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British PM urged to allow Ukraine to use long-range missiles as Russia continues to hit civilian targets

British PM urged to allow Ukraine to use long-range missiles as Russia continues to hit civilian targets
Rescuers search for victims in an apartment building destroyed by Russian missile attack in centre Lviv, western Ukraine, on Sept. 4, 2024. (AP)
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Updated 15 September 2024

British PM urged to allow Ukraine to use long-range missiles as Russia continues to hit civilian targets

British PM urged to allow Ukraine to use long-range missiles as Russia continues to hit civilian targets
  • Former PM Boris Johnson and former Conservative defense chiefs warned Starmer that “any further delay will embolden President Putin”
  • While Russia had been striking Ukrainian civilian targets at will, Ukraine's forces have been handicapped by Western restrictions

LONDON: British Labour Prime Minister Keir Starmer has been urged by former defense secretaries and an ex-premier to allow Ukraine to use long-range missiles inside Russian territory even without US backing, the Sunday Times reported on Saturday.
According to the Sunday Times, the call came from five former Conservative defense secretaries — Grant Shapps, Ben Wallace, Gavin Williamson, Penny Mordaunt and Liam Fox — as well as from ex-Prime Minister Boris Johnson.
They warned Starmer that “any further delay will embolden President Putin,” the Sunday Times said.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has been pleading with allies for months to let Ukraine fire Western missiles including long-range US ATACMS and British Storm Shadows deep into Russia to limit Moscow’s ability to launch attacks.
Starmer and US President Joe Biden held talks in Washington on Friday on whether to allow Kyiv to use the long-range missiles against targets in Russia. No decision was announced.
Some US officials are deeply skeptical that allowing the use of such missiles would make a significant difference in Kyiv’s battle against Russian invaders.
President Vladimir Putin has said the West would be directly fighting Russia if it allowed Ukraine to strike with Western-made long-range missiles.

While Russia had been striking Ukrainian civilian targets at will, Ukraine's forces have been handicapped by restrictions on use of Western-supplied weapons.

As of July 31, 2024, the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) had recorded 11,520 civilianskilled and 23,640 injured in Ukraine since February 24, 2022, but said they believe the real number is higher.

On Saturday, Russian shelling killed at least seven people in four attacks on the south, southeast and east of Ukraine, regional Ukrainian governors said.
In the Zaporizhzhia region in southeast Ukraine, governor Ivan Fedorov said Russian shells struck an agricultural enterprise in the town of Huliaipole, killing three people.
“All the dead are employees of the enterprise,” Fedorov said in a post on the Telegram messaging app. Reuters could not verify details of these latest attacks in the war in Ukraine.
A missile attack in the suburbs of the Black Sea port city of Odesa killed a man and a woman born in 1958 and 1962 and injured a 65-year-old woman, Oleh Kiper, the Odesa regional governor, said in a post on the Telegram messaging app.
“A married couple died,” he said, adding that they were found during checks of residential and commercial buildings damaged earlier in the day and that Russian forces had used a prohibited cluster warhead.
Shelling killed a sixth person in the southern region of Kherson, governor Oleksandr Prokudin, said. “A 60-year-old man who suffered serious injuries this afternoon died in hospital,” Prokudin wrote on Telegram.
In Kharkiv region, Russia struck the village of Pisky-Radkivski with the high-speed Tornado-S multiple rocket launch system, regional governor Oleh Syniehubov said on Telegram.
The body of a 72-year-old woman was retrieved from the rubble, and two civilians, a man and a woman, were taken to hospital, he added.


