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Russian strike kills one, wounds 16 in south Ukraine

By - Oct 15,2024 - Last updated at Oct 15,2024

This handout photograph taken and released by the State Emergency Service of Ukraine on Tuesday, shows the State Emergency Service of Ukraine rescuer examines the site of a rocket impact after a missile attack in Mykolaiv (AFP photo)


KYIV, Ukraine — A Russian missile strike overnight killed a woman and wounded 16 people in Mykolaiv in southern Ukraine, where Moscow has ramped up aerial attacks, authorities said on Tuesday.

Images distributed by first responders showed several buildings engulfed in flames and firefighters working to extinguish the blaze.

"Last night the enemy attacked Mykolaiv. A woman was killed," emergency services said, adding that 16 people were injured.

Mykolaiv had an estimated pre-war population of just under half a million people and was subjected to heavy bombardment when Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022.

Ukrainian forces pushed back Russian troops from the region in the autumn of 2022.

However Russian forces have continued to strike the riverside town near the Black Sea coast and over recent weeks stepped up fatal aerial attacks on the nearby port city of Odesa, damaging civilian vessels and port facilities.

The Ukrainian air force meanwhile said it had downed 12 out of 17 Iranian-designed attack drones launched by Russia at Ukraine overnight, including over the Mykolaiv region.

 

North Korea’s Kim holds security meeting over drone flights

By - Oct 15,2024 - Last updated at Oct 15,2024

his screen grab taken from video released by the South Korean Defence Ministry and filmed from an undisclosed location in South Korea along the inter-Korean border shows an explosion on a road connecting North and South Korea on Tuesday (AFP photo)

SEOUL  —   North Korean leader Kim Jong-un convened a top national security meeting to direct a plan of “immediate military action” in a dispute with the South over drone flights, state media reported on Tuesday.

The nuclear-armed North has accused Seoul of flying drones over its capital to drop anti-regime propaganda leaflets, with Pyongyang ordering troops on its border to be prepared to fire, and South Korea saying Monday it was “fully ready” to respond.

Seoul’s military initially denied North Korea’s claim, but later declined to confirm whether it had sent drones across the border.

Last weekend the North said Seoul would face a “horrible disaster” if drones from the South reached Pyongyang again.

Monday’s meeting in the North was attended by the country’s top officials, including the army head and other military chiefs, as well as the ministers of state security and defence.

“He set forth the direction of immediate military action and indicated important tasks to be fulfilled in the operation of the war deterrent and the exercise of the right to self-defence,” the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) reported on Tuesday.

Officials at the meeting in Pyongyang heard a report on the “enemy’s serious provocation”, KCNA reported, an apparent reference to the drone flights.

Kim “expressed a tough political and military stand” at the meeting, state media said.

The North has accused Seoul of being responsible for drones which dropped propaganda leaflets filled with “inflammatory rumours and rubbish”, and warned on Sunday that it would consider it “a declaration of war” if another drone was detected.

Local speculation in the South has been centred on activist groups in the country that have long sent anti-Kim propaganda and US currency northwards, typically by balloon.

But South Korean drone enthusiasts have previously sent homemade devices across the border, local media said, with Pyongyang within range of those with big batteries.

Unlike conventional drones made of metal, the devices they used were constructed from expanded polypropylene, similar to Styrofoam, allowing them to go undetected by both South and North Korean authorities, according to enthusiasts who spoke to local media.

 

Drones from North 

 

In 2022, five North Korean drones crossed into the South, the first such incident in five years, prompting the South Korean military to fire warning shots and deploy fighter jets.

The jets failed to shoot down any of the North Korean drones at the time.

Seoul in July said it would deploy this year drone-melting laser weapons designed to shoot down North Korean devices, saying the South’s ability to provocations “will be significantly enhanced”.

The new laser weapons — dubbed the “StarWars Project” by the South — shoot an invisible, silent beam that costs just 2,000 won ($1.45) per use, according to the Defence Acquisition Programme Administration (DAPA).

