Denmark aims to limit shadow fleet of Russian oil tankers

Denmark aims to limit shadow fleet of Russian oil tankers
Above, a ship makes it ways through heavy morning fog towards the Baltic Sea on Nov. 3, 2012. Russia sends about a third of its seaborne oil exports through the Danish straits. (AFP)
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Updated 17 June 2024
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Denmark aims to limit shadow fleet of Russian oil tankers

Denmark aims to limit shadow fleet of Russian oil tankers
  • Russia sends about a third of its seaborne oil exports, or 1.5 percent of global supply, through the Danish straits

COPENHAGEN: Denmark is considering ways to limit the passage of old tankers carrying Russian oil through the Baltic Sea, the Nordic country’s foreign minister said in a statement on Monday, in a move that could trigger confrontation with Moscow.
Russia sends about a third of its seaborne oil exports, or 1.5 percent of global supply, through the Danish straits that sit as a gateway to the Baltic Sea, so any attempt to halt supplies would send oil prices higher and hit the Kremlin’s finances.
Denmark has brought together a group of allied countries evaluating measures targeting the so-called shadow fleet of aging ships transporting the Russian oil, Foreign Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen said.


Death toll from central China downpours rises to 50: state media

Members of a rescue team walk to a flood-affected area in Zixing, in central China’s Hunan province. (File/AFP)
Members of a rescue team walk to a flood-affected area in Zixing, in central China’s Hunan province. (File/AFP)
Updated 55 min 28 sec ago
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Death toll from central China downpours rises to 50: state media

Members of a rescue team walk to a flood-affected area in Zixing, in central China’s Hunan province. (File/AFP)
  • The downpours late July were triggered by Typhoon Gaemi, which moved on from the Philippines and Taiwan to make landfall in China, hitting Hunan province hard

BEIJING: At least 50 people were confirmed dead on Monday following search and rescue efforts after torrential rain lashed central China in late July, state media said.
Fifteen others remained missing in Zixing city in China’s Hunan Province, according to state broadcaster CCTV.
“All administrative villages in the disaster-stricken areas of Zixing City have preliminarily achieved access to roads, electricity, communication, and water,” CCTV said.
“The affected residents have been properly resettled, and post-disaster reconstruction is under way.”
The downpours late July were triggered by Typhoon Gaemi, which moved on from the Philippines and Taiwan to make landfall in China, hitting hilly, landlocked Hunan province particularly hard.
Authorities evacuated nearly 300,000 people and suspended public transport across eastern China last month.
China has endured a summer of extreme weather, with heavy rains across the east and south, and much of the north sweltering in successive heat waves.
Heavy rain in the northern province of Shaanxi last month caused a highway bridge to collapse, killing at least 38 people.
China is the world’s biggest emitter of the greenhouse gases that are driving climate change and making extreme weather more frequent and intense.


India PM Modi to make first visit to Ukraine since start of Russian invasion

India’s PM Narendra Modi shakes hands with Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky during the G7 Summit Leaders’ Meeting. (AFP)
India’s PM Narendra Modi shakes hands with Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky during the G7 Summit Leaders’ Meeting. (AFP)
Updated 19 August 2024
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India PM Modi to make first visit to Ukraine since start of Russian invasion

India’s PM Narendra Modi shakes hands with Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky during the G7 Summit Leaders’ Meeting. (AFP)
  • Modi will visit Warsaw, Kyiv from Aug. 21 to 23
  • India has not publicly criticized Russia over Ukraine war

NEW DELHI: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi will visit Ukraine later this week, the Ministry of External Affairs said on Monday ahead of his first trip to the war-torn country since Russia’s invasion and about a month after he met President Vladimir Putin in Moscow. 

Modi will be the first Indian premier to visit Ukraine since the Eastern European country declared independence in 1991. He is scheduled to leave New Delhi on Aug. 21 for Poland, before visiting Kyiv. 

“This landmark visit of course takes place against the backdrop of the ongoing conflict in Ukraine, which will also form part of discussions. As you are aware, India has consistently advocated for diplomacy and dialogue to reach a negotiated settlement,” Tanmaya Lal, secretary West at the ministry, told a press conference in Delhi. 

