Kremlin says creation of ‘buffer zone’ in Ukraine needs time

Kremlin says creation of ‘buffer zone’ in Ukraine needs time
Above, a Russian mobile air defense system operates at an undisclosed location. (Russian Defense Ministry Press Service photo via AP)
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Updated 10 July 2024
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Kremlin says creation of ‘buffer zone’ in Ukraine needs time

Kremlin says creation of ‘buffer zone’ in Ukraine needs time
  • President Vladimir Putin said in May that Russia was creating a buffer to protect its border regions

MOSCOW: Russia said on Wednesday that its military was still working to create a “buffer zone” in Ukraine’s Kharkiv region but this would take time.
President Vladimir Putin said in May that Russia was creating a buffer to protect its border regions, especially Belgorod which lies adjacent to Kharkiv, from Ukrainian attacks.
“Of course, the realization of this task is time-consuming, it takes time. Work in this direction is under way,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters when asked how long it would take for Russia to guarantee the security of Belgorod.
Later on Wednesday, Belgorod regional governor Vyacheslav Gladkov said one person was killed and seven more wounded in Ukrainian shelling of the Russian border town of Shebekino.
According to Gladkov, three multi-story residential buildings, several commercial facilities, an industrial enterprise and 20 vehicles were damaged in the incident.
Shebekino and the wider Belgorod region have come under frequent attack by Ukrainian shells and drones in the course of the war which is now well into its third year.


Trump struggles to keep media spotlight in battle with Harris

Trump struggles to keep media spotlight in battle with Harris
Updated 13 sec ago
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Trump struggles to keep media spotlight in battle with Harris

Trump struggles to keep media spotlight in battle with Harris
  • Trump's speeches on foreign policy, the economy and crime did little to dislodge the spotlight from Harris and received little attention, a stunning turnabout for a politician used to dominating headlines
  • Harris has surged in the polls since entering the race, with polling aggregator website FiveThirtyEight putting her ahead of Trump in six of seven key battleground states

Donald Trump touted his plan to end taxation on tips at a stop in Las Vegas on Friday, trying to turn the page on a week in which he was overshadowed by Kamala Harris and struggled to keep focus on policy issues and not personal attacks on his opponent.
From a lectern set up at a Mexican restaurant, the Republican presidential candidate spoke about his plan to eliminate taxes on 100 percent of tips to waiters and other service employees. He also talked about his campaign’s efforts to court Hispanic voters in Nevada, a battleground state that could help determine the Nov. 5 election, and nationwide.
The tax proposal is one pillar of Trump’s economic agenda and the kind of issue his advisers have been pressing him to focus on rather than his frequent personal attacks against Harris’ looks, heritage and intelligence, warning they could turn off the moderate voters he needs to win.
Trump’s comments come one day after Harris accepted the Democratic Party’s presidential nomination with a muscular speech that laid down broad foreign policy principles and sharp contrasts with Trump with 11 weeks left until Election Day.
Throughout the four-day Democratic convention Trump counter-programmed with events of his own around the country, hoping to steal some media attention from Harris. However, his speeches on foreign policy, the economy and crime did little to dislodge the spotlight from Harris and received little attention, a stunning turnabout for a politician used to dominating headlines.
Trump and his aides are hoping Thursday’s boisterous convention finale marks the end of the “honeymoon” period for Harris, who emerged as the Democratic candidate little more than a month ago after President Joe Biden exited the race.
During Harris’ acceptance speech in Chicago, Trump attacked her with dozens of posts on his Truth Social platform, calling her a liar, a “Marxist” and “Comrade Kamala Harris.” With one post in all caps he simply asked: “IS SHE TALKING ABOUT ME?“
William Rosenberg, a political science professor at Drexel University, said Trump’s personal attacks on Harris underscored his frustration with having to face a biracial woman, a task complicated by his history of making racist remarks.
“His anger and his words speak volumes,” Rosenberg said. “He’s navigating a path which is full of problems for him.”
Harris has surged in the polls since entering the race, with polling aggregator website FiveThirtyEight putting her ahead of Trump in six of seven key battleground states.
She is also outraising her Republican counterpart. Her campaign told the Federal Election Commission this week that it raised $204 million last month, compared to $48 million reported to the body by Trump’s main fundraising group.
One question still to be answered is whether Harris will also outpace Trump on the trail in the coming weeks. Biden made relatively few campaign stops, easing pressure on Trump to travel more around the country. That may now change with Harris.
Trump will travel to Detroit on Monday to address a conference of the National Guard Association of the United States and is scheduled to give a speech at a conservative women’s group’s annual summit in Washington on Friday.
Campaign spokesperson Karoline Leavitt said Trump would hold at least one additional campaign stop in between those two events, without providing details.
The Harris campaign has not yet released details of her movements for next week.
Leavitt blamed the media for focusing their stories on Trump’s personal attacks, which she said made up a fraction of his otherwise policy-heavy rallies and speeches.
At an event on Wednesday in Asheboro, North Carolina, where his speech was billed as one on national security, Trump rejected the recommendations of his advisers to focus on policy and insulted Harris and other Democrats in personal terms.
One outside adviser to Trump, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told Reuters that several advisers had told the former president that a continued focus on insults rather than policy could doom his chances in November.
Republican strategist Doug Heye said Trump could still win the race, which he predicted would be close, but to do that he should focus on inflation, illegal immigration and other issues that polling show many voters give him higher marks on.


