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US lets in Iranian FM but limits him after sanctions vow

By - Jul 15,2019 - Last updated at Jul 15,2019

WASHINGTON — Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif was heading on Monday to the United Nations after the United States issued him a visa but restricted his movements amid soaring tensions between the countries.

Weeks after the United States threatened sanctions against Zarif, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said that Washington agreed to let him enter but forbade him from moving beyond just six blocks of Iran's UN mission in Midtown Manhattan.

"US diplomats don't roam around Tehran, so we don't see any reason for Iranian diplomats to roam freely around New York City, either," Pompeo told The Washington Post.

"Foreign Minister Zarif, he uses the freedoms of the United States to come here and spread malign propaganda," he said.

The United States, as the host nation of the United Nations, has an agreement to issue visas promptly to foreign diplomats on UN business and only rarely declines.

Zarif is scheduled to speak on Wednesday at the UN Economic and Social Council, which is holding a high-level meeting on sustainable development.

A US-educated academic who speaks fluent English sprinkled with self-effacing humor, Zarif regularly uses his visits to the United Nations to take Iran's message to US media and think tanks.

His visit is the latest sign that President Donald Trump's administration appears to be retreating from its vow to slap sanctions on Zarif as part of its "maximum pressure" campaign on Iran.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said on June 24 that sanctions would come later that week.

Critics questioned the legal rationale for targeting Zarif and noted that sanctions would all but end the possibility of dialogue — which Trump has said is his goal.

Zarif said in an interview with The New York Times he would not be affected by sanctions as he owns no assets outside of Iran.

Trump last year left a denuclearisation accord negotiated by Zarif with six nations including the United States under former president Barack Obama and instead slapped sanctions, vowing to curb Iran's regional role.

Zarif's restrictions are unusually harsh. The United States generally bars diplomats of hostile nations from traveling outside a 40 kilometre radius of New York's Columbus Circle.

At least five dead in Baghdad suicide blasts — medics, security

By - Jul 15,2019 - Last updated at Jul 15,2019

BAGHDAD — At least five people were killed in twin suicide blasts near a Shiite mosque in southwest Baghdad on Monday, Iraqi security and medical sources said.

Doctors at the capital's Al Yarmuk Hospital gave a casualty toll of five dead and 14 wounded.

Two suicide bombers blew themselves up near Abu Al Fadhel Al Abbas Mosque in the Al Turath district, a police officer told AFP, on condition of anonymity.

There was no immediate claim of responsiblity.

Eight people were killed in a suicide bombing at a market in eastern Baghdad on May 9, while two others died in a similar attack in late June, both also targeting Shiites.

Iraq in 2017 declared victory over the Daesh terror group extremists after a gruelling months-long campaign to dismantle their self-declared "caliphate".

But sleeper cells of the extremist group have remained active, attacking civilians and security forces across the Shiite-majority country.

Syria repairs gas pipeline after sabotage — ministry

By - Jul 15,2019 - Last updated at Jul 15,2019

DAMASCUS — The Syrian government said a gas plant resumed operations Monday after repairs to a key pipeline put out of service by a sabotage attack at the weekend.

"The Ebla gas plant resumed production at full capacity" at dawn Monday after repair of the sabotaged pipeline, the Ministry of Oil and Mineral Resources said in a statement. 

The pipeline in the Badiya desert, where the Daesh extremist group is present, transports gas from the government-controlled Shaer gas field, the country's largest, in the central province of Homs to the Ebla plant.

It feeds the Ebla plant with 2.5 million cubic metres of gas per day, according to the ministry.

On Sunday, state news agency SANA said that a "terrorist attack" by unidentified perpetrators had put the pipeline out of service.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said a bomb blast targeted the pipeline. 

There was no immediate claim of responsibility. 

The Badiya desert is the scene of regular clashes between regime forces and Daesh, which retains the ability to strike despite losing all the territory it once held in Syria.

The country’s eight-year war has seen the regime lose control of key oilfields and caused state hydrocarbon revenues to plummet by billions of dollars.

