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40% of Ukraine power grid still damaged — operator

Russia targets Ukrainian energy facilities

By - Dec 01,2022 - Last updated at Dec 01,2022

This photograph taken on Wednesday shows Ukrainian artillerymen standing atop their 2S3 Akatsiya (self-propelled howitzer) in a field near an undisclosed frontline position in eastern Ukraine, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine (AFP photo)

KYIV — Nearly half of Ukraine's electricity grid remains damaged, a private operator said on Thursday, a week after the latest Russian strikes on the country's energy infrastructure disrupted power to millions of people.

“Russia has destroyed 40 per cent of the Ukrainian energy system with terrorist missile attacks. Dozens of energy workers were killed and wounded," DTEK company said in a statement on social media.

After suffering humiliating military defeats on the ground, Russia began targeting Ukrainian energy facilities in October, causing severe damage and power shortages.

Last week, a latest series of massive strikes on these sites left entire regions across Ukraine cold and dark.

"Electrical engineers are doing everything possible and impossible to stabilise the situation regarding energy supply," the company said, saying its technical teams are working "day and night" to quickly repair the infrastructure. 

Authorities said Wednesday that nine people had died in fire-related accidents in the country over the past 24 hours, as Ukrainians are forced to find alternate heating sources. 

Britain's defence ministry said in a note Thursday that continuing Russian strikes on energy infrastructure result in "indiscriminate, widespread humanitarian suffering across Ukraine".

"However, its effectiveness as a strategy has likely been blunted because Russia has already expended a large proportion of its suitable missiles against tactical targets," it said.

 

Biden, Macron close ranks on Russia, China during state visit

By - Dec 01,2022 - Last updated at Dec 01,2022

US President Joe Biden and French President Emmanuel Macron shake hands after a joint press conference in the East Room of the White House in Washington, DC, on Thursday (AFP photo)

WASHINGTON — US President Joe Biden and French President Emmanuel Macron emerged from White House talks Thursday pledging to close ranks in helping Ukraine defend itself from Russia and in facing the "challenge" posed by China.

The leaders issued a joint statement following Oval Office talks during Macron's state visit, which Biden said demonstrated their countries' "unwavering" alliance.

They "outlined a shared vision to strengthen security and increase prosperity worldwide, combat climate change, build greater resilience to its effects, and advance democratic values," the statement said.

The two reaffirmed "support for Ukraine's defence of its sovereignty and territorial integrity, including the provision of political, security, humanitarian, and economic assistance to Ukraine for as long as it takes".

"They also reiterate their steadfast resolve to hold Russia to account for widely documented atrocities and war crimes," the statement added.

On China, they said "the United States and France will continue to coordinate on our concerns regarding China's challenge to the rules-based international order, including respect for human rights, and to work together with China on important global issues like climate change."

They also expressed “respect for the Iranian people, in particular women and youth, who are bravely protesting to gain the freedom to exercise their human rights and fundamental freedoms, which Iran itself has subscribed to and is violating”.

 

21 gun salute

 

Despite tensions over transatlantic trade, Macron took pains to emphasise their countries’ deep historic ties and the current partnership in confronting Russia’s Ukraine invasion. “We need to become brothers in arms once more,” Macron said as he was welcomed to the White House.

Service members from the marines, army, air force and even a detachment of soldiers in 18th-century Revolutionary War garb paraded in front of the White House. Artillery fired off a 21-gun salute, sending puffs of white smoke into the clear, chilly December sky.

Standing on a red-carpeted podium with Macron, Biden said “France is our oldest ally, our unwavering partner in freedom’s cause.”

 The visit certainly symbolised how Washington and Paris have buried last year’s bitter spat over the way Australia pulled out of a French submarine deal in favor of acquiring US nuclear subs instead.

However, Macron has made clear, in unusually blunt language, that he wants to confront Biden over the issue of trade.

