Ukraine’s foreign minister arrives in China to discuss ‘fair peace’

Ukraine’s foreign minister arrives in China to discuss ‘fair peace’
Ukraine's foreign minister Dmytro Kuleba arrived in China on Tuesday for talks with Foreign Minister Wang Yi on ways to achieve a "fair peace" in the war with Russia and also to discuss bilateral relations. (Reuters/File)
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Updated 23 July 2024
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Ukraine’s foreign minister arrives in China to discuss ‘fair peace’

Ukraine’s foreign minister arrives in China to discuss ‘fair peace’
  • Kuleba said he would hold “extensive, detailed, substantive negotiations” with his Chinese counterpart
  • “We must avoid competition between peace plans. It is very important that Kyiv and Beijing conduct a direct dialogue,” he wrote in a statement on Instagram

KYIV: Ukraine’s foreign minister arrived in China on Tuesday for talks with Foreign Minister Wang Yi on ways to achieve a “fair peace” in the war with Russia and also to discuss bilateral relations, he said.
Dmytro Kuleba’s visit is the first by a high-ranking Ukrainian official since Russia’s full-scale February 2022 invasion, which China, the world’s second largest economy, has not publicly condemned.
Kuleba said he would hold “extensive, detailed, substantive negotiations” with his Chinese counterpart, but did not say when the talks would happen. He said earlier his trip would continue until Thursday.
“We must avoid competition between peace plans. It is very important that Kyiv and Beijing conduct a direct dialogue,” he wrote in a statement on Instagram, announcing his arrival in China.
Various peace initiatives have emerged in recent months ahead of a US election in November that could see the return to the White House of former president Donald Trump who has threatened to cut vital aid flows to Ukraine. The United States under President Joe Biden has been Ukraine’s biggest backer.
Kyiv is pushing to hold a second international summit later this year to advance its vision for peace after an initial gathering in Switzerland in June drew dozens of delegations from around the world but not from Russia or China.
Ukraine has said it would like its second summit to be hosted by a “Global South” country and that Russia could attend. Kyiv has also said it would like to see China play a more active role in ending the war.
China and Brazil published a joint six-point peace proposal in May, saying they supported the holding of an international peace conference that both sides in the war would recognize.
Kuleba said his trip to China, the first by a Ukrainian foreign minister since 2012, aimed to develop contacts between Chinese and Ukrainian leaders.
China declared a “no limits” partnership with Russia in 2022 days before the invasion and has helped Russia keep its economy afloat. China says its ties with Russia are built on the basis of non-alliance and do not target any third party.


Kashmir gets new truncated government five years after losing autonomy

Kashmir gets new truncated government five years after losing autonomy
Updated 11 sec ago
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Kashmir gets new truncated government five years after losing autonomy

Kashmir gets new truncated government five years after losing autonomy
  • Omar Abdullah becomes chief minister, vows working to restore Kashmir statehood
  • Without statehood, new local government is stripped of most of its essential authority

NEW DELHI: Leaders of Kashmir’s biggest political party took the oath of office on Wednesday to run its new truncated local government — the first since India stripped the disputed region of autonomy and statehood five years ago.

The new government is led by Omar Abdullah as chief minister and six ministers from his National Conference party, which won the most seats in the region’s recent election.

Abdullah had served as the chief minister of the state of Jammu and Kashmir between 2009 and 2014. His current second term comes as the region is no longer a state, after Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government repealed Article 370 of the Indian Constitution, which granted the Kashmir semi-autonomous status and downgraded it to federally controlled territory.

“I was the last chief minister to serve a full six-year term, and now I’ll be the first chief minister of the union territory of Jammu and Kashmir. The last distinction — as in the one who has served six years — I’m quite happy about. Being a chief minister of a union territory is a different matter altogether,” Abdullah told reporters.

“It has its own challenges, but I hope that the status of a union territory is a temporary one. We look forward to working in cooperation with the government of India to resolve the people’s problems, and the best way to do that would be to start by restoring the statehood to Jammu and Kashmir.”

Jammu and Kashmir is part of the larger Kashmiri territory, which has been the subject of international dispute since the 1947 partition of the Indian subcontinent into Hindu-majority India and Muslim-majority Pakistan.

Both countries claim Kashmir in full and rule in part. The Indian-controlled region is predominantly Muslim and has for decades witnessed outbreaks of separatist insurgencies to resist control from the government in New Delhi.

