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Ukraine’s parliament cancels session after Russia fired a new missile

Ukraine’s parliament cancels session after Russia fired a new missile
Above, National Guard servicemen stand guard outside the Ukrainian Parliament on Feb. 23, 2022. (AFP)
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Updated 22 November 2024

Ukraine’s parliament cancels session after Russia fired a new missile

Ukraine’s parliament cancels session after Russia fired a new missile
  • Three Ukrainian lawmakers confirmed that the parliamentary session previously scheduled was canceled
  • President Volodymyr Zelensky’s office continued to work in compliance with standard security measures

KYIV: Ukraine’s parliament canceled a session on Friday as security was tightened after Russia deployed a new ballistic missile that threatens to escalate the nearly three-year war.
Russian troops also struck Sumy with Shahed drones overnight killing two people and injuring 12 more, the regional administration said Friday morning. The attack targeted a residential district of the city.
Ukraine’s Suspilne media, quoting Sumy regional head Volodymyr Artiukh, said the Russians used Shaheds stuffed with shrapnel elements for the first time in the region. “These weapons are used to destroy people, not to destroy objects,” said Artiukh, according to Suspilne.
Separately, Czech Foreign Minister Jan Lipavsky arrived on a visit to Kyiv. He posted a photo from Kyiv’s railway station on his X account Friday morning.
“I am interested in how the Ukrainians are coping with the bombings, how Czech projects are working on the ground and how to better target international aid in the coming months. I will discuss all of this here,” Lipavsky wrote.
Three Ukrainian lawmakers confirmed that the parliamentary session previously scheduled was canceled due to the ongoing threat of Russian missile attacks targeting government buildings in the city center.
Not only is the parliament closed, “there was also recommendation to limit the work of all commercial offices and NGOs that remain in that perimeter, and local residents were warned of the increased threat,” said lawmaker Mykyta Poturaiev, who added this is not the first time such a threat has been received.
President Volodymyr Zelensky’s office continued to work in compliance with standard security measures, a spokesperson said.
Russia on Thursday fired a new intermediate-range ballistic missile in response to Kyiv’s use of US and British longer-range missiles capable of striking deeper into Russian territory, Russian President Vladimir Putin said in an address on Thursday.
It struck a missile factory in Dnipro in central Ukraine. Putin warned that US air defense systems would be powerless to stop the new missile, which he said flies at 10 times the speed of sound and which he called Oreshnik – Russian for hazelnut tree.
The Pentagon confirmed that Russia’s missile was a new, experimental type of intermediate-range missile based on its RS-26 Rubezh intercontinental ballistic missile.


Trump said ‘not allowed’ to run for third term, ‘too bad’

Updated 11 sec ago

Trump said ‘not allowed’ to run for third term, ‘too bad’

Trump said ‘not allowed’ to run for third term, ‘too bad’
ABOARD AIR FORCE ONE: President Donald Trump said Wednesday he is “not allowed” to run for a third term, acknowledging the limits laid out in the US Constitution.
Trump and his supporters have repeatedly raised the question of a 2028 presidential run for the 79-year-old, drawing concern from his foes and cheers from backers.
“I have my highest poll numbers that I’ve ever had, and you know, based on what I read, I guess I’m not allowed to run, so we’ll see what happens... It’s too bad,” Trump said on Air Force One.
The US Constitution limits presidents to two terms, and Trump began his second in January.
Trump, who served his initial term from 2017 to 2021, often mentions that his supporters have called for him to govern beyond his current tenure, despite the constitutional restriction.
The former reality TV star has also recently displayed red hats emblazoned with the slogan “Trump 2028” on a desk in the Oval Office.
A popular theory among his supporters is that Vice President JD Vance could run for president in 2028 on a ticket with Trump.
Trump ruled that idea out this week, and on Wednesday said it was “pretty clear” he couldn’t run again.
“But we have a lot of great people,” he said.
House Speaker Mike Johnson told reporters on Tuesday at a news conference at the Capitol that he spoke with Trump about seeking a third term but doesn’t “see the path for that.”
“It’s been a great run, but I think the president knows, and he and I’ve talked about, the constrictions of the Constitution,” Johnson said.
“There is the 22nd Amendment,” Johnson added, saying that while Trump enjoys taunting Democrats with slogans and hats with “Trump 2028” emblazoned on the front, the Constitution is clear.
“I don’t see a way to amend the Constitution because it takes about 10 years,” Johnson added.
“You’d need two-thirds of Congress and three-fourths of the states to ratify (it). I don’t see the path for that.”
Talk of a third term came after Steve Bannon, Trump’s former adviser and one of the key ideologues of the Make America Great Again movement, last week said “there is a plan” to keep him in the White House.
“He is going to get a third term... Trump is going to be president in ‘28. And people just ought to get accommodated with that,” Bannon told The Economist.
Asked about the 22nd Amendment, which mandates term limits, Bannon said: “There’s many different alternatives. At the appropriate time, we’ll lay out what the plan is.”

