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Russia and Ukraine accuse each other of breaching Easter truce

Russia and Ukraine accuse each other of breaching Easter truce
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A view shows a building hit by Russian military strikes in the frontline town of Kostiantynivka in Donetsk region on April 19, 2025. (Ukrainian military handout photo via AFP)
Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky said Russian forces were continuing their shelling and assaults along the front line despite Russian President Vladimir Putin announcing a surprise but brief Easter truce. (AFP)
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Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky said Russian forces were continuing their shelling and assaults along the front line despite Russian President Vladimir Putin announcing a surprise but brief Easter truce. (AFP)
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Updated 21 April 2025

Russia and Ukraine accuse each other of breaching Easter truce

Russia and Ukraine accuse each other of breaching Easter truce
  • Ukraine’s forces reported 2,935 violations of Russia’s own Easter ceasefire vow, Zelensky said
  • The 30-hour truce had been meant to start Saturday to mark the religious holiday

KRAMATORSK: Russia and Ukraine on Sunday accused each other of violating an Easter truce announced by Russian President Vladimir Putin.
The 30-hour truce had been meant to start Saturday to mark the religious holiday, but Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky accused Russia of keeping up its attacks on the front line.

Ukraine’s forces reported 2,935 violations of Russia’s own Easter ceasefire vow, Zelensky said early on Monday.
“The nature of Ukrainian actions will continue to be mirrored: we will respond to silence with silence, our strikes will be to protect against Russian strikes,” he  said in a post on the Telegram messaging app.

Zelensky also renewed a proposal for a 30-day truce.
Moscow said it had “repelled” assaults by Ukraine and accused Kyiv of launching hundreds of drones and shells, causing civilian casualties.
“Despite the announcement of the Easter truce, Ukrainian units at night made attempts to attack” Russia’s positions in the Donetsk region, its defense ministry added.
Russian troops had “strictly observed the ceasefire,” the defense ministry insisted.
Rescue services in the eastern town of Kostyantynivka said they had recovered the bodies of a man and a woman from the ruins of building hit the previous day by Russian shelling.
The Russian-appointed mayor of Gorlovka in occupied Donetsk, Ivan Prikhodko, said two civilians had been wounded there, without giving details.
Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 and now occupies around 20 percent of the country.
Putin’s order to halt all combat over the Easter weekend came after months of efforts by US President Donald Trump to get the war rivals to agree to a ceasefire.
But on Friday, Trump threatened to withdraw from talks if no progress was made.
Ukrainian soldiers told AFP that they had noticed a lull in fighting.
A drone unit commander said that Russia’s activity had “significantly decreased both in Zaporizhzhia and Kharkiv regions,” combat zones in the south and northeast where the unit is active.
“Several assaults were recorded, but those were solitary incidents involving small groups,” the commander told AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity.
“Fewer guys (soldiers) will die today.”
Russian “artillery is not working. it is quiet compared to a regular day,” Sergiy, a junior lieutenant fighting in the Sumy border region, wrote to AFP in a message.
Ukrainian troops “are on the defensive,” he added. “If the enemy doesn’t move forward, they don’t shoot.”
AFP journalists monitoring in eastern Ukraine heard fewer explosions than usual and saw no smoke on the horizon.
Putin announced a truce from 6:00 p.m. (1500 GMT) Saturday to midnight Sunday Moscow time (2100 GMT), saying it was motivated by “humanitarian reasons.”
Zelensky responded that Ukraine was ready to follow suit and proposed extending the truce for 30 days to “give peace a chance.”
But he said Sunday that Russia “has not yet responded to this.”
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that Putin had given no order to extend the truce.
In Kyiv, as Easter Sunday bells rang out, people doubted Russia’s good faith.
“They’ve already broken their promise,” said 38-year-old Olga Grachova, who works in marketing. “Unfortunately, we cannot trust Russia today.”
Natalia, a 41-year-old medic, said of Zelensky’s 30-day proposal: “Everything we offer, unfortunately, remains only our offers. Nobody responds to them.”
People in Moscow welcomed an Easter truce and hoped for more progress toward an end to the war.
“We dreamt of course that peace would come by Easter. Let it come soon,” said Svetlana, a 34-year-old housewife.
“I think that this awful thing will end at some point, but not soon,” said Irina Volkova, a 73-year-old pensioner.
“All is not going well for us in Ukraine,” she added. “People are dying, our guys are dying.”
Moscow said this weekend that it had now recovered 99.5 percent of its Kursk region, which Ukrainian troops occupied in a surprise offensive in August.