Relations between the two Koreas are at their lowest point in years, with the North’s army saying last week it would permanently shut the southern border by “completely cutting off roads and railways” connected to the South and building “strong defence structures”.

Following Kim’s meeting in Pyongyang, “attention is turning to whether North Korea will respond by sending drones into the South or take strong action if drones infiltrate its territory again”, said Cheong Seong-chang of the Sejong Institute.

“North Korea is likely to engage in strong provocations along the border if there is a recurrence of drone infiltrations,” Cheong told AFP.

India foreign minister lands in Pakistan for rare visit

By - Oct 15,2024 - Last updated at Oct 15,2024

In this handout photo taken on Tuesday, and released by Pakistan’s Press Information Department, India’s Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar (left) is greeted upon his arrival at the Nur Khan Airbase in Rawalpindi (AFP photo)

ISLAMABAD — Indian Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar arrived in Pakistan on Tuesday for a Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) summit, the first top Delhi diplomat to visit in nearly a decade.

Jaishankar’s plane landed just before 3:30pm (10:30 GMT) at an airbase near the capital Islamabad, a foreign office official said, as state TV showed him receiving a bouquet of flowers from a host delegation that did not include any senior ministers.

Nuclear-armed India and Pakistan are bitter adversaries with longstanding political tensions, having fought three wars and numerous smaller skirmishes since they were carved out of the subcontinent’s partition in 1947.

Relations have been particularly sour since 2019, when Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi revoked the limited autonomy of Indian-administered Kashmir.

The Himalayan region is divided between India and Pakistan but claimed by both in full, with each accusing the other of stoking militancy there.

Modi’s 2019 move was celebrated across India but led Pakistan to suspend bilateral trade and downgrade diplomatic ties with New Delhi.

Indian government spokesman Randhir Jaiswal said this month the agenda of Jaishankar’s visit would strictly follow the SCO schedule, which is due to discuss trade, humanitarian and social issues.

“The Indian foreign minister has not requested a bilateral meeting, nor have we extended an invitation to them,” Pakistan Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar said on Sunday.

Former Indian foreign minister Sushma Swaraj was the last to visit Pakistan in 2015, arriving for a summit on Afghanistan.

Modi also made a surprise visit to Pakistan that year, shortly after taking office for his first term, sparking short-lived hopes of a thaw in relations.

The SCO is a block of 10 nations established by China and Russia, which have used the alliance to deepen their ties with Central Asian states and vie for influence in the region.

However, they have recently pitched the organisation as a competitor to the West.

The bloc claims to represent 40 per cent of the world’s population and about 30 per cent of its GDP, but its members have diverse political systems and even open disagreements with one another.

Pakistan’s former foreign minister Bilawal Bhutto Zardari was in Goa last year — also a rare visit — for an SCO meeting where he and Jaishankar were involved in a verbal spat.

It was the first official visit by a senior Pakistani official to their eastern neighbour since 2016, but the two foreign ministers did not hold a one-on-one meeting.

China, Russia pledge to strengthen military cooperation

By - Oct 14,2024 - Last updated at Oct 14,2024

Russian President Vladimir Putin (left) and Chinese President Xi Jinping shake hands during a signing ceremony following their talks in Beijing on May 16 (AFP photo)

BEIJING — The Chinese and Russian defence ministers pledged on Monday to deepen cooperation between their two countries' militaries as they met in Beijing.

Moscow and Beijing have forged closer ties since Russia invaded neighbouring Ukraine in February 2022, an alliance that has drawn anxiety in the West as both countries seek to expand their global influence.

China and Russia declared a "no limits" partnership shortly before Moscow launched its attack on Ukraine and have carried out a series of military drills together since.

Chinese defence minister Dong Jun met Russian counterpart Andrei Belousov in Beijing on Monday and called for the two sides to "deepen strategic collaboration" and "continuously advance military relations".

"Under the strong leadership of President Xi Jinping and President (Vladimir) Putin, China-Russia relations have reached an all-time high... serving as a model for major power relations," Dong said, according to Beijing's defence ministry.

