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US says at least 3,000 North Korea troops training in Russia

US says at least 3,000 North Korea troops training in Russia
“We assess that between early to mid-October, North Korea moved at least 3,000 soldiers into eastern Russia,” US National Security Council spokesman John Kirby told journalists. (AFP)
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Updated 24 October 2024

US says at least 3,000 North Korea troops training in Russia

US says at least 3,000 North Korea troops training in Russia

WASHINGTON: At least 3,000 North Korean soldiers have been sent to Russia and are training there, the United States said Wednesday, warning that they would become legitimate targets for Kyiv if they engage in combat in Ukraine.

Russia and North Korea have boosted their political and military alliance amid the Ukraine war, with Pyongyang facing long-standing accusations of supplying arms to Moscow’s army.

But the deployment of troops to support Russian forces would be a significant escalation in that support and has prompted warnings from Kyiv and its Western backers, who separately said Wednesday that they would make $50 billion in lending available to aid Ukraine.

“We assess that between early to mid-October, North Korea moved at least 3,000 soldiers into eastern Russia,” US National Security Council spokesman John Kirby told journalists.

The troops traveled by ship from North Korea to Vladivostok, and then went to “multiple Russian military training sites in eastern Russia, where they are currently undergoing training,” Kirby said.

“We do not yet know whether these soldiers will enter into combat alongside the Russian military,” but “if these North Korean soldiers decide to join the fight against Ukraine, they will become legitimate military targets,” he said.

North Korea’s state media has not commented since Seoul’s spy agency said last week said Pyongyang had decided to send a “large-scale” troop deployment to Russia to fight Ukraine.

Moscow on Wednesday refused to confirm or deny the reports, with foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova telling reporters to “ask Pyongyang” where its troops are.

After a briefing by the National Intelligence Service, South Korean lawmaker Park Sun-won said earlier that 1,500 more troops had been sent to Russia, taking the total deployment to 3,000.

Seoul says Pyongyang plans to deploy 10,000 soldiers to Russia by December, with international concerns escalating.

Germany said Wednesday it had summoned North Korea’s envoy to warn the reclusive state against sending troops.

“North Korea’s support of the Russian war of aggression directly threatens Germany’s security and the European peace order,” the German foreign ministry said on social media platform X.

Kyiv on Wednesday called on any North Korean troops deployed by Russia to lay down their arms and save their lives.

“We address fighters of the Korean People’s Army who were sent to help Putin’s regime. You must not die senselessly in a foreign land,” said a statement issued by a group run by Kyiv’s military intelligence.

“You must not repeat the fate of hundreds of thousands of Russian soldiers who will never return home!” it added.

South Korea has said the nuclear-armed North is supplying Russia with weapons for use in Ukraine. The fresh alarm comes after the North’s leader Kim Jong Un and Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a military deal in June.

South Korea will send a delegation to NATO headquarters in Brussels next week to brief the alliance on the situation, officials said.

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky has pleaded for Kyiv’s allies to respond and repeatedly said a North Korean deployment risks further escalating and prolonging the war.

“It is important that our partners do not hide from this challenge. All partners,” he said in an address published late Tuesday.

“And if Russia is still able to make this war bigger and longer, then everyone in the world who is not helping to force Russia to peace is actually helping Putin to fight,” he added.

Experts have said that in return for the troops, North Korea is likely aiming to acquire military technology, ranging from surveillance satellites to submarines, plus possible security guarantees from Moscow.

North Korea and Russia are under UN sanctions — Kim for his nuclear weapons program, and Moscow for the Ukraine war.

Kyiv meanwhile obtained significant new international financial backing on Wednesday in the form of $50 billion in lending that US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said G7 nations are committed to making available this year using profits from the interest on frozen Russian assets.


Indonesia proposes job training partnership with Qatar to boost labor ties

Indonesia proposes job training partnership with Qatar to boost labor ties
Updated 7 sec ago

Indonesia proposes job training partnership with Qatar to boost labor ties

Indonesia proposes job training partnership with Qatar to boost labor ties
  • Qatar is among top 10 destinations for Indonesian migrant workers
  • Jakarta eyes opportunities for young Indonesians in Qatari companies

JAKARTA: Indonesia is looking to deepen its labor relations with Qatar through joint job training and exchange of expertise following talks between their manpower ministers, the Indonesian Ministry of Manpower said on Friday.

More than 37,000 Indonesians live and work in Qatar, making it one of the top 10 destinations for Indonesian migrant workers. Most are employed in the energy, hospitality and construction sectors.

