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Official: Russian deputy PM to visit Iran soon

Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak

Mehdi Safari, deputy Iranian foreign minister for economic diplomacy, made the announcement at a meeting of the Committee to Coordinate Foreign Economic Relations on Saturday.

Novak, who heads the Iran-Russia Joint Economic Commission, will meet with Iran’s Vice President Mohammad Mokhber.

Safari did not specify the timing of Novak’s visit.

Iran’s Ambassador to Russia Kazem Jalali, who was present at the Saturday meeting, said Tehran and Moscow were determined to resolve such bilateral issues as transit problems.

He said the atmosphere of bilateral work had been enhanced with the visit to Moscow in January by Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi.

Iran inks eight cooperation agreements with Venezuela and Nicaragua

Iranian Oil Minister Javad Owji & his Venezuelan counterpart Tareck El Aissami

The Saturday report by semi-official Fars news agency cited sources close to Owji and said that the minister had inked two contracts and four memoranda of understanding (MoU) on oil and gas cooperation with Venezuela during a trip to the South American country that stared last weekend

The report added that the minister had signed two MoUs on agriculture cooperation with Nicaragua when he visited the country earlier this week.

It said Owji’s Latin America tour had been meant to remain confidential until images of his meetings with Venezuelan officials started circulating in the local media last week.

Iran and Venezuela have been in close cooperation in the past three years to offset the impacts of American sanctions on their economies.

The cooperation has helped the two major oil producers to get round US sanctions and sell their crude cargoes to international customers.

Iran has supplied Venezuela with large volumes of gasoline and condensate, a very light form of oil that Venezuela needs to mix with its super-heavy crude before supplying it to refiners.

The repot by Fars added Owji and his accompanying delegation that included key members of the Iranian parliament had held high-level talks with senior government officials in Venezuela and Nicaragua.

A Saturday report by Oil Ministry’s news service Shana also said that Owji had made brief visits to several petroleum installations in countries in South and Central America.

The report did not elaborate on more details including in which countries the oil facilities were located.

Russia’s “Special Operation” in Ukraine; Day 74: Biden’s wife, Canadian PM visit Ukraine

US first lady Jill Biden in Ukraine
US first lady Jill Biden receives flowers from Ukrainian first lady Olena Zelenska in Uzhhorod, Ukraine, on May 8.

US imposes new sanctions on Russia

The US has unveiled sanctions against three Russian television stations, banned Americans from providing accounting and consulting services to Russians, and sanctioned executives from Gazprombank to punish Moscow for its invasion of Ukraine.

The move comes as President Joe Biden met virtually with leaders of the Group of 7 nations and President Volodymyr Zelensky.

“This is not a full block. We’re not freezing the assets of Gazprombank or prohibiting any transactions with Gazprombank,” a senior Biden administration official told reporters.

“What we’re signaling is that Gazprombank is not a safe haven, and so we’re sanctioning some of their top business executives … to create a chilling effect,” the official added.

Eight executives from Sberbank, which holds one-third of Russia’s banking assets, were added to the sanctions list. Moscow Industrial Bank and its 10 subsidiaries were also added.

“The United States also sanctioned eight executives from Sberbank– the largest financial institution in Russia and uniquely important to the Russian economy, holding about a third of all bank assets in Russia; twenty-seven executives from Gazprombank – a prominent Russian bank facilitating business by Russia’s Gazprom, one of the largest natural gas exporters in the world; and Moscow Industrial Bank and its ten subsidiaries,” the White House announced in its Fact Sheet on Sunday.

The US State Department has also announced a raft of visa bans and a new policy of visa restrictions on more than 2,500 Russian military officials and Russian-backed forces in Ukraine, according to a department fact sheet.

It also said it designated eight Russian maritime-related companies and added 69 vessels to a US Treasury Department sanctions list.


EU edges towards oil sanctions on Russia, no deal yet

European Union governments moved closer to agreeing tough sanctions against Russia that include a ban on buying Russian oil, but scheduled more talks for Monday to work out how to ensure countries most dependent on Russian energy can cope.

Diplomats of the 27 EU countries have been meeting daily to discuss details of the sixth sanctions package targeting Moscow since the European Commission announced proposals for it on May 4.

“The Council (of EU governments) is united on the need to adopt a 6th sanctions package,” the French presidency of the EU and the Commission said in a statement, adding, “Very significant progress has been made on most of the measures.”

The sticking point is how to secure oil supplies to landlocked Hungary, Slovakia and the Czech Republic, which all depend heavily on Russian crude delivered via Soviet-era pipelines and face a challenge to secure alternative sources.