“India is willing to provide all possible support and contribution required to help find peaceful solutions to this conflict.” 

New Delhi has abstained from publicly criticizing Russia over the Ukraine war and did not join the slew of international sanctions slapped on it, despite pressure from Western countries, especially the US. 

Since the escalation of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Modi has met Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on several occasions, including on the sidelines of the G7 Summit in Italy in June. 

When Modi visited Moscow in early July for the annual India-Russia summit, the trip and his embrace with Putin then were met with criticisms from the international community, including Washington and Kyiv. 

While Modi’s upcoming trip to Ukraine is partly seen as a form of damage control following his trip to Russia, it is also Delhi’s attempt at diplomacy, said Amitabh Singh, an associate professor at the Center for Russian and Central Asian Studies in Jawaharlal Nehru University. 

“This is a significant visit in the sense that the hope of diplomacy is still alive … Going to Ukraine will put some diplomatic pressure both on Ukraine and Russia,” Singh told Arab News. 

“It would be unfair to say that Modi is visiting Ukraine just to offset the criticism he got for visiting Moscow. India always maintains that it has a certain level of strategic autonomy. It’s an effort to show to the international community that we are not only talking to Moscow, and we are also talking to Kyiv.”

Modi is likely trying to show the international community that diplomacy is key to ending the war, Singh added. 

“Diplomacy is the only alternative — that is the message probably Modi is trying to convey to Ukraine also, and Russia too.”

Aditya Ramanathan, a research fellow with the Takshashila Institution in Bengaluru, said the visit is “of considerable significance.” 

He told Arab News: “The unsympathetic will see it as an attempt at damage control that is too little too late. However, seasoned observers of India will understand that the visit is a costly signal from Delhi to demonstrate the independence of its foreign policy.”

Russia’s missile strike on a children’s hospital in Ukraine during Modi’s visit to Moscow “created a terrible impression for India,” Ramanathan added, saying that the timing “added to the impetus” of his visit to Kyiv this week. 

The trip is part of India’s attempt to navigate the complex world of ever-changing geopolitics, while also maintaining relations with old partners. 

“Indian and Russian interests have been diverging and Delhi is keenly aware that Russia’s global significance is likely to decline,” he said. 

India’s ties with Russia span over seven decades, and Moscow is its biggest crude oil supplier and the main source of its military hardware. 

But in the last two decades, India’s partnership with the West has been growing, and it is a member of the Quad, the four-state strategic security dialogue, comprising also the US, Japan and Australia, that was established to counter the increased regional economic and military influence of China. 

“While India is not going to abandon one of its closest partners just yet, there’s no harm in parlaying with Russia’s adversaries,” Ramanathan said. “If Moscow can court Islamabad and Beijing, Delhi can court Kyiv and Washington.”


Zelensky hails Kursk success as Russia rules out talks

Zelensky hails Kursk success as Russia rules out talks
Updated 19 August 2024
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Zelensky hails Kursk success as Russia rules out talks

Zelensky hails Kursk success as Russia rules out talks
  • Biggest attack on Russian soil since World War II has rattled Moscow and taken Ukraine’s Western allies by surprise
  • Moscow, intent on not letting the offensive affect its own advance in eastern Ukraine, claimed another village in the war-battered Donetsk