Earlier this week, Indonesia’s Manpower Minister Yassierli held a meeting with his Qatari counterpart, Ali bin Samikh Al-Marri, on the sidelines of the Islamic Conference of Labor Ministers in Doha, where they discussed ways to strengthen labor ties.

“Indonesia and Qatar have big opportunities to build a more concrete and mutually beneficial partnership, whether through joint job training, internship programs, as well as exchange of expertise in the areas of productivity and work safety,” Yassierli said in a statement issued by his office.

Jakarta is keen on creating new opportunities for its young workforce through government-to-government special apprenticeship visa or intra-corporate transfer programs with Qatar’s leading companies, such as Qatar Airways and QatarEnergy.

Southeast Asia’s biggest economy is also seeking further collaboration with Qatar on job training in the farming and construction sectors.

“With the spirit of collaboration and solidarity among OIC (Organization of Islamic Cooperation) countries, we can create a world of work that is inclusive, equitable, and oriented towards the welfare of the workforce,” Yassierli said.

His meeting in Doha this week follows talks between senior officials of Indonesia’s Ministry of Indonesian Migrant Workers Protection and Qatar’s Ministry of Labor in July, where they discussed the potential for more Qatari recruitment of Indonesian workers.

Increasing labor cooperation has been one of the main focuses in the growth of Indonesia-Qatar relations in recent years.

Earlier in April, sovereign wealth fund Danantara Indonesia announced the formation of a $4 billion joint fund with the Qatar Investment Authority, an initiative that will focus on projects in Indonesia’s downstream industries and sectors that process Indonesian commodities, including renewables.


Sweden seeks arrest of Qur'an burner’s suspected murderer

Sweden seeks arrest of Qur'an burner’s suspected murderer
Updated 6 min 28 sec ago

Sweden seeks arrest of Qur'an burner’s suspected murderer

Sweden seeks arrest of Qur'an burner’s suspected murderer
  • Momika, an Iraqi Christian, was shot on January 29 in an apartment in Sodertalje, south of Stockholm
  • According to documents filed with the Sodertalje district court, the suspect was a 24-year-old Syrian man

STOCKHOLM: Swedish prosecutors on Thursday sought the arrest a young Syrian man for killing Salwan Momika, who repeatedly burned copies of the Qur'an in 2023 and sparked outrage in the Muslim world.
Momika, an Iraqi Christian, was shot on January 29 in an apartment in Sodertalje, south of Stockholm. He died soon after in hospital.
“We have a clear picture of the sequence of events, and following extensive technical investigations and a review of the collected surveillance footage, we have requested that a person be remanded in custody,” senior prosecutor Rasmus Oman said in a statement.
Oman added that “at present, the whereabouts of the suspect are unknown.”
A court hearing will be held on Friday.
According to documents filed with the Sodertalje district court, the suspect was a 24-year-old Syrian man.
The prosecutor said the suspect “killed Salwan Momika by shooting him several times with a handgun,” adding that the murder had been extensively planned.
Five men were originally arrested just hours after the shooting but were all released two days later.
They were formally dismissed as suspects in March.
Momika was killed just hours before a Stockholm court was due to rule whether he and co-defendant Salwan Najem were guilty of inciting ethnic hatred.
After Momika’s murder, the Stockholm court postponed its ruling for several days.
It ultimately convicted 50-year-old Najem, also of Iraqi origin, of inciting ethnic hatred during four Qur'an burnings in 2023. There was no ruling on Momika.
Relations between Sweden and several Middle Eastern countries were strained by the pair’s actions.
Iraqi protesters stormed the Swedish embassy in Baghdad twice in July 2023, starting fires in the compound on the second occasion.
In August 2023, Sweden’s intelligence service Sapo raised its threat level to four on a scale of one to five, saying the Qur'an burnings had made the country a “prioritized target.”


Picasso painting disappears en route to Granada exhibit

Picasso painting disappears en route to Granada exhibit
Updated 11 min 30 sec ago

Picasso painting disappears en route to Granada exhibit

Picasso painting disappears en route to Granada exhibit
  • The foundation confirmed on Friday that the painting was insured for an appraised value of $700,000
  • The shipment was delivered to the CajaGranada cultural center on the morning of October 3

MADRID: A 1919 Pablo Picasso painting has disappeared in transit ahead of its display at a temporary exhibition in the southern Spanish city of Granada, prompting a police investigation, according to the foundation organizing the exhibit.
The CajaGranada Foundation said in a statement late on Thursday that the missing piece — a small framed gouache titled “Still life with guitar” — was part of a larger shipment of artworks moved from Madrid to the Andalusian city for the exhibition “Still life. The eternity of the inert.” 


