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US claims Russia ties embolden North Korea

Putin Kim

Austin made his comments in testimony to the US House Armed Services Committee on Tuesday. Ties between Moscow and the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) have deepened since Kim traveled to Russia last September for talks with President Vladimir Putin. The Russian and North Korean defense chiefs met last July in Pyongyang.

“North Korea, again, it’s becoming more confident because of its affiliation with Putin,” Austin told lawmakers.

He also cited expanding cooperation between Russia, North Korea, Iran and the People’s Republic of China (PRC).

“This is very concerning: something that we are going to have to watch, something that we are going to have to make sure that we have the capability and capacity to work with our allies to continue to deter and continue to promote peace and stability in each of the regions,” Austin stated.

He added, “The growing nexus between the PRC, Russia, the DPRK and Iran is concerning, and this is something that we are watching very closely.”

US Joint Chiefs of Staff General Charles Brown agreed, saying threats posed by Russia, China, North Korea and Iran are “interconnected”.

Austin also claimed Russia turned to the DPRK for additional artillery shells and other munitions to replenish its stockpiles in the Ukraine conflict. North Korean and Russian officials have denied accusations of arms transfers from Pyongyang. They have also accused the US and its Northeast Asian allies of worsening tensions in the region by preparing for war with the DPRK.

North Korea has ramped up missile tests since the Russia-Ukraine conflict began in February 2022, and it has ruled out the possibility of reunifying with South Korea. The North Korean Foreign Ministry said increasing cooperation with Russia would help defend the “core interests” of the two countries and help establish a “multi-polarized international order”.

Iran says has not barred IAEA inspectors

IAEA Team

The chairman of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran (AEOI) Mohammad Eslami told reporters on Wednesday after a weekly cabinet meeting that Rafael Grossi, the director general of the IAEA, has been invited as the special guest in the First International Conference on Nuclear Science and Technology in Iran to be held next week.

Eslami said Iran is continuing its interaction to resolve the outstanding issues over its nuclear activities with the IAEA.

He said the international atomic agency regularly carries out its inspection of Iran’s nuclear sites based on the safeguards to verify they are in accordance with international commitments.

The AEOI chief asserted that both sides have concluded their talks on two of the four “undeclared locations” in Iran as claimed by the IAEA, while discussions on the other two sites are ongoing.

“Our talks will take place on the sidelines of IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi’s visit to Iran. I believe that the unknown issues will disappear,” he said.

Eslami said the joint statement by Iran and IAEA issued last year is still valid and serves as the basis for cooperation between the two sides.

Blinken ceasefire comments meant to acquit Israel: Hamas official

Antony Blinken

Abu Zuhri told Reuters news agency the group was still studying the recent ceasefire offer.

Blinken has said Washington was determined to get a ceasefire in Gaza that brings captives home as he started talks with Israel’s leadership on Wednesday.

Blinken claimed “the only reason that that wouldn’t be achieved is because of Hamas”, despite Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu saying Tuesday that he will not agree to end the war.

Hamas has repeatedly stressed it will not sign off on any ceasefire deal that does not guarantee a permanent end to Israel’s assault on Gaza.

As the longwinded talks, mediated by Qatar and Egypt, continue, the Israeli military has continued deadly military operations inside the tiny enclave, which remains blockaded.

More than 34,500 Palestinians in Gaza have been killed, while the 2.3-million-strong population have been left in dire conditions, amid shortages of food, shelter and medicine.

The armed group continues to hold more than 100 captives taken from Israel during its raid across the enclave’s northern border on October 7, which killed more than 1,100.

A previous deal in November saw the release of 81 Israelis and 24 foreigners in exchange for 240 Palestinians, including 71 women and 169 children.

Iran Leader: Gaza first issue of world

Ayatollah Khamenei

Ayatollah Khamenei made the remarks in a Wednesday meeting with a group of Iranian teachers, on the Teachers’ Day, citing the growing protest rallies in US universities and many European cities in support of Palestinians amid the months-long Israeli carnage against Gazans.

“Today, I read in the news that a few more universities have joined (the demonstrations) in Australia, in Europe, and many European countries. It means nations are sensitive to the issue of Gaza,” the Leader said, calling on the world to continue to pile pressure on the Israeli regime.

He said that the Israeli regime and its Western supporters cannot change the public opinion in the world.

The Leader denounced the US and Europe for backing the Israeli regime in its genocidal campaign since October 7 last year that has left nearly 35,000 Palestinians in the Gaza Strip dead and almost the entire besieged territory in ruins.

