Russian army claims new advance in east Ukraine

Russian army claims new advance in east Ukraine
Ukrainian rescuers clear debris on the site of a Russian missile strike in the eastern city of Dnipro on Oc. 26, 2024, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. (AFP)
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Updated 28 October 2024
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Russian army claims new advance in east Ukraine

Russian army claims new advance in east Ukraine
  • 109 Ukrainian drones in a day over several regions, claims Russian defense ministry

MOSCOW: Russia said Sunday its military had advanced further in east Ukraine, capturing a frontline village just a few kilometers north of a key Ukrainian-held industrial hub.
Moscow has made steady gains on the battlefield for months, pressing its advantage against overstretched and outmanned Ukrainian forces.
Russian army units “liberated the settlement of Izmailovka,” the Russian defense ministry said in a daily briefing, using the Russian spelling for the village.
Izmailivka had a population of just under 200 people before the conflict.
It lies eight kilometers (five miles) north of the key industrial hub of Kurakhove and just a few kilometers north of Kurakhivka, a small town on a stretch of frontline Moscow is trying to surround.
The announcement was followed by Russia on Monday claiming it downed 109 Ukrainian drones in a day over several of its regions, including near the border.
Russian President Vladimir Putin warned on Sunday that Moscow would “respond” if the West allowed Ukraine to use longer-range weapons against his territory.
“It’s too early to say yet, but of course our military department is thinking about it and will offer various responses,” Putin told a state TV reporter in remarks aired Sunday.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has for months been asking his Western allies for permission to use long-range missiles against targets deep inside Russian territory, arguing the move would “motivate” Moscow to seek peace.
The United States and Britain signalled a decision on the matter was imminent last month, but later delayed the move after Putin warned they risked putting NATO “at war” with Moscow.
Putin said on Sunday he hoped the West had listened to that warning.
“They didn’t tell me anything about it, but I hope they heard,” the Russian leader said.

109 drones downed
In a statement, Russia's defense ministry said a total of 45 drones were intercepted in the Briansk region, which borders Ukraine and Belarus, while 26 were destroyed to the south in Russia's Belgorod region.
Eighteen were downed in the Tambov region, about 400 kilometers (250 miles) from the Ukrainian border.
Five were intercepted in the Kursk region, where Ukrainian troops have been conducting a ground offensive since August and control several hundred square kilometres of Russian territory.
One person was lightly wounded when a drone crashed and caught fire at an industrial facility in Russia's western city of Voronezh, governor Alexander Gusev said.
More drones were downed elsewhere in Russia, which announces almost daily that it has destroyed Ukrainian UAVs.
Kyiv says the strikes, which often target energy infrastructure, are in response to Russian bombardments of Ukrainian territory.
 


Taliban insist Afghan women’s rights are protected as UN says their bans cannot be ignored

Updated 2 sec ago
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Taliban insist Afghan women’s rights are protected as UN says their bans cannot be ignored

Taliban insist Afghan women’s rights are protected as UN says their bans cannot be ignored
  • The Taliban say Afghan women live in security with their rights protected
  • The UN renewed its call for bans on women and girls to be reversed, saying the erasure of Afghan females from public life should not be tolerated
The Taliban issued a message on International Women’s Day, saying Afghan women live in security with their rights protected, even as the UN condemned ongoing employment and education bans.
Since the Taliban took control of Afghanistan in 2021, they have barred education for women and girls beyond sixth grade, most employment, and many public spaces. Last August, the Vice and Virtue Ministry published laws that ban women’s voices and bare faces outside the home.
The Taliban’s chief spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid released a statement on his official X account, without specifically mentioning International Women’s Day, which is celebrated on March 8.
He said the dignity, honor, and legal rights of women were a priority for the Islamic emirate, the term used by the Taliban to describe their government.
Afghan women lived in security, both physically and psychologically, he added.
“In accordance with Islamic law and the culture and traditions of Afghan society, the fundamental rights of Afghan women have been secured. However, it should not be forgotten that the rights of Afghan women are being discussed within an Islamic and Afghan society, which has clear differences from Western societies and their culture,” said Mujahid.
Also Saturday, the UN renewed its call for the Taliban to lift the bans.
“The erasure of women and girls from public life cannot be ignored,” said Roza Otunbayeva, the head of the UN mission in Afghanistan. “We remain committed to investing in their resilience and leadership, as they are key to Afghanistan’s future.”
Alison Davidian, special representative for UN Women Afghanistan, said the world could not accept a future for Afghan women that would never be tolerated elsewhere.
“Our response to their erasure is a test of our commitment to women and girls everywhere,” said Davidian. “We must stand with Afghan women as if our own lives depend on it — because they do.”
The Taliban remain isolated from the West — and without international recognition as the country’s official government — because of their restrictions on women and girls.
The Afghanistan Journalists Support Organization said 893 women were currently employed in the media sector. That’s a drop from 2,756 who were working before 2021, according to Reporters Without Borders.
There were nine provinces where there were no women in the media industry, the Afghan support organization said. The declining participation of female journalists, driven by the Taliban’s discriminatory policies, signalled a “concerted effort” to erase women from the media landscape, it said.
On Friday in Paris, UNESCO hosted a high-level conference on women and girls in Afghanistan. Participants included Hamida Aman, the founder of the women-only station Radio Begum, Fawzia Khoofi, a parliamentarian from the former Western-backed government, and rights experts including Richard Bennett, who is barred from entering Afghanistan.
In an apparent dig at the event, the spokesman for the Vice and Virtue Ministry Saif ul-Islam Khyber said recent international conferences held under the name of women’s rights exposed the hypocrisy of certain organizations and European Union foundations.

