Tuesday, December 30, 2025
Home Blog Page 400

US touts “very good progress” in Iran talks

Iran US Flags

“In Rome over four hours in our second round of talks, we made very good progress in our direct and indirect discussions,” a senior administration official told CNN.

“We agreed to meet again next week and are grateful to our Omani partners for facilitating these talks and to our Italian partners for hosting us today,” the official added.

A third round of discussions is expected in Oman next Saturday, and talks between technical experts from both sides will begin on Wednesday, according to an Iran foreign ministry spokesperson.

The negotiations came a week after an initial round was held in the Omani capital of Muscat. Although the talks were in Italy, Oman was again acting as mediator between the US team, led by special envoy Steve Witkoff, and the Iranian one, led by Foreign Minister Seyyed Abbas Araghchi.

Araghchi signaled that the talks had been positive, telling reporters they lasted about four hours.

“I can say that there is movement forward. We’ve reached better understanding and agreement on some principles and goals in these Rome negotiations,” he stated.

Russia announces surprise ‘Easter truce’ with Ukraine

In a surprise move, Russia’s president said he was ordering a temporary halt to the fighting out of “humanitarian considerations”. He added he expected Ukraine to follow suit and said this would be a test of whether the “regime” in Kyiv was interested in peace.

Putin’s made his remarks in a meeting with Russia’s commander-in-chief Valery Gerasimov, which was broadcast on state television. Ukrainians reacted sceptically, pointing out the announcement was made at the same time as an air raid alert sounded across the Kyiv region.

Russia has broken numerous ceasefire since its 2014 covert invasion of eastern Ukraine. Unlike Ukraine, it has refused to implement a 30-day pause in fighting proposed more than a month ago by the Trump administration.

Speaking on Saturday, Putin stated Kyiv was guilty of violating a deal “100 times” to refrain from attacking Russian energy infrastructure. He commanded Gerasimov to prepare an “immediate response” if this were to happen again.

It came amid reports that the the Donald Trump administration is considering recognising Crimea as a Russian territory as part of its attempt to broker a peace deal between the two sides.

US diplomatic recognition would violate the UN charter and the post-1945 consensus that countries cannot seize territory by force. Most states have refused to recognise Russia’s illegal takeover.

The possible concession to Moscow from the White House is likely to provoke criticism from the US’s one-time European allies and a furious backlash in Ukraine. It comes as Trump said on Friday the US may “move on” if no peace deal can be agreed.

“Now if for some reason one of the two parties makes it very difficult, we’re just going to say you’re foolish. You are fools, you horrible people,” Trump declared, adding: “And we’re going to just take a pass. But, hopefully, we won’t have to do that.”

It is also considering lifting sanctions on Moscow and other “carrots”, the New York Post reported. By contrast, Trump has heaped pressure on Ukraine, in effect cutting off military assistance and demanding a share of the country’s lucrative mineral wealth.

Russia’s apparent tactic is to restate its maximalist demands while stepping up its offensive on the battlefield. In talks with Trump’s special envoy, Steve Witkoff, Putin has insisted on President Volodymyr Zelensky’s removal, Ukraine’s demilitarisation and its “neutral” non-NATO status.

Ukraine appears willing to accept a freeze of the conflict along the existing 1,000km-long (620 miles) frontline. But Zelensky has categorically rejected Witkoff’s recent comment that Crimea and four other Ukrainian provinces should be given permanently to Russia.

“I do not see any mandate for him [Witkoff] to speak about Ukrainian territories. These lands belong to our people, to our nation and to the future generations of Ukrainians,” Zelensky stressed last week.

A peace deal will only work if the Russians stop fighting, US officials told Bloomberg.

“Negotiations will be fruitless if the Kremlin does not agree to cease hostilities. Providing Ukraine with security guarantees is an integral part of any agreement,” one reportedly acknowledged.