Trade dispute 

On his first day of the visit on Wednesday, when he toured NASA headquarters, Arlington National Cemetery and met US lawmakers, the French leader surprised his hosts with a bitter attack on Biden’s signature policy to boost the US green economy, saying it would “kill” European jobs.

The legislation, called the Inflation Reduction Act or IRA, is set to pour billions of dollars into environmentally friendly industries, with strong backing for US-based manufacturers. The White House touts the IRA as a groundbreaking effort to reignite US manufacturing and promote renewable technologies, while breaking Chinese dominance in the field.

However, European Union governments are crying foul, threatening to launch a trade war by subsidising their own green economy sector.

Macron told Biden it is “extremely important precisely to have close coordination” as the US and EU forge ahead in the booming green economy.

Working towards a carbon neutral economy means “creating a lot of jobs, which means investing a lot in our economies, and we have to synchronise our action”, he said.

White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre insisted that US advances in clean energy will help Europeans too, saying: “This is not a zero-sum game.”

And in their joint statement, Biden and Macron pledged that a US-European Union task force would aim to further strengthen their “partnership on clean energy and climate through mutually beneficial ways.”

 

Menu and music 

 

Aside from the trade dispute fireworks, most of the visit revolves around kindling the long, if often slightly prickly US-French diplomatic friendship.

The state dinner at the White House will return grand-scale entertainment to Washington in a way not seen since the COVID-19 pandemic shut down the capital’s typically busy schmoozing scene.

Grammy-award-winning American musician Jon Batiste will perform at the banquet, which the White House said will kick off with butter-poached Maine lobster, paired with caviar, delicata squash raviolo and tarragon sauce.

The main course features beef and triple-cooked butter potatoes, before leading to the cheese course of award-winning US brands, and finally orange chiffon cake, roasted pears with citrus sauce and creme fraiche ice cream.

Washing all that down will be three different wines — all from US vineyards.

At least 16 killed, 24 wounded in north Afghanistan blast

By - Dec 01,2022 - Last updated at Dec 01,2022

KABUL — At least 16 people were killed and 24 others wounded Wednesday by a blast at a madrassa in Afghanistan's northern city of Aybak, a doctor at a local hospital told AFP.

There have been dozens of blasts and attacks targeting civilians since the Taliban returned to power in August last year, most claimed by the local chapter of the Daesh group.

A doctor in Aybak, about 200 kilometres north of the capital Kabul, said the casualties were mostly youngsters.

"All of them are children and ordinary people," he told AFP, asking not to be named.

A provincial official confirmed the blast at Al Jihad madrassa, an Islamic religious school, but could not provide casualty figures.

The Taliban, which frequently plays down casualty figures, said 10 students had died and “many others” were injured.

“Our detective and security forces are working quickly to identify the perpetrators of this unforgivable crime and punish them for their actions,” tweeted Interior Ministry spokesman Abdul Nafay Takor.

Images and video circulating on social media, which could not immediately be verified, showed Taliban fighters picking their way through bodies strewn across the floor of a building.

Prayer mats, shattered glass and other debris littered the scene.

 

Lull between blasts 

 

Aybak is a small but ancient provincial capital that came to prominence as a caravan stopping post for traders during the fourth and fifth centuries when it was also an important Buddhist centre.

There has been a lull of a few weeks between major blasts targeting civilians in Afghanistan, although several Taliban fighters have been killed in isolated attacks.

In September, at least 54 people, including 51 girls and young women, were killed when a suicide bomber detonated a device at a hall in Kabul packed with hundreds of students sitting a practice test for university admissions.

No group claimed responsibility for that bombing, but the Taliban later blamed the Daesh terror group and said it had killed several ringleaders.

In May last year, before the Taliban’s return to power, at least 85 people, mainly girls, were killed and about 300 were wounded when three bombs exploded near their school in the neighbourhood

No group claimed responsibility, but a year earlier Daesh claimed a suicide attack on an educational centre in the area that killed 24.