Zelensky, German parliament chief discuss arms, EU membership

In a video of a meeting with German parliament’s President Baerbel Bas, President Volodymyr Zelensky has said that securing the Bundestag’s approval of heavy arms deliveries to help Ukraine fend off Russian attacks was one his country’s “top priorities.”

He also asked Bas and the Bundestag to support Ukraine in its bid for European Union membership, which Kyiv’s allies have said they want soon. However, candidature would have to be agreed unanimously and accession usually takes years of complex negotiations.


G7 leaders pledge further economic isolation of Russia

The Group of Seven leaders said in a joint statement that they will reinforce Russia’s economic isolation and “elevate” a campaign against Russian elites who support President Vladimir Putin.

After meeting virtually with President Volodymyr Zelensky, the leaders said they would cut off key services on which Russia depends, reinforcing the isolation of Russia “across all sectors of its economy.”

They also committed to phasing out dependency on Russian energy, including by banning imports of Russian oil.

“(W)e will continue and elevate our campaign against the financial elites and family members, who support President Putin in his war effort and squander the resources of the Russian people,” the statement added.


Russia says it hits US-supplied weapons in Ukraine

Russia says it had destroyed weapons and military equipment provided to Ukraine by the US and other unspecified Western countries.

Igor Konashenkov, Russia’s defence ministry’s spokesperson, stated “high-precision air-launched missiles of the Russian Aerospace Forces” struck the targets near the settlement of Soledar, TASS news agency reported.


Blinken speaks to Kuleba about return of US diplomats to Kyiv and security assistance

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken spoke on Sunday with Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba about the return of US diplomats to Kyiv and US security assistance to Ukraine.

According to a readout from State Department spokesperson Ned Price, Blinken informed Kuleba that US Charge d’Affaires Kristina Kvien “and a small group of diplomats, accompanied by State Department security, traveled to Kyiv to conduct diplomatic engagement in advance of the planned resumption of Embassy Kyiv operations, as the Secretary pledged to President [Volodymyr] Zelensky they would during his most recent visit to Kyiv.”

Blinken and Kuleba also discussed the new US security assistance to Ukraine, “including the ninth drawdown from US stocks authorized by President Biden and the expanded authorities that will be offered under the Ukraine Democracy Defense Lend-Lease Act of 2022,” Price said.


Ukrainian military says new Russian efforts to break through several areas failed

Ukraine’s armed forces say they have continued to resist efforts Sunday by Russian units to break through in several areas.

The main Russian thrust has been south from the town of Izium in an effort to encircle Ukrainian troops defending parts of Luhansk region.

The Ukrainian General Staff announced the “enemy regrouped units and replenished supplies to increase the offensive,” but an attempt to take new territory was repulsed.

In an apparent indication of the Russian switch of focus, the Ukrainians said: “The occupiers are no longer conducting an active offensive in the Kharkiv direction.”

However, parts of the region continue to be shelled by Russian artillery, and there has been fighting further east, very close to the Russian border, where Ukrainian forces are trying to advance on Russian supply lines.

In Luhansk, the general staff said that “the enemy is preparing to storm Severodonetsk and Lysychansk,” two towns that the Russians have been shelling for weeks. In the same region, the Russians appear to have full control now of the town of Popasna, but have not made progress beyond that in the direction of Bakhmut to the west.

In Mariupol, the general staff added, the intensity of hostilities had decreased.

One of the most active combat areas in recent days has been the Black Sea coast. Ukraine’s Air Command South said Sunday it had downed a Russian cruise missile launched by a Russian Su-35 in the skies over the Black Sea.


Acting US ambassador and a group of US diplomats return to embassy in Kyiv for first time since war began

Acting US Ambassador to Ukraine Kristina Kvien and a group of US diplomats returned to the embassy in Kyiv on Sunday for the first time since the war began more than two months ago.

The US embassy in the Ukrainian capital was shuttered in mid-February as concerns grew of Russian military action. A small group of US diplomats was relocated to the western Ukrainian city of Lviv before moving across the border to Poland and commuting back and forth into Ukraine. On Feb. 24 — the same day Russia’s military invasion began — the US suspended services in Lviv.

In late April, during a visit to Kyiv, Secretary of State Antony Blinken announced that the US would return diplomats to Ukraine. Diplomats had begun making day trips into Lviv following that announcement.

The visit by Kvien and other US diplomats to Kyiv comes of Victory in Europe Day — a day before Russia’s Victory Day — and on the same day that First Lady Jill Biden made a surprise visit to Ukraine.


Ukrainian steel factory under constant shelling by Russians

The Azovstal steel plant in Mariupol is under “constant intense shelling” by Russian forces trying to take the last remaining stronghold in the port city, according to the Azov brigade, who held an online news conference from a hideout location within the plant.