The government of President Bashar Assad has been slapped with a raft of Western economic sanctions, extending to hydrocarbons.

Last month, underwater pipelines connected to a refinery in western Syria were sabotaged.

A senior official at the time said the attack was carried out with the help of a foreign state.

From crafts to Kalashnikovs: Arms souk thrives in Yemen's Taez

By - Jul 15,2019 - Last updated at Jul 15,2019

Armed men shop in Yemen's third city of Taez on Saturday (AFP photo)

TAEZ, Yemen — Once overflowing with handicrafts, the old Al  Shinayni market in Yemen's third city of Taez is now bursting with Kalashnikovs and bullets as traders scramble to scratch out a living in the war-wracked country.

Yemen has been plunged into a devastating war since the Iran-aligned Houthi rebels swept into the capital Sanaa in a late 2014 offensive, sparking a military intervention months later by a Saudi-led coalition. 

The southwestern city of Taez is controlled by government forces but under siege by the Houthis, who have repeatedly bombarded the city of 615,000 people.

Many civilians in tribal Yemen, the Arab world's most impoverished country, carry personal arms even under normal circumstances and weapons trade is common.

But the war has seen the arms market surge, and traditional trades pushed aside.

"In the past, the city's old souk [market] used to sell mainly handicraft items made by blacksmiths, potters and tailors," said merchant Abu Ali.

"When the war erupted, most merchants turned to selling weapons," the tailor-turned arms trader told AFP.

"Some sell [Yemen's highly popular mild narcotic leaf] Qat, and others have fled. Half of the shops have shut down," he added.

'Bullets and weapons' 

 

Armed men on motorcycles whizz in and out of the market, once a hub for selling clay pots and jugs. 

Fatigues, tactical vest and helmets are on display outside the shops. Inside, AK47 assault rifles hang on the walls, with bullets and mortar shells neatly lining the shelves.

"It's an arms market," said Abu Ali. 

Different weapons carry different price tags. An AK47 rifle is sold for $1,090, a pistol for $818, and a bullet for half a dollar.

Like Abu Ali, the war forced Mohammed Tajer, a handicraft merchant, to turn to the arms trade to make ends meet. 

"We used to work well" before the war, Tajer told AFP. 

"But once the war started, we had to resort to selling bullets and weapons. If the conflict ends, we will go back to our previous professions." 

In front of one shop, a young boy in a yellow T-shirt sits on a cushion as he bangs away on a piece of metal. An older man next to him stands near a forge hammering a sharp object.

The conflict in Yemen has triggered what the United Nations describes as the world’s worst humanitarian crisis, with more than 24 million Yemenis — around two-thirds of the population — in need of aid. 

Tens of thousands of people, mostly civilians, have been killed since March 2015 when the Saudi-led military coalition intervened in support of the internationally recognised government of President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi.

 

‘Arms trade flourished’ 

 

Taez has not been spared from the violence. 

Dozens of people, including children, were killed earlier this year in battles between the rebels and forces loyal to the government, as well as infighting among rival pro-government groups, according to local and medical sources.

Abid Al Rashdi, who still sells handmade goods at Al Shinayni, said he struggles to keep up his line of work amid a conflict that shows no sign of abating. 

“In the past five years, the blacksmith and pottery professions have been greatly impacted while arms trade flourished,” he told AFP.

Shuttered shops secured with padlocks lie on either side of an open storefront that says “tailoring for men”.

Inside, on the shelves where threads and fabrics were once placed, bullets and guns now sit, some locally produced and others smuggled into the country.

Shock, anger as videos of brutal Sudan raid belatedly go viral

By - Jul 15,2019 - Last updated at Jul 15,2019

Sudanese protesters take part in a vigil in the capital Khartoum's northern district of Bahri, to mourn dozens of demonstrators killed last month in a brutal raid on a Khartoum sit-in, on Saturday (AFP photo)

KHARTOUM — Days after a blackout on mobile Internet services ended, Sudanese are shocked by the content of online videos and photographs that appear to document last month's deadly raid on demonstrators.