It has been without a local government since 2018, when Modi’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party brought down a coalition government, forcing the assembly to dissolve.

The recent election to the assembly, which concluded on Oct. 1, was the first in 10 years.

The National Conference, the oldest party in Kashmir, which is led by Abdullah’s father, Farooq Abdullah, won 42 out of 90 assembly seats. Modi’s BJP secured 29, while the country’s main opposition Congress party, which contested the election in alliance with the National Conference, won six seats.

Modi took to social media to congratulate Abdullah on assuming office, saying that the central government “will work closely with him and his team for J&K’s progress.”

The prime minister promised to restore Kashmir’s statehood last month when he visited its main city, Srinagar, to campaign for his party.

Without the restoration, the new local government is stripped of most of its essential authority, leaving Lt. Gov. Manoj Sinha with greater influence than the chief minister.

The office of lieutenant governor was established in 2019 to put Kashmir under direct control of New Delhi, with India’s Parliament as its main legislator.

Kashmir’s statehood would have to be restored for its local administration to have similar authority to other states of India.


Indians in Punjab fear dispute with Canada endangers work, study plans

Indians in Punjab fear dispute with Canada endangers work, study plans
Updated 1 min 29 sec ago
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Indians in Punjab fear dispute with Canada endangers work, study plans

Indians in Punjab fear dispute with Canada endangers work, study plans
  • Indians have made up Canada’s largest group of international students in recent years
  • India’s high commissioner, or ambassador, was among the six diplomats Canada expelled on Monday

CHANDIGARH, India: Indians in Punjab, worried that plans to work, study or visit families in Canada will be jeopardized by this week’s tit-for-tat expulsions of diplomats over the murder of a Sikh separatist, are urging both governments to reduce the tension.
Canada’s nearly 800,000 Sikhs formed the world’s second largest community in 2021, after roughly 20 million in India. They have links to the northern granary state of Punjab, where their religion was founded more than 500 years ago.
“Many clients have reached out, worried about how this might affect their plans to migrate to Canada,” said an immigration lawyer, Karan S. Thukral, who is based in the Indian capital, though adding he had seen no big drop yet in legal inquiries.
“Indian students are among those feeling the impact most acutely.”
Indians have made up Canada’s largest group of international students in recent years, mainly from Punjab, holding more than 41 percent of student permits in 2022. International students bring in about C$22 billion ($16 billion) for its universities each year.
“We want to go to Canada to study and settle there, but now that’s not possible because students who want to go there are facing difficulties,” said Anita, a student in Punjab’s capital of Chandigarh, who gave only her first name.
Canadian study permits for Indians fell sharply late last year and the diplomatic tension was likely to weigh on future numbers, Immigration Minister Marc Miller told Reuters in January.
“It is something that both countries cannot afford because we are heavily dependent on each other,” said Kanwalpreet Kaur, a political science professor at Chandigarh’s DAV College.
“It is really keeping students on edge because their future is tied up with Canada,” she added.
Ties soured last September when Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said there were “credible allegations” linking Indian government agents to the killing of the Sikh separatist leader, Hardeep Singh Nijjar, on Canadian soil.
India’s high commissioner, or ambassador, was among the six diplomats Canada expelled on Monday, linking them to the murder, while accusing the Indian government of having undertaken a broad campaign targeting the South Asian community in Canada.
India dismissed the accusations and accused Trudeau of pursuing a “political agenda,” while kicking out six high-ranking Canadian diplomats in retaliation.
However, both countries see no immediate impact on two-way trade, which stood at $8.4 billion at the end of the last fiscal year on March 31.
“It’s a loss for families and for our children who want to go there to live a better life,” said Gurinder Singh, who runs a cloth business and exports to Canada.
“The government should consider all this and should ensure that the matter does not escalate.”