The source added no final decision over Crimea had been made. Since the US ceasefire proposal and ahead of Saturday’s “Easter truce”, Putin has stepped up attacks on Ukrainian civilians and infrastructure.

Russia has run Crimea for more than 11 years, transforming it from a holiday resort into a major military centre. It was used as a springboard for Putin’s full-scale 2022 invasion. Armoured columns seized large parts of Kherson and Zaporizhzhia provinces, as well as the city of Mariupol.

Ukraine regularly targets Russian army and naval bases in Crimea. It has bombed the headquarters of Russia’s Black Sea fleet in the port of Sevastopol, using British Storm Shadow missiles. It has also targeted the bridge linking the peninsula to Russia with drones and a car bomb.

Iran, US to proceed with technical talks in Oman within days: Foreign Minister

A new round of indirect talks between Iran and the US, mediated by Oman and held in Italy, came to an end on Saturday afternoon.

Delegations from the two sides, led by Araqchi and the US president’s special envoy Steve Witkoff, held the talks at the Omani ambassador’s residence in Rome.

Omani Foreign Minister Badr bin Hamad Al Busaidi was exchanging messages between the two sides, like the previous round of talks in Muscat.

Speaking to IRIB at the conclusion of the talks, Araqchi said the negotiations lasted for around four hours.

Hailing the “good and forward-moving” negotiations in Rome, the foreign minister stated the delegations managed to reach a better understanding on a series of principles and purposes.

Unveiling plans for the start of expert meetings, Araqchi noted “technical negotiations at the level of experts” will begin in Oman as of Wednesday, April 23.

He added the experts will take the time to go into details and design a framework for a deal.

The foreign minister stated that the top negotiators will meet afterwards on Saturday to evaluate the results of the expert meetings and see how close they will be to an agreement.

Gaza doctor’s ‘inhumane conditions’ in Israeli detention worsening: Lawyer

Gaza War

Gheed Kassem said in an interview with Alaraby TV that she has visited the paediatrician, who is the director of Gaza’s Kamal Adwan hospital, three times, with “each visit being more difficult than the one before”.

“To be honest, what I have heard from him was incredibly shocking, to the point where I don’t even know if its right to reveal to the media,” she stated.

According to Kassem, detainees from Gaza were “beaten and assaulted in a monstrous way” during the celebration of Eid al-Fitr earlier this month.

“I have not met one prisoner in the last week, unfortunately, who was not beaten or assaulted,” she added.

“The situation is escalating, the starvation is increasing, the torture is increasing, the isolation from the outside world is increasing, the threats are increasing, and no one has been able to put a boundary for these escalations.”

Abu Safiya’s lawyer said even an able-bodied healthy individual would come out suffering with health conditions following Israeli detainment.

Kassem stressed that Abu Safiya is not the only innocent prisoner facing such cruel conditions, but in fact, entire medical crews and even patients who were detained from inside Gaza hospitals are suffering the same.

“As rights advocates and lawyers, we are ashamed to even talk about the levels of torture happening,” she added, citing stomping on faces, humiliation and forced consumption of sewage water as some of the lighter treatment Palestinians face.

Kassem noted that prisoners are forced to take part in acts that would be “morally denounced worldwide”.

“Their honour is stepped on every day, every minute. Their mistreatment is incredibly horrible.”

In the case of Abu Safiya, she stated his head was hit on a metal pillar just days ago.

Abu Safiya has been categorised as an “unlawful combatant” under Israel – despite him being a civilian doctor, which means there is no formal indictment against him.

He is set to remain in administrative detention until at least September or October.

Addameer, a Palestinian prisoners’ rights group, announced that nearly 10,000 Palestinians are currently imprisoned, including around 400 children and 27 women.

It estimates that roughly 40 percent of all Palestinian men have been detained at some point by Israel in their lifetime.

The group also reports that almost 3,500 people are being held under administrative detention – imprisoned without formal charges or access to legal proceedings.