Crowds of protesters were violently dispersed — and dozens killed — by men in military fatigues during a pre-dawn raid on a weeks-long sit-in outside army headquarters in Khartoum on June 3.

"The brutal scenes of killings and beatings left me very angry," said Hussein Hashim, a 19-year-old university student from the capital's El-Deem neighbourhood.

"The perpetrators have no mercy, religion or humanity."

Demonstrators who had camped at the site demanding civilian rule were shot and beaten as armed men rampaged through the area, triggering international outrage.

But the carnage went largely unseen inside Sudan as the country's military rulers imposed a nationwide blackout on mobile Internet services.

The authorities restored mobile Internet only last week, paving the way for photographs and videos going viral on social media networks.

Services were ordered to be restored after Khartoum based lawyer Abdelaziz Hassan won a case against 3G and 4G service providers. 

"The aim of blocking the Internet was to hide information and evidence of what happened in the massacre," Hassan told AFP.

"It is the right of every citizen to know the real information so that he can form his own views."

One photograph, which could not be verified, has stirred particular anger.

It shows men in military trousers and boots putting their feet on the face of a purported protester lying on the ground.

Dozens of videos are circulating, including one that shows a group of men — also in military uniform — surrounding a teenage girl as she yells at a man who holds her neck in a tight grip.

 

Intimidation tactic? 

 

Several videos show gunmen beating protesters with sticks as thick smoke billows from the protest site amid the sound of continuous gunfire.

AFP could not independently verify the origins of many of the photographs and videos, as most were posted on accounts that used pseudonyms.

Prior to the violent dispersal of the protest site, demonstrators had camped there since April 6, initially to seek the army’s help in ousting longtime ruler Omar Al Bashir.

The army deposed Bashir on April 11, but protesters continued with the sit-in after a military council seized power.

Since the internet was restored, groups of people have been seen watching and circulating videos and photographs in shops, cafes and hotels.

Some have created a Facebook page to document all the images of the “massacre”.

“We have to hold the perpetrators of this crime accountable,” wrote one user on the page.

Another warned “without accountability, punishment and revenge, this spectacular revolution will not succeed”. 

Protesters and rights groups have accused members of the feared paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) of carrying out the raid.

While outraged activists and protesters have themselves shared and spread the videos, some believe the RSF have also had a hand in sending the images viral, in a bid to intimidate protesters. 

“These videos are meant to scare us,” said Samuol, who did not give his full name.

“But the horrific scenes will give us a bigger motive to fight for the rights of the martyrs,” he added.

‘Fabricated’ content 

 

RSF commander Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, who is also the deputy chief of the country’s ruling military council, has dismissed the accusation that his forces were involved in the raid.

“These photos are fabricated,” he said at a recent rally, accusing foreign intelligence agents of filming and circulating the videos.

“There are some people who have filmed 59 videos in one day... how is that possible? For sure they have an agenda,” he contended.

Many on the streets do not believe Dagalo’s assertions.

Some footage shows men wielding sticks against protesters and wearing uniforms usually worn by the RSF.

The protest movement says the raid killed more than 100 and wounded hundreds in just one day.

“These videos are not fabricated, they have been filmed by gunmen themselves,” said a driver, showing an AFP correspondent a video in which groups of men in military fatigues are seen beating the protesters.

“After watching these videos I feel like taking revenge for the victims,” he said, without revealing his name for security reasons.

Women are also angry.

“I was happy when the internet was restored but now I feel angry and humiliated,” said a Khartoum resident, after watching the online videos.

“They want to intimidate women, but we will not be afraid and will continue to participate in protests,” she said without revealing her identity.

Germany, Austria say sanctions among options for Turkey's Cyprus drilling

By - Jul 15,2019 - Last updated at Jul 15,2019

BRUSSELS — The European Union will decide on Monday to symbolically punish Turkey over what it calls “illegal” drilling for oil and gas off Cyprus and threaten harsher sanctions in the future unless Ankara changes tack, German and Austrian ministers said.

