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UN accuses Russia of using drones to hunt civilians in Ukraine

Russia Ukraine War

The Independent International Commission of Inquiry on Ukraine found that the coordinated drone assaults, carried out over more than a year, amount to the crime against humanity of forcible population transfer.

Investigators said Russian troops intentionally targeted civilians and civilian structures across a 300-kilometer area spanning the Kherson, Dnipropetrovsk, and Mykolaiv regions, forcing people to flee.

The report drew on 226 interviews with victims, witnesses, aid workers, and local officials, as well as verified videos showing civilians being “hunted” by drones.

UN investigators stated the attacks also struck first responders, including ambulances and firefighters, despite clear humanitarian markings.

Russia denies deliberately targeting civilians and refuses to cooperate with the UN commission, which has previously accused Russia of war crimes such as the deportation of Ukrainian children.

 

Israel kills three Palestinians in West Bank raid involving air strike

The attack took place in the early morning hours in the village of Kafr Qud, west of Jenin, when Israeli forces stormed the area and surrounded a house, according to local media reports.

The raid sparked heavy exchanges of fire and aerial shelling.

The Palestinian General Authority for Civil Affairs has identified the three men as Abdullah Mohammed Omar Jalamneh, 27, Qais Ibrahim Mohammed al-Baytawi, 21, and Ahmad Azmi Aref Nashrati, 29.

Israeli media reported that the army had cornered three men inside a cave in the village before snipers shot them, killing two and wounding the third.

Air strikes were then carried out, killing the remaining man. Israeli troops later seized at least two of the bodies.

The Israeli army claimed that the three men had been planning attacks in the area, but provided no further details.

Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz stated that forces would remain in the northern West Bank refugee camps – including Jenin, Tulkarm, and Nur Shams – which they have raided since January, leaving widespread destruction.

Hamas and the Islamic Jihad condemned the attack, calling it a “dangerous escalation”.

Israeli forces have increasingly used air strikes in the West Bank since October 2023, carrying out more than 100 such attacks over the past two years, according to Israeli media.

More than 1,000 Palestinians in the West Bank have been killed by Israeli fire in that period, mostly from gunfire.

At least 213 of those killed were children, 20 were women, and seven were people with disabilities, according to UN figures.

The UN says that this number represents 43 percent of all Palestinians killed in the occupied West Bank over the past 20 years.

 

Zelensky calls on Trump to pressure Xi to cut support to Russia

Putin Xi

“I think this may be one of (Trump’s) strong moves, especially if, following this decisive sanctions step, China is ready to reduce imports” from Russia, Zelensky told journalists on Tuesday.

Trump hit two major Russian oil companies with sanctions last week and has been urging buyers of Moscow’s vital energy exports — specifically China and India — to cut their purchases that Washington and Kyiv say fund Russia’s invasion.

Zelensky has said that Ukraine needs European financial support to continue fighting the invading Russian forces for another two or three years.

“I emphasised this again to all European leaders. I told them that we are not going to fight for decades, but you must show that for some time you will be able to provide stable financial support to Ukraine,” he added.

“And that is why they have this program in mind –- 2-3 years,” the president stated, referring to a European Commission proposal to gradually unlock frozen Russian assets to fund Ukraine.

 

Iran’s president calls for coherent ‘security architecture’ within ECO bloc

Speaking at the fourth ECO Ministerial Meeting in Tehran on Tuesday, President Pezeshkian called the organization the heir to decades of efforts, synergy, and practice of its members for economic convergence.

“Success in regional economic cooperation requires, among other things, solid, predictable, stable, and resilient common frameworks and platforms,” he added.

He urged the countries of Central Asia, the Caucasus, South Asia, West Asia, and the Persian Gulf, including the ECO member states, “to establish and implement a coherent, endogenously stable and development-oriented security architecture.”

Founded in 1985 by Iran, Turkey, and Pakistan, the ECO has since expanded to include Afghanistan, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan. Today, it serves as a major platform for regional economic integration.

Elsewhere in his speech, President Pezeshkian stated that the nations of the region are a “valuable platform for dialogue, exchange of experiences, and synergy in all fields.”

One of the unfinished tasks in ECO, he said, “is the creation of an ECO police force called ECOPOL, the process of which has not yet been finalized.”

According to the president, the ECO region is “one of the few regions in the world that does not have a joint police force.”

“This gap, in addition to intra-regional vulnerabilities, has prevented the optimal use of cooperation with other regional police forces and international police,” he said.

“Our region and surrounding areas have not been immune to foreign attacks,” he said, adding that the largest foreign intervention in contemporary history has taken place in this region.

Referring to the Israeli occupation of Palestine, Pezeshkian lamented that the “largest occupation of the century” continues near our region after about 8 decades.

“The most heinous genocide and crime against humanity in the world has occurred in the West Asia region and in Gaza by the occupying regime in the last two years,” he added.

The president warned that “there is a great thirst among the international extremists and norm-breakers for presence and intervention in our region and our peripheral regions.”