North Korea’s Kim Jong Un to watch Beijing military parade alongside Putin and Xi Jinping

North Korea’s Kim Jong Un to watch Beijing military parade alongside Putin and Xi Jinping
Updated 39 sec ago

North Korea’s Kim Jong Un to watch Beijing military parade alongside Putin and Xi Jinping

North Korea’s Kim Jong Un to watch Beijing military parade alongside Putin and Xi Jinping
  • South Korean media reported Kim’s train was expected to arrive in Beijing on Tuesday after confirming its arrival in the Chinese border city of Dandong on Monday night

SEOUL, South Korea: North Korean leader Kim Jong Un is heading to Beijing by train on Tuesday to attend a military parade with his Chinese and Russian counterparts, North Korea’s state media reported. The event could demonstrate their potential three-way unity against the United States.
Kim and Russian President Vladimir Putin are among the 26 world leaders who’ll join Chinese President Xi Jinping to watch Wednesday’s massive military parade in Beijing that commemorates the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II and China’s fight against Japan’s wartime aggressions.
While the event would mark Kim’s first attendance of a major multilateral event during his 14-year rule, it would also be the first time for Kim, Xi and Putin, all key challengers of the US, to gather at the same venue. None of the leaders have confirmed a private trilateral meeting.
The North’s official Korean Central News Agency reported early Tuesday that Kim left Pyongyang for Beijing by his special train on Monday to participate in the celebrations. KCNA, citing Foreign Ministry official Kim Chon Il, said that Kim Jong Un was traveling with top officials including Foreign Minister Choe Son Hui.
South Korean media reported Kim’s train was expected to arrive in Beijing on Tuesday after confirming its arrival in the Chinese border city of Dandong on Monday night.
Kim’s travel marks his first visit to China since 2019 and the fifth visit in total since he inherited power upon his father’s death in late 2011.
Putin arrived in China on Sunday to attend the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, a regional summit, as well as the Beijing parade. Kremlin Aide Yuri Ushakov told Russia’s TASS news agency on Sunday that a meeting with Kim on the sidelines was “under consideration.”
North Korea observers are paying keen attention to Kim possibly meeting Xi bilaterally as well and holding even a trilateral meeting with Xi and Putin. The three leaders have met bilaterally previously but have yet to hold a trilateral meeting.
North Korea’s foreign policy priority has been Russia in recent years as it has been supplying troops and ammunition to support Russia’s war against Ukraine in exchange for economic and military assistance. North Korea’s relations with Russia have reportedly turned cool in recent years, but experts say Kim likely hopes to restore ties as China is North Korea’s biggest trading partner and aid benefactor and he would want to brace for the end of the Russia-Ukraine war.
Since aligning with Russia, North Korea has become more vocal in international affairs beyond the Korean Peninsula, issuing diplomatic statements on conflicts in the Middle East and in the Taiwan Strait, while portraying itself as a part of a united front against Washington. Some experts say Kim’s presence at the multilateral event in Beijing is part of efforts to develop partnerships with other nations close to China and Russia.
Kim’s trip comes as President Donald Trump and new liberal South Korean President Lee Jae Myung have repeatedly expressed their hopes to restart talks with North Korea. North Korea has been shunning talks with the US and South Korea since Kim’s earlier round of diplomacy with Trump collapsed in 2019 after Trump rejected Kim’s demands for major sanctions relief in exchange for partial steps toward denuclearization.
 

 


Mob burns Nigerian woman to death over Islam blasphemy claim: police

Policemen stand guard at the police headquarters in Jos. (AFP file photo)
Policemen stand guard at the police headquarters in Jos. (AFP file photo)
Updated 17 min 50 sec ago

Mob burns Nigerian woman to death over Islam blasphemy claim: police

Policemen stand guard at the police headquarters in Jos. (AFP file photo)
  • Sharia law operates alongside common law in 12 predominantly Muslim states in Nigeria — including Niger — and blasphemy is punishable by death

KANO, Nigeria: A mob burnt a woman to death in central Nigeria over the weekend after accusing her of blasphemy against Islam, police said Monday.
The woman “was set ablaze” on Saturday in a “mob attack” after she made comments about the Prophet Muhammad, police spokesman Wasiu Abiodun in Niger state said in a statement.
He said the woman was a food vendor named Amaye from northwest Nigerian Katsina state.
Abiodun added that the police condemned any act of “jungle justice” and urged members of the public to remain calm during the search for the attackers.
Sharia law operates alongside common law in 12 predominantly Muslim states in Nigeria — including Niger — and blasphemy is punishable by death.
In many cases the accused are killed by mobs without going through the legal process, though the attack on the weekend is not thought to have involved a legal process.
Such attacks are rare though a butcher in the northern city of Sokoto was stoned to death in June 2023 and a Christian college student was killed by Muslim students a year earlier, both after blasphemy allegations.
 