In late October, Abu Safiya’s son was killed by an Israeli raid on the Kamal Adwan hospital.

“Despite the monstrous happenings inside the prisons, medical personnele, including Doctor Hussam Abu Safiya, until now their main concern is the state of hospitals in the Gaza Strip,” Kassem said, adding, “Until this second, the thing that he asks about is the conditions hospitals are facing amid the current and apparent genocide in Gaza.”

Iran’s FM: Israel sole obstacle to nuke-free West Asia

Araghchi made the remarks on Saturday in Rome during a meeting with his Italian counterpart, Antonio Tajani. The two met ahead of the second round of indirect talks between Iran and the United States, mediated by Oman at its embassy in the Italian capital.

Reaffirming Iran’s commitment to diplomacy, Araghchi urged all parties to seize the opportunity for a “logical and reasonable understanding” that would recognize Iran’s legitimate rights and lift “unjust and illegal sanctions.”

He emphasized Iran’s peaceful nuclear intentions, reiterating the country’s rejection of weapons of mass destruction based on its religious and national values and defensive doctrine.

The Iranian minister also thanked Tajani for Italy’s coordination in facilitating the talks and conveyed Easter greetings to the Italian people.

Tajani welcomed Araghchi and expressed Italy’s strong interest in deepening ties with Iran. He said hosting the talks was of great value to Rome and stressed Italy’s readiness to assist the negotiations in any possible way.

Araghchi arrived in Rome earlier in the day for talks on Tehran’s civilian nuclear program and termination of Washington’s unlawful sanctions against the country.

Iran had ruled out direct negotiations with the US under pressure or threats of war but stated that it remains open to indirect talks.

British MPs confronted by Israeli settlers during visit to West Bank

Israeli Settlers Police

Shockat Adam, an independent MP for Leicester South, and Andrew George, Liberal Democrat MP for St Ives, arrived in Israel and toured Hebron, Bethlehem and East Jerusalem – three areas recognised under international law and by the British government as being Palestinian territory under Israeli occupation.

The delegation said in a joint statement late on Friday that the trip immediately got off to a rocky start when George, an MP who has repeatedly condemned Israel’s 18-month onlsught on Gaza, was stopped by Israeli border officials.

“George was questioned and taken aside and prevented from entering Israel for 45 minutes, before eventually being permitted entry, following communications with the British Embassy in Tel Aviv and the British Consulate in Jerusalem,” the delegation said.

Earlier this month, Labour MPs Abtisam Mohamed and Yuan Yang were refused entry by Israeli authorities to the occupied Palestinian territories on the grounds that they intended to “spread hate speech”. The move divided British politicians, with Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch publicly expressing support for Israel’s decision.

Members of the delegation told Middle East Eye that three days after arriving in occupied Palestine, and during a visit to Al-Aqsa Mosque in East Jerusalem, they witnessed hundreds of Israeli settlers enter the mosque’s courtyards to pray.

For decades, Israel has prohibited Jewish prayer at Al-Aqsa Mosque, one of the holiest sites in Islam, but ultranationalist settlers and several members of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government oppose this stance and have increasingly allowed Jewish prayer there.

Since last Saturday, when the Passover holiday began, an unprecedented 6,315 Israeli settlers have entered the courtyards to pray, in defiance of a delicate status quo governing worship and visits to the site.

Members of the delegation told MEE they witnessed Israeli settler groups enter the mosque complex under police protection, adding that there were few Palestinians inside the mosque.

The MPs also visited Masafer Yatta, south of Hebron in the southern West Bank, where they met members of the local Palestinian community and witnessed Israeli settlers attacking Palestinians.

Members of the delegation told MEE that armed settlers and security forces confronted them while they were witnessing how Bedouin farmers had access to their land disrupted, before backing off when they found out there were British parliamentarians in the group.

In Hebron, they stated security forces raised their assault rifles as the delegation’s vehicle attempted to pass a checkpoint.