Former Columbia University president Minouche Shafik tapped as UK economic adviser

British PM Keir Starmer on Monday appointed Minouche Shafik as his chief economic adviser. (File/AP)
British PM Keir Starmer on Monday appointed Minouche Shafik as his chief economic adviser. (File/AP)
Updated 01 September 2025

Former Columbia University president Minouche Shafik tapped as UK economic adviser

British PM Keir Starmer on Monday appointed Minouche Shafik as his chief economic adviser. (File/AP)
  • Shafik, a former deputy governor of the Bank of England, has held senior academic and civil service roles in Britain, and served a brief term as Columbia president

LONDON: British Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Monday appointed economist and former Columbia University president Minouche Shafik as his chief economic adviser. It’s part of a staff shakeup aimed at strengthening the government’s response to a sluggish economy and a heated political debate over immigration.
Starmer’s center-left Labour Party government has struggled to boost economic growth and curb inflation, leaving Treasury chief Rachel Reeves facing unpalatable choices about taxes and spending in her budget this fall.
Shafik, a former deputy governor of the Bank of England, has held senior academic and civil service roles in Britain, and served a brief, tempestuous term as Columbia president. The British-US national left her job leading the New York university in August 2024 after just over a year following scrutiny of her handling of protests and campus divisions over the Israel-Hamas war.
Like other US university leaders, Shafik faced criticism from many corners: Some students groups blasted her decision to invite police in to arrest protesters. Republicans in Congress and others called on her to do more to call out antisemitism.
Starmer spokesman Dave Pares said the prime minister was delighted to have Shafik bring her “exceptional record when it comes to economic expertise” to the government.
Starmer also shook up his communications team and appointed Darren Jones, formerly a minister in the Treasury, to the new post of chief secretary to the prime minister, tasked with coordinating work on policy priorities.
The moves came as lawmakers returned to Parliament after a summer break that saw dozens of small but heated protests outside hotels housing asylum-seekers. The Labour government, which was elected in July 2024, has struggled to curb unauthorized migration and fulfill its responsibility to accommodate those seeking refuge.
The hard-right Reform UK party led by Nigel Farage has sought to capitalize on concern about thousands of migrants crossing the English Channel in small boats. Painting the asylum-seekers as a threat, Farage has pledged to deport everyone who enters the country without authorization should Reform win power in a future election.
Reform has only a handful of lawmakers in the House of Commons but regularly leads both Labour and the main opposition Conservative Party in opinion polls.
Starmer’s government says it is fixing an asylum system broken after 14 years of Conservative government and is working with other countries to tackle the people-smuggling gangs that organize the cross-channel journeys.


Greta Thunberg could be locked in cell for terrorists if arrested by Israel: Report

Greta Thunberg could be locked in cell for terrorists if arrested by Israel: Report
Updated 01 September 2025

Greta Thunberg could be locked in cell for terrorists if arrested by Israel: Report

Greta Thunberg could be locked in cell for terrorists if arrested by Israel: Report
  • Sources close to security minister say plans being drawn up to make activists ‘sorry’ for trying to reach Gaza
  • Thunberg part of flotilla that set sail from Spain on Sunday heading for besieged enclave

London: Swedish activist Greta Thunberg could be detained in a prison cell for terrorists if arrested trying to reach Gaza, Israel Hayom newspaper reported.

She is currently on the Global Sumud Flotilla that left Spain on Sunday for the Palestinian enclave.

The flotilla, which will be joined by other boats along the way, aims to break the siege of Gaza and raise awareness of developments as Israel steps up its military campaign.

However, Israel is expected to stop the flotilla before it reaches Gaza, and National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir has drawn up plans to send the activists to the Ktzi’ot and Damon detention centers if arrested, Israel Hayom reported.

Ktzi’ot is Israel’s largest prison, located in the Negev desert. Damon is notorious for its poor treatment of female prisoners, especially Palestinians.

“Following several weeks at Ktzi’ot and Damon, they’ll be sorry about the time they arrived here. We must eliminate their appetite for another attempt,” sources close to Ben-Gvir told the newspaper.

