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‘Pissed off’ at Putin, Trump threatens tariffs on Russian oil if Moscow blocks Ukraine deal

‘Pissed off’ at Putin, Trump threatens tariffs on Russian oil if Moscow blocks Ukraine deal
In a sharp change of tone to his normal stance towards Moscow, US President Donald Trump told an NBC reporter that he was angered when Russian President Vladimir Putin (right) started getting into Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky's credibility. (AFP)
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Updated 31 March 2025

‘Pissed off’ at Putin, Trump threatens tariffs on Russian oil if Moscow blocks Ukraine deal

‘Pissed off’ at Putin, Trump threatens tariffs on Russian oil if Moscow blocks Ukraine deal
  • “If Russia and I are unable to make a deal on stopping the bloodshed in Ukraine, and if I think it was Russia’s fault," he said on NBC News
  • Putin on Friday suggested Ukraine could be placed under a form of temporary administration to allow for new elections that could push out Zelensky
  • Trump plans to speak with Putin this week, NBC News says

ABOARD AIR FORCE ONE: US President Donald Trump said on Sunday he was “pissed off” at Russian President Vladimir Putin and will impose secondary tariffs of 25 percent to 50 percent on buyers of Russian oil if he feels Moscow is blocking his efforts to end the war in Ukraine.
Trump told NBC News he was very angry after Putin last week criticized the credibility of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s leadership, the television network reported, citing a telephone interview early on Sunday.
Since taking office in January, Trump has adopted a more conciliatory stance toward Russia that has left Western allies wary as he tries to broker an end to Moscow’s three-year-old war in Ukraine.
His sharp comments about Putin on Sunday reflect his growing frustration about the lack of movement on a ceasefire.
“If Russia and I are unable to make a deal on stopping the bloodshed in Ukraine, and if I think it was Russia’s fault ... I am going to put secondary tariffs on oil, on all oil coming out of Russia,” Trump said.
“That would be, that if you buy oil from Russia, you can’t do business in the United States,” Trump said. “There will be a 25 percent tariff on all oil, a 25- to 50-point tariff on all oil.”
Trump later reiterated to reporters he was disappointed with Putin but added: “I think we are making progress, step by step.”
Trump said he could impose the new trade measures within a month.
There was no immediate reaction from Moscow. Russia has called numerous Western sanctions and restrictions “illegal” and designed for the West to take economic advantage in its rivalry with Russia.
Trump, who spent the weekend at his estate in Palm Beach, Florida, told NBC News he planned to speak with Putin this week. The two leaders have had two publicly announced telephone calls in recent months but may have had more contacts, the Kremlin said in video footage last week.
The White House had no immediate comment on when the call would take place, or if Trump would also speak with Zelensky.
Trump has focused heavily on ending what he calls a “ridiculous” war, which began when Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022, but has made little progress.
Putin on Friday suggested Ukraine could be placed under a form of temporary administration to allow for new elections that could push out Zelensky.
Trump, who himself has called for new elections in Ukraine and denounced Zelensky as a dictator, said Putin knows he is angry with him. But Trump added he had “a very good relationship with him” and “the anger dissipates quickly ... if he does the right thing.”

Growing pressure to end war
Trump’s comments followed a day of meetings and golf with Finnish President Alexander Stubb on Saturday, during Stubb’s surprise visit to Florida.
Stubb’s office on Sunday said he told Trump a deadline needs to be set for establishing a Russia-Ukraine ceasefire to make it happen and suggested April 20 since Trump would have been in office then for three months.
US officials have been separately pushing Kyiv to accept a critical minerals agreement, a summary of which suggested the US was demanding all Ukraine’s natural resources income for years. Zelensky has said Kyiv’s lawyers need to review the draft before he can say more about the US offer.
Trump told reporters on Air Force One he thought Zelensky was “trying to back out of the rare earth deal.... if he’s looking to renegotiate the deal, he’s got big problems.” Trump also told reporters that Ukraine would never be part of NATO.
Trump’s latest tariff threats would add to the pain already facing China, India and other countries through trade measures imposed during his first two months in office, including duties on steel, aluminum and cars. More duties on imports from the countries with the largest trade surpluses are slated to be announced on Wednesday.
William Reinsch, a former senior Commerce Department official now at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said the haphazard way Trump was announcing and threatening tariffs leaves many questions unanswered, including how US officials could trace and prove which countries were buying Russian oil.
Trump set the stage for Sunday’s news with a 25 percent secondary tariff imposed last week on US imports from any country buying oil or gas from Venezuela.
His remarks to NBC suggest he could take similar action against US imports from countries that buy oil from Russia, a move that could hit China and India particularly hard.
The US has not imported any Russian barrels of crude oil since April 2022, according to US government data. Before that, US refiners bought inconsistent volumes of Russian oil, with a high of 98.1 million barrels in 2010 and low of 6.6 million in 2014, according to a review of EIA data since 2000.
India has surpassed China to become the biggest buyer of seaborne Russian crude, which comprised about 35 percent of India’s total crude imports in 2024.
Trump on Sunday also said he could hit buyers of Iranian oil with secondary sanctions if Tehran did not reach an agreement to end their nuclear weapons program.