Belousov, in turn, said that "friendly relations" between their two leaders "play a key role in strengthening strategic ties", according to Russian news agencies.

Military cooperation between China and Russia, he said, played an important role in "maintaining global and regional stability".

He also said he hoped his talks in Beijing would "help strengthen the Russian-Chinese strategic partnership in the field of defence".

Belousov arrived in Beijing on Monday for talks with China's "military and military-political leadership", according to Moscow.

Putin said in August that Russia's economic and trade links with China were "yielding results" and that the two were working on joint "economic and humanitarian" projects.

Russian and Chinese warships carried out joint drills in the Sea of Japan last month, part of a major naval exercise that Putin said was the largest of its kind for three decades.

China presents itself as a neutral party in the Ukraine war and says it is not sending lethal assistance to either side, unlike the United States and other Western nations.

However, it remains a close political and economic ally of Russia and NATO members have branded Beijing a "decisive enabler" of the war, which it has never condemned.

Putin and Xi declared during a summit last year that ties were "entering a new era".

Xi is set to attend a summit of BRICS leaders in Russia next week, where he is expected to meet Putin again.

EU slams 'unacceptable' Israel attacks on Lebanon peacekeepers

By - Oct 14,2024 - Last updated at Oct 14,2024

Vehicles from the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon patrol in Marjayoun in southern Lebanon on October 12, 2024 (AFP photo)

LUXEMBOURG — The European Union's foreign policy chief Josep Borrell Monday denounced as "completely unacceptable" a series of Israeli attacks that have injured United Nations peacekeepers in southern Lebanon.

"The 27 (EU) members agreed on asking (the) Israelis to stop attacking UNIFIL," Borrell told reporters ahead of a meeting of the bloc's foreign ministers in Luxembourg. "It's completely unacceptable attacking United Nations troops," he said.

At least five peacekeepers have been wounded in recent days as Israel targets Hezbollah in southern Lebanon.

UNIFIL, a mission of about 9,500 troops of various nationalities created following Israel's 1978 invasion of Lebanon, has accused the Israeli military of "deliberately" firing on its positions.

"Many European members are participating in this mission," Borrell noted. "Their work is very important."

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called on UN chief Antonio Guterres Sunday to move peacekeepers deployed in south Lebanon out of "harm's way", saying Hezbollah was using them as "human shields".

UNIFIL has refused to leave its positions.

Taiwan on alert as China aircraft carrier group detected

By - Oct 13,2024 - Last updated at Oct 13,2024

aiwanese soldiers stand in formation beside US-made M101 howitzers during a visit by Taiwan's President Lai Ching-te at the air force base in Hualien on May 28, 2024 (AFP photo)

TAIPEI — Taiwan said it was "on alert" as it detected a Chinese aircraft carrier group to its south on Sunday, days after the United States warned Beijing against taking "provocative" actions on the self-ruled island.
 
US State Secretary Antony Blinken warned China on Friday against taking action in response to a speech by Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te during the island's National Day celebrations.
 
China has ramped up military activity around Taiwan in recent years, sending in warplanes and other military aircraft while Chinese ships maintain a near-constant presence around its waters.
 
Taiwan's defence ministry said Sunday that a Chinese Liaoning aircraft carrier group had entered the Bashi Channel, a waterway that separates the island from the Philippines, "and is likely to proceed into the western Pacific". 
 
"The Taiwanese military is employing joint intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance systems to closely monitor related activities and remains on alert, prepared to respond as necessary," it said in a statement.
 
Taiwan and US officials had warned of possible Chinese military drills in response to Lai's speech.
 
The United States is Taiwan's most important backer and biggest supplier of weapons, but does not hold formal diplomatic relations with Taipei.
 
 'Resist annexation' 
 
Lai, who took office in May, has been more outspoken than his predecessor Tsai Ing-wen in defending Taiwan's sovereignty, angering Beijing, which calls him a "separatist".
 
In his speech on Thursday, Lai vowed to "resist annexation" of the island, and insisted Beijing and Taipei were "not subordinate to each other".
 