Thunberg was arrested along with 11 other activists while taking part in the Madleen flotilla in June.

At the time, Thunberg said she and her fellow activists “were kidnapped in international waters …We were well aware of the risks of this mission. The aim was to get to Gaza and to be able to distribute the aid.”

She said before departing on Sunday that more than 26,000 people had signed up to be part of the efforts to break the siege of Gaza, where international observers have warned of widespread famine.

She told Iran’s Press TV that the Global Sumud Flotilla would “deliver humanitarian aid and break Israel’s illegal siege on Gaza and open up a people’s humanitarian corridor.”

Thunberg said: “This project is part of a global uprising of people standing up … When our governments fail to step up, the people will take their place … Their atrocities and their complicity in the genocide in Gaza right now … is not something that we can stand for.”

She told the UK’s Sky News: “It is not antisemitic to say that we shouldn’t be bombing people, that one shouldn’t be living in occupation, that everyone should have the right to live in freedom and dignity no matter who you are.

“For every politician that is fueling the genocide further, environmental and climate destruction, and further colonization and fascism, there will be people escalating the resistance against that.”


Hundreds of people killed as powerful earthquake devastates eastern Afghanistan

Afghan volunteers and security personnel carry an earthquake victim evacuated by a military helicopter. (AFP)
Afghan volunteers and security personnel carry an earthquake victim evacuated by a military helicopter. (AFP)
Updated 01 September 2025

Hundreds of people killed as powerful earthquake devastates eastern Afghanistan

Afghan volunteers and security personnel carry an earthquake victim evacuated by a military helicopter. (AFP)
  • Entire villages wiped out in Kunar province, where at least 800 people were killedThe disaster will further stretch the resources of the South Asian nation
  • Rescuers walk for hours to reach the areas as roads are destroyed by landslides

KABUL: Rescuers and dozens of doctors were flown to mountainous villages in eastern Afghanistan on Monday to search for survivors of a powerful earthquake that official reports estimate has killed at least 800 people.

A magnitude 6 earthquake hit the densely populated rural areas of Kunar and Nangarhar provinces near midnight on Sunday, with aftershocks reported until Monday also in neighboring Pakistan.

Afghan government spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid told reporters in Kabul that at least 812 people — 800 in Kunar and 12 in Nangarhar — have been killed and nearly 3,000 injured. Most of the casualties were reported in Kunar’s Noorgal district.

The real toll is feared to be higher, as rescue efforts in the steep terrain have been further hindered by landslides and rockfalls that destroyed roads.

“The situation is dire. In Kunar, entire villages have been completely demolished in at least one district. In Nangarhar’s Dare Noor, people have lost all their family members,” said Faqir Sayed Al-Hashimi from Ehsas Welfare and Social Services Organization, who was helping in rescue efforts on the ground.

 

 

“The government is deploying helicopters to reach the wounded, as vehicles can’t access the area. Community members are marching on foot toward Noorgal district, where most of the casualties occurred, but it will take them several hours to get there.”

Since the morning, the Defense Ministry has flown dozens of doctors into Kunar to support hospitals overwhelmed with casualties.

Many of the injured have been transported to Jalalabad, the capital of Nangarhar province.

“Every few minutes, new ambulances are arriving from the Jalalabad airport. Military planes are transferring injured people from Kunar and Dare Noor,” Hazrat Nabi Nabizada, Najm Foundation coordinator, told Arab News from the Nangarhar Regional Hospital.

“Most patients are in critical condition and require orthopedic and neurosurgical care. We’ve lost count, but there are definitely over a thousand wounded at this hospital alone. Many others have been sent to private facilities.”

Casualties have also been reported in Laghman and Nuristan provinces.

“So far, we haven’t recorded any deaths in our province, but the number of injured is steadily rising. More than 60 injured people, including women and children, have already been brought to the provincial hospital,” said Jawhar Niazi, a volunteer with the Najm Foundation in Laghman

“We are mobilizing community members to donate blood to the injured and will be providing food to the family members visiting the hospital.”