The Russians are attacking with “artillery, tanks, mortars, infantry and snipers,” according to the soldiers.

Azov soldier Illia Samoilenko said Russian troops have “reached a barrier in close proximity to Azov regiment positions.”

The Ukrainian fighters’ supplies are “limited” but they still have enough water and ammunition to withstand the attack, he continued.

“We still have munition, we still have personal weapons and we will fight till the best resolution of this situation,” Samoilenko added.


Jill Biden makes surprise visit to Ukraine

The US first lady Jill Biden has hold a surprise Mother’s Day meeting with her Ukrainian counterpart, Olena Zelenskyy, in an unexpected visit to Ukraine.

Biden traveled under the cloak of secrecy, becoming the latest high-profile American to enter the war-torn country. Her visit follows recent stops in Kyiv by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other members of Congress, as well as a joint trip by Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin to meet with President Volodymyr Zelensky.

The first lady traveled by vehicle to the town of Uzhhorod from a Slovakian village that borders Ukraine.


Canadian PM visits Irpin town in Ukraine

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau made on Sunday an unannounced visit to the Ukrainian town of Irpin, which had been temporary held by Russian troops, the town’s mayor said on Telegram.

“I’ve just had an honor to meet with the Prime Minister of Canada Justin Trudeau, who came to Irpin to see with his own eyes all the horror which Russian occupiers have caused to our town,” Oleksandr Markushyn stated.

The PM has traveled to Ukraine and will meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, according to Trudeau administration press secretary Cecely Roy.

“The Prime Minister is in Ukraine to meet with President Zelenskyy and reaffirm Canada’s unwavering support for the Ukrainian people,” Roy told CNN in an email Sunday morning.

The timing and location of the visit and meeting was not made available.


Several dead after civilian convoy escaping fighting near Kharkiv fired on: Police

A convoy of civilian vehicles trying to escape fighting near the city of Kharkiv was fired upon, killing several people, the Kharkiv region police said. Others are missing.

Serhiy Bolvinov, chief of the investigation department, stated police had lost contact with the convoy a few days ago.

There were 15 cars traveling near the village of Staryi Saltiv, which has seen heavy fighting in recent days as Ukrainian forces launch a counter-attack against the Russians east of Kharkiv.

At the time, the convoy was trying to reach territory controlled by the Ukrainians, Bolvinov continued, adding, “Due to the ongoing combat, it was not possible to reach the place of the column.”

The wreckage of the convoy was found on Friday, he said. Having arrived at the scene, investigators found a broken enemy tank and the bodies of two Russian soldiers.

A further 300 meters away, six cars with bullet holes were found. Four corpses were found in the cars and, according to Bolvinov, they appeared to be some of the civilians who had been in the convoy.

The remains of a 13-year old girl had been positively identified, he added.

Bolvinov gave no details about what may have happened to other vehicles in the convoy.


Leaders of G7 to meet virtually on Ukraine

President Volodymyr Zelensky is set to hold talks with G7 leaders via video conference to discuss the situation in his country.

More sanctions, or at least a tightening of current ones imposed on Russia, are expected to be discussed.


Russian deputy PM visits Mariupol

Deputy Prime Minister of Russia Marat Khusnullin says he has visited, among others, the Ukrainian city of Mariupol. Khusnullin is Russia’s most senior official to step foot in Ukraine since the war began.

“In the regions, the restoration of peaceful life begins. A lot of work to be done. We will help, in particular, it is necessary to carry out large-scale work in terms of providing humanitarian assistance!” he added.

Following relentless bombardment for nearly two months, Russia has claimed victory over the port city on April 21. However, some Ukrainian fighters are still holed up in the city’s vast Soviet-era Azovstal steelworks – the last holdout against Russian forces there.


Fighters at Azovstal plant pledge to fight till the end: Azov regiment

Armed fighters at the besieged Azovstal steel plant have pledged to continue fighting “for as long as we are alive”.

“We will continue to fight as long as we are alive to repel the Russian occupiers,” Sviatoslav Palamar, a deputy commander of Ukraine’s far-right Azov Regiment, told an online conference.

“We don’t have much time, we are coming under intense shelling,” he added.


FM says Iran opposes Ukraine war

Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian has said the Ukraine crisis has no military solution, expressing Tehran’s opposition to the conflict.

Speaking at a meeting with his Polish counterpart Zbigniew Rau in Tehran on Sunday, Amir Abdollahian reaffirmed the Islamic Republic of Iran’s stance and said Tehran is opposed to war in Ukraine just as in Yemen, Iraq or anywhere else.