Foreign affairs ministers of the 28-nation bloc meeting in Brussels on Monday are due to endorse a decision to curb diplomatic contacts and funding for Ankara, retaliation for what it sees as interference with Cyprus’ exclusive economic zone.

In June, EU leaders warned Turkey to end drilling in waters around the island or face action from the bloc. EU member Cyprus has pressed for a tough line threatening harsher sanctions in the future but others have warned against antagonising a key ally on security and migration affairs.

“The provocations of Turkey are unacceptable to all of us,” German Minister of State for Europe Michel Roth said on arriving at the talks. “We have now found a balanced language that keeps all our options open, including of course sanctions.”

“I can only hope that we do not now add another crisis to the many conflicts and crises. Turkey knows what’s at stake and the European Union is united on the side of Cyprus.”

An EU diplomat told Reuters Ankara could lose some 150 million euros of 400 million euros the bloc had earmarked for 2020 for everything from political reforms to agriculture projects to help Turkey prepare for eventual EU membership.

The EU had been due to give Turkey 4.45 billion euros between 2014 and 2020, but it cut and suspended some funding last year. It has also frozen long-stalled membership talks and negotiations on upgrading its customs union with Turkey, accusing President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of grave violations of human rights.

A decision due to be endorsed by the EU ministers would invite the bloc’s executive and foreign policy arm to “continue work on options for targeted measures in the light of Turkey’s continued drilling activities”, according to the latest text seen by Reuters.

That means any future sanctions would most likely focus narrowly on freezing assets and banning from the EU firms or people involved in the drilling, diplomats in Brussels said.

Wary of upsetting too much the government in Ankara it needs to keep a lid on migration from the Middle East, the bloc would not opt for broad economic sanctions like those imposed on Russia in recent years for its role in the turmoil in Ukraine.

 

‘We stand behind Cyprus’

 

Despite some prominent examples of close cooperation, relations between the EU and Turkey have soured over Erdogan’s crackdown on critics following a failed coup in 2016.

Ankara, which backs a breakaway part of the divided island of Cyprus, says that certain offshore zones fall under the jurisdiction of Turkey or of Turkish Cypriots.

Cyprus was divided in 1974 after a Turkish invasion triggered by a brief Greek-inspired coup. Several peacemaking efforts have failed and the discovery of offshore resources has complicated the negotiations.

“It is very clear that we stand behind Cyprus, this makes sense since we never recognised the Turkish occupation of northern Cyprus. It is normal for Cyprus to want to define their own natural resources,” Austrian Foreign Minister Alexander Schallenberg said on Monday.

“We will decide today about a number of measures against Turkey, among others less money, less loans by the EIB [European Investment Bank], suspension of negotiations on air traffic agreement, but it goes without saying that more sanctions are also possible.”

Turkey said on Sunday it would continue drilling for gas in waters off Cyprus if Nicosia does not accept a cooperation proposal put forward by Turkish Cypriots.

Lunar eclipse marks Moon landing's 50th anniversary

By - Jul 15,2019 - Last updated at Jul 15,2019

PARIS — Fifty years to the day since mankind launched the first mission to set foot on it, the Moon is set to treat Earthlings to a partial lunar eclipse on Tuesday.

Britain's Royal Astronomical Society said in a statement the event would be visible from parts of northern Europe, Asia, Africa, south America and Western Australia. 

Lunar eclipses happen when the Earth gets aligned in between the Sun and the Moon. 

Tuesday's eclipse should see around 60 per cent of the Moon's visible surface obscured by the Earth's shadow, known as the umbra, the RAS said. 

Best viewing conditions in Britain will be around 2230 (2130 GMT), it added. 

Unlike solar eclipses, lunar eclipses can be seen by the naked eye without risk of damage. Experts recommend those seeking to take photos of the phenomenon use a tripod. 

More than 400,000 people worked on NASA's Apollo 11 mission, which launched on July 16, 1969 and put the first humans on the Moon four days later.