China warned after the speech that Lai's "provocations" would result in "disaster" for the people of Taiwan.
 
While Taiwan has its own government, military and currency, it has never declared formal independence from mainland China.
 
Beijing has sought to erase Taipei from the international stage, blocking it from global forums and poaching its diplomatic allies.
 
China has held three rounds of large-scale war games in the past two years, deploying aircraft and ships to encircle the island.
 
Taiwan's defence ministry said Sunday that 11 Chinese military aircraft and eight navy vessels were detected around the island in the 24 hours to 6:00 am.
 

16 killed in latest northwest Pakistan sectarian clash

By - Oct 13,2024 - Last updated at Oct 13,2024

ISLAMABAD — At least 16 people, including three women and two children, were killed in a fresh sectarian clash in Pakistan's northwest, officials said.
 
Sunni and Shiite Muslim tribes have been engaged in intermittent fighting for several months in the Kurram district of Pakistan's Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.
 
Kurram, formerly a semi-autonomous area, has a history of bloody confrontations between tribes belonging to the Sunni and Shiite sects of Islam that have claimed hundreds of lives over the years.
 
A convoy of Sunnis was travelling under the protection of paramilitary soldiers on Saturday when they came under attack, a senior Kurram administration official told AFP on the condition of anonymity.
 
"As a result, 14 people, including 3 women and 2 children, were killed, and six others were wounded," he said.
 
Frontier police responded and killed two of the attackers, who were identified as Shiites, he said.
 
The official said the latest attack had "sectarian motives" that "have plagued the region for the past two decades".
 
"Every conflict tends to take on a sectarian dimension," he said.
 
Other recent clashes in July and September killed dozens of people and ended only after a jirga, or tribal council, called a ceasefire.
 
Officials are attempting to broker a fresh truce.
 
Tribal and family feuds are common in Pakistan. 
 
However, they can be particularly protracted and violent in remote areas of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, where communities abide by traditional tribal honour codes.
 
The Shiite community in Pakistan, a predominantly Sunni Muslim country, has long suffered discrimination and violence.
 

40 nations contributing to UN Lebanon peacekeeping force condemn 'attacks'

By - Oct 13,2024 - Last updated at Oct 13,2024

UNIFIL says its headquarters in Naqura (top left) and other positions have come under repeated fire (AFP photo)

UNITED NATIONS, UNITED STATES — Forty nations that contribute to the UN peacekeeping force in Lebanon said Saturday that they "strongly condemn recent attacks" on the peacekeepers.
 
"Such actions must stop immediately and should be adequately investigated," said the joint statement, posted on X by the Polish UN mission and signed by nations including leading contributors Indonesia, Italy and India.
 
Other signatories include Ghana, Nepal, Malaysia, Spain, France and China , all countries that have contributed several hundred troops to the force.
 
At least five peacekeepers have been wounded in recent days as Israel takes its fight against Hizbollah  into southern Lebanon.
 
The peacekeeping mission, UNIFIL, has accused the Israeli military of "deliberately" firing on its positions.
 
The 40 contributing countries "reaffirm our full support for UNIFIL's mission and activities, whose principal aim is to bring stabilization and lasting peace in South Lebanon as well as in the Middle East," the statement read.
 
"We urge the parties of the conflict to respect UNIFIL's presence, which entails the obligation to guarantee the safety and security of its personnel at all times," it added.
 
UNIFIL, which involves about 9,500 troops of some 50 nationalities, is tasked with monitoring a ceasefire that ended a 33-day war in 2006 between Israel and .
 
Its role was bolstered by UN Security Council Resolution 1701 of that year, which stipulated that only the Lebanese army and UN peacekeepers should be deployed in south Lebanon.
 
At a summit on Friday, French, Italian and Spanish leaders said the "attacks" on UNIFIL peacekeepers violated Resolution 1701 and must end.
 
UNIFIL said that, in recent days, its forces have "repeatedly" come under fire in the Lebanese town of Naqura where it is headquartered, as well as in other positions.
 
