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Italy PM to visit Lebanon Friday after hits on UNIFIL

Update Italy PM to visit Lebanon Friday after hits on UNIFIL
Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni warned on Tuesday against withdrawing UN peacekeepers from Lebanon at Israel's unilateral request, as she announced she would visit Lebanon on Friday. (Reuters/File)
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Updated 15 October 2024

Italy PM to visit Lebanon Friday after hits on UNIFIL

Italy PM to visit Lebanon Friday after hits on UNIFIL
  • Meloni would be the first head of state or government to visit the country since an escalation between Israel and Lebanese militant group Hezbollah on September 23
  • Italian troops are part of a UN mission in southern Lebanon that has accused Israeli forces of firing on peacekeepers, something Meloni has said was “unacceptable.”

ROME: Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni warned on Tuesday against withdrawing UN peacekeepers from Lebanon at Israel’s unilateral request, as she announced she would visit Lebanon on Friday.
Meloni would be the first head of state or government to visit the country since an escalation between Israel and Lebanese militant group Hezbollah on September 23.
At least five peacekeepers have been wounded in recent days as Israel targets Hezbollah in southern Lebanon.
Italian troops are part of a UN mission in southern Lebanon that has accused Israeli forces of firing on peacekeepers, something Meloni has said was “unacceptable.”
Speaking to members of the lower house of parliament on Tuesday, she rejected Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s call for the UN to move the peacekeepers.
“I think that a withdrawal based on a unilateral request by Israel would be a serious mistake, it would undermine the credibility of the mission itself, the credibility of the United Nations,” she said.
“And I also think that our soldiers, as they have been precious all these years, will be precious again when we manage to obtain a ceasefire.”
UNIFIL, a United Nations mission of about 9,500 troops of various nationalities created following Israel’s 1978 invasion of Lebanon, has accused the Israeli military of “deliberately” firing on its positions.
Italy is the second-biggest contributor of UNIFIL peacekeepers, and Meloni has been outspoken on the attacks, including during a phone call with Netanyahu on Sunday.
Speaking to the Senate earlier on Tuesday, she said the attitude of the Israeli forces was “entirely unjustified.”
“In recent days, for the first time in a year of Israeli military actions, the positions of the Italian military contingent assigned to the UNIFIL mission of the United Nations have been hit by the Israeli army,” she said.
“Although there were no casualties or significant damage, I believe this cannot be considered acceptable.”
She demanded the security of the soldiers be guaranteed.
She called the Israeli forces’ stance “a blatant violation of what was established by United Nations Security Council Resolution 1701.”
She added: “On the other hand, we cannot ignore the violation of the same resolution committed over the years by Hezbollah, which has worked to militarise the area under UNIFIL’s jurisdiction.”
Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani will be heading to Israel and the Palestinian territories next week, Meloni added.


Afghan man handed life sentence in Germany after fatal stabbing at anti-Islam rally

Afghan man handed life sentence in Germany after fatal stabbing at anti-Islam rally
Updated 9 sec ago

Afghan man handed life sentence in Germany after fatal stabbing at anti-Islam rally

Afghan man handed life sentence in Germany after fatal stabbing at anti-Islam rally
  • Sulaiman A attacked a speaker and several demonstrators at the event before stabbing a police officer who rushed in to help. The officer later succumbed to his injuries
STUTTGART: An Afghan man with suspected Islamist motives was sentenced to life in prison by a German court on Tuesday for a knife attack that killed a police officer and injured five others at an anti-Islam rally last year.
The verdict comes at a time of heated debate about immigration and security in Germany, and a strong surge in support for the country’s far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party.
The defendant, named only as Sulaiman A to protect his privacy, was found guilty of using a large hunting knife to attack people during a demonstration in the western city of Mannheim that was organized by the anti-Islam group Pax Europa in late May 2024.
Sulaiman A attacked a speaker and several demonstrators at the event before stabbing a police officer who rushed in to help. The officer later succumbed to his injuries.
The attacker was taken into pre-trial custody in June 2024 after leaving intensive care for injuries he sustained during his arrest.
Though prosecutors say he sympathized with the Daesh group, he was not tried as a terrorist. He faced one count of murder and five counts of attempted murder.