KYIV: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Monday hailed his forces’ success in their surprise offensive into Russia’s territory, an advance that triggered the Kremlin to rule out entering peace talks with Kyiv.
Ukraine sent troops and tanks over the border on August 6, piercing several kilometers into Russia’s Kursk region, where they are holding onto a chunk of territory.
The biggest attack on Russian soil since World War II has rattled Moscow and taken Ukraine’s Western allies by surprise.
Zelensky on Monday said the incursion was achieving Kyiv’s objectives, which officials have previously said include stretching Russian forces, creating a “buffer zone” and bringing the war “closer” to an end on “fair” terms.
But Kremlin aide Yuri Ushakov said Kyiv’s attack had pushed the prospect of peace talks further away.
“At the current stage, given this escapade, we will not talk,” he said Monday.
He called entering a negotiating process “completely inappropriate” and said future talks “depend on the situation on the battlefield, including in the Kursk region.”
Moscow, intent on not letting the offensive affect its own advance in eastern Ukraine, claimed another village in the war-battered Donetsk region on Monday.
And bracing for a further assault, Ukraine ordered the evacuation of families from the key city of Pokrovsk as Moscow’s forces inched closer to the logistics hub.
In Kursk, Zelensky’s troops have set up administrative offices and published previously unthinkable footage of Ukrainian soldiers patrolling Russian streets.
“We are achieving our goals. This morning we have another replenishment of the (prisoner of war) exchange fund for our country,” Zelensky said, referring to more Russian troops being taken captive.
On Sunday, he said the push into Russian territory was designed to create a “buffer zone.”
The prospect of peace talks appeared distant even before Ukraine launched its incursion into Russia.
Russian President Vladimir Putin had demanded Ukraine cede swathes of territory if it wanted a ceasefire.
Zelensky, who has ruled out direct talks with the Kremlin, demands Russia’s full withdrawal from Ukrainian territory, including Crimea, and reparations.
Seeking to give impetus to a possible settlement, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi will visit Ukraine on Friday, officials in New Delhi and Kyiv said.
Modi recently visited Moscow, is close with Putin and has made no secret of his desire to bring about an end to the conflict.
Meanwhile, Ukraine was pushing on Monday with its Kursk offensive.
A third bridge over the Seym river inside Russia was hit over the weekend, a Russian military investigator said in a video published by high-profile pro-Kremlin TV commentator Vladimir Solovyov.
It has left Russia with limited supply options, according to Russian military bloggers.
Moscow’s defense ministry said Russia had thwarted Ukrainian attacks on three more villages.
The incursion has visibly worried Russians, prompting some in Kyiv to hope that sentiment could turn the country against the Kremlin’s more than two-year war.
“Accustomed to seeing the war as a television show, Russians are now seeing it up close and personal,” Ukrainian presidential adviser Mykhailo Podolyak said on X.
“If you don’t want to see the war, you have to end the war by forcing your ‘leadership’ to make peace on fair terms.”
In eastern Ukraine’s Donetsk region, Moscow said it captured the town of Artemovo, which is called Zalizne in Ukrainian.
Zalizne had a population of around 5,000 at the start of 2022 — making it one of the largest places captured by Russian troops in recent weeks.
Ukrainian artillery fired on a bus stop in the city of Donetsk, which is under Russia’s control, killing a pregnant woman and wounding 10 including two children, said Denis Pushilin, the Russian-installed governor.
Ukraine said Russian attacks killed four people in frontline towns, with a 71-year-old woman killed in her garden in Toretsk and three civilians in their 60s and 70s killed in the village of Zarichne.
As the front moved further west toward the city of Pokrovsk, Ukrainian officials announced the compulsory evacuation of families with children.
More than 53,000 people still live in the area, including almost 4,000 children.
Filashkin called the decision to evacuate “necessary and inevitable.”
Russia has long tried to capture Pokrovsk, which lies on the intersection of a key road that supplies Ukrainian troops.


Putin in Baku offers to mediate Azerbaijan-Armenia peace deal

Russia’s President Vladimir Putin and Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev attend an official dinner following their talks.
Russia’s President Vladimir Putin and Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev attend an official dinner following their talks.
Updated 19 August 2024
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Putin in Baku offers to mediate Azerbaijan-Armenia peace deal

Russia’s President Vladimir Putin and Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev attend an official dinner following their talks.
  • Russia has for decades been a traditional mediator between the Caucasus foes but has in the last two years been bogged down by its Ukraine campaign

