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Pakistani troops, gunmen fighting after deadly checkpoint attacks

The attacks took place late on Wednesday, targeting a paramilitary post in the town of Panjgur, about 450km (280 miles) south of the provincial capital, Quetta, and another one in Noshki, about 330km (205 miles) north of the first attack spot.

On Thursday, Interior Minister Sheikh Rasheed Ahmed said “four or five” attackers were still active in Panjgur, and that Pakistani forces were continuing an operation against them.

Six attackers were killed, Ahmed added, while security officials in Panjgur confirmed to Al Jazeera that a curfew had been imposed in the area and that security operations were ongoing.

At least four soldiers were killed in the Noshki attack, Ahmed stated, along with nine attackers.

Local police official Khalid Badini told Al Jazeera that a civilian had also been killed in the exchange of fire.

In a statement emailed to the media, the ethnic Baloch separatist group Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) claimed responsibility for the attacks.

Jeayand Baloch, the BLA’s spokesman, noted the raids were carried out by attackers who were prepared to “self-sacrifice”.

Balochistan is Pakistan’s largest but least populated province and has been the site of an armed rebellion by ethnic Baloch separatists for more than 10 years. Baloch separatist groups have targeted security forces and civilians in regular raids across the province, demanding greater rights and independence for ethnic Baloch areas of the province.

Wednesday’s attack comes a day after a raid on a Pakistani security forces checkpost in the town of Kech, about 145km (91 miles) south of Panjgur, where at least 10 soldiers were killed, according to a Pakistani military statement.

Israel, Bahrain sign security agreement

Bahrain, along with the United Arab Emirates, normalised relations with Israel in 2020 under the US-brokered Abraham Accords.

“The MOU (memorandum of understanding) framework will support any future cooperation in the areas of intelligence, mil-to-mil (military to military), industrial collaboration and more,” the Israeli Defense Ministry said in a statement.

An Israeli official stated Thursday’s agreement with Bahrain was the first such pact that Israel had reached with one of its new allies in the Persian Gulf.

“Only one year following the signing of the (Abraham) Accords, we have achieved an important defence agreement which will contribute to the security of both countries and the stability of the region,” the Israeli Defense Ministry quoted Gantz as saying.

It said he and his Bahraini counterpart signed the document, and that Gantz had held talks with King Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa at the royal palace.

Earlier in the day, Gantz visited the US Navy Fifth Fleet’s headquarters in Bahrain.

Bahrain hosts the Fifth Fleet’s headquarters as well as some operations for CENTCOM, a US military coordination umbrella organisation for the Middle East that Israel joined last year.

“Against a backdrop of increasing maritime and aerial threats, our ironclad cooperation is more important than ever,” Gantz said on Twitter after the naval base visit.

Israel this week is joining a 60-nation US-led Middle East naval exercise alongside the UAE and Bahrain and, for the first time, publicly alongside Saudi Arabia and Oman, two countries it has no diplomatic relations with.

Sattari: Space technology huge market for knowledge-based firms

Over 5,300 Iranian Knowledge-Based Firms Opened in 6 Years: VP

During a ceremony on Thursday marking the National Space Technology Day, Sattari stressed that the field of space should be developed.

“We in the office of vice president for science and technology have good cooperation with the ministry of communications and the space agency in the development of knowledge-based companies in this field as well as in the development of basic research,” Sattari added.

The Islamic Republic is one of the founding members of the United Nations Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space.

Iran has put several domestically manufactured satellites into orbit using its own carrier rockets since 2009.

Biden says Daesh leader killed in US operation in Syria

“Last night at my direction, US military forces in the northwest Syria successfully undertook a counterterrorism operation to protect the American people and our Allies,” read a statement from Biden.

“Thanks to the skill and bravery of our Armed Forces, we have taken off the battlefield Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi al-Qurayshi – the leader of ISIS,” the statement added.

Biden also noted that all the Americans involved in the operation returned safely.

