Tuesday, May 5, 2026
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North Korea dispatches 3,000 more troops to Russia: South Korea

North Korean Soldiers

President Volodymyr Zelensky previously stated that North Korean forces fighting for Russia had suffered around 4,000 casualties, with two-thirds killed.

Ukraine’s military intelligence chief, Kyrylo Budanov, attributed their high losses to North Korea’s lack of combat experience and reliance on human wave attacks with limited equipment.

According to the agency, Pyongyang has also supplied Moscow with short-range ballistic missiles, 170 mm self-propelled howitzers, and 240 mm multiple rocket launchers.

North Korea has become a crucial military partner for Russia, providing artillery shells, missiles, and troops in exchange for oil products and advanced rocket technology.

Up to 12,000 North Korean troops were deployed to Kursk Oblast last fall to help Russian forces push back a Ukrainian incursion that began in August 2024.

Ukrainian troops initially seized 1,300 square kilometers (500 square miles) of Russian territory before Russian forces, reinforced by North Korean units, launched a counteroffensive earlier this month, recapturing significant ground, including the town of Sudzha.

Iran, Lebanon, Iraq, Yemen stage joint naval exercises in support of Gaza

The joint parade kicked off across the Persian Gulf, Makran coastal region, and the Caspian Sea in the northern and southern territorial waters of Iran on Thursday ahead of International Quds Day.

IRGC Navy Commander Rear Admiral Alireza Tangsiri said 3,000 heavy and light vessels are taking part in the parade.

The parade mainly aims to display the maritime capabilities of the resistance front and convey a message to the wicked and oppressive Israeli regime, he added.

Tangsiri said the IRGC naval forces are pursuing the guidelines of Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei and will “turn the sea into hell for the Zionists and eliminate Israel from the face of the world.”

“We will not only fight on land. We are also ready in the sea and you will have no way to escape,” the IRGC commander told the Israeli regime.

“We will establish security and power in the waters of the Persian Gulf, the Sea of Oman and the northern part of the country and prevent any adventurism by the enemies,” he added.

The IRGC commander emphasized that such a regional alliance would pose a challenge to the Israeli regime.

He also noted that Iran’s mobilization of naval forces is not only a military force but a symbol of resistance and prowess of Muslim nations in the face of enemies.

Pointing to the significance of International Quds Day, Tangsiri said, “This day symbolizes uprising against oppression and defense for the oppressed.”

He added that not only the Iranian nation but all Muslims around the world will express their protest against Israel on this day.

During the parade, the flag of Palestine was displayed, and the flag of the Israeli regime was set on fire and destroyed in the Persian Gulf.

The IRGC Navy’s Shahid Bagheri drone carrier, Raees Ali Delvari warship, and Tareq-class missile-launching speed boat are participating in the drill.

Nearly 1,900 people arrested in Turkey protests over jailed mayor

Imamoglu, President Tayyip Erdogan’s biggest political rival who leads him in some polls, was jailed pending trial for graft on Sunday. His arrest prompted the largest anti-government protests in a decade and led to mass arrests across the country.
Imamoglu’s main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP), other opposition parties, rights groups and Western powers have all said the case against the mayor – dismissed from his job due to the case – was a politicised effort to eliminate a potential electoral threat to Erdogan.

The government denies any influence over the judiciary and says the courts are independent.

Speaking to international media representatives in Istanbul, Justice Minister Yilmaz Tunc stated Ankara had asked its European partners to act with “common sense”, adding the gravity of the allegations against Imamoglu required his arrest.

“We don’t want the arrest of any politician, but if there is evidence of a violation then it can happen,” Tunc said through a translator.

“If we look at the gravity of the allegations, and as there is risk that evidence can be concealed, the judiciary has made a reasonable decision,” he added.

The CHP has called on Turks to continue protesting, saying it would organise rallies and gatherings at different locations in Istanbul and elsewhere. Erdogan has dismissed the protests as a “show” and warned of legal consequences for protesters.

Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya said 1,879 people had been detained since the protests erupted last Wednesday, adding that courts jailed 260 of them pending trial. He added that 489 were released and 662 others were still being processed, while 150 police officers were injured.
Rights groups have called on Turkey to investigate what they called the excessive use of force by police while dispersing crowds, and urged the government to allow the demonstrations, which have been largely peaceful. Western leaders have said the case marked democratic backsliding.

Asked about the timing of Imamoglu’s arrest, which happened days ahead of his announcement as the CHP’s presidential candidate in the next elections – set for 2028 – and following a months-long legal crackdown on the opposition, Tunc said the judiciary only looked at criminal reports. The minister added that being an elected official did not mean impunity.

He also added Erdogan was not being informed about the case against Imamoglu due to the confidentiality of the case, though the president has made several comments accusing the CHP and its municipalities of corruption.
A day before Imamoglu was detained last week, a university annulled his diploma – an eligibility requirement for candidates in presidential elections.