Ex-British soldier goes on trial for 1972 Bloody Sunday killings in Northern Ireland

Ex-British soldier goes on trial for 1972 Bloody Sunday killings in Northern Ireland
Updated 27 min 35 sec ago

Ex-British soldier goes on trial for 1972 Bloody Sunday killings in Northern Ireland

Ex-British soldier goes on trial for 1972 Bloody Sunday killings in Northern Ireland
  • Prosecutors say the killing of 13 unarmed civil rights demonstrators and wounding of 15 others was unjustified
  • Families of the victims who have campaigned for justice for over 50 years marched to the courthouse holding photos of the dead

LONDON: The only British soldier to be prosecuted in the 1972 Bloody Sunday massacre in Northern Ireland went on trial Monday in Belfast on murder charges in a case that has come to symbolize the three decades of sectarian violence known as “The Troubles.”
The ex-paratrooper, a lance corporal named as “Soldier F” to protect his identity, was concealed behind a blue curtain that shielded him from view of the families of some of the 13 people killed and 15 wounded when troops opened fire on unarmed civil rights demonstrators on Jan. 30, 1972, in Londonderry, also known as Derry.
“The civilians ... did not pose a threat to the soldiers and nor could the soldiers have believed that they did,” prosecutor Louis Mably said during an opening statement in Belfast Crown Court. “The civilians were unarmed and they were simply shot as they ran away.”
The Army veteran pleaded not guilty to two counts of murder and five counts of attempted murder in what was the deadliest shooting of the long-running conflict between mainly Catholic supporters of a united Ireland and predominantly Protestant forces that wanted to remain part of the United Kingdom.
While the conflict largely ended with the 1998 Good Friday peace accord that created a system for Republican and Unionist parties to share power in Northern Ireland, tensions remain. Families of civilians killed continue to press for justice and supporters of army veterans complain that their losses have been downplayed and that they have been unfairly targeted in investigations.
A long march to court
Families of the victims who have campaigned for more than a half century for accountability for the killings marched to the courthouse before the trial carrying photos of the dead and walking behind a banner reading “Towards Justice.”
John McKinney called it a momentous day.
“It has taken 53 years to get to this point, and we have battled all the odds to get here,” said McKinney, whose brother, William, was killed in the shooting.
“Everything that we have achieved to this point has been through relentless commitment and a refusal to lie down,” he said. “We will shortly occupy a courtroom very proudly with our heads held high and in the knowledge that, regardless of the ultimate outcome, that we are on the right side of history.”
From instigators to victims
The fact that it’s taken more than a half century for a trial to get underway reflects the tortured history of the shooting and foreshadows hurdles ahead for prosecutors.
The government initially said members of a parachute regiment fired in self-defense after being attacked by bombers and gunmen and a formal inquiry cleared troops of responsibility. A subsequent and lengthier review in 2010 found soldiers had fired at unarmed civilians fleeing and then lied about it for decades.
Then-Prime Minister David Cameron apologized and said the killings were “unjustified and unjustifiable.”
The findings cleared the way for the eventual prosecution of Soldier F, though that, too, has been beset by delays and obstacles.
It took seven years from the time police opened their investigation until prosecutors announced in 2019 that they would only charge Soldier F. They said there wasn’t enough evidence to charge 16 other former soldiers and two alleged members of the Official Irish Republican Army who were investigated for their roles in the shootings.
Two years later, the Public Prosecution Service dropped the case because they didn’t think they could prevail at trial. They made the decision after a judge tossed out a case against two soldiers in the killing of an Irish Republican Army leader after ruling key prosecution evidence was inadmissible.
Although the prosecution against Soldier F was revived after McKinney’s family appealed, Mably acknowledged Monday that the government would have to clear legal challenges over the use of the type of hearsay testimony that torpedoed the IRA case.
Confusion and chaos on the streets
Mably also said it was not possible to identify who shot each of the victims, but the prosecution’s theory is that Soldier F and others from his battalion had joint responsibility when they pulled the triggers of their self-loading rifles.
Mably described a chaotic scene as soldiers began shooting. Some mistook the sound of gunfire as troops shooting rubber bullets, though the reality quickly became clear as bullets skipped across the pavement and bodies began dropping. Most of those shot were struck in the side or the back.
“These soldiers lost control of themselves,” said Mably, adding that they had “disgraced the British Army.”
In his interview with police in 2016, Soldier F declined to answer questions, saying he had no “reliable recollection” of the events that day but was sure he had properly discharged his duties as a soldier.
Soldier F is charged with two counts of murder in the deaths of James Wray, 22, and William McKinney, 27, and five counts of attempted murder for shooting Joseph Friel, Michael Quinn, Joe Mahon, Patrick O’Donnell and for opening fire at unarmed civilians.
Three of the survivors are expected to testify in the weeks-long trial that resumes Wednesday.
While family members marched for the victims, some veterans gathered outside the courthouse in support of their brethren.
Northern Ireland Veterans Commissioner David Johnstone said it’s important to remember the vast majority of nearly 300,000 British troops served with dignity and restraint and more than 1,000 lost their lives and thousands more were wounded in that tumultuous period.
“Many veterans today feel frustrated, feel angry, and indeed feel betrayed by the legacy process since 1998,” he said. “There must first be a fair and balanced legacy process, a process that does not facilitate the wholesale demonization of those who served and certainly not facilitate the rewriting of the history of the Troubles.”


