kherson and Mykolaiv regions.

Elsewhere in the south, heavy shelling was reported overnight in the town of Nikopol in Dnipropetrovsk region, with about ten homes and a power plant hit.


Russia’s block on Ukraine grain ‘issue of life or death’: EU official

Russia’s blockade of Ukrainian ports threatens grain supplies to tens of thousands of people vulnerable to starvation and must end, EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell has warned.

“It’s an issue of life and death for many human beings. And the question is that Russia has to de-block and allow Ukrainian grain to be exported,” Borrell told reporters.

“We are not going to stop supporting Ukraine and putting sanctions on Russia,” he said, adding, “Certainly there is a risk to our energy supply. Everybody knows (that).”

He noted that the EU Commission and Council were prepared to face “any possible situation.”

EU foreign ministers are expected to meet in Brussels on Monday to hold sanctions discussions, according to a senior EU official.


Ukraine claims 38,450 Russian soldiers killed

Ukraine’s army killed 150 Russian military personnel in the past day, the general staff of Ukraine’s armed forces said on Monday.

This brings the total number of Russian personnel lost, since the beginning of the invasion on February 24, to 38,450, the general staff added.


Moscow: NATO MRL experts appear to be directing Ukrainian servicemen on ground

NATO’s multiple rocket launcher (MRL) experts appear to be directing the actions of Ukrainian troops “on the ground,” which is fraught with certain consequences, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov stated.

“NATO instructors and MRL gunners are already, apparently, directing the actions of the Armed Forces of Ukraine and the national battalions ‘on the ground’,” Lavrov said in his article for the Izvestia newspaper, adding that he hoped that “there are responsible politicians among the Europeans who are aware of the consequences this is fraught with.”

He noted that the armed forces of Russia, as well as the Donetsk and Luhansk People’s Republics (DPR and LPR), are confidently solving tasks within the framework of Moscow’s special military operation in Ukraine.

“Losing on the battlefield, the Ukrainian regime and its Western patrons do not disdain to stage bloody dramatizations in order to demonize our country in international public view,” the Russian foreign minister continued.

According to the Russian foreign minister, Europe is suffering from sanctions imposed against Russia the most, and is using up its arsenals, supplying weapons to Kiev without requiring an account of who controls the arms and where these weapons end up.


Private army Wagner played central role in Russia’s Lysychansk capture: UK

Private military company Wagner group, sometimes known as Vladimir Putin’s private army, played a central role in Russia’s capture of the towns of Popasna and Lysychansk, the United Kingdom’s defence ministry has announced.

In its latest intelligence briefing, the ministry stated Russia was using Wagner “to reinforce front-line forces and to mitigate manning shortfalls and casualties.”

“Wagner are lowering recruitment standards, hiring convicts and formerly blacklisted individuals. Very limited training is made available to new recruits,” the briefing said.

It added that this was potentially impacting Russian military effectiveness.


FM: China not a party to Ukrainian crisis, but will not sit idly by

China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi reportedly said during a phone call with his Hungarian counterpart Peter Szijjártó Beijing is not a party to Ukrainian crisis, but will not sit idly by.

Yi and Szijjarto talked over the phone on Sunday about bilateral ties between the countries and the Ukraine crisis, according to a report by China’s Xinhua news agency.

“China is not a party to the Ukrainian crisis, but we are not going to be an indifferent spectator and, moreover, we are not going to add fuel to the fire, we have always been adamant and consistent in encouraging peace and negotiations,” the Chinese diplomat said.

The lessons from the Ukraine crisis are “profound and worth well learning for all sides”, Wang noted, adding that in the long run, the parties should discuss building a balanced, effective, and sustainable European security framework, so as to realise lasting peace and security.


Russian journalist who staged TV protest arrested, later released

Russian police detained the journalist Marina Ovsyannikova, who in March interrupted a live television broadcast to denounce the military action in Ukraine, her lawyer stated.

No official statement has been made, but her entourage posted a message on the journalist’s Telegram account on Sunday, according to Agence France-Presse.

“Marina has been detained. There is no information on where she is,” it read.

The message included three photos of her being led by two police officers to a white van, after apparently having been stopped while cycling.

Ovsyannikova also posted images of herself and two dogs on her Facebook page, later revealing she had been released.

“Went for a walk with the dogs, just stepped outside the gate, people in uniform approached me. Now I’m sitting in Krasnoselsky ministry of internal affairs,” she stated.

Three hours later, Ovsyannikova said she had been released.

“I’m home. Everything is okay,” she wrote, adding, “But now I know it’s always best to bring a suitcase and passport if you go out.”


EU chief executive heads to Azerbaijan in search of gas deal

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen will travel to Baku on Monday to seek more natural gas from Azerbaijan, the EU’s executive announced, as the European Union seeks to reduce its reliance on Russian energy.

“Amid Russia’s continued weaponisation of its energy supplies, diversification of our energy imports is a priority for the EU,” the Commission wrote on Twitter, adding, “President von der Leyen and (Energy) Commissioner Kadri Simson will be tomorrow in Azerbaijan to further strengthen the cooperation.”

According to a draft document seen by the Reuters news agency on July 14, the Commission has proposed to EU countries a deal with Azerbaijan to increase imports of natural gas and support the expansion of a pipeline to do this.