Asked about the arrest and subsequent release of seven local journalists covering the demonstrations in Istanbul, including a photojournalist from Agence France Presse (AFP), Tunc said there was a misperception about Turkey’s treatment of journalists and that it did not jail reporters.
Reporters Without Borders, a free speech advocate, ranked Turkey 158th of 180 countries in its 2024 press freedom index. It said some 90% of media was under government influence, prompting Turks to turn more to opposition or independent news outlets.

Tunc said the index did not reflect the truth.

Minister: Over 45mn domestic trips recorded during Nowruz holidays in Iran

Speaking at a meeting of provincial governors, Salehi Amiri revealed that 24.7 million trips were recorded in the first week of the holidays alone, with Mazandaran, Gilan, Tehran, Khorasan Razavi and Isfahan provinces emerging as the most popular destinations.

“The remarkable travel numbers demonstrate our people’s vitality and enthusiasm for tourism,” the minister stated, while acknowledging the need for improved infrastructure and services across provinces.

The government mobilized 1.2 million personnel from 27 different agencies to facilitate holiday travel and ensure smooth operations at tourist sites nationwide.

Salehi Amiri emphasized the administration’s commitment to tourism development, citing plans to attract an additional 1.5 million visitors this year as part of a five-year strategy targeting 15 million annual foreign tourists.

The minister also outlined plans to establish a tourism infrastructure investment council and delegate greater authority to provincial governors to accelerate tourism projects. Special attention would be given to supporting low-income travelers and improving accessibility.

Iran Greco-Roman team crowned at 2025 Asian championship

The Iranian wrestlers won five gold medals and three silver medals, claiming the title with 201 points.

Uzbekistan came second with 168 points, and Japan finished third with 131 points.

Saeid Esmaeili (67kg), Danial Sohrabi (72kg), Mohammad Naghousi (82kg), Mohammad Hadi Saravi (97kg), and Fardin Hedayati (130kg) each won a gold medal.

Mohammad Mehdi Keshtkar (63kg), Alireza Abevali (77kg), and Yasin Yazdi (87kg) won three silver medals.

The competition is being held in Amman, Jordan.

Trump administration arrests another pro-Palestine student

Rumeysa Ozturk, 30, had left her home in Somerville on Tuesday night to meet friends and break her Ramadan fast when she was arrested by Department of Homeland Security agents, lawyer Mahsa Khanbabai said in a petition filed in Boston federal court.

Ozturk’s supporters say her detention is the first known immigration arrest of a Boston-area student engaged in such activism to be carried out under President Donald Trump.

His administration has detained or sought to detain several foreign-born students who are legally in the US and have been involved in pro-Palestinian protests.

The actions have been condemned as an assault on free speech, though the Trump administration argues that certain protests are anti-Semitic and can undermine US foreign policy.

US Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin in a post on X said authorities determined Ozturk “engaged in activities in support of Hamas, a foreign terrorist organisation that relishes the killing of Americans”.

“A visa is a privilege, not a right,” McLaughlin said.

She did not specify what activities. But Ozturk’s arrest came a year after the student co-authored an opinion piece in the school’s student paper, the Tufts Daily, that criticised Tufts’ response to calls by students to divest from companies with ties to Israel and to “acknowledge the Palestinian genocide”.

“Based on patterns we are seeing across the country, her exercising her free speech rights appears to have played a role in her detention,” Khanbabai said.

Following Ozturk’s arrest, Khanbabai filed a lawsuit late Tuesday arguing she was unlawfully detained, prompting US District Judge Indira Talwani in Boston that night to order US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) not to move Ozturk out of Massachusetts without at least 48 hours notice.

Despite the judge’s order, by Wednesday afternoon, Khanbabai in a motion said she had been unable to locate her client in New England and had just been informed by a US senator’s office that Ozturk was transferred to Louisiana. She sought a court order requiring ICE to permit access to Ozturk.

The student’s detention was condemned by Democratic lawmakers, including US Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, who said the “arrest is the latest in an alarming pattern to stifle civil liberties”. A rally in her support was expected later Wednesday in Somerville.

Neighbours said they were left rattled by the arrest, which played out at 5:30pm on a residential block.

“It looked like a kidnapping,” said Michael Mathis, a 32-year-old software engineer whose surveillance camera picked up the footage of the arrest. “They approach her and start grabbing her with their faces covered. They’re covering their faces. They’re in unmarked vehicles.”

The Trump administration has targeted international students as it seeks to crack down on immigration, including ramping up immigration arrests and sharply restricting border crossings.

Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio, in particular, have pledged to deport foreign pro-Palestinian protesters, accusing them of supporting Hamas, posing hurdles for US foreign policy, and being anti-Semitic.

Protesters, including some Jewish groups, say the administration wrongly conflates their criticism of Israel and support for Palestinian rights with anti-Semitism and support for Hamas.

Ozturk is a Fulbright Scholar and student in Tufts’ doctoral programme for child study and human development, according to her LinkedIn profile, and had previously studied at Columbia University in New York.

She has been in the country on an F-1 visa, which allows students to live in the US while studying, according to the lawsuit.

In a statement, Tufts president Sunil Kumar said the school had no advance knowledge of the arrest, which he recognised would be “distressing to some members of our community, particularly the members of our international community”.