The Taliban’s return to power brought an end to their insurgency, but Daesh continues to stage attacks across the country.

The Taliban movement, made up primarily of ethnic Pashtuns,  has pledged to protect minorities and clamp down on security threats.

Russian army says it seized two east Ukraine villages near Bakhmut

By - Nov 30,2022 - Last updated at Nov 30,2022

MOSCOW/ BUCHAREST —  The Russian army said Wednesday it seized two east Ukrainian settlements near the embattled town of Bakhmut that Moscow has been trying to capture since this summer.

"In the Donetsk area, after offensive actions, Russian troops fully liberated the settlements of Bilogorivka and Pershe Travnya," the Russian army said in its daily briefing.

Bilogorivka is 25 kilometres north of Bakhmut.

Pershe Travnya — Ozarianyvka in Ukrainian, is 20 kilometres to the south.

The small gains come as Russian armed forces, desperate for a win after retreating from Kherson and Kharkiv, have thrown all their might in the battle for Bakhmut.

Once known for its vineyards and cavernous salt mines, Bakhmut has been dubbed "the meat grinder" due to the brutal trench warfare, artillery duels and frontal assaults around the city.

The Ukrainian presidency said Wednesday that gas, electricity and communications were cut off in the city due to shelling.

Meanwhile, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Wednesday condemned Russia's attacks on Ukraine's civilian infrastructure as "barbaric".

“Over the past several weeks, Russia has bombed out more than a third of Ukraine’s energy system, plunging millions in the cold,” Blinken said after a meeting with NATO counterparts in Bucharest.

“These are President Putin’s new targets. He’s hitting them hard. This brutalisation of Ukraine’s people is barbaric.”

NATO allies pledged to help Ukraine rebuild its shattered power grid as they met with the country’s foreign minster on Tuesday.

Blinken said Western allies were setting up a coordination group to synchronise their support to restore Ukraine’s infrastructure.

Blinken insisted that at the same time as they look to help Ukraine repair its grid, the United States and allies are also giving Kyiv anti-air systems “to establish the best possible defence”.

“We have to do both, and we are doing both,” Blinken said.

Washington’s top diplomat said that the United States supported “the need for a just and durable peace” in Ukraine, but Moscow’s strikes showed it had no interest in achieving that.

“Russia’s savage attacks on Ukrainian civilians are the latest demonstration that President Putin currently has no interest in meaningful diplomacy,” Blinken said.

“Short of erasing Ukraine’s independence, he will try to force Ukraine into a frozen conflict, lock in his gains, rest and refit his forces and then at some point reattack again.”

 

Clashes in south China as authorities warn of 'crackdown'

By - Nov 30,2022 - Last updated at Nov 30,2022

Chinese residents in Japan and supporters stage a rally to protest against China’s Zero Corona in Tokyo on Wednesday as part of candlelight vigil for victimes of 11.24 Urumqi fire (AFP photo)

BEIJING — Clashes broke out between police and protesters in a southern Chinese city, part of a wave of COVID lockdown-sparked demonstrations across the country that have morphed into demands for political freedoms.

China's top security body warned late on Tuesday night that authorities would "crack down" following the protests, which are the most widespread since pro-democracy rallies in 1989 that were crushed with deadly force.

The demonstrations erupted over the weekend across major cities, including Beijing and Shanghai, with China's vast security apparatus moving swiftly to smother any further unrest.

But new clashes broke out in China's southern city of Guangzhou on Tuesday night and into Wednesday, according to witnesses and social media footage verified by AFP.

Security personnel in hazmat suits formed ranks shoulder-to-shoulder, taking cover under see-through riot shields, to make their way down a street in the southern city's Haizhu district as glass smashed around them, videos posted on social media showed.

In the footage people could be heard screaming and shouting, with orange and blue barricades strewn across the ground.

People are seen throwing objects at police, and later nearly a dozen men are filmed being taken away with their hands bound with cable ties.