‘Victory will be ours’: Putin

Russian President Vladimir Putin has vowed that “as in 1945, victory will be ours” as he congratulated former Soviet nations on Victory Day.

“Today, our soldiers, as their ancestors, are fighting side by side to liberate their native land from the Nazi filth with the confidence that, as in 1945, victory will be ours,” Putin said.

“Today, it is our common duty to prevent the rebirth of Nazism which caused so much suffering to the peoples of different countries,” he stated.

He added he hoped “new generations may be worthy of the memory of their fathers and grandfathers”.


EU mulls emergency energy sharing plan in face of possible full stop of Russian supplies: Report

The European Commission is due to approve an emergency energy sharing plan on 18 May to grapple with a possible abrupt interruption of Russian gas supplies to the bloc, the Spanish newspaper El Pais has reported.

According to the news outlet, Brussels warns that in case of emergency, the plan will affect almost all EU partners of Madrid because those that have alternative sources of energy supplies, such as Spain, will have to share their gas with the countries that will be hit by Russia’s possible decision to cut gas deliveries.

The blueprint will reportedly stipulate that energy rationing should be applied in such a way that companies in unaffected EU countries could not have a competitive advantage over the firms based in the bloc’s member states that may face cuts in energy supplies.

El Pais pointed out that Brussels plans to use a 2017 regulation on the security of energy supplies in order to introduce measures that will guarantee the delivery of enough gas to households and essential social services in all EU countries.

The EU’s blueprint envisages that each affected country can declare a national emergency and impose its own rationing rules. In addition, such nations are allowed to invoke the regulation’s solidarity-related clause, which would prompt unaffected countries to help provide them with gas supplies.

El Pais reported the EU has already “embarked on a frantic race” to find alternative energy supplies. At the same time, Brussels admits that in the immediate future, “it will be practically impossible” to replace Russian gas deliveries, the newspaper argues.

According to the daily, the European Commission believes that of the 155,000 million cubic meters of gas that annually arrived from Russia, two thirds can be replaced. It means that about 50,000 million cubic meters would be missing, a figure that is tantamount to the 12-month gas consumption of Romania, Hungary, Austria, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.

Earlier this week, EU Commissioner for Energy Kadri Simson urged Brussels to accelerate the deployment of renewable energy sources in a bid to resolve the issue of replacing imports of Russian gas.

“We cannot simply replace 155 bcm of Russian gas with fossil gas from other suppliers. It [is] neither sustainable nor affordable. So we need to speed [up] the deployment of renewable energy,” she stressed.


Rescue efforts underway, but likelihood of finding survivors of school bombing “very small”: Ukrainian official

A senior official in the Luhansk region has said that the chances of finding anyone still alive inside the school that was sheltering around 90 people when it was bombed by a Russian aircraft on Saturday afternoon are “very small.”

Serhiy Hayday, head of the Luhansk regional military administration, stated the school building was completely destroyed.

“The explosion happened inside the building. Rescuers [are] dismantling the debris as quickly as possible. The chances of finding [anyone still] alive are very small. There were 90 people inside the school building; 27 survived, 60 people most likely died,” he added.

The bodies of two people were found in the debris, Hayday said in a Telegram post Sunday.

A Russian aircraft dropped a bomb on the school in the village of Bilohorivka, which is about seven miles from the frontlines, according to Hayday.

The strike hit at around 4:37 p.m. local time on Saturday, causing fires to break out that took almost four hours to extinguish, he continued.

Hayday added that heavy fighting overnight had disrupted the rescue operation.

He said fighting had continued into Sunday on several fronts in Luhansk — including Bilohorivka, Voyevodivka, and Rubizhne. He also said there was an extremely difficult situation around Hirske.

Near Popasna, Russian artillery hit the house where 11 people were hiding in the basement, he said. Rescuers were dismantling the debris.

Hayday noted Ukrainian troops had withdrawn a “little way” from Popasna, adding, “Since the city was destroyed, our troops retreated to more fortified positions.”


Evil has returned to Ukraine: Zelensky

Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelensky claims evil has returned to Ukraine during an address for Victory Day, a day commemorating the formal surrender of Germany to the Allies in World War Two.

“The evil has returned. Again!” Zelenskyy said, noting, “In a different form, under different slogans, but for the same purpose.”

“No evil can escape responsibility, it cannot hide in a bunker,” he added.


Russia continues to bomb northeast region: Ukraine authorities

The Ukrainian military claims Russia continued bombarding towns and villages in the country’s northeast as it tries to gain territory along the front line.

Pavlo Kovalchuk, spokesman of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, has stated Russia shelled Prudyanka, Slatine and Tsyrkuny near Kharkiv, the country’s second-largest city.


