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Russian army launches major offensive in Kharkiv region

Russian Army

The development was first announced by the Ukrainian Defense Ministry, which claimed earlier in the day that Russian forces had attacked defensive positions near the border town of Volchansk. The assault was accompanied by heavy aerial bombardment, the ministry said, adding that fighting “of varying intensity” was continuing along Russia’s border with Kharkov Region.

The claims were further amplified by Zelensky, with the president insisting that Ukrainian troops were well-prepared to repel Russian attacks in the area.

“Russia can bolster and pour in its forces, but we knew this and calculated everything,” Zelensky stated during a news conference, after a meeting with the Slovak president in Kiev.

Some Ukrainian media reports, however, have said the Russian military was able to advance and has seized several settlements along the border. Ukrainian journalist Yury Butusov, widely believed to be associated with former President Pyotr Poroshenko, claimed that Russian forces have captured an area of roughly 30 square kilometers near the border, seizing the villages of Strelechye, Krasnoye, Pylnaya and Borisovka.

Despite having intelligence on the looming assault, Ukrainian defenses in the area have proven to be ineffective, Butusov claimed. The journalist also suggested that the assault was on a relatively small scale, despite official claims to the contrary, with a force of up to five infantry battalions involved.

So far, Moscow has not provided any information on its purported activities in Kharkov Region. Over the past few months, the area has been used by Ukrainian forces to launch indiscriminate drone, artillery and missile attacks on Russian border regions, primarily Belgorod, and to stage multiple unsuccessful attempts to break through the border.

The Russian leadership has consistently warned Kiev and its Western backers against launching attacks deep into its territory, with President Vladimir Putin suggesting the creation of a “security zone” in Ukraine along the border, to prevent such strikes. Moscow has not provided any timeframe for when such a zone could be created, or how deep into Ukraine it would go.

Biden faces impeachment for stalling arms transfer to Israel amid Gaza war

Joe Biden

Earlier this week, Biden told CNN that “we’re not going to supply the weapons and artillery shells” to Israel if it proceeded with plans to attack Rafah City in south Gaza. Republicans quickly pointed out that Democrats had accused Trump of “abuse of power” for allegedly withholding congressionally approved military aid in 2019.

“Joe Biden is pressuring Israel, our biggest ally in the Middle East, by pausing their funding that has already been approved in the House, if they don’t stop all operations with Hamas,” Representative Cory Mills of Florida told Fox News on Thursday, adding that it was a pretty clear case of “quid pro quo” and that he intended to impeach Biden for it.

On Friday, Mills made good on his threat, formally initiating the procedure in the US House of Representatives.

“In violation of his oath to faithfully execute the office of the president and to uphold the Constitution, President Biden abused the powers of his office by soliciting a ‘quid pro quo’ with Israel while leveraging vital military aid for policy changes,” according to Mills.

He also posted a photo on X (formerly Twitter), showing the exact same language used by Rep. Jerry Nadler, a New York Democrat, to go after Trump five years ago.

Democrats, who controlled the House of Representatives at the time, impeached Trump in a party-line vote after accusing him of abuse of power. They claimed Trump had threatened to delay a shipment of weapons to Ukraine unless Kiev investigated the firing of a prosecutor who was looking into a company that had hired Biden’s son Hunter. Biden had publicly boasted about getting the prosecutor fired, but as he was in the race for the Democrats’ 2020 presidential nomination, the party claimed this amounted to soliciting “election interference.”

The impeachment went nowhere because the Republican-majority Senate refused to convict Trump in February 2020.

Republicans currently hold a slim majority in the House of Representatives, which has been largely ineffective at opposing the Democrats’ priorities. Even if Mills manages to get the House to impeach Biden, it is highly likely that he will be acquitted in the Democrat-controlled Senate.

Iran announces final list of elected lawmakers

Iran Election

The spokesperson of the headquarters, Mohsen Eslami, read out the names of the 45 representatives who were elected on Friday from a pool of 90 candidates in 22 constituencies across the country.

Bijan Nobaveh, Mohammad Seraj, and Abolfazl Zohrevand topped the list of candidates in the capital Tehran.

The first round of the election, which was held along with the Assembly of Experts vote on March 1, saw a turnout of 41 percent.

245 candidates managed to pass the threshold to get elected for the legislative body for a four-year term.