A Guangzhou resident surnamed Chen told AFP on Wednesday that he had seen around 100 police officers converge on Houjiao village in Haizhu district and arrest at least three men on Tuesday night.

Some students at Guangzhou’s universities said they were forced out of their dormitories overnight on Wednesday, according to social media posts, as a growing number of universities nationwide ordered students home in the wake of campus demonstrations.

Multiple Guangzhou districts lifted restrictions on some or all locked-down neighbourhoods Wednesday afternoon, according to government announcements.

Anger over China’s zero-COVID policy, which involves lockdowns of huge numbers of people and has strangled the economy, has been the trigger for the protests.

A deadly fire last week in Urumqi, the capital of the north-western region of Xinjiang, was the catalyst for the outrage, with people blaming COVID curbs for trapping victims inside the burning building.

China’s National Health Commission announced on Tuesday a renewed effort to expand low vaccination rates among the elderly, long seen as a key obstacle to relaxing the measures.

Vienna welcomes Iran freeing Austrian for medical treatment

By - Nov 30,2022 - Last updated at Nov 30,2022

VIENNA — Vienna on Wednesday welcomed the release of an Austrian from prison in Iran to get medical treatment.

Massud Mossaheb, a 76-year-old Austrian citizen of Iranian origin who was jailed in Iran on charges of espionage, was freed last week.

He has spent almost four years at Tehran’s notorious Evin prison.

“We have been raising the issue at the highest levels and we welcome that these diplomatic endeavours have now produced first results,” a foreign ministry spokeswoman said.

“As far as we are concerned, we will continue with everything in our hands to work for a humanitarian solution in all cases of Austrians imprisoned.”

Two other Austrians are currently detained in Iran.

Mossaheb’s daughter, who declined to be named, said her father had been diagnosed with prostate cancer and had been released “for the length of his treatment”.

He is not allowed to leave Iran and has to report twice a month to the authorities, she added, thanking Austrian authorities for their efforts.

Mossaheb was the general secretary of the Austro-Iranian Society, an organisation set up to encourage exchanges between the two countries.

He was arrested in Tehran in January 2019 while he was accompanying a visiting group of Austrian scientists. Accused of spying for Israel and Germany, he was sentenced to 10 years in jail.

Iran currently holds more than 20 Westerners, many of them with dual nationality.

Rights groups such as Amnesty International have condemned their detention as “hostage-taking” for political ends, as a means to put pressure on Western powers to win concessions.

Iran, which does not recognise double nationality, says that all the people held have been detained following rulings by the courts.

One of the two Austrians still detained was arrested recently. Iranian authorities have not specified the reasons, according to Austria.

Businessman Kamran Ghaderi, another Austrian citizen of Iranian origin, was arrested in 2016 and sentenced to 10 years in jail on spying charges.

 

Ukraine embassy employee in Madrid ‘lightly’ injured by letter bomb

By - Nov 30,2022 - Last updated at Nov 30,2022

Spanish policemen block the street after a letter bomb explosion at the Ukraine’s embassy in Madrid, on Wednesday (AFP photo)

MADRID — A security guard at Ukraine’s embassy in Madrid was lightly injured on Wednesday while opening a letter bomb addressed to the Ukrainian ambassador, prompting Kyiv to boost security at its embassies.

The letter, which arrived by regular post, exploded as the guard opened it in the embassy garden, said the central government’s representative in Madrid, Mercedes Gonzalez.

“Fortunately it was not serious, the person has a small injury to his right hand. The letter was addressed to the ambassador,” she said during an interview with TV station Telemadrid.

A police source said the man had been “lightly” injured and “went himself to a hospital” for treatment.

Spain’s National Police force were informed at around 1:00pm (1200 GMT) of an explosion at the Ukranian embassy in Madrid, the source added.

Police have opened an investigation “which includes the participation of forensic police”, the source said without giving further details.

A security cordon was put in place by the police around the embassy, located in a leafy residential area in northern Madrid.