Lavrov slams Macron’s idea of a European community as ‘anti-Russian’

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has called the French president’s proposal for a “European political community” a deliberately confrontational idea with anti-Russian intentions, according to state news agency TASS.

Emmanuel Macron’s proposed community would be a framework for European Union members and democratic European non-members to discuss shared interests. Its overriding goal would be “stabilising the European continent”, France24 reported Macron having said in June. This community would encompass EU membership candidates like Ukraine and possibly ex-member the United Kingdom.

But TASS reports that Lavrov told Izvestia newspaper there would be “no particular financial or economic benefits, but there will be demands for full solidarity with the EU on its anti-Russian actions”.

“This is no longer an ‘or-or’ principle, but a ‘who is not with is against us’ principle,” TASS quoted Lavrov as having said.

“Macron himself explained what this community is: the EU will invite all European countries to join, from Iceland to Ukraine, but not Russia. I will point it out right here that we don’t need to go there, but the statement itself, which unveils the nature of this deliberately confrontational, dividing idea, is noteworthy,” he added.


Zelensky: Over 60 prosecutors, state security employees work against Ukraine

Zelenskyy has followed up on decrees in which he removed the State Security Service head and his Prosecutor General by saying more than 60 of their employees were working against Ukraine in Russian-occupied territory.

He stated 651 criminal proceedings had been registered relating to high treason and collaboration by employees of prosecutor’s offices, pretrial investigation bodies and other law enforcement agencies.

“In particular, more than 60 employees of the prosecutor’s office and the Security Service of Ukraine remained in the occupied territory and are working against our state,” he added.

He said that such crimes raised “very serious questions” for the relevant leaders and added, “Each of these questions will receive a proper answer.”


If bridge linking Crimea and Russia is hit, ‘consequences will be obvious’: Medvedev

Dmitry Medvedev, the deputy head of Russia’s Security Council chaired by Vladimir Putin, has responded to Ukrainian officials’ statements that Kyiv may strike the bridge linking Crimea and Russia, warning that that would trigger devastating consequences for the Ukrainian leadership.

“If that happens, the consequences will be obvious: They will momentarily face Doomsday,” Medvedev said, adding, “It would be very hard for them to hide.”

Medvedev, who once was touted by the West as more liberal compared to Putin, noted Russia will press its action in Ukraine until fulfilling its stated goal of “denazifying” and “demilitarising” the country.

He predicted that the continuing fighting will “undoubtedly lead to the collapse of the existing regime” in Kyiv.


Ukraine’s president fires security agency chief and prosecutor general

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky has issued executive orders dismissing the State Security Service head and the Prosecutor General.

The orders dismissing domestic security chief Ivan Bakanov, a childhood friend of Zelensky, and Prosecutor General Iryna Venediktova, who leads the effort to prosecute Russian war crimes in Ukraine, were published on the president’s official website.

No reason was immediately given for the sackings.

Former Iran FM: Tehran has capacities to make nukes, but not after it

Kamal Kharazi

Kharrazi, in an interview with Al Jazeera channel, said Iran increased the uranium enrichment level from 20 to 60 percent, in just a few days, and “We can easily increase it to 90 percent.”

Kharrazi also said the Israeli regime is on the decline and US President Joe Biden’s support will not reverse this trend.

He said, that any attempt against Iran’s security from neighboring countries will provoke a response to those countries and a direct response to the Zionist regime.

He also said Iran has held massive war games to target the heart of Israel in the event that the regime hits Iran’s sensitive facilities.

Kharrazi further referred to Biden’s recent visit to Israel and noted that the Quds statement from the US and the Zionist regime is just a repetitive one and will produce no results.

Elsewhere, Kharrazi welcomed Saudi Arabia announcement that it has extended the hand of friendship to Iran, saying Tehran is ready for talks with Riyadh and normalize ties with the kingdom.

He maintained that Iran and Saudi Arabia are two key regional nations and resolution of their disputes will change the situation in the region for the better.

Kharrazi further rejected the notion of the Arabic NATO as a superficial idea and echoed a statement by Saudi Arabia that this plan is not on the agenda.

He said the only solution to the regional crises is the formation of a commission of regional dialog to resolve political and security disputes.

Kharrazi also said Iran will not negotiate its regional polcies and missile might.
In other remarks, Kharrazi spoke of the talks over the revival of the Iran nuclear deal, JCPOA.

He said the US is not giving any guarantees that Iran will enjoy economic benefits of the nuclear deal after its revival and this makes an agreement elusive.

He added that if the International Atomic Energy Agency is fair and independent, it will be easy to resolve differences.

The former Iranian foreign minister denied that Tehran is after nukes, saying the Islamic Republic has the capability to do so but it does not seek atomic weapons.

3 Iranian Hajj pilgrims die in Saudi Arabia

Hajj

The head of the Hajj and Pilgrimage Organization’s Public relations Office said the deceased are two women and a man.

Vahid Eskandari did not provide further details. He added that 10 Iranian Hajj pilgrims have also been hospitalized in Saudi Arabia due to different reasons.

Another official with the organization said 39,630 Hajj pilgrims are now beginning to return to Iran after performing their rituals. Planes carrying the pilgrims will fly to Bandar Abbas, Mashhad and Tehran.