Friday, December 26, 2025
Home Blog Page 2407

Syria says ‘attack’ caused widespread blackout, Damascus included

“There was a significant direct drop in gas pressure, which led to the failure at the Deir Ali power station… as a result of an attack on the gas line,” al-Zamil told the Syria TV channel late on Friday, though added that few details were yet known about the purported attack.

The outages affected Damascus and the surrounding region, as well as some other areas around Syria, according to SANA, however the full extent of the blackout remains unclear, with some reports suggesting the outages were nationwide. 

Al-Zamil added power should be restored in the capital soon, as several other power stations will attempt to compensate for the shutdown at Deir Ali.

The minister later stated that electricity was being gradually restored in Damascus.

“Electricity has started to return to Damascus after the launch of al-Zara, al-Nasryeh and Jandar power stations,” the minister noted on Saturday, as quoted by SANA.

Unconfirmed photos have circulated purporting to show “sabotage” to the gas line have circulated online.  

Damascus has reported a number of sabotage attempts and terrorist attacks against its critical infrastructure over the years, including a similar incident at a gas pipeline in the outskirts of the capital city in August 2020, which also triggered major outages across Syria. The gas pipeline in question had been attacked on five different occasions prior, officials announced, though declined to name any perpetrators. Washington, however, later pinned the attack on Daesh, but shared no evidence to support the charge.

Ayatollah Khamenei meets Paralympic medalists, says Iran flag raised

Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei said, “The most important message of the championship of Iran’s proud athletes in the international arenas is the possibility of accomplishing unimaginable deeds and conveying the message of endurance and hope and vitality to the society and the youth”. 

He added that while many organizations are making efforts to disappoint the society, especially the youth, the championship of Iranian athletes sends this message of hope to the whole society and this is very valuable. 

Referring to his short messages of thanks after the athletes’ championship, Ayatollah Khamenei noted that those messages are from the bottom of heart and “We know the value and importance of your accomplishment”. The leader added that despite restrictions on Iran, the country’s flag is raised and world platforms are conquered, which is a sign of strong will and determination. 

Ayatollah Khamenei said Iran’s accomplishments are also happening in other fields like science, technology, art and literature.

He also spoke of Iran’s refusal to recognize the Israeli regime in sports fields. He called the issue “very important” and said Israel is a ruthless, genocidal and illegitimate regime and is trying to gain legitimacy by participating in international sports arenas. 

He said Iranian sports officials and athletes should not be passive in this regard. The leader referred to Israel’s and its supporters’ reciprocal actions to deprive Iranian athletes, saying the Sports and Foreign Ministries and the judiciary should pursue this issue through legal means and even support foreign Muslim athletes such as Algerian athletes who have been deprived for refusing to compete with Israelis. 

He emphasized that a proud Iranian athlete cannot shake hands with the representative of a criminal regime for a medal and actually recognize that regime. 

He said this is not without precedent and in the past, athletes refused to compete with representatives of the apartheid regime in South Africa. 

Ayatollah Khamenei noted that the apartheid regime disappeared after a short while and the Israeli regime will also go away. 

Ayatollah Khamenei called the manifestation of human, religious and spiritual values along with the championship very valuable and pointed to examples of these cases in the Olympic and Paralympic competitions.

US, UK top diplomats discuss Iran, China

In a press statement, State Department Spokesperson Ned Price informed that Blinken congratulated Truss on her appointment and highlighted the importance of the US-UK bilateral ties.

The US State Secretary also reaffirmed their partnership in supporting democracy, the rules-based international order, and open societies worldwide, the spokesperson added.

“Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken spoke today with UK Foreign Secretary Elizabeth Truss. Secretary Blinken congratulated Foreign Secretary Truss on her appointment and highlighted the importance of the United States-UK bilateral relationship in supporting democracy, the rules-based international order, and open societies worldwide,” Price said in a statement on Friday.

Both leaders also discussed shared foreign policy priorities including Afghanistan, the People’s Republic of China, Iran, and multilateral engagement to tackle the climate crisis, Price noted.

This comes as US President Joe Biden and leaders of two other nations launched the newly-formed AUKUS (Australia-UK-US) defence partnership pact on Wednesday that focuses on the Indo-Pacific.