The mission said that Israeli tank fire on Thursday caused two Indonesian peacekeepers to fall off a watch tower in Naqura. 
 
The following day it said explosions close to an observation tower in Naqura wounded two Sri Lankan Blue Helmets, while Israel said it had responded to an "immediate threat" near a UN peacekeeping position.
 
On Saturday UNIFIL said a peacekeeper in Naqura "was hit by gunfire" on Friday night.
 
UNIFIL spokesman Andrea Tenenti told AFP the peacekeeping mission's work had become "very difficult because there is a lot of damage, even inside the bases."
 
 

With medical report, Harris plays health card against Trump

By - Oct 13,2024 - Last updated at Oct 13,2024

WASHINGTON — Democratic White House candidate Kamala Harris is in "excellent health" and fit for the presidency, according to a medical report published by the White House Saturday, as she challenged rival Donald Trump to publish his own health records.
 
"Vice President Harris remains in excellent health," her physician Joshua Simmons said in the report, adding that she "possesses the physical and mental resiliency required to successfully execute the duties of the presidency."
 
Speaking to reporters on Saturday ahead of a trip to North Carolina, Harris called Trump's unwillingness to publish his records "a further example of his lack of transparency."
 
"It's obvious that his team at least, does not want the American people to see everything about who he is... and whether or not he is actually fit to do the job of being president of the United States," she said.
 
But as Harris ramped up pressure for details on the physical health and mental acuity of the 78-year-old Trump, the former president's campaign pushed back.
 
The Republican candidate is also "in perfect and excellent health to be Commander in Chief," it said in a statement, and charged that Harris lacked his strength to lead the country.
 
'Unremarkable' exam 
 
Harris's most recent physical exam, conducted in April, was "unremarkable," according to Simmons.
 
In the detailed report, her physician noted that Harris suffers from seasonal allergies and hives, which are managed by non-prescription as well as prescription medications. The vice president is also slightly nearsighted and wears contact lenses, the report said.
 
Trump became the oldest presidential nominee from a major political party in US history after 81-year-old President Joe Biden withdrew from the White House race in July. Harris is 59.
 
Biden passed the torch to Harris after a disastrous debate against Trump raised concerns in the Democratic Party about his own mental sharpness.
 
But Trump's age has not appeared to be a deal-breaker for voters, as polls show a knife-edge battle with Harris in the November 5 presidential election.
 
 'Confused' 
 
Harris's campaign drew attention to a recent series of articles in The New York Times that raised concerns about Trump's failure to disclose basic information about his health. 
 
The newspaper has also published an analysis of Trump's language showing that his speeches are increasingly long and "confused," and include vulgarities -- a trend seen by experts as a possible sign of cognitive decline.
 
Trump has continued to insist he is fit for office, and on Saturday, his campaign republished statements from his former White House doctor, Ronny Jackson, that were released following the July assassination attempt on Trump in which a bullet grazed his right ear.
 
In the statement dated July 26, Jackson, who is now a Republican congressman from Texas, said Trump was doing "extremely well" and "rapidly recovering" from the wound.
 
Trump's campaign also circulated a note from another doctor who examined Trump in September 2023. Bruce Aronwald, a physician who is reportedly a longtime member of one of Trump's golf clubs, declared the former president to be in "excellent" health, while providing few details about the exam.
 
Trump's campaign said he had maintained "an extremely busy and active campaign schedule unlike any other in political history," and asserted that Harris's campaign schedule showed her to be "wholly unqualified to be President of the United States."
 
Trump's personal and White House doctors have at times made seemingly exaggerated claims about his health.
 
In 2015, as Trump was running for the presidency, his doctor Harold Bornstein declared that he would be "the healthiest individual ever elected to the presidency." And Jackson said in 2018 that with a better diet Trump could live to be 200.
 
If Trump wins the election in November, he would be 82 at the end of his second term.
 