This January, Israel launched a military operation called Operation Iron Wall with the aim of tightening its grip on resistance strongholds in the occupied West Bank.

The UN says the operation has seen at least 40,000 Palestinians forced from their homes. In the Tulkarem governorate in the north-west, the MPs met Palestinian families displaced from their homes by the military.

The delegation also visited Ramallah, where they met Palestinian political and human rights figures, including Mustafa Barghouti, general secretary of the Palestinian National Initiative.

And in Tel Aviv in Israel, they met with journalists and Israeli and Palestinian human rights campaigners, including the chair of B’Tselem, Israel’s largest human rights organisation.

Adam and George are set to hold a press conference on Wednesday to answer questions about their visit.

Rice paddy volleyball tournament thrills in Mazandaran

Held in Imamzadeh Abdollah district’s working rice paddies, the tournament saw athletes wading through ankle-deep water during matches.

The challenging muddy conditions added an element of unpredictability to each game, with dramatic dives and slippery saves becoming pleasing highlights.

Tourism officials highlight the tournament as part of Mazandaran’s efforts to promote agritourism experiences, allowing visitors to witness rural athletic traditions while surrounded by the province’s iconic emerald-green rice terraces.

Around 200 students, journalists go on trial in Turkey over Istanbul protests

In the dock are 189 suspects who were rounded up in a government crackdown on the protests, which erupted following the March 19 detention and subsequent jailing of Istanbul’s opposition mayor Ekrem Imamoglu.

As the trial opened, the Caglayan courthouse was packed with family members, journalists, university lecturers and lawmakers from the main opposition CHP party.

Most of the defendants were students, but among them were also eight Turkish journalists.

The suspects are facing a number of charges, notably “taking part in illegal rallies and marches” and “failing to disperse despite police warnings”, court documents show.

If convicted, they could face between six months to four years behind bars, Human Rights Watch (HRW) said in a statement.

Addressing the court on behalf of the journalists, lawyer Veysel Ok called for their acquittal on grounds they were reporting the news of the protests.

“They were there as journalists to cover the protests … that’s what they are paid for,” he told the judge.

The judge rejected the acquittal request but agreed to separate their file from that of the students.

According to the indictment, their claim to be journalists “has not been counted” because the police did not establish that they were present for journalistic purposes, HRW announced.

“We want the journalists to be acquitted” because they are being tried on the basis of false evidence, Erol Onderoglu, the Turkey representative of Reporters Without Borders (RSF) told AFP.

“Unfortunately, their prosecution is as arbitrary as their detention and arrest.”

For most of the youths, it was the first time they had joined a protest, as large-scale rallies have been largely non-existent since a government crackdown on the 2013 Gezi Park protests.

“We want justice for our children. They need to be at their desks in university, not in prison,” Avni Gundogdu, co-founder of The Parents’ Solidarity Network, told AFP outside the court.

The Istanbul prosecutor’s office said 819 people will be tried in 20 criminal investigations.

After reviewing nine indictments involving 650 defendants, HRW criticised the “rushed nature and mass scale of the trials”, saying the charges “lack evidence of criminal wrongdoing”.

“Given the glaring absence of evidence, it is hard not to conclude that the intended purpose of these rushed trials is to send a warning against exercising the rights to peaceful protest or free expression,” stated HRW’s Europe and Central Asia director Hugh Williamson.

Istanbul’s jailed mayor is President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s greatest political rival, and his arrest sparked protests that spread across the country, despite a ban on demonstrations in Turkey’s three largest cities.

Police cracked down using teargas, pepper spray and rubber bullets to disperse the crowds, and rounded up nearly 2,000 people, many during pre-dawn home raids.

HRW added 62 of those in court Friday were charged with carrying weapons or hiding their faces to avoid being identified “yet the only specifics provided … (was) an allegation that one protestor had a rock in his hand”.