Experts believe it is a veiled way of confronting China’s growing military aggression in the region.

Indo-Pacific region is largely viewed as an area comprising the Indian Ocean and the western and central Pacific Ocean, including the South China Sea. China’s territorial claims in the South China Sea and its efforts to advance into the Indian Ocean are seen to have challenged the established rules-based system.

Source: ANI News

France recalls envoys from US, Australia over submarine deal

France immediately recalls for consultations its ambassadors from the United States and Australia over announcements made by the two countries on September 15 – the day when they announced creating a security partnership with the United Kingdom, and Canberra cancelled a submarine contract with Paris, French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said in a statement on Friday.

“At the request of the President of the Republic, I am recalling to Paris without delay our ambassadors to the United States and to Australia for consultations,” the French top diplomat was quoted as stating by the ministry’s press service. 

He added that “this exceptional decision is justified by the exceptional gravity of the announcements made on 15th September by Australia and the United States”.

“The cancellation of the Attack class submarine program binding Australia and France since 2016, and the announcement of a new partnership with the United States meant to launch studies on a possible future cooperation on nuclear-powered submarines, constitute unacceptable behavior between allies and partners, whose consequences directly affect the vision we have of our alliances, of our partnerships and of the importance of the Indo-Pacific for Europe,” the statement reads.

Reuters quoted a White House official as saying the United States regretted the French decision, adding that Washington had been in close touch with France over it.

Reuters also wrote with reference to diplomatic sources that France was not planning to recall its ambassador to the United Kingdom. 

“We don’t need to hold consultations with our (British) ambassador to know what to make of it or to draw any conclusions,” the source added.

On September 16, Australia, the UK and the US announced the establishment of the AUKUS trilateral partnership on security in Indian and Pacific oceans. Under the agreement, Australia plans to build at least eight nuclear-powered submarines that will be commissioned in 2036, as well as equip its armed forces with US-made cruise missiles. This forced Canberra to void its major military contract with France. China warned that the establishment of AUKUS will ramp up the arms race and urged all participants to abolish the “cold war mentality” and “narrow-minded geopolitical concepts”.

Source: TASS

Second Dutch minister resigns over ‘mishandling of Afghanistan evacuation’

Bijleveld followed suit of Kaag and tendered resignation due to accusations of poorly organising evacuations from Afghanistan, the Dutch Broadcasting Foundation (NOS) reported.

The decision was made at an emergency meeting of the Christian Democratic Appeal political party, of which Bijleveld is a member, NOS added.

Earlier this week, the Dutch lower chamber passed a vote of no-confidence in Kaag because of the poorly organised evacuations. Kaag announced her resignation soon after the vote. A vote of no-confidence in Bijleveld was also passed, but the minister initially stated she would not leave the post anyway.

According to media reports, the Dutch government for months ignored urgent requests of the embassy in Kabul to evacuate staffers and families.

Capitol police chief warns of threats ahead of pro-rioters rally

US Capitol Police Chief Thomas Manger warned that some threats had been made regarding the upcoming “Justice for J6” rally in Washington, DC. Law enforcement have upped security as they fear a repetition of the incidents that occurred at the beginning of the year.

A tall fence, which was installed around Capitol grounds in the aftermath of the storming of the building, has reappeared in the US capital.

The measures were introduced after the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) warned about the potential for violence during the upcoming demonstration, which is scheduled for 18 September.

“We are aware of a small number of recent online threats of violence referencing the planned rally, including online discussions encouraging violence the day before the rally,” reads a DHS intelligence briefing obtained by CNN.

The briefing said that around 700 people are expected to attend the event and noted that violence could break out due to a counter-rally that is scheduled to take place on the same day at Freedom Plaza in Washington.

US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin approved a request from the US Capitol Police to deploy 100 troops to assist with the planned protest at the Capitol on Saturday, Defense Department Spokesperson Christian Mitchell stated on Thursday.

Eleanor Holmes Norton, a delegate to the United States House of Representatives, stated that the security measures that have been introduced in Washington, DC are an overcompensation for the 6 January incident.

“It looks like the authorities, especially the Capitol Police, have been taken aback by how unprepared they were on Jan. 6. So now they’re coming back overprepared,” she added.

