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Russia says its response to West’s seizure of frozen assets to be tough

Kremlin

She drew attention to The Wall Street Journal’s report that Germany allegedly wants to leave Russia’s frozen assets intact to used them as a tool during the conflict settlement talks to force Russia cede part of the Ukrainian territory it has taken control of.

“Russian assets must stay intact. Otherwise, a tough response will follow the West’s robbery. Many in the West understand this. I wish everyone does,” Zakharova wrote on her Telegram channel.

“I don’t know who is saying what but we don’t swap assets for territories. We never bargain our motherland,” she emphasized.

The European Union, Canada, the United States, and Japan have frozen some $300 billion worth of Russian assets since the beginning of its special military operation in Ukraine. The United States accounts for around $5-6 billion of this sum.

On April 24, the US Senate approved a package of bills to provide military aid to Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan, to confiscate Russia’s frozen assets for their transfer them to Kiev, and to impose additional sanctions on China.

Kremlin Spokesman Dmitry Peskov has also said confiscating Russian assets would be a nail in the coffin of the entire Western economic system.

“If this happens, if such a dangerous precedent is created, it will be such a solid nail in the future coffin of the entire Western economic system of coordinates,” Peskov said in an interview with Pavel Zarubin, a journalist from the program ‘Moscow. Kremlin. Putin’ on Rossiya 1 TV channel.

Peskov, Russian President Vladimir Putin’s press secretary, also stated that foreign investors and countries around the globe will reconsider investing their money in the West if it goes ahead with the asset seizure sanctioned by the US Congress this week.

“Of course, foreign investors, foreign states that keep their reserves in the assets of these countries, from now on will think ten times before investing their money,” Peskov continued, adding, “Reliability disappears overnight, because of one thoughtless decision. It is restored [only after] decades, or even more.”

He said it was to soon to talk about Russia’s response in the event of the West seizing Russian assets, but noted that there was also Western property in Russia.

“It is premature to talk about this,” Peskov stated, adding, “Of course, there is Western money here. We have Western money of various structures. Now is not the time to specify.”

However, he stressed that in the event of the seizure of frozen Russian assets in the West, Russia would take legal action and other steps.

“Of course, such decisions will have very broad judicial perspectives. And, of course, Russia will use these judicial perspectives and will endlessly defend its interests in this field,” the spokesperson continued.

Biden pressures Netanyahu on Rafah military operation, urges captive deal in call

Biden Netanyahu

Biden “reiterated his clear position” on Rafah during the call, the White House said, as the Israeli military approaches an invasion of the southern Gaza city. The Biden administration has repeatedly called on the Israeli military against entering the city without a clear plan to avoid mass civilian casualties.

Israel has increased strikes on Rafah in recent days, as Israeli leaders claim invading the city is a military necessity in the campaign to rout Hamas from Gaza. Netanyahu has announced that a date for invading Rafah has been set, though the State Department said earlier this month that plans have not been communicated to U.S. leaders.

Biden also continued discussions of a potential hostage agreement between Israel and Hamas. More than 100 hostages taken during the Oct. 7 attack remain under Hamas’s control, though negotiations toward a second hostage agreement have slowed in recent weeks.

The president also discussed the humanitarian situation in Gaza, the White House added, working with Netanyahu to open additional humanitarian corridors into the territory from Israel. The United Nations and humanitarian organizations in Gaza have warned that the region has fallen into famine, with a severe lack of access to food and medical supplies.

“The President stressed the need for this progress to be sustained and enhanced in full coordination with humanitarian organizations,” the White House said of humanitarian aid expansion.

A U.S.-backed seaport in Gaza is scheduled to begin aid shipments directly into the territory by sea early next month, senior military officials stated last week.

Iranian pres. slams crackdown on anti-Zionist students in US                              

Protest US Universities

President Raisi said, the blood of the oppressed martyrs of Gaza has laid bare the true face of the Western civilization to the whole world.

Raisi added that the developments in Gaza showed that the self-proclaimed defenders of the freedom of speech are committed to nothing but to maintaining their domination.

He described the Western students and professors’ support for the oppressed people of Gaza as a big event.

Seven months into Israel’s war on Gaza, university students, professors and staff in the US and Europe are out on the streets to condemn Israel’s onslaught against Gaza that has killed more than 35,500 Palestinians.

Hundreds of the protestors have been arrested by police.

Former Iranian official detained on corruption charges 

Arvand free zone

Tasnim News Agency said Maood Shamkhani is accused of accepting bribes.

He is the nephew of former secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council Ali Shamkhani.

Maoow Shamkhani was the deputy of the Arvand Free Zone for technical and infrastructure affairs in 2015.

The Iranian Judiciary has intensified a crackdown on corruption that it started under its current chief Gholamhossein Mohsen Ejei.

Iran wins 2024 AFC Futsal Asian Cup

Iran wins 2024 AFC Futsal Asian Cup

Iranian futsallers got off to a good start, taking the lead in the first minute. That came about when Salar Aghapour placed it on a tee for Mahdi Karimi, who finished into the bottom corner of the net.