20 million children not vaccinated in 2018: UN warns against ‘stagnation’

By - Jul 15,2019 - Last updated at Jul 15,2019

GENEVA — Almost 20 million children missed out on potentially life-saving vaccinations last year, the UN said on Monday, as surging measles cases highlighted "dangerous" gaps in efforts to shield kids from preventable illness.

Last year, 19.4 million children were "not fully vaccinated", the World Health Organisation (WHO) and the UNICEF children's agency said in an annual report — up from 18.7 million in 2017 and about 18.5 million the year before.

This all pointed to a "dangerous stagnation of global vaccination rates, due to conflict, inequality and complacency", the United Nations agencies said.

The comparative birth rate was not provided, but they warned the global quest for widespread vaccination against life-threatening disease has stagnated.

A case in point: the global coverage rate for a key vaccine combination against diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis (whooping cough) and measles has been stalled at 86 per cent since 2010, it said, describing the rate as "not sufficient". 

Some 350,000 measles cases were reported globally last year — more than double the 2017 number, a "real-time indicator" of the quest to expand vaccine coverage, UNICEF chief Henrietta Fore said in a statement.

In April, the WHO said 2019 was set to be worse, with preliminary data showing reported measles cases in the first quarter 300 times higher than the same period in 2018.

There was some progress too.

By last year, 90 countries — though largely wealthy ones — integrated the human papillomavirus vaccine into their national programmes, thus making it available to one in three girls worldwide, the UN said. 

The vaccine is given to girls, and recently also to boys, against a sexually-transmitted virus type that causes a range of cancers, including of the cervix.

 

'Outright false information' 

 

A worldwide resurgence of measles is partly blamed on the so-called "anti-vax" movement based on fake science wrongly linking vaccines to side effects including autism.

This has discouraged many parents, particularly in the United States but increasingly in Europe, from taking their children for their shots.

The director of the WHO's vaccines department, Kate O'Brien, told reporters in Geneva the UN was "concerned about the proliferation of misinformation [and] outright false information", online. 

But she stressed that "access" remained the main obstacle. Countries with the weakest public health systems still have the lowest vaccination rates, though coverage in Sub-Saharan Africa rose from 50 per cent in 1999 to 76 per cent last year.

 

 'Backsliding' 

 

A number of countries with coverage formerly well above 90 per cent, have regressed, the data showed.

In Brazil for example, application of the first dose of a measles vaccine fell to 84 per cent last year from a high of 99 per cent.

Ecuador saw a similar drop for the first measles dose, while in the Philippines coverage fell from 87 per cent to 67 per cent from 2010 to 2018. 

The "reasons for backsliding include complacency, lack of investment in public health, conflict, and in some places lack of trust in vaccines", the UN said. 

Hunger on the rise worldwide as 821 million affected, says UN

Around 149 million children currently suffer from hunger-related growth delays

By - Jul 15,2019 - Last updated at Jul 15,2019

In this file photo taken on July 5, Yukpa indigenous children, some of them suffering from malnutrition, are fed with supplements provided by Caritas organisation, at Los Angeles del Tukuko mission, near Machiques, Zulia state, Venezuela (AFP)

UNITED NATIONS, United States — More than 821 million people suffered from hunger, food insecurity and malnutrition worldwide last year, the United Nations reported on Monday — the third year in a row that the number has risen.

After decades of decline, food insecurity began to increase in 2015 and reversing the trend is one of the 2030 targets of the UN's Sustainable Development Goals.

But getting to a world where no one is suffering from hunger by then remains an "immense challenge", the report said. 

"The State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World" was produced by the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) and other UN agencies including the World Health Organisation. 

"To safeguard food security and nutrition, it is critical to already have in place economic and social policies to counteract the effects of adverse economic cycles when they arrive, while avoiding cuts in essential services, such as healthcare and education, at all costs," it said.

The authors said a "structural transformation" was needed to include the poorest people in the world, a move they said would require "integrating food security and nutrition concerns into poverty reduction efforts" while tackling gender inequality and the exclusion of certain social groups. 

