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North Korea has sent 14k troops, 100 ballistic missiles and millions of munitions to Russia: Report

The report was released Friday by the Multilateral Sanctions Monitoring Team (MSMT), an initiative made up of 11 United Nations members, formed after Russia forced the disbandment of a previous UN panel that monitored the implementation of sanctions against North Korea.

While some of the team’s findings have been well documented – such as North Korea sending troops to fight for Russia – the report lays out the stunning scope and scale of weaponry sent from Pyongyang since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

That includes as many as 9 million rounds of artillery and ammunition in 2024; more than 11,000 troops last year, and another 3,000 troops in the early months of this year; rocket launchers, vehicles, self-propelled guns and other types of heavy artillery; and at least 100 ballistic missiles “which were subsequently launched into Ukraine to destroy civilian infrastructure and terrorize populated areas such as Kyiv and Zaporizhzhia,” the report found, citing participating states.

“These forms of unlawful cooperation between (North Korea) and Russia contributed to Moscow’s ability to increase its missile attacks against Ukrainian cities including targeted strikes against critical civilian infrastructure,” the report said.

In return, Russia provided North Korea with various valuable pieces of weaponry and technology, including air defense equipment, anti-aircraft missiles, electronic warfare systems and refined oil, the report said.

Moscow has also provided data feedback on Pyongyang’s ballistic missiles, helping improve its missile guidance performance, it said.

These actions “allow North Korea to fund its military programs and further develop its ballistic missiles programs, which are themselves prohibited under multiple (UN Security Council resolutions), and gain first-hand experience in modern warfare,” the report found.

It said its findings were based on MSMT participating states and cited supporting evidence from the Open Source Centre (OSC), a UK-based non-profit that uses publicly accessible information for research, and Conflict Armament Research (CAR), a UK-based research organization.

Both Russia and North Korea are violating the UN arms embargo and are transferring arms and military equipment through actors and networks that evade sanctions, the report alleged. The two countries will likely continue their military cooperation “at least for the foreseeable future,” it added.

In a joint statement, the member nations behind the MSMT – Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, New Zealand, South Korea, the United Kingdom and the United States – urged North Korea to “engage in meaningful diplomacy.”

Western governments have become increasingly concerned about the long-term implications of what appears to be a deepening strategic partnership between the two nations.

In recent months, the US has warned that Russia may be close to sharing advanced space and satellite technology with North Korea in exchange for continued support for the war in Ukraine.

Russian President Vladimir Putin acknowledged in April for the first time that North Korean soldiers took part in the fighting to recover Russian territory after Ukraine’s incursion into the Kursk region last year. North Korea also confirmed its troop presence there for the first time in April.

Though North Korean troops had been deployed to Kursk since at least November, they withdrew from the front lines in January after reports of mass casualties, Ukrainian officials said.

Both countries have denied that Pyongyang is supplying arms to Moscow, despite overwhelming evidence. However, as part of a landmark defense pact struck last year, they have both pledged to use all available means to provide immediate military assistance in the event the other is attacked.

Putin has warned he would provide arms to Pyongyang if the West continues arming Ukraine.

In recent weeks, Ukraine’s allies have lifted a ban on Kyiv firing long-range missiles into Russia, after days of Russia bombarding the Ukrainian capital and other regions with massive aerial attacks and as the US grows increasingly frustrated with Putin over the lack of a peace deal.

Half of global population faced extreme heat due to climate change: Study

Iran Heat

The findings stress how the continued burning of fossil fuels is harming health and well-being on every continent, with the effects especially under-recognized in developing countries, the authors said.

“With every barrel of oil burned, every tonne of carbon dioxide released, and every fraction of a degree of warming, heat waves will affect more people,” said Friederike Otto, a climate scientist at Imperial College London and co-author of the report.

The analysis — conducted by scientists at World Weather Attribution, Climate Central, and the Red Cross Red Crescent Climate Centre — was released ahead of global Heat Action Day on June 2, which this year spotlights the dangers of heat exhaustion and heat stroke.

To assess the influence of global warming, researchers analyzed the period from May 1, 2024 to May 1, 2025.

They defined “extreme heat days” as those hotter than 90 percent of temperatures recorded at a given location between 1991 and 2020.