Saeid Ahmadabbasi who scored the second goal, netted for the eighth time in this tournament during the first half.

Thailand then retook the initiative to make a comeback. And they made it in a spectacular way in the 25th minute. Jirawat Sornwichian exchanged passes with Muhammad Osamanmusa before darting through center and chipping the ball over Mohammadi.

Iran was too quick to hit back. Two minutes later, Sangsefidi lofted the perfect cross to an unmarked Aliasghar Hassanzadeh to volley home to regain their two-goal advantage.

Thailand was desperate trying to make up for the goals Iran netted in the second half. But their offensive posture cost them dearly in the 34th minute when Mohammadi gained possession in his area before lofting the ball over to score Iran’s fourth goal.

This secured Iran’s 13th AFC Futsal Asian Cup title.

Rafah attack ‘biggest catastrophe in Palestinian people’s history’: President Abbas

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas

Abbas told a special meeting of the World Economic Forum in Riyadh that about 1.5 million Palestinians are sheltering in Rafah and only a “small strike” would force those people to flee.

“The biggest catastrophe in the Palestinian people’s history would then happen,” he said.

“We call on the United States of America to ask Israel to not carry on the Rafah attack. America is the only country able to prevent Israel from committing this crime.”

Abbas reiterated he rejects the displacement of Palestinians into Jordan and Egypt, and added he’s concerned once Israel completes its operation in Gaza, it will attempt to force the Palestinian population out of the occupied West Bank and into Jordan.

Israel, which has threatened for weeks to launch an all-out assault on the neighborhood saying its goal is to wipeout Hamas presence there, stepped up airstrikes on Rafah last week.

Western countries, including Israel’s closest ally the United States, have pleaded with it to hold back from attacking the southern city, which abuts the Egyptian border and is sheltering more than a million Palestinians who fled Israel’s seven-month long aggression against much of the rest of Gaza.

Abbas stated that Israel had killed more than 34,000 civilians, mostly children, women, and the elderly, and injured 75,000, in addition to destroying 75% of buildings, institutions, roads, mosques, and universities in the Gaza Strip.

Student rallies held across Iran in support of Gaza, world-wide pro-Palestinian demos

Iran student rallies Gaza

Professors and students of universities in the capital Tehran joined the academics all over the country after noon prayers earlier in the day and held a gathering in support of the uprising by pro-Palestinian students in the US and Europe.

Students of Tabriz University in northwest Iran held a rally dubbed “the Awakened Conscience” in defense of the Palestinian people’s rights and in condemnation of the occupying regime’s crimes.

In central Iran, students in the city of Yazd also lend their support to the protest rallies held in US and European universities, which have faced harsh crackdown by the police during the past weeks.

The violent dealing with the students have drawn worldwide condemnations.

Similar demonstrations were staged in dozens of other Iranian cities, including Abadan, Ilam, Isfahan, and Lahijan.

Over 34,000 Palestinians have been killed and tens of thousands of others have been injured in the months-long US-backed Israeli onslaught that has left the besieged Palestinian enclave in ruins.

Urmia Lake water level further up

Lake Urmia

Ahmad Ghandehari said on Sunday, “Currently, the level of Lake Urmia has reached 1,270.53 meters, its area has expanded to 1,790 square kilometers, and its volume is 2.34 billion cubic meters.”

Despite the unfavorable rainfall in the catchment area in the first 6 months of the year, about 200 million cubic meters of water was released from the dams of the catchment area to the lake and its satellite wetlands, he added.

However, with the increase in downpours in the catchment area of the receding lake in the second half of the year and the release of the water rights from upstream dams, the lake is in a better condition.

Lake Urmia was one once the world’s 6th saltwater lake and the biggest of its kind in West Asia, but due to unsustainable water consumption by farmers in the region and climate change it is feared that the lake will be drying up.

Ukraine downplays military death toll to avoid disrupting recruitment campaign: Report

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky

Zelensky’s February announcement that 31,000 military personnel had been killed since 2022 greatly downplayed the true toll to avoid disrupting an already-struggling recruitment and mobilization effort, the lawmaker said, acknowledging that there is a manpower shortage.

“I don’t think it’s an emergency right now. We do need more people, but we need to balance … We see so many deaths and so many wounded. If they go, [troops] want to know how long they will be there,” the lawmaker said.

Ukraine likely cannot consider launching an offensive this year due to the acute shortage of soldiers and the superiority of Russian firepower, the newspaper noted.

On April 11, the Ukrainian parliament adopted a bill on mobilization aimed at replenishing Ukrainian forces depleted by two years of military conflict with Russia. On April 16, Zelensky signed it into law. The document will take effect on May 18.

The bill says that people liable for military duty must report to military commissions to clarify their registration data within 60 days after mobilization is announced. The bill also obliges people liable for military service to carry military identity cards with them during the period of mobilization and present them at the request of military registration and enlistment office employees, police, and border guards.