Malnutrition remains widespread in Africa, where around 20 per cent of the population is affected, and in Asia where more than 12 of people experience it. In Latin America and the Caribbean, 7 per cent of people are affected.

Adding the number of people suffering from famine to those hit by food insecurity gives a total of more than two billion. 

The FAO said current efforts were insufficient to meet the goal of halving the number of children whose growth is stunted by malnutrition by 2030.

Around 149 million children currently suffer from hunger-related growth delays. 

At the same time, the report notes that obesity and excess weight are both on the rise in all regions, with school-age children and adults particularly affected.

France says Franco-Iranian academic arrested in Iran

By - Jul 15,2019 - Last updated at Jul 15,2019

PARIS — A Franco-Iranian academic based at a prestigious Paris university has been arrested in Iran and denied contact with consular staff, the French foreign ministry said on Monday. 

The detention of Fariba Adelkhah, a well-known expert on Iran and Shiite Islam at Sciences Po, risks increasing tension between Paris and Tehran at a critical moment in the crisis over the Iranian nuclear programme.

"The French authorities were recently informed of the arrest of Fariba Adelkhah," said the foreign ministry statement which confirmed she holds dual nationality.

"France calls on the Iranian authorities to shed full light on Mrs Adelkhah's situation and repeats its demands, particularly with regard to an immediate authorisation for consular access," it said.

"No satisfactory response has been received until now," it added.

Iranian government spokesman Ali Rabiei said he could not confirm the charges.

Adelkhah, 60, is the latest Iranian national with a Western passport to be arrested in Iran.

British-Iranian Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, a project manager with the Thomson Reuters Foundation, has been jailed in Tehran since 2016 on sedition charges, a detention that has caused major tensions with Britain.

Adelkhah's arrest comes just as French President Emmanuel Macron was seeking to lead European efforts to find a way of keeping alive the 2015 nuclear deal, which limits Iran's atomic programme.

Macron has sent an envoy to Tehran twice in the last month and was even rumoured to be considering becoming the first French president in more than 40 years to travel to the Iranian capital.

The landmark deal is at risk of collapsing after US President Donald Trump pulled Washington out unilaterally, leading Iran to violate safeguards that limited its stockpiling and enrichment of uranium.

Jean-Francois Bayart, a French academic and friend of Adelkhah's, said he and colleagues had alerted French authorities when the anthropologist did not return home from a trip to her homeland as scheduled on June 25.

He said he thought she had been arrested on June 5 and was being held at the Evin prison in Tehran.

"She has been visited by her family. She hasn't been mistreated, but I'm worried about her because she isn't physically strong," Bayart told AFP. "We don't know how long this totally unacceptable detention is going to last."

"Iran doesn't recognise dual nationality, so for them she is Iranian, which is why consular access has not been permitted," he added. "But talks have taken place at the highest levels between the countries."

Other Iranian dual nationals jailed in Iran include Iranian-American Siamak Namazi and his father Baquer, who are serving 10-year sentences for espionage in a case that has outraged Washington.

Chinese-American Xiyue Wang, a Princeton University researcher, is serving a 10-year sentence for espionage and US national Michael White, 46, was this year also sentenced to 10 years.

French academic Clotilde Reiss was detained in Iran for 10 months in 2009-10 before being released in a case that attracted widespread attention at the time.

At around the same time as her release, French judicial authorities freed Ali Vakili Rad, who had been convicted of the 1991 murder outside Paris of the ousted shah's former prime minister Shapour Bakhtiar.

The timing led to speculation about a bilateral deal over the prisoners, though French authorities denied any exchange.

For several months in 2007, Iran detained US-Iranian academic Haleh Esfandiari, one of the most prominent US-based academics working on Iran, who at the time was director of the Middle East programme at the Wilson Centre. 

She was arrested while visiting her mother in Iran.

Bayart said that Adelkhah had arrived in France in 1977 to study.

"She's a free, independent and extremely talented researcher," he told AFP.

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