 

 

Russia says Ukraine drone attack targets Moscow for second night in row

Ukraine War

The Russian defence ministry announced in a statement its air defence units destroyed 17 Ukrainian drones overnight, including one flying towards Moscow and 13 over the Kaluga region which borders the Moscow region to its northeast.

Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said on Telegram that emergency services were dispatched to the site where the drone heading towards Moscow fell.

There were no reports of damage, but Russia rarely discloses the full-scale impact of Ukrainian strikes inside its territory unless civilians or civilian objects are involved.

Russia’s air defence units destroyed the remaining three drones over the Bryansk region, which borders Ukraine to its west and Kaluga region to its northeast.

Alexander Bogomaz, governor of the Bryansk region, wrote on Telegram that one civilian was hospitalised as a result of the attack.

Both sides deny targeting civilians, but thousands have died in the conflict, the vast majority of them Ukrainian.

On Monday, Russia noted it had downed 34 Ukrainian drones that were targeting Moscow.

Iran’s Judiciary: Actor Pejman Jamshidi’s case still under preliminary investigation

He said information would be provided once proceedings are finalized.

Speaking at a press conference on Tuesday, Jahangir stated that while individuals are free to express their opinions, they must respect legal, moral, and religious boundaries.

He noted that the current case arose after a private complaint was filed, adding that such cases are pursued when individuals believe their rights have been violated.

Jahangir confirmed that Jamshidi had initially been detained following a private complaint, with his temporary detention order later changed to a bail arrangement.

The actor was arrested on October 21 and released on November 3 after appealing the decision through his lawyers.

UN slams Israel for attack on peacekeeping troops in Lebanon

UNIFEL

UN spokesperson Stephane Dujarric said on Monday that the previous day’s attack on UNIFIL troops, which he stated involved an Israeli drone dropping a grenade in the vicinity of a patrol, as well as a tank opening fire on peacekeepers near the border town of Kfar Kila, was “very, very dangerous”.

The United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) works with the Lebanese army to enforce a ceasefire struck last year between Israel and the Lebanese armed group Hezbollah. Israel has violated the truce on a near-daily basis.

France’s Ministry for Europe and Foreign Affairs also condemned “the Israeli fire that targeted a UNIFIL detachment” and noted that the incidents followed similar attacks on October 1, 2 and 11.

Dujarric added: “It’s not the first time that we feel we’ve been targeted in different ways by the [Israeli army, including] pointing lasers or warning shots. He said his colleagues at UNIFIL were in touch with the Israeli military to “protest vehemently” against the attacks.

On Sunday, UNIFIL reported an Israeli drone flying over its patrol in an “aggressive manner”, saying its peacekeepers “applied necessary defensive countermeasures to neutralise the drone”. No injuries or damage were reported.

Israel still occupies five positions in southern Lebanon and has been launching near-daily attacks in defiance of the ceasefire. At least two brothers were killed in a strike on the village of al-Bayyad in the Tyre district on Monday.

The Lebanese official news agency ANI reported that the two were killed in an attack on a sawmill in al-Bayyad.

Three people were killed on Sunday in raids on southern and eastern Lebanon.

The military says that it is targeting members of Hezbollah and its infrastructure, but Lebanese leaders have accused it of attempting to obstruct reconstruction by striking machinery like diggers and bulldozers.

The Israeli army added that its Sunday attacks targeted an arms dealer working for Hezbollah and another man who was “aiding the group’s attempts to rebuild its capacity for military action”.

Hezbollah, severely weakened by Israel’s attacks, has said it is ready to defend itself.

“The possibility of war exists but is uncertain; it depends on their calculations,” stated Hezbollah leader Naim Qassem in reference to Israel.

The United States government has been pressuring Lebanon to have the group surrender its arms to the country’s army.

US Middle East envoy Morgan Ortagus arrived late on Monday in Beirut, where she is scheduled to meet Lebanese leaders.

 

Pope Leo to visit several cities in Turkey, Lebanon on first trip abroad as pontiff

Leo, the first U.S. pope, will visit Turkey from November 27 to 30 and then will be in Lebanon from November 30 to December 2.

Leo’s predecessor Pope Francis had planned to visit both countries but was unable to go because of his worsening health. Francis died on April 21 and Leo was elected as the new pope on May 8 by the world’s cardinals.

A central part of the visit to Turkey will be several joint events with Patriarch Bartholomew, spiritual leader of the world’s 260 million Orthodox Christians, who is based in Istanbul.

They will celebrate the 1,700th anniversary of a major early Church council, which took place in Nicaea, now called Iznik.

“It is profoundly symbolical that Pope Leo … will visit (the patriarch) on his first official journey,” Rev. John Chryssavgis, an adviser to Bartholomew, told Reuters.

Leo will also meet Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan in the capital Ankara, visit the Blue Mosque in Istanbul, and will celebrate a Catholic Mass at Istanbul’s Volkswagen Arena.

In Lebanon, the pope will meet President Joseph Aoun in Beirut, will host an inter-religious meeting and will lead an outdoor Mass on the Beirut waterfront.