BAKU: Russian President Vladimir Putin said on a visit to Baku Monday that Moscow was still committed to its historic role of mediating peace negotiations between Azerbaijan and Armenia, despite its Ukraine campaign.
Putin was in Azerbaijan on a two-day visit — his first to the oil-rich country since Moscow invaded Ukraine in 2022, and since Baku retook the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave in a September 2023 offensive.
Russia has for decades been a traditional mediator between the Caucasus foes but has in the last two years been bogged down by its Ukraine campaign, with Western powers playing an increasing role in arbitrating the conflict.
“It is widely known that Russia is also facing crises, first of all on the Ukrainian track,” Putin said in Baku in joint remarks with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev.
“However, Russia’s historical involvement in the events in the South Caucasus, even during the recent years, makes it necessary for us to participate where needed by the sides, without a doubt.”
Baku’s campaign ended three decades of Armenian separatist rule and soured relations between Yerevan and its traditional ally Moscow, with Armenia accusing Russia of inaction and strengthening its ties with Western countries since.
“If we can do something to sign a peace agreement between Azerbaijan and Armenia... we will be very happy to,” Putin said.
The Russian leader said that after his Baku visit he will contact Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan to “tell him about the results of our negotiations.”
Aliyev said the security of the region largely depended on the close cooperation between Azerbaijan and Russia.
“The new situation (since September last year) opens up new opportunities for establishing a lasting peace in the South Caucasus,” he said.
When Baku recaptured Karabakh in a swift offensive last September, it led to the exodus of the mountainous enclave’s entire ethnic Armenian population — more than 100,000 people.


UK support of Ukraine ‘unwavering’ amid Kursk offensive: spokeswoman

A Ukrainian soldier walks on a damaged street in the Ukrainian-controlled Russian town of Sudzha, Kursk region.
A Ukrainian soldier walks on a damaged street in the Ukrainian-controlled Russian town of Sudzha, Kursk region.
Updated 19 August 2024
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UK support of Ukraine ‘unwavering’ amid Kursk offensive: spokeswoman

A Ukrainian soldier walks on a damaged street in the Ukrainian-controlled Russian town of Sudzha, Kursk region.
  • Britain has been one of Kyiv’s biggest backers in its fight against Russia’s invasion
  • UK has pledged $16.2 billion in support to Ukraine since Russia’s invasion of its neighbor in February 2022, of which £7.6 billion is for military assistance

LONDON: British Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s commitment to Ukraine “remains absolutely resolute,” his spokesperson said Monday, after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky suggested that UK support “has slowed down recently.”
Britain has been one of Kyiv’s biggest backers in its fight against Russia’s invasion, and London insisted its position has not changed since Ukrainian forces launched an offensive in Russia’s Kursk region earlier this month.
“The prime minister remains absolutely resolute in his support for Ukraine,” Starmer’s spokeswoman told reporters when asked about the claim by Zelensky, who wants restrictions lifted on the use of donated long-range missiles.
“In fact, on the latest situation, including in Kursk, the prime minister wants to set out his full admiration for the bravery shown by Ukrainian soldiers who have once again proved their spirit and determination in the face of continued Russian aggression, and shown that they will do whatever it takes to defend their country.”
She added that the incursion, which Zelensky says is aimed at creating a “buffer zone” on Russian territory to shield its own population from strikes, was “a reminder that Ukraine has consistently exceeded expectations of what is possible and Russia continues to fail.”
“But in terms of our support, again, it is unwavering,” the spokeswoman said.
Britain has pledged £12.5 billion ($16.2 billion) in support to Ukraine since Russia’s full-scale invasion of its neighbor in February 2022, of which £7.6 billion is for military assistance.
British equipment supplied to Kyiv’s war effort includes long-range Storm Shadow cruise missiles and a squadron of 14 Challenger 2 tanks deployed early last year.
The UK government says the weapons are for self-defense and it is up to Ukraine’s armed forces decide how to use them, provided they do so in accordance with international humanitarian law.
But Britain and western allies have put limits on the use of long-range missiles to avoid escalating the conflict.
In a post on X Sunday, Zelensky said: “Throughout this war, we’ve seen the UK demonstrate true leadership — in arms, politics, and support for Ukrainian society. This has saved thousands of lives, reflecting the strength of the UK.
“Unfortunately, the situation has slowed down recently. We will discuss how to fix this because long-range capabilities are vital for us.”
Starmer’s spokeswoman said there was “no change” in Britain’s position on the use of Storm Shadow.
Last week, UK media reported that some Challenger 2 tanks had been used during the incursion into Kursk.