Another 20 were charged with seeking to “incite a crime”. But HRW noted that “overwhelmingly” involved social media posts declaring a wish “to join people in the streets and statements against the government, and not calls for violence or criminality”.

With many family members unable to enter the courthouse due to tight security, hundreds protested by the metal barriers outside, closely watched by an army of police.

US says to bring down forces in Syria to less than 1,000 within months

US Forces Syria

“Recognizing the success the United States has had against ISIS, including its 2019 territorial defeat under President Trump, today the Secretary of Defense directed the consolidation of U.S. forces in Syria under Combined Joint Task Force – Operation Inherent Resolve to select locations in Syria,” spokesman Sean Parnell said in a statement.

The consolidation reflects the “significant” steps the US has made toward degrading the operational capability of the Daesh/ISIS terror group regionally and globally, Parnell added.

“This deliberate and conditions-based process will bring the U.S. footprint in Syria down to less than a 1,000 U.S. forces in the coming months,” he stressed.

Stressing that in the last 10 years, the Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS (Daesh or ISIL) has made “major gains,” Parnell said US Central Command (CENTCOM) launched dozens of airstrikes in the last year to further degrade the capabilities of Daesh.

CENTCOM will “remain poised to continue strikes against the remnants of ISIS in Syria,” he continued, adding the US will work with coalition partners to maintain pressure on the terror group.

The Pentagon continues to maintain a “significant amount of capability in the region and the ability to make dynamic force posture adjustments based on evolving security situations on the ground,” he stressed.

US President Donald Trump said in late January that the US “will make a determination” on troops in Syria following a report that said he intends to withdraw American forces.

“I don’t know who said that, but we’ll make a determination on that,” Trump told reporters at the White House.

“We’re not involved in Syria. Syria is in its own mess. They’ve got enough messes over there. They don’t need us involved,” he added.

Ukraine imposes sanctions on China’s firms for helping Russia make missiles

Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky

It comes a day after President Volodymyr Zelensky claimed that China had been supplying weapons to Russia. China’s foreign ministry earlier on Friday dismissed Zelensky’s accusation as groundless.

While maintaining close economic ties with Russia during Moscow’s three-year war in Ukraine, China has sought to project an image of neutrality and denies any involvement in the war.

Zelensky’s administration on Friday published an updated list of sanctioned entities. The list, which also includes Russian companies, named Beijing Aviation And Aerospace Xianghui Technology Co. Ltd, Rui Jin Machinery Co. Ltd, and Zhongfu Shenying Carbon Fiber Xining Co. Ltd, all described as registered in China.

Zelensky said that the Chinese companies hit with sanctions were involved in the production of Russian Iskander missiles. Russia widely uses the nuclear-capable short-range ballistic missile system in the conflict.

On Friday, Ukraine said Iskander missiles had struck Kharkiv, a city in northern Ukraine, killing one and injuring more than 100 people.

“Today, we have expanded our Ukrainian sanctions against nearly a hundred more entities – natural and legal persons – most of whom are involved in the production of such missiles -Iskanders – like those that struck our Kharkiv,” Zelensky wrote on X.

“Many of these entities are Russian, but unfortunately, some are also from China,” he added.

Sanctions ban companies from doing business in Ukraine and freeze their assets there.

Ukraine exported $8 billion of goods to China in 2021, mostly raw materials and agricultural products, while it imported from China just under $11 billion, mainly in manufactured goods, according to the Ukrainian government.

On Thursday, Zelensky told reporters in Kyiv his government had evidence that Chinese firms were supplying what he described as artillery and gunpowder to Russia, and that Chinese entities are making some weapons on Russian soil.
He did not offer any evidence for the assertion.

A week earlier, Zelensky had stated Chinese nationals were fighting on Russia’s side in the war with Ukraine, including two who had been taken prisoner. A Chinese diplomat was summoned to the Ukrainian foreign ministry to provide an explanation.

Ukrainian and U.S. officials later said the men had signed up on their own initiative for money.