Using a peer-reviewed modeling approach, they then compared the number of such days to a simulated world without human-caused warming.

The results were stark: roughly four billion people — 49 percent of the global population — experienced at least 30 more days of extreme heat than they would have otherwise.

The team identified 67 extreme heat events during the year and found the fingerprint of climate change on all of them.

The Caribbean island of Aruba was the worst affected, recording 187 extreme heat days — 45 more than expected in a world without climate change.

The study follows a year of unprecedented global temperatures. 2024 was the hottest year on record, surpassing 2023, while January 2025 marked the hottest January ever.

On a five-year average, global temperatures are now 1.3 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels — and in 2024 alone, they exceeded 1.5C, the symbolic ceiling set by the Paris climate accord.

The report also highlights a critical lack of data on heat-related health impacts in lower-income regions.

While Europe recorded more than 61,000 heat-related deaths in the summer of 2022, comparable figures are sparse elsewhere, with many heat-related fatalities misattributed to underlying conditions such as heart or lung disease.

The authors emphasized the need for early warning systems, public education, and heat action plans tailored to cities.

Better building design — including shading and ventilation — and behavioral adjustments like avoiding strenuous activity during peak heat are also essential.

Still, adaptation alone will not be enough. The only way to halt the rising severity and frequency of extreme heat, the authors warned, is to rapidly phase out fossil fuels.

Saudi FM to make rare trip to occupied West Bank

Prince Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud

Bin Farhan will lead a ministerial delegation comprised of his counterparts in Jordan, Egypt, and other Arab nations, the Palestinian ambassador to Saudi Arabia told local media, adding that the trip is intended to convey the centrality of the Palestinian cause to Arabs and Muslims.

The move appears similar to the trip bin Farhan organised to Washington in the early months of Israel’s war on Gaza, in a bid to showcase a united Arab front in support of a ceasefire.

It also appears to be an attempt at lending credibility to the PA as an alternative to Hamas in Gaza, despite the PA’s plummeting popularity among Palestinians.

The trip is rare and unusual, given that the last time a Saudi official visited Ramallah, he had been appointed a non-resident ambassador to Palestine.

Nayef al-Sudairi arrived just weeks before the 7 October 2023 Hamas-led attacks on southern Israel, and before him, King Faisal had visited in 1966.

Those attacks were intended to and indeed derailed Saudi-Israeli normalisation talks, Hamas officials revealed over the course of the war.

With the kingdom being the de facto leader of the Arab world, it can set an agenda with the kind of influence few of its neighbours possess – and normalising with Israel would have likely dashed ambitions for Palestinian statehood.

The Times of Israel reported on Friday evening that Israel would block Farhan and his delegation’s visit. Israel has control of the occupied West Bank’s land border with Jordan.

If Israel follows through on the threat, it could further strain relations with Riyadh and other regional countries.

Since 2023, Saudi Arabia has made it clear that normalisation would only be pursued with a clear pathway to a Palestinian state.

Earlier this year, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman called Israel’s now 19-month-long war on Gaza a “genocide”, echoing assessments by the United Nations and countless rights organisations, among other leading historians and experts.

More than 54,000 Palestinians have been killed so far, with some experts believing the figure to be a significant undercount.

Next month, a meeting in New York co-chaired by Saudi Arabia and France is expected to outline the necessity of establishing a Palestinian state, and rebuild support for the concept of the two-state solution, a plan outlined in the 1993 Oslo Accords.

Several European nations have recently recognised the state of Palestine, including Ireland, Spain, and Norway.

Iranian MP apologizes after son’s involvement in traffic accident

In a statement released to clarify the incident, Nikzad emphasized his respect for the rule of law and apologized “humbly” to the Iranian people.

He confirmed that his son unintentionally struck a traffic police officer on May 25. Nikzad, however, denied any misconduct, stating that his son neither fled the scene nor acted aggressively. Immediate medical assistance was provided to the injured officer, and legal procedures were fully observed, including enforcement actions against both the driver and the vehicle.

Nikzad said he personally followed up on the officer’s medical treatment and praised the injured officer’s “professionalism and grace.”

Rejecting claims of preferential treatment, Nikzad stressed that “no one is above the law,” regardless of status. He also warned against the misuse of the incident by foreign media, reiterating his commitment to the values of the Islamic Revolution.