Matt Braynard, whose organisation is planning the “Justice for J6”, rally announced that the demonstration will be peaceful and that participants will cooperate with law enforcement.

On that day, members of Congress were convening to certify the results of the 2020 presidential election, which Donald Trump lost to Democrat Joe Biden. However, the incumbent Republican president refused to concede defeat. He claimed that the vote had been rigged and that Biden won thanks to widespread voter irregularities, a claim that many of his allies and supporters strongly backed. While lawmakers were gathered in the Capitol, Trump held a rally that was attended by thousands of his supporters.

Addressing the crowd, the former president and other speakers at the rally reiterated claims about the election being stolen. Trump also called on his supporters to “march” on Congress.

“You are the people that built this nation. You have to get your people to fight,” the president told his supporters.

During the rally, hundreds of supporters headed to the Capitol, with a large group of people storming into the building. Five protesters and a policeman were killed and more than a hundred law enforcement officers were injured as Trump supporters breached the building.

Federal authorities responded by arresting almost 600 people. A number of people that incited violence, according to federal indictments, were not charged with anything – prompting widespread speculation they may have been FBI informants or undercover agents.

Following the incident, Democrats accused Trump of inciting an “insurrection” and introduced an impeachment article against him. The Republican POTUS became the first US president to be impeached twice. The four-day trial ended in lawmakers acquitting Trump. The president noted he bore no responsibility for the deadly riots and dismissed the Democrats’ decision to introduce an impeachment article against him as “ridiculous”.

Source: RIA Novosti

New convoy of Iranian fuel arrives in Lebanon

Lebanon’s Al Mayadeen television channel said the convoy has crossed the border and is moving to areas in need of fuel. 

The fuel tankers are carrying diesel recently discharged by an Iranian ship in Syria’s Baniyas port.

The Iranian vessel was unable to transport directly to Lebanon by sea because of U.S. sanctions and went to Syria for land transfer instead.

It has been estimated that it will require well over 1,000 trucks to transport the cargo to Lebanon.

Lebanese Resistance Movement Hezbollah which is behind the initiative has said hospitals and other key services will get priority access.

On Thursday, a group of eighty lorries with diesel on board crossed the border and were met with celebratory gunfire and people throwing flowers into their path as they drove through Lebanon’s northeast.

Hezbollah has announced that more Iranian fuel ships will soon arrive in Syria under an agreement between the resistance movement and the Islamic Republic.

Hezbollah has said that tankers carrying fuel for the Lebanese people are regarded as Lebanese territory, warning against any attack on the oil tankers by Israel and the US.

Hezbollah Secretary General Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah has warned against any effort to block the transfer. He has warned Israel and the U-S to stay away from the Iranian ships. 

An unprecedented economic crisis has left Lebanon severely short of fuel and other basic necessities.

US admits Kabul attack killed 10 civilians, not Daesh militants

An investigation by U.S. Central Command has determined that an Aug. 29 drone strike in Kabul killed an innocent aid worker and nine members of his family, not a member of the Daesh terrorist group, a top general announced Friday.

The command now assesses that “it is unlikely” the man and vehicle targeted was affiliated with Daesh or “a direct threat to U.S. forces”, Gen. Frank McKenzie, head of U.S. Central Command, told reporters Friday.

“This strike was taken in the earnest belief that it would prevent an imminent threat to forces at the airport,” McKenzie stated, noting, “Our investigation now concludes that the strike was a tragic mistake.”

The news comes as the administration of President Joe Biden is already facing criticism over its Afghanistan withdrawal and the fact that the effort left hundreds of Americans and thousands of at-risk Afghans in the country at the end of August. More than 120,000 people were airlifted from Hamid Karzai International Airport before U.S. troops pulled out.

The revelation also comes one week after a New York Times investigation determined the target actually worked for an American aid organization.

Central Command ordered the Aug. 29 strike based on intelligence that the man was planning an “imminent” attack on the airport, where the military was scrambling to evacuate tens of thousands of American citizens and at-risk Afghans before the clock ran out on the withdrawal.

Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, in early September called the strike “righteous”.

But instead, the strike “tragically” killed “as many as 10 civilians”, including up to seven children, McKenzie said.

Milley on Friday acknowledged the mistake, calling the “heart wrenching” strike “a horrible tragedy of war”.