The president’s statement came several hours after the Pentagon confirmed the raid, which targeted a house in the village of Atmeh in Syria’s Idlib province, near the border with Turkey. Locals told AP that the operation involved multiple helicopters, and that explosions and machine gun fire were heard.

While neither Biden nor the Pentagon mentioned civilian casualties, a local reporter cited by AP said that at least 12 bodies were seen at the site, with Al Jazeera later claiming that seven children and three women were among them. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights also reported 13 deaths, including three women and four children and others who had not yet been identified.

The raid targeted a stand-alone, three-story cinder block building surrounded by olive trees.

Images shared on social media by activists who visited the site showed simple rooms with mats on the floors, a diesel heater and clothes and blankets scattered about, some of them covered with blood. Video from the scene where an American airstrike targeted the leader of the Islamic state posted on social media showed people pulling the bodies of at least nine men, women and children from the rubble of the badly damaged house.

Witnesses announced that American strikes on the house caused the damage. But a senior American military official stated there was an explosion inside the house that was not caused by US firepower, and was more likely caused by the target of the raid blowing himself up.

Al-Qurayshi was appointed leader of IS following the death of Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi in 2019. Like al-Qurayshi, al-Baghdadi was killed during an American raid in Idlib province, ordered by then-President Donald Trump.

Whereas IS once occupied enormous swathes of Iraq and Syria, and threatened to expand across northern Africa, the group’s territorial gains have since been rolled back by the Syrian government and its Russian and Iranian allies, and by a US and Western air campaign.

Prior to his death, al-Qurayshi had been considered a “specially designated global terrorist” by the US since 2020, and he had a $10 million bounty on his head.

Turkey’s inflation soars to two-decade high

Consumer prices surged by 48.7% from the same period in January last year, up from an annual rate of 36.1% in December, according to the Turkish Statistical Institute (TurkStat).

The highest annual price increase last month was seen in transportation with 68.89%, followed by food and non-alcoholic beverage (55.61%) and furnishings and household equipment (54.53%).

The lowest annual increases were posted by communication with 10.76%, education with 18.67%, clothing and footwear with 25.32%.

The monthly inflation rate was 11.10% in January.

The highest monthly increase was 21.90% in alcoholic beverages and tobacco among the main groups, while clothing and footwear posted negative inflation – minus 0.24%.

A group of 20 economists projected an average annual rise of 48.42% in consumer prices in January, an Anadolu Agency (AA) survey found last week.

The Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey (CBRT) last week hiked its year-end annual inflation forecasts for this year as well as the next, while it stressed supporting the lira is a key objective of its ongoing policy review.

The 2022-end consumer price index estimate has been raised to 23.2%. In its last report in October, the central bank forecast inflation would ease to 11.8% by the end of 2022.

The bank forecast 8.2% inflation for 2023 and a return to its official target of 5% a year later.

Meanwhile, data shared by the bank showed it expected inflation to approach 50% in January, before peaking in May and then dropping sharply in the third quarter.

The bank hiked its year-end food inflation estimate to 24.2%, compared with 13.9% previously, before a predicted drop toward 10% in 2023.

The bank has slashed the policy rate to 14% from 19% since September. It kept the benchmark one-week repo rate steady last week.

 

Russia deploys S-400 in Belarus amid tensions over Ukraine

“S-400 ‘Triumf’ anti-aircraft missile systems of the Eastern Military District’s Air Force and Air Defense Army involved in an inspection of the Union State’s Response Force have arrived in Belarus,” the ministry said in a statement on Thursday.

From the unloading station, the personnel will conduct a march on their vehicles to an unfamiliar training ground in the Brest Region, the ministry specified.

“Upon arrival at the places of accomplishing their training tasks, the Russian teams of the S-400 surface-to-air missile launchers will go on air defense combat alert as part of the Russia-Belarus integrated air defense system,” the ministry added.