The pope will also pray at the site of the 2020 chemical explosion at the Beirut port that killed 200 people and caused billions of dollars worth of damage.

Travelling abroad has become a major part of the modern papacy, with popes seeking to meet local Catholics, spread the faith, and conduct international diplomacy.

A new pope’s first travels are usually seen as an indication of the issues the pontiff wants to highlight during his reign.

Both Turkey and Lebanon are majority Muslim countries, and Francis put a strong focus on Muslim-Catholic dialogue during a 12-year reign that included 47 trips abroad.

The official motto of Leo’s Lebanon trip is “Blessed are the peacemakers”.

Iran FM: No Access granted to sensitive nuclear sites during recent IAEA inspections

Abbas Araghchi

According to committee spokesperson Ebrahim Rezaei, Araghchi said the limited inspections were authorized only for the Bushehr nuclear power plant, for fuel replacement, and the Tehran Research Reactor, which produces medical isotopes for over one million Iranians.

Both were conducted with the approval of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran and the Supreme National Security Council.

Rezaei noted that Araghchi reaffirmed Iran’s foreign policy as increasingly economy-driven, highlighting the government’s focus on provincial diplomacy to expand trade with neighboring countries. Two regional conferences have already been held, with two more planned by the end of the year.

Lawmakers also questioned the minister on sanctions, the 2015 nuclear deal (JCPOA), and cooperation with China and Russia.

Araghchi said Iran remains a JCPOA signatory because some of its clauses benefit the country, adding that partnerships with Beijing and Moscow under 20- and 25-year agreements are progressing effectively.

US Colonel says Washington watered down report on Shireen Abu Akleh’s killing

The statements from Colonel Steve Gabavics in an interview with the New York Times published on Monday represent the first time any military official involved in the report has spoken publicly. Gabavics had previously spoken anonymously for a documentary by the Zeteo news organisation.

The official, who left the government in January, recounted being “flabbergasted” by a State Department statement that described Abu Akleh’s May 11, 2022, killing as “the result of tragic circumstances”. The statement, the only official assessment of the killing to date by the US government, added that US officials “found no reason to believe that this was intentional”.

At the time Abu Akleh was fatally shot in the Jenin refugee camp in the occupied West Bank, Gabavics had been working at the inter-agency Office of the United States Security Coordinator, which oversees cooperation between Israeli and Palestinian security forces.

The office, led by Lieutenant General Michael R Fenzel, had been tasked by the Biden administration with compiling a report on the killing, which informed the State Department’s public account.

Gabavics and four unnamed officials told the New York Times that the official US government line did little to reflect the impassioned debate among those who compiled the report about whether the attack was intentional.

The report relied on findings from Israeli and Palestinian investigations, as well as visiting the site and overseeing a ballistic analysis. The US has never released its own investigation into the killing. While the FBI launched a probe in 2022, its status remains unknown.

Gabavics said he was among the officials who believed the shooting was intentional. The government’s watered-down account “continued to be on my conscience nonstop”, he told the New York Times.

While it was not clear if the soldier who fired the fatal shot was deliberately targeting Abu Akleh, he, at the very least, would have known he was targeting a journalist, Gabavics added.

The assessment is in line with several probes by rights groups, a United Nations investigative body, Palestinian officials, and media organisations, including Al Jazeera. For its part, Israel eventually admitted one of its soldiers was likely behind the killing, which it called “an accident”. It announced that no personnel would be punished.

In support of his conclusion, Gabavics pointed to Israeli radio military traffic that showed soldiers were aware of journalists in the area at the time of the shooting. He added there had been no gunfire coming from the direction of the journalists at the time of the fatal shooting.

An Israeli military vehicle had been parked down the road from the group of journalists Abu Akleh was travelling with, which would have been clearly visible via a sniper scope, he said.

Gabavics said that the apparent precision of the shots did not indicate a spray of uncontrolled bullets. The fact that the soldier shot at a producer, then Abu Akleh, and then at another person who tried to help, also indicated intentionality.

He told the Times that for the shooting to have been an accident, “the most absurd thing in the world” would have had to happen.

“The individual popped out of the truck, just was randomly shooting, and happened to have really well-aimed shots and never looked down the scope. Which wouldn’t have happened,” he said.

Gabavics said he had reported his conclusion both orally and in writing to General Fenzel, but the account did not appear in the assessment shared with the State Department. Gabavics and several officials said he was subsequently sidelined from the review.

For his part, General Fenzel, in a statement to the Times, stood by his approach.

“Ultimately, I had to make judgements based on the full set of facts and information available to me,” he said, adding, “I stand by the integrity of our work and remain confident that we reached the right conclusions.”

Gabavics said the incident underscored the US bias towards Israel he witnessed while working in the office. The US provides billions of dollars in military aid to Israel, which it has surged during the war in Gaza.

“The favouritism is always toward the Israelis. Very little of that goes to the Palestinians,” he stated.

He added that Abu Akleh’s case has left the most lasting impact of any during his career.

“Because we had everything there.”