Greek coast guards open fire on migrant smuggling boat after alleged ramming, killing 1 passenger

Greek coast guards open fire on migrant smuggling boat after alleged ramming, killing 1 passenger
Updated 24 August 2024
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Greek coast guards open fire on migrant smuggling boat after alleged ramming, killing 1 passenger

Greek coast guards open fire on migrant smuggling boat after alleged ramming, killing 1 passenger
  • The statement said the incident occurred northwest of Symi after the helmsman of the smuggling boat ignored multiple calls to stop

ATHENS, Greece: The crew of a Greek coast guard vessel opened fire on a speedboat smuggling migrants — including several children — from neighboring Turkiye killing one passenger, Greek authorities said Friday.
A coast guard statement said shots were fired, first into the air and then at the speedboat’s engine “to avert the direct threat to the patrol boat and its crew” after the helmsman rammed the Greek patrol boat in a bid to escape arrest.
When the boat came to a halt, the statement said, the passenger was found fatally wounded, “probably by a bullet.”
The remaining 13 people on the plastic speedboat — 5 children, 7 men and a woman — were unharmed and were taken to the southeast Aegean Sea island of Symi. The dead passenger was identified as a 39-year-old man. His nationality was not immediately known.
The statement said the incident occurred northwest of Symi after the helmsman of the smuggling boat ignored multiple calls to stop. It said he “repeatedly carried out extremely dangerous maneuvers, ramming the patrol boat.”
The coast guard said the migrant smuggling vessel had been heading from the nearby Turkish coast to Symi.
Two of the men on the speedboat were arrested on suspicion of belonging to a migrant smuggling gang.
Thousands of migrants try to reach Greece’s eastern Aegean islands in small boats every year. In most cases they pay smuggling rings to carry them across, and in several incidents the Greek coast guard has reported attempted rammings by smugglers seeking to escape arrest.
Greece has been roundly criticized by human rights organizations over the treatment of migrants trying to reach its shores. In June, it denied a BBC report that accused its coast guard of brutal practices resulting in dozens of deaths.
According to data from the United Nations refugee agency, nearly 30,000 migrants have arrived illegally in Greece so far this year from Turkiye, and, increasingly, from Libya in North Africa.
The number of arrivals is slightly lower than in Italy and Spain, the main destinations for migrants trying to reach Europe illegally. Most people heading for Greece are Afghan, Syrian or Egyptian nationals.
 

 


Pakistan flies home the injured and the bodies of 28 Shiite pilgrims killed in a bus crash in Iran

Pakistan flies home the injured and the bodies of 28 Shiite pilgrims killed in a bus crash in Iran
Updated 24 August 2024
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Pakistan flies home the injured and the bodies of 28 Shiite pilgrims killed in a bus crash in Iran

Pakistan flies home the injured and the bodies of 28 Shiite pilgrims killed in a bus crash in Iran
  • Iran has one of the world’s worst traffic safety records with some 17,000 deaths annually

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan brought home Friday the bodies of 28 Shiite pilgrims killed in a bus crash in Iran this week while heading to Iraq for a pilgrimage. A Pakistani military aircraft also flew back 23 pilgrims injured in the accident, officials said.
Earlier in the day in Iran, officials handed over the bodies of the crash victims to Pakistani diplomats. Prayer services were held in both Iran and later in Pakistan.
Funeral were to take place in the victims’ home districts early Saturday. The pilgrims were from Pakistan’s southern Sindh province, according to Nasir Shah, a provincial government spokesman.
The plane, requested by Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif for the repatriation, landed at the airport in Jacobabad, about 1,000 kilometers (625 miles) southwest from the capital of Islamabad. The coffins, covered in Pakistan’s national flag, were handed over to the victims’ relatives for burial.
State-run PTV broadcast the ceremony at the Jacobabad airport, where relatives of the victims cried and hugged each other.
Authorities have not revealed the cause of the crash near the city of Taft, some 500 kilometers (310 miles) southeast of the Iranian capital, Tehran.
In a state TV report, Mohammad Ali Malekzadeh, a local Iranian emergency official, blamed the crash on the bus brakes failing and a lack of attention by the driver. A surveillance video later aired by the state TV showed the bus speeding past a parked car into a dirt lot just before the crash, narrowly missing bystanders.
Iran has one of the world’s worst traffic safety records with some 17,000 deaths annually. The grave toll is blamed on wide disregard for traffic laws, unsafe vehicles and inadequate emergency services in its vast rural areas.
The pilgrims had been on their way to Iraq’s holy city of Karbala, to commemorate Arbaeen — Arabic for the number 40 — marking the end of the annual 40-day mourning period after the date of the seventh century death of the Prophet Muhammad’s grandson, Hussein, a central figure in Shiite Islam.
Hussein died at the hands of the Muslim Umayyad forces in the Battle of Karbala, during the tumultuous 1st century of Islam’s history.
 