 


Israel moves EU approval for diaspora bond to Luxembourg from Ireland amid Gaza protests

Israel moves EU approval for diaspora bond to Luxembourg from Ireland amid Gaza protests
Updated 02 September 2025

Israel moves EU approval for diaspora bond to Luxembourg from Ireland amid Gaza protests

Israel moves EU approval for diaspora bond to Luxembourg from Ireland amid Gaza protests
  • Non-EU countries must choose one EU member state to apply to for approval of a prospectus where securities are traded in the EU

DUBLIN: Israel has moved the process of securing EU approval for its diaspora bond prospectus to Luxembourg from Ireland amid increasing opposition in Dublin to its central bank’s role in approving the program on behalf of the European Union.
Irish lawmakers and pro-Palestine campaign groups have called on the central bank to stop facilitating the sale of the bonds over the last year due to Israel’s near two-year military campaign in Gaza that has killed more than 63,000 people, mostly civilians, according to Gaza health officials.
Israel’s diaspora bonds are relatively small and sold mainly in Jewish communities around the world to help supplement the state’s bond sales that finance its budget deficit that has risen due to the war. Israel launched a diaspora bond campaign in October 2023 to raise money amid the conflict.
Non-EU countries must choose one EU member state to apply to for approval of a prospectus where securities are traded in the EU and Ireland’s central bank had been asked to approve Israel’s diaspora bond program each year since 2021.
A joint committee of Irish lawmakers recommended in August that the government seek to amend EU regulations so as to allow each individual European central bank to refuse to act as the competent authority for such bond prospectuses.
Protesters have also demonstrated outside the central bank’s offices.
Ireland is one of the most pro-Palestinian EU member states. It officially recognized a Palestinian state last year and the government is drafting legislation on restricting trade with Israeli settlements in the occupied Palestinian territories.
The Irish central bank had consistently said it is legally obliged to approve any prospectus once the relevant conditions are met.
In a letter to a lawmaker published by the central bank, Governor Gabriel Makhlouf said the approval for Israel’s program would be transferred to Luxembourg upon the expiry of the prior year’s prospectus on Monday.
The new prospectus published on the website of Israel Bonds, the country’s borrowing vehicle for diaspora bonds, said its program for the next year had been approved by Luxembourg.
Israel’s finance ministry said the move was a natural step as the state was already working with Luxembourg in its tradable sovereign debt program. The move will ensure Israel “maintains continuous access to investors worldwide,” it added in an emailed statement.


Moroccan convicted in Germany for spying on protest group

Police officers stand guard in Solingen, Germany, Sunday, Aug. 25, 2024. (AP)
Police officers stand guard in Solingen, Germany, Sunday, Aug. 25, 2024. (AP)
Updated 02 September 2025

Moroccan convicted in Germany for spying on protest group

Police officers stand guard in Solingen, Germany, Sunday, Aug. 25, 2024. (AP)
  • A Moroccan security source speaking on condition of anonymity told AFP he was a “radical activist” with a “hostile stance against the kingdom”