Israeli whistleblowers disclose abuse of Palestinians at military base

Israeli Army

Three Israeli individuals who worked at the base, in which Palestinians are arrested amid the war in Gaza, alleged that at the facility, doctors have occasionally amputated prisoners’ limbs and performed medical procedures they were not qualified to conduct.

Doctors amputated prisoners’ limbs due to injuries from consistent handcuffing, according to the whistleblowers.

The facility is made up of two parts — one has enclosures where about 70 Palestinian detainees are put into intense physical restraint. The other is a field hospital, where injured detainees are strapped to beds, wearing diapers, and are fed via straws, according to the report.

“They stripped them down of anything that resembles human beings,” one of the whistleblowers who worked in the field hospital stated, according to CNN.

Another whistleblower said “(the beatings) were not done to gather intelligence”.

“They were done out of revenge,” the second whistleblower continued, adding, “It was punishment for what they (the Palestinians) did on October 7 and punishment for behavior in the camp.”

UN General Assembly approves Palestine’s qualification for full membership

Palestine UN

At Friday’s emergency session at the 49th meeting of the UN General Assembly, 143 countries voted in favour of upgrading Palestine’s status at the United Nations, with nine voting against and 25 abstentions.

Israel and the US voted against the resolution.

Israel’s ambassador to the UN Gilad Erdan said on Monday, that if the measure was approved, he expected the US to cut funding to the United Nations and its institutions, in accordance with American law.

The ambassador also brought a small paper shredder to the podium and shredded the UN charter to symbolise how Israel views Friday’s “destructive” vote.

Permanent Observer of Palestine to the United Nations Riyad Mansour spoke of a day when Palestine “takes its rightful place among free nations”.

The resolution calls on the Security Council to reconsider the request for Palestine to become the 194th member of the United Nations. The United States vetoed a Security Council resolution on 18 April that would have paved the way for full membership.

The resolution does not give Palestine full UN membership but recognises it as qualified to join.

The resolution points out that it is done “on an exceptional basis and without setting a precedent”, which discourages other hopefuls like Kosovo or Taiwan from employing the same strategy at the UN.

In defence of their vote, the United States maintained its position that full Palestinian statehood and full UN membership should come as a result of negotiations between Israelis and Palestinians.

Robert A Wood, US ambassador to the UN, stated the resolution does not “resolve the concerns about the Palestine membership application raised in April at the Security Council”.

The US also threatened that if the UN Security Council reconsiders its vote on Palestine’s member status, it will once again exercise its veto.

The new draft resolution determines that the State of Palestine is “qualified for membership in the United Nations” and should therefore be admitted to membership.

The resolution is being viewed as a way to circumvent the United Nations Security Council in taking a first step towards full membership.

Most remarkably the resolution looks to adopt new rights and privileges for Palestine in procedural matters at the UN, despite the state’s continuing “observer status”, and requests the UN secretary general to implement these privileges.

New privileges also include the right to make statements on behalf of a group, to submit proposals and amendments and introduce them orally, the right of reply, as well as co-sponsor proposals and amendments and to raise procedural motions, among others.

It also grants members of the Palestinian delegation to be elected as officers in the plenary and main committees of the General Assembly.

It does not grant Palestine the right to vote in the GA, propose resolutions or put forward its candidature to UN organs.

It also gives the right to “full and effective participation in United Nations conferences and international conferences and meetings convened under the auspices of the General Assembly”.

The state of Palestine would also be able to be seated among member states in alphabetical order and have the right to be listed as speakers on agenda items other than the Middle East or Palestine.

After the UN General Assembly vote, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas stressed that Palestine would “continue its endeavour” to obtain full UN membership status and is looking for another vote at the UNSC.

Netanyahu admits failure in Hamas October 7 attack

Netanyahu

In an exclusive interview with Dr. Phil’s Primetime, a YouTube channel, Netanyahu was asked if he had failed in this matter, he said: “I hold myself and everyone on this.”

“The government’s first responsibility is to protect the people. That’s the ultimate enveloping responsibility, and people weren’t protected. We have to admit that,” Netanyahu added.

Following Oct. 7, pressure mounted on the Israeli premier to resign from office due to his lack of intelligence regarding the attack by the Palestinian resistance group Hamas, which claimed it was in response to Tel Aviv’s oppressive policies and actions against Palestinians over decades.

Several surveys conducted in Israel in recent months also found that people want Netanyahu to step down.

Netanyahu’s admission of his government’s failure comes after US President Joe Biden announced to halt the supply of certain weapons to Israel if a large-scale ground operation in Rafah was launched.