Zelensky seeks ‘united position’ from EU on Russia sanctions

Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelensky is calling for more unity among EU countries in terms of sanctions against Russia.

“The European Union should be in a united position. They don’t have it with respect to certain sanctions. For those sanctions the European Union introduced, we are thankful to them. However, they have to be thankful to themselves because the role of Russia against Ukraine, it’s a war against the values that Ukraine defends, and these values are the values of the European Union countries,” Zelensky said in an interview with Fox News.

He also criticized the United Nations and the UN Security Council for their alleged ineffectiveness in preventing hostilities.

“I’m open to saying about that organization [UN], especially on such high level, that it doesn’t work,” Zelensky added.

In contrast, he praised the role of Washington as a strong global leader, particularly in what concerns the anti-Russia sanctions campaign.

“So far, I think that the United States of America is the accelerator of the sanction policies and I think they do more than any other country. And this is the way it should be because they are the most powerful country right now. I see the same support with respect to sanctions from the United Kingdom,” Zelensky stated.


Russians make minor advances but are under pressure around Kharkiv: Ukrainian military

Russian forces have made minor advances on one front near the city of Izium, according to the Ukrainian military, but are also on the defensive near Kharkiv as a Ukrainian counter-attack continues.

The General Staff of the Ukrainian armed forces said Sunday the Russians had captured the northern outskirts of the village of Shandryholove as they try to push south from the Izium area into the Donetsk region.

The enemy concentrated its main efforts on “preparations for the continuation of the offensive” in the area.

Along other front lines there were few changes, the General Staff announced, with the Russians using artillery against Ukrainian defenses.

In the Kharkiv area, the General Staff added that the Russians were concentrating on “preventing the further advance of our troops towards the state border of Ukraine to the north and northeast of Kharkiv.”

To that end they were shelling villages recently recaptured by Ukrainian forces — such as Prudyanka and Slatine — and trying to strengthen their defensive positions.

In the south-west of Ukraine, the armed forces said “the situation remains tense.”

They claimed that “armed formations” in the pro-Russian area of Transnistria in Moldova, as well as Russian troops there, are in full combat readiness. Transnistria, a breakaway territory within Moldova, has housed Russian troops for decades.

The General Staff confirmed clashes on Snake Island, a small island off the Romanian and Ukrainian coastline. It added that, during Saturday, one Russian Mi-28H helicopter as well as a number of drones had been destroyed by anti-aircraft missiles. The military’s Operational Command (South) later published drone video purporting to show a Russian helicopter on Snake Island being destroyed.


Russia’s Gazprom continues gas exports to Europe via Ukraine

Gas producer Gazprom has announced it was supplying natural gas to Europe via Ukraine in line with requests from European consumers.

Requests stood at 92.1 million cubic metres (mcm) for May 8 compared with 92.4 mcm on May 7.


60 people feared dead after bombing of school shelter in Ukraine

Sixty people are feared dead following an airstrike on Saturday on a school in the Luhansk region where 90 people were sheltering, according to a local official.

Serhiy Hayday, head of the Luhansk Regional Military Administration, said 30 people sheltering in the school had been rescued, of which seven were injured.

The bodies of two people were found in the debris, Hayday said in a Telegram post on Sunday, adding that it is “likely that all of the 60 people left under the building’s wreckage were killed.”

A Russian aircraft had dropped a bomb on the school in the village of Bilohorivka, which is some seven miles from the frontlines, according to Hayday.

The strike hit at around 4:37 p.m. local time on Saturday, causing fires to break out that took almost four hours to extinguish, he continued.


High casualties feared after school shelter in Ukraine bombed

Ukraine has accused Russia of dropping a bomb on a school in Luhansk region where 90 people were taking shelter.

Serhiy Hayday, the head of the Luhansk region military administration, said a Russian aircraft had dropped a bomb on the school in the village of Bilohorivka, which is about 7 miles from the front lines.

Hayday added 30 people had so far been rescued from the rubble.

“Almost the entire village was hiding. Everyone who did not evacuate. After the social club was hit, the basement of the school was the only place of salvation, but the Russians took this chance from people,” Hayday continued.

The rescue operation is ongoing, he stated.

Photographs posted by the regional authorities show the school in ruins.


UK to provide 1.3 billion pounds of additional military aid to Ukraine

The United Kingdom says it will provide 1.3 billion pounds ($1.6bn) in military support and aid to Ukraine.

The new pledge almost doubles the UK’s previous spending commitments on Ukraine and the British government announced that this is the highest rate of spending on a conflict since the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, although it did not give details of this calculation.