“The honor of our police force and the supremacy of law are sacred,” he said, asserting that any attempt to undermine them must be condemned.

France may toughen stance on Israel if it continues blocking Gaza aid: Macron

Gaza War

“The humanitarian blockade is creating a situation that is untenable on the ground,” Macron said at a joint press conference in Singapore with Prime Minister Lawrence Wong.

“And so, if there is no response that meets the humanitarian situation in the coming hours and days, obviously, we will have to toughen our collective position,” Macron continued, adding that France may consider applying sanctions against Israeli settlers.

“But I still hope that the government of Israel will change its stance and that we will finally have a humanitarian response”.

Under growing international pressure, Israel partially ended an 11-week long aid blockade on Gaza last week, allowing a limited amount of relief to be delivered under a system that has been heavily criticised.

Macron said Paris is committed to working towards a political solution and reiterated his support for a two-state solution to the Israel-Palestinian conflict.

The existence of a Palestinian state “is not just simply a moral duty but also a political necessity,” Macron told reporters in Singapore, in comments broadcast on French TV.

Macron is leaning towards recognising a Palestinian state, diplomats and experts say, a move that could infuriate Israel and deepen Western splits.

French officials are weighing up the move ahead of a United Nations conference, which France and Saudi Arabia are co-hosting in June, to lay out the parameters for a roadmap to a Palestinian state, while ensuring Israel’s security.

Israel launched its campaign in Gaza in response to a Hamas attack in its south on October 7, 2023, that killed some 1,200 people and saw 251 hostages taken into Gaza, according to Israeli tallies.

The war since then has killed more than 54,000 Palestinians, Gaza health authorities say.

 

US proposes 60-day ceasefire for Gaza

Gaza War

The document, which says the plan is guaranteed by U.S. President Donald Trump and mediators Egypt and Qatar, includes sending humanitarian aid to Gaza as soon as Hamas signs off on the ceasefire agreement.

The aid will be delivered by the United Nations, the Red Crescent and other agreed channels.

The White House announced on Thursday that Israel had agreed to the U.S. ceasefire proposal.

Israeli media said Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told the families of hostages held in Gaza that Israel had accepted the deal presented by Trump’s Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff. The prime minister’s office declined to comment.

The Palestinian group Hamas confirmed it had received the Israeli response to the proposal, which it said “fails to meet any of the just and legitimate demands of our people” including an immediate cessation of hostilities and an end to the humanitarian crisis in Gaza.

Hamas official Basem Naim stated the Israeli response “fundamentally seeks to entrench the occupation and perpetuate policies of killing and starvation, even during what is supposed to be a period of temporary de-escalation”.

However, he added Hamas’ leadership was carrying out a “thorough and responsible review of the new proposal”.

The U.S. plan provides for Hamas to release the last 30 of the 58 remaining Israeli hostages once a permanent ceasefire is in place. Israel will also cease all military operations in Gaza as soon as the truce takes effect, it shows.

The Israeli army will also redeploy its troops in stages.

Deep differences between Hamas and Israel have stymied previous attempts to restore a ceasefire that broke down in March.

Israel has insisted that Hamas disarm completely, be dismantled as a military and governing force and return all 58 hostages still held in Gaza before it will agree to end the war.

Hamas has rejected the demand to give up its weapons and says Israel must pull its troops out of Gaza and commit to ending the war.

Israel launched its campaign in Gaza in response to the Hamas attack in its south on October 7, 2023, that killed some 1,200 people and saw 251 Israelis taken hostage into Gaza, according to Israeli tallies.

The subsequent Israeli military campaign has killed more than 54,000 Palestinians, Gaza health officials say, and has left the enclave in ruins.

Israel has come under increasing international pressure, with many European countries that are usually reluctant to criticise it openly demanding an end to the war and a major relief effort.

The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said on Friday that Israel is blocking all but a trickle of humanitarian aid from entering Gaza, with almost no ready-to-eat food entering what its spokesperson described as “the hungriest place on earth”.

Witkoff told reporters on Wednesday that Washington was close to “sending out a new term sheet” about a ceasefire by the two sides in the conflict.