The Russian Defense Ministry earlier reported that two battalions of S-400 ‘Triumf’ air defense systems of the Eastern Military District’s Air Force and Air Defense Army were sent to Belarus in an inspection of the Union State’s Response Force.

The inspection of the Russia-Belarus Union State’s Response Force will run in two stages. At the first stage before February 9, the Belarusian and Russian militaries will practice deploying troops and creating task forces in dangerous directions on the territory of Belarus within a short period of time. During this stage, the troops will practice protecting and defending vital state and military facilities and protecting the state border in the airspace and checking the preparedness and capability of air defense quick reaction alert forces for accomplishing the tasks of shielding vital facilities.

At the second stage of the inspection that will run on February 10-20, the Union Resolve 2022 joint drills will be held, in which the troops will practice fighting and repelling external aggression, countering terrorism and protecting the interests of the Union State.

As the Russian Defense Ministry reported, during the joint drills, the troops will practice reinforcing state border sections in potential areas of the illegal penetration of armed gangs into the territory of Belarus and shutting down channels of the supply of arms, munitions and other means that can be used for destabilizing the situation in the country, eliminating outlawed armed gangs and enemy subversive and reconnaissance groups.

The troops will practice their joint operations at the Domanovsky, Gozhsky, Obuz-Lesnovsky, Brestsky and Osipovichsky training grounds and also on some terrain sections on Belarusian soil. The Baranovichi, Luninets, Lida and Machulishchi airfields will also be involved in the drills.

Recently, claims of Russia’s potential invasion of Ukraine have been echoed quite often in Ukraine and throughout Western countries. Kremlin Spokesman Dmitry Peskov lambasted such reports as an “empty and groundless escalation of tensions”, underscoring that Russia does not pose any threat to anyone. Peskov noted that provocations may happen in order to justify such claims and warned that such attempts will bear the most serious consequences.

Iran FM: Tehran ready for reliable agreement in Vienna

Amir Abdollahian made the remarks in a phone conversation with his Japanese counterpart Yoshimasa Hayashi on Thursday, with the top Japanese diplomat expressing support for the ongoing negotiations in Vienna to remove anti-Iran sanctions.

Iran and the P4+1 group, Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany, are engaged in intensive talks in Vienna trying to hammer out a deal to revive the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action.

Hayashi stressed the need for serious action by all parties to live up to their commitments and seize the current opportunity to reach an agreement.

He also underlined favorable grounds for further development and expansion of economic relations between Iran and Japan, stressing that the two sides should remove obstacles on the way of cooperation.

He also invited the Iranian minister of foreign affairs to visit Tokyo.

Amir Abdollahian welcomed the development of cooperation with Japan in different fields.

Funeral procession held for Ayatollah Safi Golpayegani in Najaf

Huge number of people including clerics attended the ceremony. Ayatollah Safi Golpayegani passed away in the holy city of Qom on Tuesday due to a heart attack.

Iran Covid: Fatalities, infections keep rising

The Covid deaths and infections have jumped in the recent days.

Health authorities attribute this to the Omicron strain of the disease which is highly contagious.
The number of cities marked red, that is, the highest level of risk from Covid, has been increasing in Iran as well.

Officials are urging people to strictly observe health protocol. They also say those who have not got their boosters yet should do so asap in order to contain Omicron which is spreading like wildfire across Iran.

Iran marks Natl. Space Technology Day

On the same day back in 2009, Iran successfully launched a domestically-produced satellite named Omid (literally meaning ‘hope’), joining the club of nations which enjoy the capability to launch satellites.

Omid was put into orbit by the satellite carrier Safire II.

Thereafter, the day was designated as National Space Technology Day in Iran.

Omid was Iran’s first home-made satellite and the first scientific breakthrough in the nation’s endeavor to indigenize the space technology.

The move also featured efforts to set the stage for spotting potentialities in domestic industries as well as in the domain of developing equipment to produce, assemble and test satellites, and to promote space activities by the private sector.