Meanwhile, he downplayed US attempts to push normalization of ties between Israel and Arab states forward, saying it cannot solve the issues in West Asia.

Ayatollah Khamenei reiterated, “America’s behavior in the Gaza issue proved the righteousness of Iran’s stance in distrusting the US.”

The Leader said Palestine must return to its real owners.

Several arrested at Columbia University as NYPD clear Gaza protest

US University Gaza Rally

Live television images showed police entering the university in upper Manhattan, which has been the focal point of student protests against Israel’s war in Gaza, in which more than 34,535 Palestinians have been killed.

After entering the site shortly after 9pm on Tuesday (01:00 GMT on Wednesday), some officers approached Hamilton Hall, the administration building that students began occupying early on Tuesday morning after the management said it had begun suspending students who had refused to meet a previous deadline to disperse.

They had renamed the building “Hind’s Hall”, in memory of six-year-old Palestinian girl Hind Rajab who was killed in Gaza in February.

“We’re clearing it out,” police in a riot unit yelled as they marched up to the barricaded entrance to the building, while dozens more officers moved on the main protest camp.

Columbia Students for Justice in Palestine announced in a post on X that the police officers were “wearing riot gear” and that “multiple blocks have been barricaded off”.

A long line of police officers were seen climbing into the building via a ladder extended from the top of a truck into a second-storey window.

Shortly afterwards, officers were seen leading multiple protesters, their hands tied behind their backs with plastic zip ties, to police vehicles outside the campus gates. Between 30 and 40 people were taken from Hamilton Hall, the Associated Press reported.

“Free, free, free Palestine!” chanted protesters outside the building. Others yelled, “Let the students go!”

The move to clear the protest came exactly 56 years since police swept into Hamilton Hall to end a 1968 protest by students against racism and the Vietnam War.

Dozens of protesters barricaded the entrances of Hamilton Hall after occupying the building on Tuesday. A student organiser who spoke to Al Jazeera said that the occupation group was separate from the group that had established a camp on the campus lawn.

At an evening news briefing held a few hours before police entered the campus, New York Mayor Eric Adams and city police officials alleged the Hamilton Hall takeover had been instigated by “outside agitators” who lacked any affiliation with Columbia and were known to law enforcement for provoking lawlessness.

Adams suggested some of the student protesters were not fully aware of “external actors” in their midst.

A spokesperson for Columbia University stated police had been asked onto the campus as a last resort and would remain until May 17 when graduation events come to an end.

“After the university learned overnight that Hamilton Hall had been occupied, vandalised, and blockaded, we were left with no choice,” the spokesperson said in a statement, adding that its public safety personnel had been forced out of the building and one facilities worker “threatened”.

“The decision to reach out to the NYPD was in response to the actions of the protesters, not the cause they are championing,” the statement read, adding, “We have made it clear that the life of campus cannot be endlessly interrupted by protesters who violate the rules and the law.”

One of the student leaders of the protest, Mahmoud Khalil, a Palestinian student at Columbia’s School of International and Public Affairs, disputed the claims.

“They’re students,” he told the Reuters news agency.

The protesters are calling for the university to sell off any investments linked to Israel, be transparent about its financial ties to the country, and provide amnesty from any disciplinary measures to all students participating in the rallies.

Columbia’s protests began on April 17, inspiring demonstrations that now stretch from California in the west to Massachusetts in the east, and come as universities prepare for end-of-year graduation ceremonies.

More than 1,000 protesters have been arrested over the last two weeks on campuses in states including Texas, Utah, Virginia, North Carolina, New Mexico, Connecticut, Louisiana, California and New Jersey, some after confrontations with police in riot gear.

At the University of Southern Florida in Tampa on Tuesday, police fired tear gas at students who set up a Gaza solidarity camp and arrested two people, according to videos from journalists and witnesses verified by Al Jazeera.

Sixteen people were arrested at the University of New Mexico as police forcefully removed pro-Palestine protesters occupying the college’s Student Union building. A university spokesman said five of those arrested were students at the University of New Mexico, while the 11 others had no connection with the institution.

Students arrested on Monday during pro-Palestinian protests at the University of Texas at Austin (UT Austin) were greeted by their supporters as they were released from the Travis County Jail.

Travis County Attorney General Delia Garza said 65 people arrested at UT Austin had been charged with criminal trespass.

At Brown University, located in Providence, Rhode Island, meanwhile, university administrators reached an agreement with students to bring their protests to a peaceful end.