Putin has ‘no interest in peace’: EU foreign policy chief

Putin has ‘no interest in peace’: EU foreign policy chief
Updated 3 min 35 sec ago
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Putin has ‘no interest in peace’: EU foreign policy chief

Putin has ‘no interest in peace’: EU foreign policy chief
  • Russian leader Vladimir Putin “has no interest in peace,” the European Union’s foreign policy chief said on Saturday, after overnight strikes by Moscow’s troops killed 14 people in Ukraine

BRUSSELS: Russian leader Vladimir Putin “has no interest in peace,” the European Union’s foreign policy chief said on Saturday, after overnight strikes by Moscow’s troops killed 14 people in Ukraine.
“Russian missiles keep relentlessly falling on Ukraine, bringing more death and more destruction. Once again, Putin shows he has no interest in peace. We must step up our military support — otherwise, even more Ukrainian civilians will pay the highest price,” Kaja Kallas said on X.


Britain must accept more Afghan refugees: UN official

Britain must accept more Afghan refugees: UN official
Updated 20 min 27 sec ago
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Britain must accept more Afghan refugees: UN official

Britain must accept more Afghan refugees: UN official
  • Special Rapporteur Richard Bennett: ‘Life is very hard for them. Nobody wants to be a refugee’
  • US, UK ‘need to consistently raise their concerns about human rights when they engage with the Taliban’

LONDON: The UK must accept more refugees from Afghanistan and show greater compassion toward people fleeing the Taliban, the UN special rapporteur for Afghanistan told The Independent.

Richard Bennett’s appeal came almost four years since the Taliban takeover of the country, with Afghan women and girls having suffered under a series of draconian restrictions since 2021.

Afghans are coming to the UK “because they are persecuted and life is very hard for them,” he said: “Nobody wants to be a refugee.”

Under a Home Office scheme for vulnerable Afghans, Britain pledged to accept 20,000 refugees from the country over a five-year period.

Figures from December showed that 34,940 people had arrived from Afghanistan, with almost 26,000 having been given accommodation.

Due to the risk of Taliban reprisals, many refugees resorted to reaching the UK via small boat from Europe.

Bennett, who was banned by the Taliban from entering Afghanistan last year, said: “They are refugees who have been persecuted in a war and now by an oppressive regime. They are truly the classic definition of a refugee.”

He added: “I come from New Zealand, and we had a prime minister who asked people to be kind. So, that’s what I would do, too — to be kind to Afghan refugees, please.”

Bennett has produced several reports detailing the suffering of Afghan women and minorities since his appointment to the UN Human Rights Council in 2022.

The Taliban accused the UN’s findings last year of being “based on prejudices and anecdotes detrimental to interests of Afghanistan and Afghans.”

At the recent Herat Security Dialogue in Spain, Bennett described the situation of women and girls in Afghanistan as “hell.”

There are women “tortured in prison, sometimes sexually abused, beaten and threatened,” he told The Independent, adding that the UN’s rights authorities are trying to “understand the scale and the gravity of the Taliban’s rule.”

He highlighted the Taliban’s latest edicts, including one banning women from appearing near uncovered windows.

“It shows how women and girls are not considered the equal of men and boys, but rather inferior human beings. This is not a situation that any country, any other country can accept in the 21st century,” he said.

Since retaking power in Afghanistan, the Taliban has banned most girls aged over 12 from formal education.

Women have also been barred from parks and prevented from traveling long distances without a male guardian.

The Taliban’s positions on women’s rights is undermining its attempts to gain international recognition, with no country having established formal ties with Afghanistan.

The US and UK should only engage with the Taliban on condition that “measurable improvements” are seen in human rights practices, Bennett said.

“Use that leverage that the international community has — be it political or financial or sanctions — a range of actions can put pressure on the Taliban. And to be clear, I am not against dialogue,” he added.