However, Netanyahu expressed hope that he and Biden could resolve their differences over the ongoing attacks on Gaza.

“We often had our agreements, but we’ve had our disagreements we’ve been able to overcome them. I hope we can overcome them now. But we will do what we have to do to protect our country,” he stated.

He reiterated Israel’s demand for the establishment of “some kind of civilian government by Gazans who are not committed to our destruction possibly with the aid of the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia and other countries wanting to see stability and peace,” while addressing plans for the future of the Gaza Strip after the war.

Netanyahu also criticized pro-Palestinian students in US universities, calling them “ignorant,” adding, “That’s Israel when they say rip from the river to the sea. That’s wipe out the state of Israel. They’re supporting genocide.”

Antisemitism is on the rise in the US, Israeli premier said, claiming that this phenomenon to “the fusion of radical Islam with ultra-anarchist left”.

“They agree on is that Israel has to be destroyed and America has to be destroyed.”

More than 2,500 people, including students, have been arrested during pro-Palestine demonstrations in the United States, with protesters demanding that universities divest from Israel and condemning the onslaught on Gaza, which has killed nearly 35,000 people.

Students in other countries including Canada, Australia, France and Britain have also organized demonstrations at universities in solidarity with Palestine.

Israel has pounded the Gaza Strip in retaliation for a Hamas-led attack in October, which killed less than 1,200 people.

More than 34,900 Palestinians have since been killed in Gaza, the vast majority of whom have been women and children. Over 78,500 others have been injured, according to Palestinian health authorities. Thousands remain missing.

Seven months into the Israeli war, vast swathes of Gaza lay in ruins, pushing 85% of the enclave’s population into internal displacement amid a crippling blockade of food, clean water and medicine, according to the UN. Most of the displaced have sought refuge in Rafah following earlier Israeli evacuation orders.

Israel stands accused of genocide at the International Court of Justice (ICJ). An interim ruling in January said it is “plausible” that Tel Aviv is committing genocide in the coastal enclave, and ordered Tel Aviv to stop such acts and take measures to guarantee that humanitarian assistance is provided to civilians.

Iranian president says strong parliament requirement for powerful administration 

The president made the remark while casting his vote in the second round of the parliamentary elections in Iran in Friday.

Raisi thanked the organizers and observers of the elections for holding a safe, sound and fair vote as demanded by the leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei.

He noted that one of the honors of the Islamic Republic of Iran is that it was formed based on the people’s vote and all these institutions are also based on the will of the Iranian people.

The president said other countries pretend to be democracies and only talk about the people’s vote, but the Islamic Republic of Iran translates word in action and the reason for the enemy’s hostility is that this system originates from the people’s vote.

Innotex 2024 hosts innovations and technologies 

Innotex 2024 has been held since May 18 in Tehran with the aim of providing advice to solve the challenges companies and workstations face in attracting trainees.

Trade delegations and exhibitors from 20 countries have participated in this event.

Also, the collective funding method is used in this exhibition for companies.

Iran’s Int’l book fair underway in Tehran, warmly received

Iran’s Int’l book fair underway in Tehran, warmly received

Several senior Iranian officials attended the opening ceremony of the international book fair which will be running for 10 days.

About 100 foreign publishers from 25 countries have presented over 50,000 books that run a wide gamut of subjects for every age group and taste.

The mega-event draws over 400 thousand visitors per day.

Book lovers from across the world can visit this year’s fair around the clock as it is simultaneously being held online for the enthusiasts.

Several cultural events are also held on the sidelines, including programs on Palestine.

Yemen is the special guest of this year’s exhibition.

President Raisi: Iran’s missile, military capabilities not negotiable 

Raisi made the assertion on Thursday addressing a gathering of people on a trip to the shrine city of Qom in southern Tehran.

Referring to the 2022 unrest and deadly riots in Iran, the president said the enemies sought to ignite chaos and riots in the country but failed to block Iran’s path of progress.

He stated, “Some people said that the country might get stuck in a war and we should remove the specter of war from the country and the way to do that is to trade off our military and missile capabilities and they put the JCPOA 2 and 3 on the table,” alluding to the dormant 2015 nuclear deal with the West, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action.

He also noted Iran’s military might was manifested in its recent operation against Israel, dubbed True Promise, carried out last month in retaliation for the Israeli strikes on the Iranian consulate in the Syrian capital, Damascus