India to strengthen cooperation with Russia after Modi-Putin talks in China

India to strengthen cooperation with Russia after Modi-Putin talks in China
Updated 01 September 2025

India to strengthen cooperation with Russia after Modi-Putin talks in China

India to strengthen cooperation with Russia after Modi-Putin talks in China
  • Modi meets Russian leader a day after 1-on-1 with Chinese President Xi Jinping
  • PM invites Putin to visit New Delhi for India-Russia Annual Summit in December

NEW DELHI: India and Russia are exploring ways to deepen their cooperation, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on Monday, after talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin in China.

Modi and Putin were both in the northern Chinese city of Tianjin to attend the Shanghai Cooperation Organization’s leaders’ summit, where they underscored their friendly ties by traveling in one car to the meeting’s venue.

Modi said on social media they had an “excellent meeting” and discussed “ways to deepen bilateral cooperation in all sectors,” including trade, space, and security.

“We exchanged views on regional and global developments, including the peaceful resolution of the conflict in Ukraine. Our Special and Privileged Strategic Partnership remains a vital pillar of regional and global stability,” he wrote on X.

In a video from the meeting, he said that “even in difficult times, India and Russia have walked shoulder to shoulder” and that their close relationship is important not only for the two countries, “but also for global peace, stability, and prosperity.”

He also invited Putin to visit New Delhi in December to take part in the India-Russia Annual Summit, which is a key a platform of the Special and Privileged Strategic Partnership.

The meeting with Russia’s leader followed Modi’s one-on-one with Chinese President Xi Jinping a day earlier, marking a thaw in relations between the Asian giants that were locked in a years-long standoff over their disputed Himalayan border.

The breakthrough with China and plans of increased cooperation with Russia form the backdrop to India’s souring relations with its main partner, the US, after the Donald Trump administration imposed a 50 percent duty on Indian goods as punishment for buying Russian oil.

The White House last month alleged that New Delhi’s oil purchases were indirectly helping to fund Russia’s war in Ukraine.

This week’s meetings with Xi and Putin show efforts to recalibrate India’s foreign policy, which over the past few years was strongly US-oriented.

“This is important because this is a kind of departure from the policy that we have been pursuing with the US for the last 20 years,” Prof. Rajan Kumar from the Centre for Russian and Central Asian Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University, told Arab News.

Modi’s engagements at the Shanghai Cooperation Organization meeting sent a “clear and loud message” to the US and other Western powers that India would pursue a policy of multi-alignment, he said.

“It will have its ties with the US, but also it will not disrupt its ties with Russia, China, and other countries just because the US would like India to behave in a certain way.”


EU chief’s plane hit by suspected Russian GPS jamming in Bulgaria

EU chief’s plane hit by suspected Russian GPS jamming in Bulgaria
Updated 01 September 2025

EU chief’s plane hit by suspected Russian GPS jamming in Bulgaria

EU chief’s plane hit by suspected Russian GPS jamming in Bulgaria
  • The European Commission said Bulgarian authorities suspected the disruption ‘was due to blatant interference’ from Moscow
  • The aircraft landed safely at Plovdiv International Airport, in the south of the country, without having to change route

BRUSSELS: A plane carrying EU chief Ursula von der Leyen was hit by GPS jamming as it readied to land in Bulgaria on Sunday, Brussels said Monday, alleging Russia was thought to be behind the incident.
The European Commission said Bulgarian authorities suspected the disruption “was due to blatant interference” from Moscow but it was not clear if the chartered flight was deliberately targeted.
“We can indeed confirm that there was GPS jamming,” Commission spokeswoman Arianna Podesta told a press conference in Brussels.
The aircraft landed safely at Plovdiv International Airport, in the south of the country, without having to change route.
Commission president Von der Leyen, 66, was in Bulgaria as part of a seven-country tour of “frontline” European Union states which, sitting on the 27-nation bloc’s eastern flank, are more exposed to Russian hybrid threats.
The region has experienced “a lot of such jamming and spoofing activities,” the commission said, adding it has sanctioned several companies believed to be involved.
The Bulgarian government confirmed the incident.
“During the flight carrying European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen to Plovdiv, the satellite signal transmitting information to the plane’s GPS navigation system was neutralized,” a government statement said.
“To ensure the flight’s safety, air control services immediately offered an alternative landing method using terrestrial navigation tools,” it said.
The Financial Times newspaper, which first reported the incident, said the plane was forced to land using paper maps.