In a statement, Brown President Christina Paxson said the deal included the students removing their protests from the university grounds in exchange for the institution considering divesting from Israel.

She added five students would be invited to meet five members of the Corporation of Brown University this month to present their arguments to divest Brown’s endowment from “companies enabling and profiting from the genocide in Gaza”.

The board will then vote on the proposal in October.

Renowned Iranian sports commentator Oskoui succumbs to disease

Massoud Oskoui

Oskoui was receiving treatment for cancer and was hospitalized in late March for pelvis and leg fractures in the capital Tehran.

He was a veteran media personality, a trademark sports commentator, and radio and television host, whose career spanned nearly 6 decades.

Besides his special tone, Oskoui was known as the trailblazer for other commentators in Iran in several fields including tennis, rally, equestrianism, and skiing.

Creation of Palestinian state ‘has got harder’ due to Israeli settlements in West Bank: UK

Israeli settlement

At a session of House of Lords’ International Relations and Defense Committee, Cameron said the illegal settlements constructed by Israel in the West Bank were exacerbating the challenges in establishing a Palestinian state.

“It was getting harder because of the settlement-building by Israel in the West Bank, so technically creating the Palestinian state has got harder and we have to think about that,” he added, when asked to comment on the committee’s seven-year-old report that said the two-state solution could become an “impossibility” and “considered no longer viable by either side.”

” … It’s got harder, but it’s not impossible … recognition is an important part of helping to give the Palestinians a perspective towards statehood, but it doesn’t create a state just by everybody recognizing it. You’ve got to set out the things that actually create a state: a government, its ability to govern … .”

“There is no long-term peace and security instability in the Middle East without a solution to the Palestinian question,” Cameron said.

“So if you look at, for instance, what the Saudis have tried to do with this normalization deal with Israel, that’s obviously a huge step for Saudi Arabia, a big step for Israel, but part of it would be the creation of a Palestinian state and the horizon towards that basis,” he added.

On the situation in Gaza, where Israel has killed more than 34,500 Palestinians since the Oct. 7, 2023 Hamas incursion, Cameron expressed deep concern and sadness over the loss of lives.

“Obviously the whole situation in Gaza is deeply concerning and the loss of life deeply regrettable,” he stated.

Regarding the resumption of funding to the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, Cameron stressed the UK awaits the results of ongoing investigations before making any decision.

US considers accepting Gaza refugees: Report

Gaza War

Senior officials across several federal US agencies have discussed the practicality of different options to resettle Palestinians from Gaza who have immediate family members who are American citizens or permanent residents, the report said, citing internal federal government documents.

According to the report, one of the ideas involves using the United States Refugee Admissions Program to grant refugee status to those who have managed to escape Gaza into Egypt.

Coordination with Egypt would likely be required to get additional Palestinians out of Gaza and process them as refugees if they have American relatives, said the report.

Israel has waged an unrelenting offensive on Gaza since a cross-border attack by the Palestinian group Hamas last Oct. 7 which killed some 1,200 people.

More than 34,500 Palestinians have since been killed, mostly women and children, and thousands injured amid mass destruction and severe shortages of necessities.

More than six 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.

Israel is accused of genocide at the International Court of Justice. An interim ruling in January ordered Tel Aviv to stop genocidal acts and take measures to guarantee that humanitarian assistance is provided to civilians in Gaza.

Iran inaugurates world’s highest bungee jumping platform

Iran bungee jumping

The platform officially received the first daring volunteers at Tehran’s landmark Milad Tower on Monday.

You can see the pictures of the opening ceremony:

UN chief calls for independent investigation into Gaza mass graves

Gaza War

“There are competing narratives around several of these mass graves, including serious allegations that some of those buried were unlawfully killed,” he said.

“It is imperative that independent international investigators, with forensic expertise, are allowed immediate access to the sites of these mass graves, to establish the precise circumstances under which hundreds of Palestinians lost their lives and were buried, or reburied,” he continued.

“The families of the dead and missing have a right to know what happened. And the world has a right to accountability for any violations of international law that may have taken place.”

Officials in Gaza have stated a total of 400 bodies, including those of children and women, with signs of torture and executions, have so far been found at makeshift burial sites at two hospitals that were earlier raided by the Israeli military.

Last week, the secretary-general’s spokesperson stated that a mandate from a United Nations body would be required for the organisation to take legal possession of any evidence collected during the discovery of the mass graves, in order for the UN to carry out its own investigation.

More than 34,500 people have been killed in Israel’s war on Gaza since October 7, according to Palestinian authorities.