“I have always been for dialogue, and the US and the UK need to consistently raise their concerns about human rights when they engage with the Taliban — not skirt around or avoid it.”


Trains back to normal at Paris Gare du Nord after WWII bomb defused

Trains back to normal at Paris Gare du Nord after WWII bomb defused
Updated 08 March 2025
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Trains back to normal at Paris Gare du Nord after WWII bomb defused

Trains back to normal at Paris Gare du Nord after WWII bomb defused
  • Rail services resumed on Saturday at Gare du Nord station in Paris, one of a the busiest rail hubs in Europe, after all trains were canceled for much of the previous day

PARIS: Rail services resumed on Saturday at Gare du Nord station in Paris, one of a the busiest rail hubs in Europe, after all trains were canceled for much of the previous day following the discovery of a World War II bomb.
Gare du Nord hosts Eurostar services to London and into continental Europe via Belgium, high-seed trains to northern France, as well as a plethora of regional and suburban services.
Sone 500 trains and 600,000 people were affected Friday “with the entire northern part of the country paralyzed,” said Transport Minister Philippe Tabarot, after one of the toughest days in years on the French rail network in years.
“We are pleased and relieved that it is over,” he said Friday, adding the bomb weighed 500 kilogrammes with 200 kilogrammes of explosives packed inside.
Defusing operations were completed by Friday afternoon, allowing travel to resume.
Rail services resumed progressively from 1700 GMT Friday and were back to normal on Saturday.
“Traffic has resumed normally, everything is open, everything is running normally,” a spokesperson for French rail operator SNCF told AFP Saturday.
High-speed trains to London and Brussels have resumed “like a normal Saturday,” said Eurostar which has laid on extra trains for passengers who could not travel on Friday.
Some 300 police were mobilized to secure the site after the bomb was unearthed close to the tracks during engineering works overnight Thursday to Friday. Nearby residents were evacuated and part of the Paris ring road temporarily closed.
It was not immediately clear when the bomb had been dropped but experts quoted by French media noted that Allied forces had targeted railway infrastructure and factories close to tracks during the German occupation of France in World War II.


Myanmar junta chief says election to be held by January

Myanmar junta chief says election to be held by January
Updated 08 March 2025
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Myanmar junta chief says election to be held by January

Myanmar junta chief says election to be held by January
  • Myanmar’s junta chief said the country would hold an election in December or January, the first in the war-torn nation since the military staged a coup in 2021

BANGKOK: Myanmar’s junta chief said the country would hold an election in December or January, the first in the war-torn nation since the military staged a coup in 2021.
“We are planning to hold the election in December 2025 or ... by January 2026,” General Min Aung Hlaing was quoted as saying in the state-run newspaper Global New Light of Myanmar published Saturday.
The vote would be “free and fair” he said on Friday during a state visit to Belarus, adding that 53 political parties had “submitted their lists” to participate.
“We also invite observation teams from Belarus to come and observe” the slated election, he said during a meeting with Belarusian President Aleksandr Lukashenko in Minsk.
The Myanmar military seized power in 2021, making unsubstantiated claims of massive electoral fraud in 2020 polls won resoundingly by Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy (NLD).
It has since unleashed a bloody crackdown on dissent and as fighting ravages swathes of the country had repeatedly delayed plans for fresh polls that critics say will be neither free nor fair.
The junta is struggling to crush widespread opposition to its rule from ethnic rebel groups and pro-democracy “People’s Defense Forces.”

In 2022, the junta-stacked election commission announced that Suu Kyi’s NLD would be dissolved for failing to re-register under a tough new military-drafted electoral law.
Junta-appointed foreign minister Than Swe in December told delegates from five neighboring countries at a meeting in Bangkok that “progress was being made” toward an election in 2025.
The junta in January extended an already-prolonged state of emergency by six months, eliminating the possibility of long-promised polls until the second half of the year at the earliest.
Southeast Asian foreign ministers in January told the junta to prioritize a ceasefire in its civil war over fresh elections during a meeting in Malaysia.
Min Aung Hlaing told his ruling military council in January that “peace and stability is still needed” before the state of emergency can be lifted and polls held.
The United States has said any elections under the junta would be a “sham,” while analysts say polls would be targeted by the military’s opponents and spark further bloodshed.
A joint statement by election experts published on the International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance’s website in February said they “unequivocally reject” plans by Myanmar’s junta to hold an election in 2025.
More than 6,300 civilians have been killed since the coup, and more than 28,000 arrested, according to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (AAPP) monitoring group.
The conflict has forced more than 3.5 million people to flee their homes, while an estimated 19.9 million people — or more than a third of Myanmar’s population — will need humanitarian aid in 2025, according to the UN.