Trump likely to meet Zelensky next week on peace efforts: Rubio

Trump likely to meet Zelensky next week on peace efforts: Rubio
Updated 16 September 2025

Trump likely to meet Zelensky next week on peace efforts: Rubio

Trump likely to meet Zelensky next week on peace efforts: Rubio
  • Trump came into office vowing to end the war within a day, blaming his predecessor Joe Biden for Russia’s invasion and criticizing the billions of dollars provided by the United States to Ukraine

TEL AVIV: President Donald Trump will likely meet Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelensky next week and still hopes to broker a peace deal between Kyiv and Moscow, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said Tuesday.
Trump has repeatedly threatened sanctions against Russia if President Vladimir Putin does not compromise. But he has not followed through even as Russia ramps up attacks, frustrating Ukraine.
Trump has had “multiple calls with Putin, multiple meetings with Zelensky, including probably next week again in New York,” where leaders will gather for the UN General Assembly, Rubio told reporters in Israel.
“He’s going to keep trying. If peace is possible, he wants to achieve it,” Rubio said.
“At some point the president may conclude it’s not possible. He’s not there yet, but he could get to that point.”
Rubio pointed to a figure previously cited by Trump, saying that Russia lost 20,000 soldiers in fighting in July alone.
Trump a month ago welcomed Putin to Alaska — the first time a Western nation has allowed the Russian leader to visit since he ordered the invasion of Ukraine in 2022 — and days later met with Zelensky alongside European leaders at the White House.
Rubio said that Trump was unique in being able to speak to Putin as well as Zelensky and the Europeans.
“If somehow he were to disengage from this, or sanction Russia and say, ‘I’m done’, then there’s no one left in the world that could possibly mediate the end,” Rubio said.
Trump came into office vowing to end the war within a day, blaming his predecessor Joe Biden for Russia’s invasion and criticizing the billions of dollars provided by the United States to Ukraine.
At a February 28 meeting at the White House that stunned US allies, Trump and Vice President JD Vance publicly berated Zelensky, accusing him of ingratitude, and then briefly cut off US military and intelligence support for Ukraine.
Zelensky has since met Trump twice and each time gone out of his way to praise the US president and voice appreciation for American support.


Pakistan military kills 31 militants, as presence increases

Pakistan military kills 31 militants, as presence increases
Updated 16 September 2025

Pakistan military kills 31 militants, as presence increases

Pakistan military kills 31 militants, as presence increases
  • It comes after 12 soldiers were killed in an ambush in a neighboring district on Saturday
  • Militancy has surged in border regions with Afghanistan since the Taliban’s return to power

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s military said it had killed 31 local Taliban militants in two separate operations near the border with Afghanistan, where the group’s presence has increased.
It comes after 12 soldiers were killed in an ambush in a neighboring district on Saturday, an attack claimed by the Pakistani Taliban (TTP).
The military said in a statement published late Monday that it had killed 31 “Khwarij” over the weekend, a recent term adopted by authorities to describe TTP fighters.
It accused archfoe India, with which Pakistan fought a four-day skirmish in May, of backing the militants.
The nuclear armed neighbors have long accused each other of backing militant forces to destabilize one another.
“Sanitization operations are being conducted to eliminate any other Indian sponsored” militants in the area, said the statement published late Monday.
Militancy has surged in the border regions with Afghanistan since the return to power of the Afghan Taliban in Kabul in 2021.
Security officials have said that the presence of TTP militants has increased over the past two months.
The TTP, which is waging a campaign against security forces, is a separate group from the Afghan Taliban, but they are closely linked.
Islamabad accuses neighboring Afghanistan of failing to expel militants using Afghan territory to launch attacks on Pakistan, which authorities in Kabul deny.
More than 460 people, mostly members of the security forces, have been killed this year in attacks carried out by armed groups fighting the state, both in northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and the southern province of Balochistan, according to an AFP tally.
Last year was Pakistan’s deadliest in nearly a decade, with more than 1,600 killed, nearly half of them soldiers and police officers, according to the Islamabad-based Center for Research and Security Studies.