BERLIN: A Moroccan man was found guilty on Monday of spying on supporters of a protest group in Germany for a Moroccan secret service.
The suspect, named only as Youssef El A., was handed an 18-month suspended sentence, the higher regional court in Duesseldorf said in a statement.
Youssef El A. “had been working for the Moroccan secret service DGED since at least January 2022,” the court said.
Along with an accomplice identified as Mohamed A., he spied on members of the Hirak movement, a Moroccan opposition protest group, according to the statement.
Youssef El A. had previously been a supporter of the movement, the court said.
Mohamed A. was found guilty of spying on supporters of the Hirak movement in August 2023 and was given a suspended sentence of one year and nine months.
Youssef El A. made a full confession during the trial, the court said.
After his arrest in Germany in January, Moroccan authorities denied that they had any connection with him.
A Moroccan security source speaking on condition of anonymity told AFP he was a “radical activist” with a “hostile stance against the kingdom.”
The man “has no ties to Moroccan intelligence services and has never collected information for them,” the source said.
The Hirak movement emerged in northern Morocco’s Rif region in 2016 following anger over the death of a fishmonger crushed by a bin lorry as he tried to recover swordfish seized by police.
It sparked protests demanding development in the long-marginalized Berber region, which led to dozens of arrests.
 

 


Maduro says US warships with 1,200 missiles targeting Venezuela

Maduro says US warships with 1,200 missiles targeting Venezuela
Updated 01 September 2025

Maduro says US warships with 1,200 missiles targeting Venezuela

Maduro says US warships with 1,200 missiles targeting Venezuela
  • Nicolas Maduro said that ‘in response to maximum military pressure, we have declared maximum readiness to defend Venezuela’
  • US military deployment was welcomed by Guyana’s President Irfaan Ali as ‘anything to eliminate any threat to our security’

CARACAS: Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro said Monday that eight US military vessels with 1,200 missiles were targeting his country, which he declared to be in a state of “maximum readiness to defend” itself.
The United States, which accuses Maduro of heading a drug cartel, has announced a deployment of warships to the south Caribbean in what it labeled an anti-drug trafficking operation. It has made no invasion threat.
Yet Maduro railed at a meeting with international media in Caracas Monday against “the greatest threat that has been seen on our continent in the last 100 years” in the form of “eight military ships with 1,200 missiles and a submarine targeting Venezuela.”
One of the ships, a guided missile cruiser, was spotted going through the Panama Canal from the Pacific to the Caribbean Friday night.
Maduro said that “in response to maximum military pressure, we have declared maximum readiness to defend Venezuela.”
He said more than eight million Venezuelans have enlisted as reservists. Caracas has already announced increased patrols of its territorial waters.
Washington has doubled to $50 million a bounty for the capture of Maduro, whose re-election in 2024 and 2018 were not recognized by the United States or much of the international community amid allegations of fraud and voter oppression.

Known for his fiery, often anti-US tirades, Maduro on Monday said lines of communication with the United States have broken down, and vowed his country “will never give in to blackmail or threats of any kind.”
At the press conference, he warned that US Secretary of State Marco Rubio sought to lead President Donald Trump “into a bloodbath... with a massacre against the people of Venezuela.”
The US military deployment was welcomed, however, by Guyana’s President Irfaan Ali as “anything to eliminate any threat to our security.”
Georgetown and Caracas are engaged in a dispute over the oil-rich border region of Essequibo, which makes up two-thirds of Guyana’s territory but is also claimed by Venezuela.
The bilateral rhetoric has escalated since ExxonMobil discovered massive oil deposits a decade ago off the coast of Essequibo, which has been administered by Guyana for over 100 years.

Maduro has been in Trump’s crosshairs since the Republican’s first term from 2017 to 2021.
But Trump’s policy of maximum pressure on Venezuela, including an oil embargo, has failed to dislodge Maduro from power.
Analysts have told AFP the US military deployment was unlikely to result in any invasion or attack, but rather sought to ramp up pressure on Maduro — who has repeatedly accused Trump of attempting to bring about regime change.
Last week, Caracas petitioned the United Nations to intervene in the dispute by demanding “the immediate cessation of the US military deployment in the Caribbean.”
On Monday, Maduro said Venezuela was prepared for “a period of armed struggle in defense of the national territory” in case of an attack.