Kremlin, commenting on Zelensky’s ‘victory plan,’ says Ukraine needs to ‘sober up’

Kremlin, commenting on Zelensky’s ‘victory plan,’ says Ukraine needs to ‘sober up’
Updated 54 min 47 sec ago
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Kremlin, commenting on Zelensky’s ‘victory plan,’ says Ukraine needs to ‘sober up’

Kremlin, commenting on Zelensky’s ‘victory plan,’ says Ukraine needs to ‘sober up’
  • Volodymyr Zelensky’s five-point ‘victory plan’ calls for an unconditional invitation for Kyiv to join NATO and a strategic non-nuclear deterrent package for Ukraine, among other things

MOSCOW: The Kremlin said on Wednesday it was too early to comment in detail on Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s “victory plan,” but that Kyiv needed to “sober up” and realize the futility of the policies it was pursuing.
Zelensky on Wednesday presented his five-point “victory plan” which he said called for an unconditional invitation for Kyiv to join NATO and a strategic non-nuclear deterrent package for Ukraine among other things.
Addressing parliament, the Ukrainian leader said that it could be possible to end the conflict with Russia no later than next year if his plan was implemented now.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the Ukrainian plan was probably a “camouflaged” US plan which he said was about using Kyiv to fight against Russia “until the last Ukrainian.”
“But there could be a different plan there, which could be really peaceful, which is for the Kyiv regime to realize the futility of the policies they are pursuing and to realize the need to sober up and realize the causes that led to this conflict,” Peskov said.
Russia remains staunchly opposed to Ukraine joining NATO.
Washington, which has provided billions of dollars of arms and aid to Ukraine, has said it’s up to Kyiv how it deals with Russia.


US officials who resigned over Biden’s Gaza policy form new lobby group

US officials who resigned over Biden’s Gaza policy form new lobby group
Updated 16 October 2024
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US officials who resigned over Biden’s Gaza policy form new lobby group

US officials who resigned over Biden’s Gaza policy form new lobby group
  • New political action committee to advocate for a revamp of Washington’s long-standing stance on the Israeli and Palestinian conflict

WASHINGTON: Two US officials who resigned last year in protest over President Joe Biden’s policy on the Gaza war have launched a lobbying organization and a political action committee to advocate for a revamp of Washington’s long-standing stance on the Israeli and Palestinian conflict.
Josh Paul, a former State Department official and Tariq Habash, who used to work as a policy adviser at the US Department of Education, said the American public is no longer in favor of unconditionally sending US weapons to Israel but that elected officials have lagged behind.
Their PAC, called “A New Policy,” would support candidates whose position on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict center on aligning US policies with human rights and equality and would ensure US arms transfers to all countries in the Middle East including Israel comply with both US and international law.
Washington’s unwavering support for Israel’s military operations in Gaza and more recently in Lebanon has emerged as a key reason for why Muslim and Arab voters, who resoundingly had backed Biden in 2020, may withhold their votes from Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris in the upcoming election.
“American voters are clear: they do not want to be complicit in this humanitarian catastrophe and a majority want an end to the transfer of lethal weapons that are used to kill Palestinian civilians,” Habbash said.
Many Muslims and Arabs in the US have urged Biden to call for a permanent ceasefire. Harris faces Republican former President Donald Trump on Nov. 5 in what polls show to be a tight presidential race.
The US is Israel’s largest weapons supplier and has provided it with billions of dollars in military aid since Oct. 7, when Palestinian Hamas militants attacked southern Israel, killing 1,200 people and kidnapping 250 others, according to Israeli tallies.
Israel’s relentless retaliatory offensive of the densely-populated Gaza Strip, which was home to 2.3 million people, has reduced the enclave to a wasteland, with hundreds of thousands of people repeatedly displaced. More than 42,000 people have been killed, according to Palestinian health officials.


Nigeria fuel tanker explosion kills almost 100: police

Nigeria fuel tanker explosion kills almost 100: police
Updated 16 October 2024
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Nigeria fuel tanker explosion kills almost 100: police

Nigeria fuel tanker explosion kills almost 100: police

KANO: A fuel tanker explosion in northern Nigeria has killed at least 94 people and left 50 injured, police said on Wednesday.
Many of the victims had been trying to collect fuel spilt on the road after the tanker crashed in northern Jigawa state late on Tuesday, police spokesman Lawan Shiisu Adam told AFP.
The tanker had veered to avoid colliding with a truck in the town of Majia, he said.
“We have so far confirmed 94 people dead and around 50 injured,” he said, warning the death toll could rise.
Following the crash, residents crowded around the vehicle, collecting fuel that had spilled on the road and in drains, Adam said.
He said the residents had “overwhelmed” officers trying to stop them.
The Nigerian Medical Association has urged doctors to rush to nearby emergency rooms to help with the influx of patients.
Fuel tanker explosions are common in Africa’s most populous nation, where roads can be poorly maintained and residents often look to siphon off fuel following accidents.