Ukraine targets Moscow with drones for third straight night, Russia says

Ukraine targets Moscow with drones for third straight night, Russia says
Updated 11 min 38 sec ago

Ukraine targets Moscow with drones for third straight night, Russia says

Ukraine targets Moscow with drones for third straight night, Russia says
  • Kyiv has kept up long-range drone strikes on Moscow and other Russian regions in recent months, saying the aim is to hit military and industrial assets, sap Russia’s war economy and show Russians the conflict is no longer distant

Ukraine sent drones toward Moscow for the third consecutive night and targeted several other Russian regions, disrupting air traffic throughout the country and threatening an industrial plant in Russia’s south, Russian authorities said on Wednesday.
Russian air defense units destroyed a total of 100 Ukrainian drones overnight, including six in the Moscow region and 13 over bordering regions, the Russian defense ministry said on the Telegram messaging app.
Kyiv has kept up long-range drone strikes on Moscow and other Russian regions in recent months, saying the aim is to hit military and industrial assets, sap Russia’s war economy and show Russians the conflict is no longer distant.
The attacks on Moscow came in several waves, the mayor of the Russian capital, Sergei Sobyanin, said on Telegram.
Russian aviation watchdog Rosaviatsiya said three of Moscow’s four airports, and several others throughout the country, were briefly closed for safety reasons.
Ukraine also launched several drones targeting the Budyonnovsk industrial zone in Russia’s Stavropol region, the region’s governor, Vladimir Vladimirov, said on Telegram. The Russian defense ministry said its units downed two drones over the region, located in the country’s south.
The attack caused no “significant” damage, and there were no casualties, Vladimirov said on the Telegram messaging app.
According to Ukrainian media, including the RBK-Ukraine media outlet, Kyiv attacked the Stavrolen chemical plant in the Budyonnovsk zone, a part of Russia’s Lukoil group.
According to Russian and Ukrainian media, Stavrolen is one of Russia’s main producers of polyethylene and polypropylene.
Reuters could not independently verify the reports of the attack on Stavrolen. Stavropol’s governor did not disclose what was attacked in Budyonnovsk.
Russia typically gives limited details about the effects of Ukrainian strikes on its territory unless civilians or civilian infrastructure are hit.
Over the previous two nights, Russia’s units destroyed 35 Ukrainian drones over the Moscow region, the Russian defense ministry said. There was no damage reported.


Germany to give more than $1 billion for Holocaust survivors’ home care in 2026

Germany to give more than $1 billion for Holocaust survivors’ home care in 2026
Updated 33 min 53 sec ago

Germany to give more than $1 billion for Holocaust survivors’ home care in 2026

Germany to give more than $1 billion for Holocaust survivors’ home care in 2026
  • The compensation was negotiated with Germany’s finance ministry and is the largest budget for frail and vulnerable Holocaust survivor home care in the organization’s history
  • The Claims Conference projected in April that approximately 200,000 survivors are still alive, most of them living in Israel, the United States and Europe, but also scattered all over the globe