 


Knife attack leaves 3 people dead, several wounded in German city of Solingen

Knife attack leaves 3 people dead, several wounded in German city of Solingen
Updated 34 min 45 sec ago
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Knife attack leaves 3 people dead, several wounded in German city of Solingen

Knife attack leaves 3 people dead, several wounded in German city of Solingen
  • “It breaks my heart that an attack on our city happened,” Solingen Mayor Tim Kurzbach said in a Facebook post
  • The city of 160,000 residents was holding its “Festival of Diversity” to mark the city’s 650th anniversary

SOLINGEN, Germany: Three people were killed and four were seriously wounded in an attack on Friday at a festival in the western German city of Solingen, police said.
Police said that the perpetrator was on the run, German news agency dpa reported. It cited unidentified police sources as saying the weapon was believed to be a knife. The attack happened at about 9:45 p.m. (1945 GMT) on a central square, the Fronhof.
One of the festival organizers, Philipp Müller, appeared on stage and asked festivalgoers to “go calmly; please keep yours eyes open, because unfortunately the perpetrator hasn’t been caught.” He said many people had been wounded by “a knifeman.”

Mayor Tim Kurzbach said in a Facebook post that “this evening, we in Solingen are all in shock. We all wanted to celebrate our city’s anniversary together and now have dead and wounded to lament.”
“It breaks my heart that an attack on our city happened,” he added.
The local newspaper Solinger Tageblatt quoted Celine Derikartz, its reporter covering the festival, as saying that “the atmosphere is spooky.” She said a party atmosphere had turned to shock within minutes and she saw festivalgoers weeping.
The “Festival of Diversity,” marking the city’s 650th anniversary, began on Friday and was supposed to run through Sunday, with several stages in central streets offering attractions such as live music, cabaret and acrobatics.
Solingen has about 160,000 residents and is located near the bigger cities of Cologne and Duesseldorf.


UN fears repeat of 2017 atrocities against Rohingyas

UN fears repeat of 2017 atrocities against Rohingyas
Updated 23 August 2024
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UN fears repeat of 2017 atrocities against Rohingyas

UN fears repeat of 2017 atrocities against Rohingyas

GENEVA: The United Nations said Friday it fears a repeat of the 2017 atrocities committed against the Rohingya minority in Myanmar, warning a human tragedy was unfolding in Rakhine State.
UN human rights chief Volker Turk voiced grave alarm about the sharply deteriorating situation across Myanmar, particularly in Rakhine where, he said, hundreds of civilians have reportedly been killed while trying to flee fighting.
Clashes have rocked Rakhine since the rebel Arakan Army attacked forces of Myanmar’s ruling junta in November, ending a ceasefire that had largely held since a military coup in 2021.
Turk blamed both sides for abuses against the Rohingya including extrajudicial killings, abductions and indiscriminate bombardments of towns.
The AA says it is fighting for more autonomy for the ethnic Rakhine population in the state, which is also home to around 600,000 members of the Rohingya Muslim minority.
Hundreds of thousands of Rohingya fled Rakhine in 2017 during a crackdown by the military that is now the subject of a United Nations genocide court case.
“Thousands of Rohingya have been forced to flee on foot, with the Arakan Army herding them repeatedly into locations that offer scant safe haven,” Turk said in a statement.
“As the border crossings to Bangladesh remain closed, members of the Rohingya community are finding themselves trapped between the military and its allies and the Arakan Army, with no path to safety.”
Bangladesh is now home to around one million Rohingya refugees.

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“This month marks seven years since the military operations which drove 700,000 across the border into Bangladesh. Despite the world saying ‘never again’, we are once more witnessing killings, destruction and displacement in Rakhine,” said Turk.
In a statement released by his office, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called on all parties in the conflict “to end the violence and ensure the protection of civilians.”
He also urged the strengthening of “regional protection efforts, to provide access to conflict-affected communities and further support host countries,” especially in Bangladesh.
Turk said parties to the armed conflict were denying responsibility for attacks against the Rohingya, which “stretches the bounds of credulity.”
The UN Human Rights Office said that according to its information, the military and the Arakan Army have both committed serious human rights violations and abuses against the Rohingya.
These include extrajudicial killings, some involving beheadings; abductions, forced recruitment, indiscriminate bombardments of towns and villages, and arson attacks.
“Both the military and the Arakan Army bear direct responsibility for the human tragedy that is unfolding in Rakhine,” said Turk.
“These atrocities demand an unequivocal response: those responsible must be held accountable, and justice must be pursued relentlessly.
“Recurrence of the crimes and horrors of the past must be prevented as a moral duty and a legal necessity.”
Turk called on both parties to cease attacks on civilians and urged the ASEAN regional bloc to take all necessary measures to protect the Rohingya.
Guterres voiced hope “for sustainable peace and national reconciliation that are important steps to create conditions conducive to the voluntary, safe, dignified, and sustainable return of the Rohingya people to Myanmar.”