The foundation confirmed on Friday that the painting, owned by a private collector and measuring 13 x 10 centimeters (5 x 4 inches), was insured for an appraised value of 600,000 euros ($700,000).
The shipment was delivered to the CajaGranada cultural center on the morning of October 3, a Friday.
The loss was not discovered until the following Monday, when the exhibit’s curator and the foundation’s head of exhibitions began unpacking the crates.
“As not all packages were properly numbered, it was not possible to carry out a thorough check without unpacking them,” the foundation added.
The CajaGranada Foundation said it had reviewed the security footage from that weekend and confirmed “no incident occurred” during that time.
After discovering the painting was missing, the foundation filed a complaint with Spain’s national police.
The organization said it has made all its resources available to investigators and expressed confidence in the authorities’ ability to resolve the case.


King Charles III’s visit to Vatican marks a historic step in path of unity between two churches

King Charles III’s visit to Vatican marks a historic step in path of unity between two churches
Updated 42 min 8 sec ago

King Charles III’s visit to Vatican marks a historic step in path of unity between two churches

King Charles III’s visit to Vatican marks a historic step in path of unity between two churches
  • Charles, who is titular head of the Church of England, strongly wanted to visit the Vatican during the 2025 Holy Year
  • During the visit, Charles will be given a formal new title and recognition at a pontifical basilica

VATICAN CITY: The Catholic Church and Church of England, divided for centuries over issues that now include the ordination of female priests, will take a historic step on the path to unity next week when Britain’s King Charles III and Pope Leo XIV pray together in the Sistine Chapel, officials said Friday.
The Oct. 23 ecumenical prayer service, drawing on the shared concern for care of God’s creation, marks the first time since the Reformation that the heads of the two Christian churches pray together.
Buckingham Palace and Vatican officials on Friday announced details of the two-day trip that Charles and Queen Camilla will undertake on Oct. 22-23, a visit that was scheduled for April but was postponed after Pope Francis’ final illness, shortly before his death.
Charles, who is titular head of the Church of England, strongly wanted to visit the Vatican during the 2025 Holy Year, a once-every-quarter century celebration of Christianity. In doing so, he is following in the footsteps of his late mother, Queen Elizabeth II, who visited during the 2000 Jubilee, said Monsignor Flavio Pace, secretary of the Vatican’s office for promoting Christian unity.
During the visit, Charles will be given a formal new title and recognition at a pontifical basilica that has strong, traditional ties to the Church of England, St. Paul’s Outside the Walls. The title “Royal Confrater,” is a sign of spiritual fellowship and will be given to Charles along with a special chair decorated with his coat of arms that will remain in the basilica for Charles and his heirs to use, officials said.
Anglicans split from the Catholic Church in 1534 when English King Henry VIII was refused a marriage annulment. While popes for decades have forged warm relations with the Church of England and the broader Anglican Communion on a path toward greater unity, the two churches remain divided over issues such as the ordination of female priests, which the Catholic Church prohibits.
Significantly, the Archbishop of Canterbury-designate, Sarah Mullally, will not join the king and queen since she hasn’t been formally installed as the Church of England’s spiritual leader. She is the first woman to hold the position, which is considered the first among equals in the broader Anglican Communion, which has more than 85 million members spread across 165 countries.
In her place, the archbishop of York will preside with Leo in the Sistine Chapel service, which will feature hymns sung by members of the royal choirs alongside the Sistine Chapel choir, Pace said.
Pace dodged a question about whether the Sistine Chapel service would have gone ahead as planned had Mullally been installed in time and joined the king and queen on the visit. He noted past joint statements of the Catholic and Anglican churches acknowledging their differences over women’s ordination but insisting that such obstacles shouldn’t prevent theological dialogue from continuing.
Charles and Camilla’s trip was originally scheduled for April as part of a joint Vatican-Italy state visit. After Francis got sick, the king and queen went ahead with the planned four-day leg in Italy, and briefly greeted Francis at the Vatican just a few weeks before he died.