Egyptian, Congolese contenders vie for UNESCO top job

Egyptian, Congolese contenders vie for UNESCO top job
Updated 10 sec ago

Egyptian, Congolese contenders vie for UNESCO top job

Egyptian, Congolese contenders vie for UNESCO top job

PARIS: An Egyptian former minister is the favorite to become head of the UN’s culture agency, but his Congolese rival says bets are still off before a key decision next week.
The vote to replace outgoing French UNESCO director-general Audrey Azoulay after two four-year terms in office is not expected until Nov. 6, during the body’s general assembly in Uzbekistan.
But UNESCO’s executive board is expected to recommend a name, in a move that has in the past led to that person’s election by the assembly.
Just two candidates remain in competition for the top job after a Mexican contender withdrew in August.
They are former Egyptian Antiquities and Tourism Minister Khaled Al-Enany and the Republic of Congo’s Firmin Edouard Matoko, who served as UNESCO’s de facto foreign minister until March.
Enany, a 54-year-old Egyptologist who announced his intention to run more than two years ago, has emerged as a favorite.
When the board interviewed the candidates in April, the Egyptian was “by far the best” candidate, said a European diplomat.
A source with knowledge of UNESCO workings said Enany’s election was a “done deal.”
However, Matoko, a 69-year-old diplomat who has worked at UNESCO since 1990, has argued that he is a better candidate, with more knowledge of the agency.
The recommendation of the executive board, which comprises 58 out of 194 member states, is expected to be key.
“When they don’t name you, you can go home and rethink your career plans,” said Matoko.
Enany oversaw antiquities and, later, also tourism, from 2016 to 2022 under President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi.
Since announcing his bid in 2023, he claims to have visited 65 countries and met with 400 people over the course of 30 months on the campaign trail. Matoko has dismissed these remarks.
“You don’t need to visit 70 countries to make yourself known,” he said.
“I’ve been visiting countries for 30 years. I’ve visited more than 100 countries to suggest solutions,” during UNESCO postings in Africa, South America, and in Paris, he added.
The Republic of Congo has gone all out in recent weeks at trying to gain traction for its contender.
It has deployed at least three ministers, including the president’s son, International Cooperation Minister Denis Christel Sassou Nguesso, to plead the case for a Congolese UNESCO chief in Asia, South America, the Caribbean, and the Gulf.
“The race is not over, the vote remains completely open,” said Sassou Nguesso, adding they had the backing of many of the 13 sub-Saharan African nations on the executive board.
“It’s a secret ballot. We have confidence in the African group, and backing from some other countries,” he said.
Senegal’s Amadou-Mahtar Mbow was the agency’s only sub-Saharan director-general from 1974 to 1987.
Enany has countered that the African Union, of which Egypt is a member, has three times backed his candidacy.
His team says he also has the backing of the Arab League, as well as individual support from executive board members.
“We don’t think it’ll be a tight race,” a member of his team said, requesting anonymity.
Matoko was recently campaigning in New York when world leaders attended the UN General Assembly last week.
Enany, however, stayed in France to attempt to persuade UNESCO delegates at home that it was time for the Paris-based agency to be headed by an Arabic-speaking country.
His critics point to the risks associated with such a choice, especially in the context of the Gaza war.
“Matoko would be a smoother candidate in terms of geostrategic issues,” Sassou Nguesso, who vowed to campaign until the last minute.
“You have to plow your field until the day of the vote,” he said.


Anti-Muslim hate reports spike after right-wing rally, charity warns

Anti-Muslim hate reports spike after right-wing rally, charity warns
Updated 02 October 2025

Anti-Muslim hate reports spike after right-wing rally, charity warns

Anti-Muslim hate reports spike after right-wing rally, charity warns
  • In the 7 days after United the Kingdom rally, Tell Mama received 157 reports of anti-Muslim hate
  • ‘This comes at a time when real political leadership on this matter is missing’

LONDON: Anti-Muslim hate reports surged in the week following last-month’s right-wing Unite the Kingdom rally in London last month, charity Tell Mama has said, highlighting growing anxiety among Muslim and migrant communities.