UN report details ‘systematic looting’ by South Sudan’s rulers as citizens went hungry

UN report details ‘systematic looting’ by South Sudan’s rulers as citizens went hungry
Updated 16 September 2025

UN report details ‘systematic looting’ by South Sudan’s rulers as citizens went hungry

UN report details ‘systematic looting’ by South Sudan’s rulers as citizens went hungry
  • The payments from 2021 to 2024 were just one example of “grand corruption” in the impoverished nation, according to the report by the UN Commission on Human Rights in South Sudan

NAIROBI: UN investigators on Tuesday accused South Sudanese authorities of plundering their country’s wealth, including by paying $1.7 billion to companies affiliated with Vice President Benjamin Bol Mel for road construction work that was never done.
The payments from 2021 to 2024 were just one example of “grand corruption” in the impoverished nation, according to the report by the UN Commission on Human Rights in South Sudan, where average gross domestic product per capita is now a quarter of what it was at independence in 2011.
“The country has been captured by a predatory elite that has institutionalized the systematic looting of the nation’s wealth for private gain,” said the commission, which was created in 2016 by the UN Human Rights Council.
The report cites an annual budget allocation to the president’s medical unit that exceeded health spending across the entire country.
In an official written response sent to the UN commission, Justice Minister Joseph Geng said the report was based on figures that do not match the government’s own data and attributed South Sudan’s economic problems to conflict, climate change and falling sales of its chief export, crude oil.
A spokesperson for Bol Mel declined to comment.
CONFLICT HAS RAGED SINCE INDEPENDENCE
Since 2011, South Sudan has endured repeated bouts of armed conflict, including a 2013-2018 civil war in which an estimated 400,000 people died.
Last week, the government charged First Vice President Riek Machar — whose forces opposed soldiers loyal to President Salva Kiir in the civil war — with crimes against humanity, escalating a feud that has fueled fighting in recent months.
South Sudan is also contending with steep cuts to the foreign humanitarian aid it receives each year.
But the report said corruption best explains its sustained economic and humanitarian woes, with nearly two-thirds of its 12 million people facing crisis levels of hunger or worse.
The commission said the report was based on 173 targeted meetings and interviews from late 2022 to late 2024 as well as government documentation and financial data.
It said its focus on corruption was warranted because graft has undermined the government’s ability to meet its human rights obligations and directly fueled armed violence.
“Locked in a zero-sum competition for power and control of resources and territory, South Sudan’s elites continue to pursue partisan political ends, mobilizing and exploiting ethnic differences and tensions,” it said.
OFF-BUDGET ‘OIL FOR ROADS’
The 101-page report spotlights companies associated with Bol Mel, whom President Salva Kiir elevated to one of South Sudan’s five vice presidential positions in February.
The US government sanctioned Bol Mel and two companies it said were associated with him in 2017, saying one of the firms had allegedly received preferential treatment from high-level government officials to do road work in the country. The US sanctioned two more of his companies in 2021.
After the 2017 sanctions were announced, South Sudan’s government denied the US characterization of him as Kiir’s personal financial adviser and said the decision to blacklist him was based on misleading information.
South Sudanese officials have been asking US President Donald Trump’s administration to lift those sanctions during recent bilateral discussions, Joseph Szlavik, a lobbyist working for Juba in Washington, told Reuters last month.
Those conversations have also touched on sending more US deportees to South Sudan following the arrival in July of eight men, including seven from third countries, Szlavik said.
The State Department told Reuters it does not provide details on private diplomatic communications, but called on Juba to “begin using public revenue to address the public need of the people of South Sudan rather than rely on international assistance.”
According to the UN report, South Sudan’s government disbursed an estimated $2.2 billion from 2021 to 2024 to companies affiliated with Bol Mel through its off-budget “Oil for Roads” program.
In some years, this program consumed around 60 percent of all government disbursements, the report said.
Despite the outlays, the companies affiliated with Bol Mel completed less than $500 million worth of driveable roads, inflating the value of construction contracts by overstating the length of the roads, overcharging relative to industry standards and building fewer lanes than agreed, the report said.
The report did not specify how the companies are affiliated with Bol Mel, but two of the three that it cited by name were those sanctioned by the US in 2021.
Bol Mel has never publicly responded to the accusations against him.
In his response, Justice Minister Geng dismissed the allegations about road spending, saying sums cited in the report were absurdly high given South Sudan’s economic realities.
He pointed to anti-corruption legislation enacted before independence and in July 2024 as proof of the government’s “serious commitment and will to combat corrupt practices.”
PUBLIC SPENDING DOES NOT MEET PUBLIC NEEDS
More broadly, the report said public spending priorities did not reflect the government’s obligations to its citizens.
Little of the more than $23 billion raised from oil exports since independence has gone to address pressing needs like education, health care and food security, it said.
For example, in the 2022-2023 national budget, more money was allocated to the Presidential Medical Unit than to the community, public, secondary and tertiary public health care systems across the entire country, it said.
The government’s response did not specifically respond to this point, but said it was working to promote the well-being of its citizens. The minister of presidential affairs did not respond to a request for comment. (Reporting by Aaron Ross; Editing by Ammu Kannampilly, Aidan Lewis and Ros Russell )