A man who lives in front of the embassy, who asked not to be identified, told AFP that he had stepped out to walk his dogs and now police where preventing him from returning home.

“I heard it, I thought it was gunshot. It was not too loud,” he said.

Ukrainian Foreign Minister  Dmytro Kuleba ordered the strengthening of security at all Ukrainian embassies, Ukraine’s foreign ministry spokesperson Oleg Nikolenko said on social media after the letter bomb went off.

Spain’s Foreign Minister Jose Manuel Albares has spoken with Ukraine’s ambassador to Spain by telephone “to ask about the well-being of the Ukrainian worker who was injured”, the Spanish foreign ministry said in a statement.

Albares also contacted Kuleba by telephone to express his “support and solidarity”, it added.

Jailed Belarus activist Kolesnikova in intensive care — allies

By - Nov 29,2022 - Last updated at Nov 29,2022

MOSCOW — Jailed Belarusian opposition leader Maria Kolesnikova, who is serving a long prison term, has been admitted to intensive care in hospital, her allies said on Tuesday.

“Maria is in the emergency hospital in Gomel, in the intensive care unit,” said the press service of fellow opposition politician Viktor Babaryko.

Maria Kolesnikova was part of a trio of women — with Veronika Tsepkalo and Svetlana Tikhanovskaya — who led historic demonstrations against Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko.

Kolesnikova, 40, is the only one of the three still in the country, but she is serving 11 years for conspiracy over her role in the mass protests.

According to the press release, she first went to the surgery unit before being sent to intensive care.

“What terrible news. Our dear Masha, we all hope that you will be alright!” said Tikhanovskaya, now leader of the opposition in exile.

Last week Babaryko’s press service said Kolesnikova had been put in solitary confinement on the grounds of “impolite behaviour”. It said her lawyer had been denied access to Kolesnikova.

Kolesnikova was jailed after spectacularly resisting expulsion from her own country.

The Belarusian security services (KGB) had driven her to the Ukrainian border after putting a sack over her head and pushing her into a minibus.

Kolesnikova then avoided deportation by ripping up her passport, but she was imprisoned.

In 2020 massive rallies had broken out across Belarus, against Lukashenko’s claim to a sixth presidential term.

Lukashenko cracked down on the protests, leading to thousands of arrests and the forced exile or imprisonment of activists and journalists.

Kolesnikova — a former flute player in the country’s philharmonic orchestra — became a symbol of the protest movement.

Shortly after her conviction she was given one of Europe’s top human rights awards, the Vaclav Havel Prize, with the Council of Europe praising her courage.

Sentenced along with Kolesnikova was lawyer and activist Maxim Znak, who was given 10 years in a high-security prison colony.

One-time presidential hopeful Babaryko was jailed for 14 years on fraud charges last year in a case he condemned as politically motivated.

Western countries have adopted several sets of sanctions against Minsk, which has Moscow’s unwavering support.

Russia used Belarus as a launching pad for its miliary operation in neighbouring Ukraine on February 24, but the Belarusian army has not officially taken part in fighting on Ukrainian territory.

 

Western allies to help Ukraine brave winter of war

By - Nov 29,2022 - Last updated at Nov 29,2022

A photo taken on November 28, 2022 shows the Russian-controlled Azov Sea port city of Mariupol in southeastern Ukraine (AFP photo)

BUCHAREST — NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg warned Tuesday that Russia was using winter as a "weapon of war" against Ukraine, as Western allies meeting in Bucharest planned to help Kyiv mend its ravaged power grid.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken was to announce "substantial" financial aid to help Ukraine deal with damaged infrastructure on the sidelines of a meeting of NATO's foreign ministers.

A senior US official said the assistance would "not be the end" and pointed out the Biden administration had budgeted $1.1 billion for energy spending in Ukraine and neighbouring Moldova.

A Russian campaign of missile strikes has severely damaged Ukraine's energy infrastructure and plunged millions into darkness as the country braces against the first snows and chill winds of winter.