“Putin’s brutal attack is not only causing untold devastation in Ukraine – it is also threatening peace and security across Europe,” British Prime Minister Boris Johnson stated in a statement.


Germany to help restore water supply, rebuild houses in Ukraine

Germany has announced an aid package of 63 million euros ($66m) to help rebuild conflict-torn areas in Ukraine.

“We have boosted the immediate aid programme for Ukraine from 122 million to 185 million euros,” said German Development Minister Svenja Schulze.

“This will be used to restore the drinking water supply and rebuild destroyed apartments, schools and kindergartens,” she continued.

She added, “Where the bombs have stopped falling, Germany will assist with billions for rebuilding.”


Chechen leader claims his soldiers control Ukraine’s Popasna

Ramzan Kadyrov, the head of Russia’s republic of Chechnya, says his soldiers have taken control of most of the eastern  Ukrainian city of Popasna.

“Fighters of the Chechen special forces … have taken most of Popasna under control,” Kadyrov, who has often described himself as Russian President Vladimir Putin’s “foot soldier”, wrote in a post on the Telegram messaging app.

“The main streets and central districts of the town have been completely cleared,” he added.

Popasna is in the Luhansk region.

There was no immediate response from Ukraine, but an adviser to President Volodymyr Zelensky noted late on Saturday that heavy fighting for the town continues.

“A battle for Popasna is ongoing,” Oleksiy Arestovych said in a video on social media.

“Russian propagandists have joyfully reported that they have already taken it, but this is not quite how it is. This is their 117th ‘capture of Popasna’ claim only this week,” he added.


WHO has documented 200 attacks on health facilities in Ukraine

World Health Organisation Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus has told Ukrainians that the WHO stands by them in the conflict with Russia and urged Moscow to stop waging war on its neighbour.

“My message to all the people of Ukraine is this,” he said, speaking from the government media centre in the capital Kyiv.

“WHO stands by you,” he added.

WHO Emergencies Director Mike Ryan told the same news conference that the organisation had already documented 200 attacks on healthcare facilities in Ukraine, and would pass its findings on to those who could assess whether crimes had been committed.


Zelensky: Over 300 people were saved from Azovstal plant

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky says more than 300 civilians have been rescued from the Azovstal steel plant in Mariupol.

Zelenskyy stated in a late night address that authorities would now focus on a second stage of the evacuation, aimed at rescuing the wounded and medics, and work on humanitarian corridors for all residents of Mariupol and surrounding settlements.

He also added Kyiv was attempting to negotiate the evacuation of Ukrainian “defenders” from the steel mill but that it had been “extremely difficult.”

Russia’s defence ministry has also announced the completion of an operation to evacuate civilians from the Azovstal steel plant in Mariupol.


Russia and Ukraine report combat near Snake Island

The Russian defense ministry claimed that its forces in the area of Snake Island off the coast of Ukraine have shot down several Ukrainian aircraft and drones.

In a briefing in Moscow, the defense ministry spokesperson, Maj. Gen. Igor Konashenkov, said that a Ukrainian Su-24 bomber, a Su-27 fighter aircraft, three Mi-8 helicopters with a landing force and two Turkish-made attack drones had been shot down.

“The Ukrainian amphibious assault boat Stanislav has also been destroyed,” he added.

The ministry posted a video purporting to show Russian air defenses on Snake Island bringing down a drone.

Earlier, the Ukrainian military also reported combat around Snake Island but did not comment on any losses. It released drone footage which, it said, showed its forces destroying a Russian landing craft on the island. It said that two anti-aircraft missile systems had also been hit.

Snake Island is where, early on in the war, Ukrainian soldiers reacted with words of defiance against Russian attackers. According to a purported audio exchange, a Russian officer told the Ukrainians to lay down their arms, but a soldier responded: “Russian warship, go f*** yourself.” All 13 Ukrainian defenders were at first believed to have been killed; it was later revealed that they were alive but had to surrender due to lack of ammunition.

Majority of Iranians say they want Iran deal revived: Poll

Iranians Nuclear Deal Dollar Rial

According to a poll conducted on 1,100 adults via telephone by Keyou Analytics, 53.9 percent of the respondents said they expected the administration to revive the nuclear deal, while 12.2 percent said they wanted Iran out of the agreement.

Under the Iran deal, originally between Iran and six world powers, a raft of sanctions that had been imposed on the country over its nuclear program was lifted, opening a flow of foreign businesses into the country.

Former US President Donald Trump, however, unilaterally pulled out of the agreement in 2018 and reintroduced tougher restrictions on the country, which have partially to blame for its battered economy.

Since Trump was voted out of office, Iran has been negotiating with the United States indirectly to facilitate its return and revive the deal. Those negotiations have, however, stopped, apparently to allow the sides to make political decisions.