BERLIN: The organization that handles claims on behalf of Jews who suffered under the Nazis said Wednesday that Germany has agreed to extend another $1.076 billion (923.9 million euros) for Holocaust survivors ‘ home care around the globe for the coming year.
The compensation was negotiated with Germany’s finance ministry and is the largest budget for frail and vulnerable Holocaust survivor home care in the organization’s history.
“This historic increase to home care funding reflects the complex and growing needs of Holocaust survivors worldwide,” said Gideon Taylor, the president of the New York-based Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany, also referred to as the Claims Conference.
“While we are losing survivors at a rapid pace each year, those who remain are older, frailer and in greater need than ever before,” Taylor said in a written statement. “This budget is critical in providing each of them the opportunity to age in place, a dignity that was stolen from them in their youth.”
The average age of survivors receiving home care through Claims Conference funding has increased from 86 in 2018 to 88.5 in 2024. Data collected by the organization show that survivors are experiencing more complicated health needs and increased disability, with the number of survivors who qualify for full-time assistance due to extreme disability — such as Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and dementia — has nearly doubled during that time period.
Additionally, the Hardship Fund Supplemental payments, which were previously guaranteed to be paid annually to eligible Holocaust survivors until 2027, have been extended through 2028 at an amount of €1,450 per survivor, impacting more than 127,000 Holocaust survivors globally.
The Claims Conference projected in April that approximately 200,000 survivors are still alive, most of them living in Israel, the United States and Europe, but also scattered all over the globe.
Also, righteous rescuers – non-Jews who risked their lives to save Jews during the Holocaust — currently receiving a monthly pension from the Claims Conference, will be eligible to receive home care similar to that provided to Jewish survivors, allowing them to live their final years with dignity in their own homes, the group announced.
Colette Avital, a Holocaust survivor and member of the Claims Conference negotiation delegation, said that “it is deeply meaningful that, 80 years after the liberation, the German government maintains its responsibility to those who suffered and survived.”
“Every survivor — and every rescuer — deserves to live with dignity and to be seen, heard and cared for,” Avital added.
Holocaust education funding was also extended through 2029, for a total funding of €175 million.
The funding comes at a time when knowledge of the Holocaust is declining and antisemitism is sharply on the rise. The funding for education programs will include initiatives for teacher training, academic research and mass-market mediums, like film, gaming and virtual reality experiences that have a greater potential to reach a wider, more mainstream audience, the group said.
“It is imperative that we invest in the future of Holocaust education while we still have living witnesses who can share their firsthand testimonies of survival,” said Greg Schneider, the executive vice president of the Claims Conference.
“This is our moral obligation to the survivors of the Holocaust and to the 6 million who were murdered.”


Regional Spanish leader under fire year after deadly floods

Regional Spanish leader under fire year after deadly floods
Updated 55 min 19 sec ago

Regional Spanish leader under fire year after deadly floods

Regional Spanish leader under fire year after deadly floods
  • Regions are primarily responsible for managing emergencies in Spain’s decentralized political system, but Mazon has denied accusations of dereliction of duty during the country’s deadliest natural disaster in decades

MADRID: One year after historic floods killed 229 people in Valencia, the Spanish region’s leader Carlos Mazon has faced mounting criticism over his handling of the disaster and defied calls to resign.
The eastern region bordering the Mediterranean had woken up under the highest red alert for torrential rain on October 29 last year.
But for five hours, the conservative Mazon, 51, was absent from the front line of an emergency response widely condemned as inadequate.
Above all, the late sending of a mass telephone alert to residents at 8:11 p.m. sparked fierce scrutiny of his agenda and a debate about whether that delayed potentially life-saving action.
“If Mazon had really been where he should have been, the alarm would have arrived on time,” leftist MP Agueda Mico, of the regionalist Compromis party, said on Tuesday.
Regions are primarily responsible for managing emergencies in Spain’s decentralized political system, but Mazon has denied accusations of dereliction of duty during the country’s deadliest natural disaster in decades.
“I did not switch off my mobile, I was not unreachable, I did not lack coverage, I did not lose interest, nor was I lost,” he told local newspaper Las Provincias in a rare interview since the tragedy.
According to the Levante newspaper, a colleague told Mazon there were already “many deaths” when he arrived in the evening at the seat of the regional government after a lengthy lunch.
Mazon resumed work at 7:45 p.m. and joined a critical emergency services meeting at around 8:30 pm, shortly after the telephone alert had been sent.
But the warning was too little, too late: muddy floodwater was already gushing through towns south of Valencia city and claiming lives.

