You are here

World

World section

Ukraine denies attacking Russian-held nuclear plant

By - Apr 09,2024 - Last updated at Apr 09,2024

KYIV, Ukraine — Ukraine on Monday accused Moscow of spreading "fake" information after Russian officials said a Ukrainian drone had hit the Moscow-controlled Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant.

The head of Ukraine's centre for countering disinformation, Lieutenant Andriy Kovalenko, said Russia was intensifying a "campaign of provocation and fakes" after it claimed that Ukrainian forces attacked the plant on Sunday.

Russia is attacking the station "with drones, pretending that the threat to the plant and nuclear safety is coming from Ukraine", Kovalenko said.

The Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant in southern Ukraine, Europe's largest such facility, has been occupied by Russian forces since the start of their February 2022 invasion.

Russia's nuclear agency Rosatom said there was a "series of attacks" Sunday, with one drone striking the site's canteen, wounding three staff members, one of them "severely".

Drones also hit a cargo port and the roof of one of the site's six reactors, it said.

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which has experts at the plant, said the attacks caused a "physical impact" on one reactor and resulted in one casualty, but nuclear safety was not compromised.

Rosatom called on Western nations and IAEA chief Rafael Grossi to "categorically condemn the attempt to escalate the situation around the biggest nuclear power plant in Europe".

Kovalenko accused Russia of "manipulating the concerns of the IAEA" and "trying to accuse Ukraine of nuclear terrorism".

A spokesman for the Ukrainian defence ministry's main directorate of intelligence, Andriy Yusov, had earlier accused Russia of endangering the power station and carrying out "simulated strikes".

Swapping of the Guard: French, British troops mark Entente Cordiale

By - Apr 09,2024 - Last updated at Apr 09,2024

British members of Number 7 Company Coldstream Guards march along the street outside the Elysee Palace, as they make their way into the courtyard, in Paris on Monday (AFP photo)

LONDON — French and British troops on Monday swapped roles to take part in ceremonies outside the palaces of the other country’s head of state, in a historic move to celebrate 120 years since the Entente Cordiale.

Signed in 1904, the accord cemented an improvement in relations after the Napoleonic Wars and is seen as the foundation of the two NATO members’ alliance to this day.

Even after Brexit and with war back in Europe, “this entente cordiale is somehow the cornerstone... that allows us to maintain the bilateral relationship”, French President Emmanuel Macron said in a social media video.

“Long live the Entente Cordiale and long live the Franco-British friendship,” he said, switching to English.

UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak hailed the anniversary as “a powerful symbol of the enduring friendship between our nations” in a call with Macron.

They also discussed shared challenges, from wars in the Middle East and Ukraine to migrants crossing the Channel on small boats, Sunak’s office said.

Macron and Britain’s Ambassador to France Menna Rawlings watched British guards taking part in the changing of the guard outside the Elysee Palace.

French guards then did the same in London outside Buckingham Palace, the official residence of King Charles III.

At the Elysee, 16 members of the Number 7 Company Coldstream Guards, wearing traditional bearskin hats, relieved French counterparts from the first infantry regiment.

The French army choir then sang the two national anthems — God Save the King and La Marseillaise.

‘More to defeat Russia’

British Foreign Minister David Cameron and his French counterpart, Stephane Sejourne, celebrated their countries’ “close friendship” in a joint op-ed.

They said it was key at a time when NATO is mobilised to ensure Ukraine does not lose its fight against Russia.

“Britain and France, two founding members and Europe’s nuclear powers, have a responsibility in driving the alliance to deal with the challenges before it,” the diplomats wrote in Britain’s The Telegraph newspaper.

“We must do even more to ensure we defeat Russia. The world is watching — and will judge us if we fail.”

A French presidential official said it was “the first time in the history of the Elysee” that foreign troops had been invited to participate in the military ritual.

At the end of 2023, Macron made the changing of the Republican Guard public again, on the first Tuesday of each month, although the ceremony is less spectacular than the event outside Buckingham Palace.

Two sections of the 1st and 2nd Infantry Regiment of France’s Republican Guard participated in the London ceremony alongside guards from F Company Scots Guards and other British forces, the French presidential official said.

It was watched by the Duke and Duchess of Edinburgh — Prince Edward and his wife Sophie — accompanied by the UK chief of the general staff, General Patrick Sanders, and French chief of the army staff Pierre Schill.

Tensions after Brexit

The event on the forecourt of Buckingham Palace was the first time a country from outside the Commonwealth — mostly English-speaking former British colonies and possessions — has taken part in the changing of the guard.

Tourists crowded around the palace fence as the two groups of soldiers conducted the unprecedented ceremony.

“It really is a monumental occasion,” said Jamie Drummond-Moray, officer commanding F Company Scots Guards.

The signing of the Entente Cordiale on April 8, 1904, is widely seen as preparing the way for France and Britain to join forces against Germany in World War I.

While the accord is often used as shorthand to describe the Franco-British relationship, ties have been bedevilled by tensions in recent years, particularly since Britain left the European Union.

Migration has been a particular sticking point, with London pressuring Paris to stop undocumented migrants crossing the Channel.

But a state visit by King Charles last year was widely seen as a success that showed the fundamental strength of the relationship.

A couple’s long quest for Rwanda genocide justice

By - Apr 08,2024 - Last updated at Apr 08,2024

Alain and Dafroza Gauthier have dedicated three decades of their lives seeking to bring justice to victims of Rwanda’s 1994 genocide (AFP photo)

REIMS, France — Dafroza Mukarumongi-Gauthier, who lost nearly all her family in the 1994 genocide in Rwanda, tells rapt schoolchildren how she and her husband have for three decades tracked down genocide suspects who have found refuge in France.