Western pressure to hit Asian buying of Russian oil from December, sources say

Western pressure to hit Asian buying of Russian oil from December, sources say
Updated 17 October 2025

Western pressure to hit Asian buying of Russian oil from December, sources say

Western pressure to hit Asian buying of Russian oil from December, sources say
  • Washington is exerting pressure on China, India and Japan through trade talks to reduce their purchases of Russian oil
  • China and India’s seaborne imports of key Russian crude grades are expected to rebound

NEW DELHI/SINGAPORE/TOKYO: US and European pressure on Asian buyers of Russian energy could restrict India’s oil imports from December, leading to cheaper supplies for China, while Japan is unlikely to halt its Sakhalin liquefied natural gas shipments for now, trade sources and analysts said.
Washington is exerting pressure on China, India and Japan through trade talks to reduce their purchases of Russian oil and LNG, while Britain has just imposed sanctions on Chinese and Indian entities. More sanctions from the European Union could follow. Western nations say Moscow is using its energy revenues to fund the Ukraine war.
The moves come after Russia ramped up crude exports this month as Ukrainian drone attacks on its refineries have reduced oil processing. China and India’s seaborne imports of key Russian crude grades are expected to rebound to about 3.1 million barrels per day in October, the highest volume since June, data from analytics firm Kpler showed.
These imports are expected to remain high through November given the sharp rise in exports from Russia, Kpler’s senior oil analyst Muyu Xu said.
“However, the sudden UK sanctions on Chinese and Indian refineries — and the possibility of more measures from the EU or even the US — could prompt buyers to take a more cautious approach when placing new orders until further clarification emerges,” she added.

INDIA CUTS NOT YET VISIBLE
A White House official said on Thursday that Indian refiners are already cutting Russian oil imports by 50 percent. Indian sources said the cut was not visible yet, though it could be reflected in import numbers for December or January. Refiners had already placed orders for November loading that included some cargoes for December arrival as well, multiple sources said.
“We do not think India can stop Russian crude purchases overnight, even if it has agreed to do so, as at least 700,000 bpd of India imports of Russian crude are on a term basis,” consultancy FGE said in a note.
“Therefore, the maximum volume of Russian crude flows to India we see as potentially being at risk in the short term is the 0.8-1 million bpd of spot volumes that Indian refiners take,” FGE analysts said. China could pick up some of the volumes backed out of India as Russian crude discounts will widen further, they added.
Meanwhile, Indian refiners have bought rare Guyanese crude as they diversify purchases that would mitigate the impact on their operations if Russian supply was cut.

SANCTIONS ON NAYARA, YULONG
Britain slapped sanctions on India’s Nayara refinery, which is already reeling from EU sanctions, and on Chinese refiner Yulong Petrochemical which operates a 400,000 barrels per day refinery in China’s eastern Shandong province.
The UK government has given Yulong until November 13 to complete outstanding transactions, allowing the refiner to handle its upcoming Middle Eastern imports, Kpler’s Xu said.
It’s unclear if Yulong can establish a new supply chain to circumvent the sanctions, she added.
“The move has undoubtedly sounded an alarm for other Russian oil buyers who may have previously overlooked sanctions from non-US authorities,” Xu said.
June Goh, a senior oil market analyst at Sparta Commodities, said the UK sanctions are unlikely to significantly impact Yulong, but the refiner will find it hard to maintain operations if the EU and the US follow suit.
Meanwhile, Taiwan’s Russian naphtha imports are set to fall after a group of non-governmental organizations criticized the island’s continued business with Russia.
However, Ukrainian attacks on Russian energy infrastructure, as well as a partial ban imposed by Moscow on Russian exports of gasoline and diesel, have already been capping Russian refined product shipments, traders said.

JAPAN LNG IMPORTS
The US has also called on Japan to halt Russian energy imports, ahead of US President Donald Trump’s expected visit to Asia later this month.
Tokyo has agreed with other G7 countries to phase out Russian oil imports in response to Moscow’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine, but it has exemptions to continue importing LNG from the Sakhalin-2 project under long-term contracts.
An early termination of these contracts would result in various penalties, said Yuriy Humber, CEO of Tokyo-based consultancy Yuri Group. Also, securing an additional 6 million metric tons of LNG annually on the spot market to replace Russian supply would not be easy and is “massively expensive,” he said.
Russian LNG, which accounts for about 9 percent of Japanese imports, is an important stable supply source for Japan, Kingo Hayashi, chairman of Japan’s Federation of Electric Power Companies, told reporters on Friday, adding that Japanese utilities want to continue using it.
Anne-Sophie Corbeau, a researcher at Columbia University’s Center on Global Energy Policy, said the US needs to have a consistent and coherent policy on Russian LNG.
“On the one side, they are pressuring their allies to stop importing Russian gas or LNG. But they are not implementing their own sanctions on Arctic LNG 2,” she said, referring to Russia’s large-scale LNG project in northern Siberia which is still delivering LNG to China despite being under US sanctions.