“I have some very good feelings about getting to a long-term resolution, temporary ceasefire and a long-term resolution, a peaceful resolution, of that conflict,” Witkoff said then.

The 60-day ceasefire, according to the plan, may be extended if negotiations for a permanent ceasefire are not concluded within the set period.

Senior Hamas official Sami Abu Zuhri stated on Thursday the terms of the proposal echoed Israel’s position and did not contain commitments to end the war, withdraw Israeli troops or admit aid as Hamas has demanded.

The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, a private group backed by the United States and endorsed by Israel, said it had distributed a total of more than 1.8 million meals this week and it expanded its aid distribution to a third site in Gaza on Thursday. GHF plans to open more sites in coming weeks.

The group, heavily criticised by the United Nations and other aid groups as inadequate and flawed, began its operation this week in Gaza, where the U.N. has said 2 million people are at risk of famine after an 11-week blockade by Israel on aid entering the enclave.

There were tumultuous scenes on Tuesday as thousands of Palestinians rushed to distribution points and forced private security contractors to retreat.

The chaotic start to the operation has raised international pressure on Israel to get more food in and halt the fighting in Gaza.

US, E3 plan to push IAEA Board of Governors to find Iran in breach of duties: Reuters

IAEA

The step is likely to further complicate talks between the United States and Iran aimed at imposing fresh restrictions on Iran’s rapidly advancing nuclear programme.

Washington and its European allies Britain, France and Germany, known as the E3, proposed past resolutions adopted by the International Atomic Energy Agency’s 35-nation Board of Governors calling on Iran to quickly take steps, such as explain uranium traces the IAEA found at undeclared sites.

The IAEA is preparing to send member states its quarterly reports on Iran before the next board meeting, which begins on June 9. One of those will be a longer, “comprehensive” account of issues including Iran’s cooperation, as demanded by a board resolution in November, and diplomats expect it to be damning.

“We expect the comprehensive report to be tough, but there were already no doubts over Iran not keeping its non-proliferation commitments,” one European official said.

Once that report is issued, the United States will draft a proposed resolution text declaring Iran in breach of its so-called safeguards obligations, three diplomats stated. A fourth added the Western powers were preparing a draft resolution without going into specifics.

The text will be discussed with countries on the board in coming days before being formally submitted to the board by the four Western powers during the quarterly meeting as has happened with previous resolutions, diplomats said.

The last time the board took the step of formally declaring Iran in breach of its safeguards obligations was in September 2005 as part of a diplomatic standoff that stemmed from the discovery of clandestine nuclear activities in Iran.

The United States and IAEA now believe Iran had a secret, coordinated nuclear weapons programme that it halted in 2003. Iran denies ever having had a weapons programme and says it is only using nuclear technology for peaceful purposes.

A separate IAEA board resolution passed in February 2006 referred Iran’s non-compliance to the U.N. Security Council, which later imposed sanctions on Iran.

The diplomats said it had not yet been determined at what point the Western powers would seek to have the matter referred to the Security Council, and it is unclear what action if any the Security Council would then take against Iran.

The most immediate effect of a resolution is likely to be on Tehran’s talks with the United States and any further nuclear steps Iran decides to take on the ground.

A senior Iranian official told Reuters that Tehran would react to a resolution by “expanding nuclear work based on (the content of) the resolution”.

The board has passed all recent resolutions proposed by the Western powers on Iran, and there is little doubt that this one would go through as well. The only question is how large the majority would be. Russia and China have been the only countries to consistently oppose such resolutions.

Iran bristles at resolutions and other criticism of it at the IAEA board, taking steps such as accelerating and expanding its uranium enrichment programme or barring top IAEA inspectors.

Iran denies Reuters’ claim regarding Saudi King’s message

Esmael baghaei

Esmail Baqaei, in response to a question from a Fars News Agency reporter, firmly rejected the alleged claims by the news agency regarding the content of the Saudi king’s letter, which was reportedly conveyed during the Saudi defense minister’s visit to Tehran.