Nobel Prize a timely reminder, Hiroshima locals say

By - Oct 12,2024 - Last updated at Oct 12,2024

Member of the Nihon Hidankyo and atomic bomb survivor, co-chair Terumi Tanaka speaks during a press conference in Tokyo on Saturday (AFP photo)

HIROSHIMA, JAPAN — Just like the dwindling group of survivors now recognised with a Nobel prize, Hiroshima's residents hope that the world never forgets the atomic bombing of 1945 , now more than ever.
 
Susumu Ogawa, 84, was five when the bomb dropped by the United States all but obliterated the Japanese city 79 years ago, and many of his family were among the 140,000 people killed.
 
"My mother, my aunt, my grandfather, and my grandmother all died," Ogawa told AFP a day after the survivors' group Nihon Hidankyo was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.
 
Ogawa recalls very little but the snippets he garnered from surviving relatives and others painted a hellish picture.
 
"All they could do was to evacuate and save their own lives, while they saw other people (perish) inside the inferno," he said.
 
"All nuclear weapons in the world have to be abandoned," Ogawa said. "We know the horror of nuclear weapons, because we know what happened in Hiroshima."
 
What is happening now in the Middle East saddens him greatly.
 
"Why do people fight each other?... Hurting each other won't bring anything good," he said.
 
- 'Great thing' -
 
On a sunny Saturday, tourists and residents strolled around the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park where "Little Boy" detonated with a force equivalent to 15,000 tonnes of TNT.
 
Temperatures reached an estimated 7,000 degrees Celsius A firestorm sucked the oxygen out of the air and homes blazed for miles around.
 
A preserved skeleton of a building close to ground zero and a statue of a girl with outstretched arms are poignant reminders today.
 
Nihon Hidankyo was formed in 1956, tasked with telling the stories of "hibakusha" -- the survivors -- and pressing for a world without nuclear weapons.
 
Visiting the Hiroshima memorial, Kiyoharu Bajo, 69, said he hopes that the Nobel prize will help "further spread the experiences of atomic bomb survivors around the world" and persuade others to visit.
 
With the average age among the roughly 105,000 hibakusha still alive now 85, it is vital that young people continue to be taught about what happened, added the retired business consultant.
 
"I was born 10 years after the atom bomb was dropped, so there were many atom bomb survivors around me. I felt the incident as something familiar to me," he said.
 
"But for the future, it will be an issue."
 
 Like rain 
 
Three days after Hiroshima, on August 9, 1945, the United States dropped a second nuclear weapon on the southern city of Nagasaki, killing around 74,000 people.
 
The bombings, the only times nuclear weapons have been used in history, were the final blow to imperial Japan and its brutal rampage across Asia. It surrendered on August 15, 1945.
 
Shigemitsu Tanaka was four and survived. 
 
Today the 83-year-old is co-chair of Nihon Hidankyo and had almost given up on the group winning the Nobel, he told a packed news conference in Tokyo on Saturday. 
 
"Our early members shared their experiences in Japan and abroad despite discrimination and their health issues. I think (their message) penetrated like rain," he said by video link.
 
"We heard the news on a plane... I almost gave up as it wasn't showing the news. But the words 'Hidankyo won' appeared on the screen, and I shouted 'Yes!'," he said.
 
Terumi Tanaka, 92, another co-chair, was 13 and at his hillside home when the bomb hit Nagasaki.
 
"I wanted to be a soldier... Then I experienced the atomic bomb. Five of my relatives died from it," he told the same event.
 
"I saw the atrocities. Bodies were everywhere," he said.
 
He welcomed the Nobel prize but said that the danger of a nuclear war was still very real, almost 80 years on.
 
"I'm a victim but you could be victims too in the future," he said.
 
Jiro Hamasumi's father was at work when the bomb hit Hiroshima, just a few hundred metres from the epicentre. He was killed.
 
"I thought of my father (when I heard about the Nobel). Not a day goes by without me remembering him. I wanted to tell him about the prize, I thought," the 78-year-old said Saturday.
 
Hidankyo has had to disband in 11 out of Japan's 47 prefectures, partly due to its ageing membership. 
 
"It's tough, but I want to keep trying. I don't want Nihon Hidankyo to stop its activities," Hamasumi said.
 

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