- Shifting narrative -

Mazon said he spent four of his five hours of absence having lunch with a journalist to offer her a job.
This came after he had initially claimed to have eaten with a representative of Valencian businesses, but the person in question quickly came out to deny that account.
The remaining hour of Mazon’s absence — a critical period during which regional authorities hesitated about sending the alarm — remains shrouded in mystery.
The journalist, Maribel Vilaplana, broke her silence last month, saying they left the restaurant “between 6:30 and 6:45.”
But sources close to Vilaplana, contradicting Mazon’s narrative, revealed that he then accompanied her to search for her car instead of heading straight to his office.
An unexplained gap persists in his account of events from 6:57 to 7:34, when Mazon made and received no calls, according to a list he submitted to a parliamentary committee.
At 7:36 pm, the list shows he turned down a call from his then-top emergencies official, Salome Pradas, now under investigation for her role in the handling of the floods.

- Conservatives ‘undermined’ -

Although not under formal judicial investigation himself, Mazon has spent a year resisting intense pressure to resign.
Thousands of protesters have descended on Valencia’s streets every month demanding he quit, while 75 percent of the region’s residents want him to go, according to a poll published on Monday by Las Provincias and conservative daily ABC.
Experts view Mazon as a burden for the national leader of his opposition conservative Popular Party (PP), Alberto Nunez Feijoo, who prefers to dodge the topic.
Mazon “undermines Feijoo as a leader” and gives the Socialists “arguments to respond to corruption accusations” against Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, said Anton Losada, a political science professor at the University of Santiago de Compostela.
For Paloma Roman Marugan, associate professor of political science at Madrid’s Complutense University, the PP has entered “a rabbit hole” that could have been avoided “with a swift resignation that never happened.”
“But bringing him (Mazon) down is a tricky puzzle” for the PP as the party has no obvious replacement and wants to avoid early elections, she told AFP.


Myanmar invites foreign media coverage of junta-run election

Myanmar invites foreign media coverage of junta-run election
Updated 29 October 2025

Myanmar invites foreign media coverage of junta-run election

Myanmar invites foreign media coverage of junta-run election
  • The junta stacked Union Election Commission said in a statement “both local and international news media will be allowed to cover” the election, due to unfold in phases over a matter of weeks

YANGON: International media will be allowed to cover Myanmar’s upcoming junta-run polls, election authorities said Wednesday, an apparent invitation for foreign press to scrutinize the deeply disputed vote.
Myanmar’s junta has “shattered the media landscape” with censorship and intimidation since staging a 2021 coup that sparked a civil war, Reporters Without Borders says.
Local journalists bore the brunt of the crackdown while foreign media quit the country en masse, with AFP the only international news agency maintaining a full in-country bureau.
The junta has touted polls starting December 28 as a path to peace, but the vote will be boycotted in rebel-held enclaves and monitors are dismissing it as a ploy to disguise continuing military rule.
The junta-stacked Union Election Commission said in a statement “both local and international news media will be allowed to cover” the election, due to unfold in phases over a matter of weeks.
The junta-run information ministry “will scrutinize and endorse eligible international media organizations,” said the notice in state newspaper The Global New Light of Myanmar.
It is not clear what that process will entail and which media outlets will be approved for access to a country which has been largely cut-off by the military coup.
Myanmar’s media landscape blossomed during its decade-long democratic thaw, with new domestic outlets springing up and foreign journalists rushing in.
Since the military took back power many of those outlets have shut, moved to rebel-held areas or operate from exile in neighboring Thailand.
Myanmar ranked third among the world’s leading jailers of journalists in 2024, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists.
Rights groups have said the election cannot be legitimate with democratic figurehead Aung San Suu Kyi deposed and jailed in the coup, and her vastly popular National League for Democracy party dissolved.
Protesting against the poll has been made punishable by up to a decade in prison.
Diplomatic sources have told AFP the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) will not send election observers for the vote.
Numerous rights groups lobbied the 11-nation bloc to hold back monitors, lest they lend legitimacy to a vote which they say will be neither free nor fair.