The rally, held on Sept. 13, attracted over 150,000 people. In the seven days after, Tell Mama received 157 reports of anti-Muslim hate, with victims describing being told to “leave the UK” and “go back to your country.”

Between June and September, the charity recorded a total of 913 cases, including attacks on 17 mosques and Islamic institutions.

Tell Mama said the increase in reports following the rally appeared to be linked to “political discourse around migration,” and warned that such rhetoric is having a direct impact on the daily lives of Muslim communities.

Iman Atta, director of Tell Mama, described the figures as “shocking,” and warned that the full-year total could surpass last year’s record of more than 6,000 incidents.

“We are looking at a serious problem of anti-Muslim hatred that is pervasive in parts of our country. This comes at a time when real political leadership on this matter is missing,” she said.

The charity, which has monitored anti-Muslim hate for more than a decade, also confirmed it will no longer apply for government funding following an apparent dispute over resources.

Earlier this year, the British Muslim Trust was selected to receive investment from the new Combatting Hate Against Muslims Fund.

The BMT brings together the Aziz Foundation and Randeree Charitable Trust to analyze data and identify drivers behind the rise in anti-Muslim hatred across England.

Tell Mama said the surge in hate reports underscores a broader concern about how political narratives around migration are translating into harassment and abuse on the streets.

“The national debate around migration is having real-world impacts on the lives of people going about their daily activities,” the charity said.


Putin vows ‘significant’ response to ‘Europe’s militarization’

Putin vows ‘significant’ response to ‘Europe’s militarization’
Updated 02 October 2025

Putin vows ‘significant’ response to ‘Europe’s militarization’

Putin vows ‘significant’ response to ‘Europe’s militarization’
  • “Russia will never show weakness or indecisiveness,” Putin said

SOCHI: Russian President Vladimir Putin on Thursday promised a “significant” response to “Europe’s militarization,” as he addressed a foreign policy forum in southern Russia.
“We are closely monitoring the rising militarization of Europe,” he told the audience, adding: “Retaliatory measures by Russia will not take long. The response to such threats will be very significant.”
“Russia will never show weakness or indecisiveness,” Putin added.
Relations between Russia and the EU spiralled downward after Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine, leading the bloc to bolster its defense.
Drone incidents in Denmark and aerial incursions from Moscow in Estonia and Poland have heightened fears that Russia’s war on Ukraine could spill over Europe’s borders.
Putin accused Europe of stoking up “hysteria” to excuse rising military spending and said Russia wasn’t a threat. “Just calm down,” the Russian President said.


Gaza flotilla activist ‘disgusted’ by UK’s lack of intervention after Israeli interception

Gaza flotilla activist ‘disgusted’ by UK’s lack of intervention after Israeli interception
Updated 02 October 2025

Gaza flotilla activist ‘disgusted’ by UK’s lack of intervention after Israeli interception

Gaza flotilla activist ‘disgusted’ by UK’s lack of intervention after Israeli interception
  • UK’s PM accused of ‘moral bankruptcy’ for failing to act

LONDON: A British-Polish activist detained on board an aid flotilla bound for Gaza has accused the UK’s Prime Minister Keir Starmer of “moral bankruptcy” for failing to act after the vessel was intercepted by Israeli forces.

Ewa Jasiewicz, a journalist and campaigner who was also on the 2010 Gaza Freedom Flotilla in which nine activists were killed, was among hundreds detained on Wednesday night when the Global Sumud Flotilla was stopped en route to the besieged territory.

from detention, Jasiewicz said: “I'm stunned that (Starmer) can be this morally and ethically bankrupt. Is this what being in power does to somebody? I’m not just baffled, I’m disgusted as well.”

Calling on the UK to intervene, she added: “I fully expect my MP to intervene on my behalf and to support civilian efforts to break the siege on Gaza. I expect full diplomatic and state efforts to lift this genocidal siege on Gaza.”

The Global Sumud Flotilla, made up of 44 boats carrying around 500 activists from more than 40 countries, set out with the aim of delivering aid to Palestinians in Gaza.

Among those taking part was Swedish activist Greta Thunberg. Tracking data shows at least one boat in the flotilla is still heading toward the territory.

Israeli authorities described the flotilla as an “initiative serving the terror group Hamas’ agenda,” accusations rejected by participants.

Jasiewicz said Israeli commandos boarded her vessel, the Sumud, “in a very violent way,” firing rubber bullets, using tasers and threatening activists.

She also claimed that detainees were humiliated once in custody, with soldiers filming them on their phones.

“It was not a good experience. It was scary, being on a vessel that was moving,” she said.

Jasiewicz compared the UK’s stance on Gaza with its support for Ukraine.

