Zelensky urges US Congress to approve new Ukraine aid

Zelensky urges US Congress to approve new Ukraine aid
“Will Ukraine survive without Congress’ support? Of course. But not all of us,” Zelensky told Fox’s Bret Baier in an interview near a front line in Ukraine. (Fox News)
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Updated 23 February 2024
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Zelensky urges US Congress to approve new Ukraine aid

Zelensky urges US Congress to approve new Ukraine aid
  • He said a failure to do so will cost Ukrainian lives

WASHINGTON: President Volodymyr Zelensky called on the US Congress to approve additional aid for Kyiv, saying in an interview broadcast Thursday that a failure to do so will cost Ukrainian lives.

Republican lawmakers in the House of Representatives have stalled the approval of $60 billion in new aid for Ukraine, and Zelensky made his appeal for action during an interview with Fox News — a favored channel for US conservatives.

“Will Ukraine survive without Congress’ support? Of course. But not all of us,” Zelensky told Fox’s Bret Baier in an interview near a front line in Ukraine.

The Ukrainian leader also warned that the price of helping Kyiv now is much lower than the potential cost of confronting Russian President Vladimir Putin later if he succeeds in Ukraine.

The United States has provided tens of billions of dollars in military aid to Ukraine and is by far Kyiv’s biggest donor. But existing funding has dried up, and former president Donald Trump’s allies in the House have been stalling new assistance.

Trump, the likely Republican nominee in the November presidential election, opposes helping Kyiv and recently used his sway to kill a US border reform bill that would have also authorized additional aid to Ukraine.

Zelensky told the Munich Security Conference on Saturday that he was ready to take Trump to the frontlines in Ukraine, saying policy makers should see what real war entails.


NATO chief says he can confirm North Korean troops are in Russia’s Kursk

NATO chief says he can confirm North Korean troops are in Russia’s Kursk
Updated 15 sec ago
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NATO chief says he can confirm North Korean troops are in Russia’s Kursk

NATO chief says he can confirm North Korean troops are in Russia’s Kursk

BRUSSELS: NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte confirmed on Monday that North Korean troops have been sent to Russia and that North Korean military units have been deployed to the Kursk region.
“The deepening military cooperation between Russia and North Korea is a threat to both Indo-Pacific and Euro-Atlantic security,” Rutte told reporters after NATO officials and diplomats received a briefing from a South Korean delegation.
Ukrainian forces staged a major incursion into Kursk in August and remain in the region.
Rutte said the North Korean deployment represented “a significant escalation” of Pyongyang’s involvement in “Russia’s illegal war” in Ukraine, a breach of UN Security Council resolutions and a “dangerous expansion” of the war.
Rutte said the deployment of North Korean troops was a sign of “growing desperation” on the part of Russian President Vladimir Putin.
“Over 600,000 Russian soldiers have been killed or wounded in Putin’s war and he is unable to sustain his assault on Ukraine without foreign support,” Rutte said.
The Kremlin had dismissed reports about a North Korean troop deployment as “fake news.” But Putin on Thursday did not deny that North Korean troops were currently in Russia and said that it was Moscow’s business how to implement a partnership treaty with Pyongyang.
A North Korean representative to the United Nations in New York called the reports “groundless rumors.”
Ukraine’s top presidential official said on Monday sanctions would not be a sufficient response to North Korean involvement in the war and called for more Western arms supplies to Kyiv.
“North Korean troops are already in the Kursk region...This is an escalation. Sanctions alone are not enough. We need weapons and a clear plan to prevent North Korea’s expanded involvement in the war in Europe,” Andriy Yermak, president’s chief of staff, said on X.
He added that Ukraine’s Western allies should respond firmly since “the enemy understands strength.”


Modi, Spanish PM launch India’s first private military aircraft plant in Gujarat

Modi, Spanish PM launch India’s first private military aircraft plant in Gujarat
Updated 9 min 17 sec ago
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Modi, Spanish PM launch India’s first private military aircraft plant in Gujarat

Modi, Spanish PM launch India’s first private military aircraft plant in Gujarat
  • The first C-295 aircraft made in India will be rolled out by Vadodara plant in 2026
  • Modi launched ‘Make in India’ initiative in 2014 to promote country as a global manufacturing hub

NEW DELHI: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Spanish counterpart Pedro Sanchez inaugurated India’s first private military aircraft plant on Monday, boosting the country’s ambitions of becoming a global manufacturing hub. 

In Gujarat state’s Vadodara city, the two premiers launched the Tata Aircraft Complex, the manufacturing hub that will produce the Airbus C-295 transport military aircraft in collaboration with Airbus Spain and to be deployed by the Indian Air Force.

“In India, the defense manufacturing ecosystem is touching a new height. Had we not taken a firm step 10 years ago we would not have reached this feat today. Back then no one could have imagined that India could be involved in defense manufacturing on such a scale,” Modi said at the launching ceremony. 