Martial law was introduced in Ukraine on February 24, 2022. The next day, Zelensky signed a decree on general mobilization. Under martial law, men aged from 18 to 60 are prohibited from leaving Ukraine.

US officials say Israel may be violating international law in Gaza

White House Biden Blinken

Other officials upheld support for Israel’s representation.

Under a National Security Memorandum (NSM) issued by President Joe Biden in February, Blinken must report to Congress by 8 May whether he finds credible Israel’s assurances that its use of US weapons does not violate US or international law.

By 24 March, at least seven State Department bureaus had sent in their contributions to an initial “options memo” to Blinken. Parts of the memo, which has not been previously reported, were classified.

The submissions to the memo provide the most extensive picture to date of the divisions inside the State Department over whether Israel might be violating international humanitarian law in Gaza.

“Some components in the department favoured accepting Israel’s assurances, some favoured rejecting them and some took no position,” a US official said.

A joint submission from four bureaus – Democracy Human Rights & Labor; Population, Refugees and Migration; Global Criminal Justice and International Organization Affairs – raised “serious concern over non-compliance” with international humanitarian law during Israel’s prosecution of the Gaza war.

The assessment from the four bureaus said Israel’s assurances were “neither credible nor reliable”. It cited eight examples of Israeli military actions that the officials said raise “serious questions” about potential violations of international humanitarian law.

These included repeatedly striking protected sites and civilian infrastructure; “unconscionably high levels of civilian harm to military advantage”; taking little action to investigate violations or to hold to account those responsible for significant civilian harm and “killing humanitarian workers and journalists at an unprecedented rate”.

The assessment from the four bureaus also cited 11 instances of Israeli military actions the officials said “arbitrarily restrict humanitarian aid”, including rejecting entire trucks of aid due to a single “dual-use” item, “artificial” limitations on inspections as well as repeated attacks on humanitarian sites that should not be hit.

Another submission to the memo reviewed by Reuters, from the bureau of Political and Military Affairs, which deals with US military assistance and arms transfers, warned Blinken that suspending US weapons would limit Israel’s ability to meet potential threats outside its airspace and require Washington to re-evaluate “all ongoing and future sales to other countries in the region”.

Any suspension of US arms sales would invite “provocations” by Iran and aligned militias, the bureau claimed in its submission, illustrating the push-and-pull inside the department as it prepares to report to Congress.

The submission did not directly address Israel’s assurances.

Inputs to the memo from the Office of the Special Envoy to Monitor and Combat Antisemitism and US ambassador to Israel Jack Lew stated they assessed Israel’s assurances as credible and reliable, a second US official told Reuters.

The State Department’s legal bureau, known as the Office of the Legal Adviser, “did not take a substantive position” on the credibility of Israel’s assurances, a source familiar with the matter noted.

State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said the agency doesn’t comment on leaked documents.

“On complex issues, the secretary often hears a diverse range of views from within the department, and he takes all of those views into consideration,” Miller added.

When asked about the memo, an Israeli official stressed: “Israel is fully committed to its commitments and their implementation, among them the assurances given to the US government.”

Biden administration officials repeatedly have stressed they have not found Israel in violation of international law.

Blinken has seen all of the bureau assessments about Israel’s pledges, the second US official added.

Matthew Miller on 25 March stated the department received the pledges. However, the State Department is not expected to render its complete assessment of credibility until the 8 May report to Congress.

Further deliberations between the department’s bureaus are underway ahead of the report’s deadline, the US official added.

USAID also provided input to the memo.

“The killing of nearly 32,000 people, of which the GOI (Government of Israel) itself assesses roughly two-thirds are civilian, may well amount to a violation of the international humanitarian law requirement,” USAID officials wrote in the submission.

USAID does not comment on leaked documents, a USAID spokesperson said.

The warnings about Israel’s possible breaches of international humanitarian law made by some senior State Department officials come as Israel is vowing to launch a military offensive into Rafah, the southern-most pocket of the Gaza Strip that is home to over a million people displaced by the war, despite repeated warnings from Washington not to do so.

Israel’s military conduct has come under increasing scrutiny as its forces have killed over 34,000 Palestinians in Gaza, according to the enclave’s health authorities, most of them women and children.

The National Security Memorandum was issued in early February after Democratic lawmakers began questioning whether Israel was abiding by international law.

The memorandum imposed no new legal requirements but asked the State Department to demand written assurances from countries receiving US-funded weapons that they are not violating international humanitarian law or blocking US humanitarian assistance.

It also required the administration to submit an annual report to Congress to assess whether countries are adhering to international law and not impeding the flow of humanitarian aid.

If Israel’s assurances are called into question, Biden would have the option to “remediate” the situation through actions ranging from seeking fresh assurances to suspending further US weapons transfers, according to the memorandum.

Biden can suspend or put conditions on US weapons transfers at any time.

He has so far resisted calls from rights groups, left-leaning Democrats and Arab American groups to do so.

But earlier this month he threatened for the first time to put conditions on the transfer of US weapons to Israel, if it does not take concrete steps to improve the dire humanitarian situation in Gaza.