“I want to see the same legal and moral standards that states including the UK and Poland, my countries, rightly apply to the ongoing invasion and occupation of Ukraine,” she said.

“These double standards amount to racist hypocrisy and dehumanization of Palestinian lives.”

Her criticism carries particular weight given her history with the flotilla movement.

In 2010 she was traveling in a fleet of six ships raided by Israeli forces in a deadly confrontation that left nine activists dead, dozens injured and 10 Israelis wounded.

A UN investigation later found that at least six of the deaths were “in a manner consistent with an extra-legal, arbitrary and summary execution.”

In London, Camden Friends of Palestine has written to Starmer demanding he guarantee Jasiewicz’s safety, while campaigners have been planning a protest in Parliament Square.

The UK’s Foreign Office said it was “very concerned about the situation with the Sumud Flotilla” and is in contact with the families of those involved.

The Israeli military did not respond to a request for comment, according to The Independent.


Malaysia vows legal action against Israel’s ‘criminal’ abduction of Gaza flotilla crew

Reporters take photos of Malaysian participants of Global Sumud Flotilla after their confirmed abduction by Israel.
Reporters take photos of Malaysian participants of Global Sumud Flotilla after their confirmed abduction by Israel.
Updated 02 October 2025

Malaysia vows legal action against Israel’s ‘criminal’ abduction of Gaza flotilla crew

Reporters take photos of Malaysian participants of Global Sumud Flotilla after their confirmed abduction by Israel.
  • Malaysia loses contact with 23 citizens aboard Global Sumud Flotilla vessels
  • Israel’s conduct is ‘state piracy’: ASEAN Parliamentarians for Human Rights co-chair

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia vowed on Thursday to take legal action against Israel after some 200 international activists, including Malaysian citizens, were abducted at sea as they carried aid for Gaza aboard the Global Sumud Flotilla.

The GSF mission, which involved representatives from 45 countries, carried over 400 people, including 34 Malaysians. It was scheduled to arrive at Gaza’s coast on Thursday afternoon, but the journey was disrupted after several vessels were intercepted by the Israeli navy.

Malaysia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs confirmed that 12 citizens were taken in international waters while carrying lifesaving aid to Gaza and demanded their immediate and unconditional release.

It said that “the criminal and cowardly acts of aggression by Israeli forces against the Global Sumud Flotilla” constituted a “flagrant violation of international law, including international maritime law, international humanitarian law and international human rights law.”

Hours later, more Malaysians, who were aboard other boats, lost contact with their mission’s organizer, the Sumud Nusantara Command Center in Kuala Lumpur.

Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said in a series of X posts that 23 were missing and that he would take “all lawful and legally grounded measures to hold the Zionist regime accountable.”

Among the Malaysian nationals held by the Israeli military are popular singer Zizi Kirana and actress Ardell Aryana, who shared voice notes describing how Israelis tried to stop her boat by using water cannons.

“At first, they came in small groups and they gave a warning to stop, but we did not stop because our mission is to go straight to Gaza,” she said.

The capture of the flotilla crew has sent a wave of outrage across the country, where the mission to break Israel’s illegal blockade and starvation of Gaza is supported by both the government and the public.

Lavisha Sukumaran, a lawyer, recalled a video shared by a flotilla participant talking about how he was doing this for his children.

“He doesn’t want them to grow up in a world where people turn their backs on each other,” she said.

“It’s easy to talk about it, make social media posts about the genocide, participate in rallies, and all that. It takes a different kind of bravery to actually get to the group, risk your actual life, in hopes of making a change. It is so amazing and terrifying.”

For Dina Sallehudin, a content creator, the activists are “the bravest and kindest people, who are willing to risk their lives to make this mission happen.”

Some, like Ili Liyana Mokhtar, an editor, expected more action from the Malaysian government, including pressure on the ongoing UN General Assembly and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, which it chairs this year.

“The Malaysian government has both a moral and diplomatic responsibility to act and act fast,” she told Arab News.

“The Sumud Flotilla wasn’t carrying weapons — it carried milk for babies, medicine for the sick, and food for the hungry. It carried hope ... It’s about standing up for basic human dignity. When children are starving, silence is not neutrality — it’s complicity.”

The ASEAN Parliamentarians for Human Rights network’s co-chair, Charles Santiago, released a statement saying that Israel’s interception of the Global Sumud Flotilla was “nothing short of state piracy.”

He added that it “has no jurisdiction there, no legal grounds to detain civilians,” in international waters.

“It arrogantly hijacks a humanitarian mission, proving once again its utter disregard for international law,” Santiago said.

“The world cannot look away: silence is complicity, and every hour of inaction emboldens Israel’s criminal blockade of Gaza.”