“In a dynamic high threat environment, the commanders on the ground had appropriate authority and had reasonable certainty that the target was valid,” Milley announced in a statement, adding, “But after deeper post strike analysis our conclusion is that innocent civilians were killed.”

McKenzie on Friday stood by the intelligence the military used to determine the target, noting the threat to the airport was posed by a “white Toyota Corolla”, the same type of car that was destroyed in the strike, and that the military had “no indication that the strike would result in civilian casualties”.

The strike must be considered “in the context of the situation on the ground”, McKenzie continued, adding that just days before a Daesh suicide bombing had killed 13 U.S. service members and more than 100 civilians at the airport.

In the 48 hours before the strike, the military had “a substantial body of intelligence” indicating that there would be another attack, and one recurring theme was that Daesh would use a white Toyota Corolla as a key element, McKenzie stated.

Based on that intelligence, the military began surveilling the car belonging to the target, identified as Zemari Ahmadi, the morning of the strike, and continued observing its movements for eight hours, McKenzie said.

The strike was executed at 4:53 p.m. that afternoon because the military determined there was little potential for civilian casualties, McKenzie stressed. That assessment turned out to be wrong, he acknowledged.

McKenzie declined to comment as to whether anyone will be disciplined over the strike, noting that the investigation is ongoing. 

“I have nothing for you now because that involves personnel issues,” he said.

Source: Politico

Iran, Tajikistan leaders Discuss Closer Cooperation

In a Saturday meeting in the Tajik capital, Dushanbe, the two sides underscored the common religion, culture and language between the two nations.

They expressed hope both sides will work towards opening a new chapter in closer ties and cooperation between the two sides on economic, cultural and political fronts.

Raisi said there exists good potential in both countries to enhance mutual relations and cooperation.

“The deepening and promotion of reciprocal relations and interactions will also pave the way for the enhancement of regional cooperation between the two countries,” said the Iranian president.

“Iranian and Tajik officials should, through regular meetings and talks, establish lasting and all-out relations between the two Persian-language countries which will set a good example at the regional level,” Raisi noted.

Rahmon, for his part, expressed his gratitude to the Iranian president for accepting his invitation to attend the 21st summit of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) in Dushanbe and for visiting Tajikistan during his first overseas trip as president.

The Tajik president touched upon the history of Tehran-Dushanbe cooperation as well as the joint ventures undertaken by Iranian experts in Tajikistan, and added the friendship and affection which exist between the people and governments of both countries lay the groundwork for the promotion of bilateral cooperation and relations.

Rights groups say EU failing Afghans trying to flee Taliban

Several refugee groups have also called on the bloc to increase its support for refugees trying to flee Afghanistan.

“The EU should be sharing, rather than shirking, the responsibility to offer them protection,” a joint statement read.

The letter was signed by 24 non-governmental organisations, including Amnesty International, Caritas Europa, the International Rescue Committee, Oxfam, and the Red Cross.

The groups warned that 18 million people are in urgent need of humanitarian assistance in Afghanistan – nearly half the population – and that thousands still want to leave the country.

They called on the EU to set up safe pathways for Afghans in need of protection, as well as an “ambitious” resettlement programme in Europe.

More than 630,000 people have been forced from their homes so far this year due to violence and drought.

In excess of 100,000 people were airlifted out of Kabul late last month after President Joe Biden announced that US troops would withdraw, and the Taliban seized control of Afghanistan in just a few weeks.

According to new figures from the European Asylum Support Office (EASO), asylum applications by Afghans numbered 7,300 in July – a 21% increase over June and the fifth consecutive monthly rise. Almost 1,200 were unaccompanied minors, EASO reported.

More than half of asylum applications by Afghans in Europe are rejected.

Despite the rise in applicants, the EU face no immediate arrivals, with most Afghans are sheltering in neighbouring Iran and Pakistan, as well as Uzbekistan and Tajikistan.

Some European governments have also expressed concern about a repeat of the 2015 migrant crisis when more than one million people entered Europe, many fleeing conflicts from Syria.

“We regret the misleading and alarmist rhetoric expressed by some European leaders in the past weeks,” the rights groups said.

The organisations added that these concerns could “raise barriers” to the integration of refugees into European societies.

Source: The AP