Ozturk was taken into custody less than three weeks after Mahmoud Khalil, a Columbia University graduate and lawful permanent resident, was similarly arrested. He is challenging his detention after Trump, without evidence, accused him of supporting Hamas, which Khalil denies.

Federal immigration officials are also seeking to detain a South Korean-born Columbia University student who is a legal permanent US resident and has participated in pro-Palestinian protests, a move blocked by the courts for now.

A Lebanese doctor and assistant professor at Brown University in Rhode Island this month was denied re-entry to the US and deported to Lebanon after the Trump administration alleged that her phone contained photos “sympathetic” to Hezbollah. Rasha Alawieh said she does not support the group but holds regard for its slain leader because of her religion.

The Trump administration has also targeted students at Cornell University in New York and Georgetown University in Washington.

Leader’s advisor: Iran open to indirect talks with US, but rejects pressure

Kamal Kharazi

The remarks come as US President Donald Trump announced on March 7 that he had written to Iranian leaders reportedly calling for nuclear negotiations while threatening military action.

Speaking as head of Iran’s Foreign Policy Strategic Council, Kharrazi said Washington is waging a “psychological war” by sending mixed signals – alternating between threats and offers of dialogue.

He warned the approach aims to pressure Iran into one-sided negotiations.

“Some in Iran see recent US messages as an opportunity, but the real American strategy is talks under sanctions and military threats,” Kharrazi stated.

He stressed any meaningful dialogue must be based on equality and mutual respect, principles the US has consistently violated.

The former foreign minister emphasized Iran refuses to be bullied, citing the nation’s resistance during the 1980s Iran-Iraq War as proof of its defiance under pressure.

In a March 21 response, Iran’s Leader Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei dismissed US threats as ineffective, warning that Iran would take reciprocal action against any “malign” American moves.

Iran’s Army, IRGC issue stern warnings to Israel ahead of Quds Day rallies

Iran Quds Rally

The Iranian Army’s proclamation condemned “seven decades of Western-Zionist conspiracy” that created Israel, accusing the “bloodthirsty regime” of massacring “millions of innocent people.”

The statement particularly highlighted recent Israeli military actions in Gaza, citing “tens of thousands of martyrs among children, women and civilians” as evidence of “shameless brutality.”

“The silence of so-called human rights advocates proves the Zionist entity respects no moral or legal principles,” the Army declared, asserting that only sustained resistance could liberate Palestine.

The IRGC’s communiqué framed Palestine as the central issue confronting the Islamic world. It boasted that Hamas’s October 7th Operation Al-Aqsa Storm had transformed the conflict into a global concern, leaving Israel “humiliated and strategically defeated” after 18 months of fighting.

Both military institutions paid tribute to slain resistance leaders, including Hezbollah’s Seyyed Hassan Nasrallah, Hamas’s Ismail Haniyeh, and Iran’s General Qassem Soleimani.

The statements come as millions in the world are preparing for the annual Quds Day marches on the last Friday of the holy month of Ramadan in support of Palestine.

Iran calls on Iraq to counter ‘enemy provocations’ in oil trade

Iran Oil Gas

The conversation followed Iraqi media reports claiming the US Navy had seized Iranian tankers allegedly using forged Iraqi documents in the Persian Gulf, allegations Iran has firmly denied.

Paknejad stressed the need to protect bilateral relations from external interference while reaffirming Iran’s commitment to legal oil trade practices.

“Iran’s oil sales strictly comply with internationally accepted trade standards,” Paknejad stated during the call. Both sides described their nations’ ties as “friendly and brotherly.”

He emphasized the need for “joint alertness against divisive schemes by adversaries,” without naming specific countries.

Earlier, Iran’s Deputy Oil Minister Seyed Ali Mohammad Mousavi dismissed the allegations as “baseless US propaganda,” insisting Tehran’s oil trade complies fully with legal norms.

The US has yet to provide evidence supporting the seizure claims. Analysts view the dispute as part of broader tensions over Iran’s oil exports, which remain a focal point in the geopolitical standoffs.

Israel kills 103 Palestinians daily in Gaza onslaught: Monitor

Gaza War

The grim figures average 103 deaths and 223 injuries per day—a relentless escalation in violence that shows no sign of slowing.

In a scathing statement, the group accused Israel of deliberately targeting civilians, including those sheltering in tents and the rubble of their homes.

“Without any military justification, the Israeli occupation army has committed the crime of targeting homes – or what is left of them – every day, including targeting tents where civilians have sought safety following almost 18 months of genocide. This is a clear component of a systematic Israeli policy that aims to kill Palestinians, ruin their lives, and impose a horrific reality that makes it impossible to survive,” the statement said.

The United Nations said on Tuesday that Israel’s forcible displacement orders now encompass 15 percent of the Gaza Strip, roughly the same size as Manhattan in New York City.

“Families are forced to move – again. Resources are running out, and nowhere is safe,” the UN said.

The UN added that at least 142,000 Palestinians have been displaced since Israel resumed its attacks on Gaza.

Nearly 50,200 Palestinians have been killed, mostly women and children, and over 113,700 injured in a brutal Israeli military onslaught on Gaza since October 2023.