The Keyou poll also studied the approval rating of the Raisi administration, which assumed office in August 2021 on a platform of reviving the Iranian economy.

The poll found that 32.3 percent of respondents approved of the Raisi administration’s performance compared to an earlier poll that had been carried out five months ago, when 44.1 percent of people expressed approval.

Also, 52 percent of the respondents disapproved of the administration’s performance, compared to 50.4 percent in the previous polling.

Asked specifically to rate the administration’s economic performance from 1 (lowest performance rate) to 5 (highest performance rate), 43 percent of the respondents — by far the largest percentage —picked 1.

A mere 10 percent rated the administration’s economic performance the highest.

Borrel: EU makes last-ditch effort to salvage JCPOA

EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell

EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell told the Financial Times he was seeking a “middle way” to end the impasse, which threatens to scupper more than a year of European diplomatic efforts to seal a deal that would lead to the US rejoining the 2015 accord and lifting sanctions on Iran. In return, the Islamic republic would drastically reduce its nuclear activity.

He said he wanted EU negotiator Enrique Mora to visit Tehran to discuss the issue, but added that Iran “was very much reluctant”. He described the diplomatic push as “the last bullet”.

Borrell is considering a scenario whereby the designation on the guards is lifted, but kept in place on other parts of the organisation, which has several arms across the security apparatus and a sprawling business empire.

Analysts have suggested one compromise option for the US is to lift the terrorist designation on the guards and keep it on the Quds force. The Quds force has been designated since 2007, while former US President Donald Trump labelled the guards a terrorist organisation in 2019, a year after he abandoned the agreement.

In 2018, the US, under Trump, pulled out of the pact and reinstated sanctions under the so-called ‘maximum pressure campaign’ against Tehran, effectively depriving Iran of the deal’s benefits by forcing third parties to stop doing business with Iran.

Iran remained patient for an entire year, after which it began to take incremental steps away from its nuclear obligations, especially after Europeans failed to salvage the deal under the US pressure.

The Islamic republic’s decision to ramp up its nuclear activities prompted other parties to revive talks

US President Joe Biden promised to rejoin the deal if Iran fell back into compliance with it, and the EU spent months brokering indirect talks between Washington and Tehran in Vienna.

Western officials insist an agreement is ready to be signed. But there have been no negotiations in Vienna since March. Tehran repeatedly says it is ready to sign if Washington meets its demands.

Analysts stated the Biden administration was reluctant to lift the guards’ designation because it would face a backlash domestically, as well as from US allies in the Middle East.

Iranian officials have stressed the IRGC is a national army and no one can blacklist a national army as a terrorist entity.

“At a certain moment, I will have to say, as co-ordinator [of the Vienna talks] I make this proposal on the table, formally . . . the only equilibrium point possible would be this one,” Borrell stated.

“We cannot continue like this forever, because in the meantime Iran continues developing their nuclear programme,” he noted.

He added that “the file is on the table of President Biden himself, my discussions with [Antony] Blinken have reached the limit”.

A senior US administration official announced Washington did not agree with Iran that the terrorism designation should be linked to the nuclear talks.

“If it matters to the Iranians that we lift it, we are going to need something that addresses our non-nuclear concerns in exchange,” the official said, adding, “If Iran insists the designation has to be lifted and rejects all of the ideas that we put forward, there will be a collapse of the talks.”

However, in a sign of the impact of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on the talks, Borrell said negotiators would not give Iran an ultimatum. Analysts say they are wary about sparking a separate crisis with Iran, and keen to secure a deal that will enable Tehran to ramp up its oil exports to help stem rising energy prices and replace Russian crude.

Borrell added the US and Iran wanted a deal.

“We Europeans will be very much beneficiaries from this deal, the situation has changed now. For us it was something . . . ‘well we don’t need it’, now it would be very much interesting for us to have another [crude] supplier,” he continued, stating, “And the Americans need a diplomatic success.”

Iran insists that the talks must lead to the removal of all American sanctions that were imposed against Tehran following Washington’s unilateral withdrawal from the landmark agreement in May 2018. Tehran has also demanded credible guarantees that Washington will not abandon the deal again.

EU’s Mora to visit Tehran for talks with Iranian officials

The European Union’s Deputy Foreign Policy Chief Enrique Mora

That’s according to Nour News, a media outlet affiliated with Iran’s Supreme National Security Council.

After the Vienna talks reached a point where conclusion of a deal became contingent upon a political decision by the US, the P4+1 group and Iran continued their negotiations through exchanging messages in order to remain in touch.