Stoltenberg said “the message from all of us will be that we need to do more” to help Kyiv fix its gas and electricity infrastructure and provide air defence to help it protect itself better.

He said he expected Russia to carry out more attacks on Ukraine’s grid as the Kremlin suffers defeats on the ground and warned Europe should “be prepared for more refugees”.

“Russia is actually failing on the battlefield. In response to that they are now attacking civilian targets, cities because they’re not able to win territory,” Stoltenberg said at the start of the two-day meeting.

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba was to meet his NATO counterparts to urge them to send more weaponry for Kyiv and assistance in coping with Moscow’s attacks.

 

 ‘Keep calm, give tanks’ 

 

“This targeting of civilian infrastructure, of energy infrastructure is obviously designed to try and freeze the Ukrainians into submission,” said British Foreign Secretary James Cleverly.

“I don’t think it’ll be successful.”

Allies have given arms worth billions of dollars to Ukraine, but Kyiv is pleading for more air defence, tanks and longer-range missiles to push the Kremlin’s forces back.

But there are growing concerns that weapon stores in some NATO countries are running low as stockpiles have been diverted to Ukraine.

Lithuanian Foreign Minister Gabrielius Landsbergis said his request to fellow NATO ministers was simple: “Keep calm and give tanks”.

Germany, which currently chairs the G-7, has convened a meeting Tuesday afternoon on the sidelines of the NATO gathering to discuss the energy crisis caused by the war in Ukraine.

The United States will call on the other member countries to strengthen their aid in this area, according to the US official.

 

 ‘Door is open’ 

 

NATO says the meeting in Bucharest will showcase its unity on continuing to support Ukraine as Moscow’s war against its neighbour drags on into its tenth month.

The alliance will not, however, make any progress on Ukraine’s request to join, first made some 14 years ago when NATO first pledged that Kyiv would one day become a member.

Stoltenberg insisted that the “door is open” to new members but said the focus now was on assisting Ukraine in its fight with Moscow.

NATO has bolstered its eastern flank in the face of Russia’s war by sending more troops and equipment to countries like Romania, neighbouring Ukraine.

Romania has been hard hit by the war and around two million people fleeing Ukraine have passed through the country.

Non-NATO Moldova, which has also seen blackouts caused by the fallout from the attacks on neighbouring Ukraine, will attend the alliance’s talks on Thursday along with Bosnia and Georgia.

Besides the war in Ukraine, the ministers will take stock of progress in the accession of NATO candidates Finland and Sweden, already ratified by 28 of the 30 member countries but which remains suspended awaiting the green light from Hungary and Turkey.

The Finnish, Swedish and Turkish foreign ministers were meeting on the sidelines of the meeting, but Ankara has played down hope for any quick breakthrough.

 

Top China security body calls for 'crackdown' on 'hostile forces' after protests

By - Nov 29,2022 - Last updated at Nov 29,2022

Residents undergo swab testing at a residential area under lockdown due to COVID-19 coronavirus restrictions in Beijing on Tuesday (AFP photo)

BEIJING — China's top security body on Tuesday called for a "crackdown" on "hostile forces" after the country saw protests in major cities opposing COVID lockdowns and demanding greater political freedoms.

The ruling Communist Party's Central Political and Legal Affairs Commission, which oversees all domestic law enforcement in China, said it was "necessary to crack down on infiltration and sabotage activities by hostile forces in accordance with the law", according to a readout of a meeting carried in state news agency Xinhua.

It also said it was crucial to "resolutely crack down on illegal criminal acts that disrupt social order in accordance with the law, and earnestly safeguard overall social stability".

A deadly fire last week in Urumqi, the capital of the north-western region of Xinjiang, was the catalyst for the outrage, with protesters taking to the streets in cities across China to pay tribute to the dead and call for an end to hardline COVID controls.

Security forces have already moved to quash repeat demonstrations since the weekend, with police out in force across China on Tuesday.

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