The Indian premier vowed to turn India into a global manufacturing hub when he came to power in 2014 with his “Make in India” initiative, including in infrastructure, pharmaceuticals and the defense sector. 

“That time our priority and identity were of importer. But we decided to tread a new path, we fixed a new target for us and today we are witnessing the result,” he said.

Under a $2.5 billion deal signed in 2021, India and Spain agreed to procure 56 C-295 transport aircraft to replace the aging Avro-748 planes of the Indian Air Force. 

Airbus will deliver the first 16 of the aircraft from its final assembly line in Seville, Spain — six of which have so far been delivered. The remaining 40 will be manufactured and assembled by Tata Advanced Systems in India, as part of an industrial partnership between the two companies. 

“The factory will not only strengthen India and Spain’s relationship but also consolidate Make in India and Make for the World Mission,” Modi said. 

The plant in Vadodara is expected to roll out the first C-295 aircraft made in India in 2026. The plane can transport up to 71 troops or 50 paratroopers, will be able to access remote locations and be used for medical evacuations and aid in disaster response and maritime patrol duties.

“This project brings together the best of two worlds,” Sanchez said. 

“This project strengthens our industrial ties while underlying our country's deep commitment as a reliable and strategic partner. This plant will be a symbol of industrial excellence, an engine of growth and a testament to the close and growing friendship.”

Sanchez was on a three-day visit to India, the first such trip by a Spanish leader to the South Asian nation in 18 years.

As part of his visit, Sanchez will also travel to India’s financial capital of Mumbai on Tuesday, where he is expected to meet with trade and industry leaders, as well as visit film studios in an effort to boost entertainment industry collaboration between the two countries. 

As the world’s largest arms importer, accounting for almost 10 percent of total global arms import between 2019 and 2023, the plant in Vadodara marks a new chapter in India’s defense industry development.  

“To maintain strategic autonomy, it is imperative to substantially reduce dependence on foreign suppliers. Hence, India is focusing on maximizing its domestic production of advanced defense systems,” Delhi-based defense analyst Ranjit Kumar told Arab News. 

India has been encouraging the private sector to make investment in weapons production to increase its self-dependency in the defense sector. New Delhi is also in talks with German and Spanish submarine makers to produce next-generation diesel submarines in India, he added. 

“India is thus leveraging its huge defense market to successfully negotiate with leading international defense firms to produce their weapon systems in India for supplying not only Indian armed forces but also use the facility in India for the international market.” 


Around 40 soldiers killed in attack on Chad military base, presidency says

Around 40 soldiers killed in attack on Chad military base, presidency says
Updated 28 October 2024
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Around 40 soldiers killed in attack on Chad military base, presidency says

Around 40 soldiers killed in attack on Chad military base, presidency says

DAKAR: Around 40 soldiers were killed in an attack on a military base in Chad’s Lake region on Sunday, the central African country’s presidency said on Monday.
President Mahamat Idriss Deby launched an operation to track down the assailants, the statement said.
The presidency did not name the group responsible for the attack. The region is often attacked by the Boko Haram insurgency, which erupted in northeast Nigeria in 2009 and spread to the west of Chad.


2 people fatally shot in a rural area of northern Austria

2 people fatally shot in a rural area of northern Austria
Updated 28 October 2024
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2 people fatally shot in a rural area of northern Austria

2 people fatally shot in a rural area of northern Austria

VIENNA: Two people were fatally shot on Monday in a rural area of northern Austria, police said, and the suspected shooter was on the run.
The body of a man was found early Monday in the Muehlviertel area of Upper Austria province, the Austria Press Agency reported. Police said later in the morning that there was a second victim.
They didn't identify either victim but Austrian media reported, without naming sources, that one was a local mayor.


Six children died from pesticide poisoning in South Africa, lab analysis finds

Six children died from pesticide poisoning in South Africa, lab analysis finds
Updated 28 October 2024
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Six children died from pesticide poisoning in South Africa, lab analysis finds

Six children died from pesticide poisoning in South Africa, lab analysis finds

JOHANNESBURG: Six children who died in a South African township earlier this month had ingested a chemical compound used in pesticides, the country’s health minister said on Monday, in a case that has prompted calls for tighter food safety controls.
Local media have reported that the children died after eating snacks bought from an informal cornershop in the Soweto township near Johannesburg.
“The cause of death is unequivocally organophosphate ... a group of substances, which are usually used in agriculture or as pesticides,” Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi told reporters as he announced the findings of a toxicology analysis.
Health officials are still waiting for the results of tests on swabs from informal township cornershops — known as spaza shops in South Africa — in Soweto as they try to establish where the organophosphate came from.
“Our theory, until we are proven otherwise, is that they (the shops) are using it as pesticides to kill rats ... It is also being sold to communities for killing rats,” Motsoaledi said, adding that pesticide products containing organophosphate were not routinely meant to be used in people’s homes.
“Any poison you use to kill pests or whatever domestically is not supposed to kill human beings,” he said.