According to Nour News, Mora’s visit can serve as a new step toward constructive consultations over the few remaining issues which are at the same time key ones.

Iran has maintained contacts with the other parties to the Vienna talks despite hostile moves by the US that go against the spirit of negotiations aimed at reaching a deal.

Iran has time and again said it’s possible to reach a robust and lasting deal in Vienna provided that the US acts realistically and learns a lesson from its past mistakes which are responsible for the complicated situation of the talks in Vienna.

Iran Covid: Fatalities single-digit again

COVID in Iran

According to figures released by the Health Ministry on Saturday, the daily death toll was 8 over the past 24 hours. The daily caseload was also 270 including 63 hospitalizations.

Meanwhile, over the past 24 hours, 33,410 doses of Covid vaccine were administered to people in Iran. That’s part of a nationwide inoculation campaign that is credited for the downward trend in deaths and infections.

So far, 85 percent of Iranians have received two doses of vaccine while authorities say they have started giving the fourth shot as well. Over 27 million people are triple-vaxxed.

There are no red cities or towns in Iran in terms of risk from Covid. This is while 125 cities or towns are blue, which shows things have returned to normal in those areas.

Analyst: Russia can’t boast of win in Ukraine on natl. Victory Day

Russia holds Victory Day Parade in Moscow

In an interview with ILNA, Ali Bigdeli elaborated on the historical significance of Victory Day, when Russia marks the ex-Soviet Union’s victory over Nazi Germany.

Annually, Russia holds a large parade joined by thousands of soldiers, tanks and military vehicles on Moscow’s Red Square.

Russian President Vladimir Putin also joins the event and delivers a speech.

The analyst said Putin is seeking to unveil an achievement on this day and will boast about certain elements of Russian power.

“However, in the current circumstances, especially in the wake of the failure to establish military control over the Ukrainian capital, Moscow is now seeking a declaration of victory, but I think such a declaration will not happen during the May 9 parade,” he said.

Bigdeli said he believed if Putin leaves Ukraine without a triumph, he will have the same fate as ex-Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev, who was stripped of his power in 1964 as his role in the Soviet power structure began to decline.

On the other camp, Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky has clearly said he would not accept any faulty truce that that would allow Russia troops to stay on Ukrainian soil, he said.

Without any prospect for a ceasefire in the coming days, “we should wait to see the resolution of this conflict through other channels,” Bigdeli said.

Taliban order Afghan women to cover faces in public

Afghan Woman

A spokesman for the Ministry for the Propagation of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice read the decree from the group’s supreme leader Hibatullah Akhundzada at a press conference in Kabul, saying that a woman’s father or closest male relative would be visited and eventually imprisoned or fired from government jobs if she did not cover her face outside the home.

They added the ideal face covering was the all-encompassing blue burqa, which became a global symbol of the Taliban’s previous hardline regime from 1996 until 2001.

Most women in Afghanistan wear a headscarf for religious reasons, but many in urban areas such as Kabul do not cover their faces.

The group has faced intense pushback, led by Western governments but joined by some religious scholars and Islamic countries for their growing limits on women’s rights.

A surprise U-turn in March in which the group shuttered girls’ high schools on the morning they were due to open drew the ire of the international community and prompted the United States to cancel planned meetings on easing country’s financial crisis.

Washington and other nations have cut development aid and enforced strict sanctions on the banking system, since the Taliban took over in August, pushing the country towards economic ruin.

The Taliban announced it has changed since it last ruled when it banned girls’ education or women leaving the house without a male relative and women were required to wear cover their faces.

However in recent months the administration has increased its restrictions on women including rules limiting their travel without a male chaperone and banning men and women from visiting parks at the same time.

Recognition of Taliban not on Iran’s agenda for now: Ex-envoy

Taliban Afghanistan

Fada-Hossein Maleki told ILNA that Iran had repeatedly emphasized the need for the formation of an all-inclusive government in Kabul, but there are “serious internal divisions” among the Taliban and they do not hold unified positions in terms of receiving neighbors.

He said the recent wave of Daesh terror attacks that targeted Afghan mosques are a sign of the same internal rift, which hampers the restoration of stability, adding, “We hold sessions of talks with the Taliban and bring up such issues with them.”

“Recognition of the Taliban is not on our agenda for now, he said.

“Today, we maintain ties with the Afghan people and have stayed in the country with the goal of supporting the people. We have not shut the borders and offered assistance.”

“We emphasize that the Taliban must accept international regulations, while the issue of Iran’s share of water is a priority,” he added.

The former envoy said, “If the Taliban accept the formation of an inclusive government, stability will return to the country and all ethnic groups will be able to participate” in running the country’s affairs.