Reuters had claimed in a report that Khalid bin Salman bin Abdulaziz, Saudi Arabia’s defense minister, during his visit to Tehran last, delivered a message from King Salman of Saudi Arabia to Iran, urging Tehran to take US President Donald Trump’s offer to negotiate a nuclear agreement seriously because it presents a way to avoid the risk of war with Israel

On April 21, in response to a question about whether the Saudi defense minister’s visit to Iran was related to indirect Iran-US talks, Baqaei stated: “This visit had been planned in advance and coincided with the talks in Rome. This trip reflects the success of the neighborhood policy pursued by Iran over the years and demonstrates our belief that regional countries should be able to rely on each other’s capabilities and build mutual trust to move toward stability and safeguarding security in the Persian Gulf and West Asia.”

Baqaei had previously commented on similar cases, saying: “The news agency you mentioned has repeatedly violated professional journalism standards, reducing itself to part of a disinformation campaign against Iran and West Asian regional issues. On many occasions, it has produced and disseminated false, fabricated, and biased news about regional affairs and Iran.”

Over 300 celebrities urge PM Starmer to end UK arms sales to Israel

Gaza War

The prominent public figures have also demanded that the prime minister suspend all UK arms sales to Israel.

“We urge you to take immediate action to end the UK’s complicity in the horrors in Gaza,” the letter starts.

“Violence stamped with UK inaction – flown with parts shipped from British factories to Israel, could be obliterating families in seconds. Each arms shipment makes our country directly complicit in their deaths.”

Amongst the signatories are actors Benedict Cumberbatch, Brian Cox, Toby Jones and Andrea Riseborough; film director Danny Boyle; broadcaster Gary Lineker; singer-songwriter Dua Lipa and Holocaust survivor Stephen Kapos.

The main demands outlined in the letter urge Starmer to suspend UK weapons sales and licences to Israel, ensure full humanitarian access across Gaza without military interference, broker an immediate ceasefire, and put an end to the starvation wrought on the besieged enclave.

“Over 15,000 children have already been killed – including at least 4,000 under the age of four. Bedrooms where children once slept, kitchens where families shared meals, schools where they learned – all reduced to rubble while Britain stands by,” the open letter read.

“History is written in moments of moral clarity. This is one. The world is watching and history will not forget. The children of Gaza cannot wait another minute. Prime Minister, what will you choose? Complicity in war crimes, or the courage to act?”

Since the start of the war on Gaza, the Israeli military has killed more than 54,000 people, the majority of them children and women, and wounded more than 123,300 people.

The Government Media Office in Gaza reported on Wednesday that more than 18,000 children are estimated to have been killed over 19 months of Israeli attacks, including 16,854 confirmed deaths.

Among the children killed, 916 were under one year old; 4,365 were aged one to five; 6,101 were between six and 12; and 5,124 were aged 13 to 17.

The signatories have condemned the total Israeli blockade of the Gaza Strip that has left the population facing acute hunger.

They stressed that the UK must ensure “full humanitarian access across Gaza for experienced aid organisations without military interference.”

“Right now, children in Gaza are starving while food and medicine sit just minutes away, blocked at the border. Words won’t feed Palestinian children – we need action… Mothers, fathers, babies, grandparents – an entire people left to starve before the world’s eyes,” the letter added.

“290,000 children are on the brink of death – starved by the Israeli government for more than 70 days. They cry until they can’t cry anymore – until hunger takes even their voices. And their parents are left to do the unthinkable: hold them, and wait.”

Israel sealed off Gaza’s borders on 2 March, blocking the entry of all international aid and goods, including basic food items, hygiene supplies, and fuel.

On 1 April, all 25 bakeries supported by the World Food Programme across the Gaza Strip shut down due to the lack of wheat flour and fuel.

Since Tuesday, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, a controversial US-backed group that has been approved by Israel to take over aid distribution in the enclave, has claimed to have handed out just 14,000 food boxes to Palestinians – a fraction of what aid agencies say is needed to address the mass starvation unfolding in the strip.

The new aid system, which limits food distribution to a small number of hubs guarded by American security contractors, seeks to wrest distribution away from aid groups led by the United Nations.

Iranian Judiciary on singer’s suicide rumors: Tataloo hospitalized due to poisoning

According to the Judiciary’s media center, Tataloo’s condition was immediately attended to by medical professionals and that he is currently under specialist supervision.

It added that thanks to timely intervention and specialized treatment, his condition is now under control and his general health is stable. Tataloo has been imprisoned and put on trial on a range of charges including insulting the Prophet Muhammad.