For 30 years Dafroza, 69, and Alain Gauthier, 75, have dedicated much of their spare time and now retirement to trawling parts of Rwanda to search for evidence of ex-killers, prisoners and survivors.

“When we’ve spotted the killer in France, we go to the scene of the crime,” Dafroza tells the French pupils.

“We look to see if there are survivors and we begin the investigation.”

Ahead of the 30th anniversary of the genocide beginning on Sunday, the couple addressed around 100 high school students in the northern French city of Reims.

Known as the Klarsfelds of Rwanda after the Nazi hunters Beate and Serge Klarsfeld, the couple have made it their life’s duty to “end impunity” of those responsible.

Over 100 days between April and July 1994, more than 800,000 minority Tutsis and moderate members of the Hutu majority were killed, in massacres orchestrated and inflamed by the authorities.

Rwandan-born Dafroza’s own life was utterly devastated.

In late February of that year, she went to Kigali to see her family.

Tensions were already high and Hutu militiamen were stationed in the capital.

 

‘Abyss’ of pain 

 

Her mother urged her to flee to France but Dafroza could not persuade her family to leave, she told AFP, her face bearing traces of the enduring pain three decades on.

She would never see them again.

Her mother, Suzana, was shot outside a church in a Kigali parish where she had taken refuge.

Dafroza lost as many as 80 family members, with no survivors on her mother’s side.

“It’s an abyss — all these deaths that inhabit us,” she said.

For several years, the Gauthiers have gone into schools and universities in an effort to pass on the memory of what happened.

The Reims students listened to the horrific testimony of survivors, viewed archive images and watched a film showcasing the Gauthiers’ work.

Abylou Taiclet-Andre, 18, said it had made all the difference to their understanding, as in school they just learned figures and it remained “vague”.

“Whereas here, we had people who could bear witness and we had very touching witness accounts,” she said.

 

‘Complacency’ 

 

Rwanda has long accused France, which maintained close relations with the then Rwandan Hutu-dominated regime, of complicity.

In 2021, a commission of historians set up by President Emmanuel Macron concluded that France had “heavy and overwhelming responsibilities” for the tragedy.

Macron said this week ahead of the anniversary that France and its Western and African allies “could have stopped” the genocide but did not have the will to do so.

Historical links between Paris and the regime of then Rwandan president Juvenal Habyarimana — whose death sparked the violence — helped many of those responsible find refuge in France after 1994, the Gauthiers say, blasting French “complacency”.

They became doctors, priests, municipal employees and led anonymous lives.

The Collective of Civil Parties for Rwanda, which the Gauthiers co-founded in 2001, is behind the bulk of more than 30 legal cases filed in France against Rwandan nationals.

To date, seven men have been sentenced in France for their participation in the genocide, to sentences ranging from 14 years in jail to life imprisonment.

France is, along with former colonial power Belgium, the European country from which Rwanda has urged the most extraditions of suspects — 42.

France’s highest court has consistently opposed extradition to Kigali on the grounds that the crime was not on Rwandan statute books at the time of the massacre.

 

‘Our duty’ 

 

The Gauthiers have travelled to Rwanda three or four times a year, shrugging off sleepless nights haunted by witness accounts of the horror.

“Fortunately, we did this work for the sake of justice,” Alain, a French-Rwandan national, said.

“Had we not committed ourselves, I think that no genocide perpetrator would have been tried and convicted today in France.

“It is regrettable that this justice system has relied for so long on the initiative of a few basic citizens like us... It was not until 2019 that the prosecution took the initiative to prosecute and open judicial investigations against people suspected of having participated in the genocide,” Alain notes..

For Dafroza, “justice allows you to mourn”.

“What we do with a trial is rehabilitate victims, say their names and what they were,” she said.

“This is the moral restitution the victims expect” and require, she added.

Given that countless victims ended up in mass graves and remain unidentified “their only grave... the only worthy burial we can offer them is justice” itself.

“These trials had to take place in order to strip away impunity,” she said.

The couple are due to attend the commemoration in Kigali on Sunday, an event Dafroza says is important for those born after the genocide.

“We remember in our hearts almost daily. We have been living with this for 30 years,” she said emotionally.

But, says Alain, “we will have done our little bit towards reconciliation in Rwanda. We did our duty.”

 

Ecuador in diplomatic storm after raid at Mexican embassy

By - Apr 08,2024 - Last updated at Apr 08,2024

Riot police officers and members of the diplomatic police corps stand guard outside the Ecuadorian embassy in Mexico City on Saturday, following the severance of diplomatic relations between the two countries (AFP photo)

QUITO — Ecuador was lambasted across Latin America on Saturday after its security forces stormed the Mexican embassy in Quito to arrest graft-accused former vice president Jorge Glas, who had been granted political asylum there.

Special forces surrounded the embassy with a battering ram, and at least one agent scaled the walls, in an almost unheard-of raid on diplomatic premises that are considered inviolable sovereign territory.

The incident on Friday night prompted Mexico to quickly sever diplomatic ties with Ecuador.

“This is a flagrant violation of international law and the sovereignty of Mexico,” President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador wrote on X.

Nicaragua followed suit, citing the “unusual and reprehensible action” of the embassy raid. Searing rebukes poured in from governments across the political spectrum, including Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Cuba, Peru and Venezuela.

Lopez Obrador said authorities “forcibly entered” the building to arrest Glas, who is wanted on corruption charges and had been at the embassy since December before being granted asylum on Friday.

He said he would file a complaint against Ecuador at the International Court of Justice.

On Saturday, Ecuadoran Foreign Minister Gabriela Sommerfeld accused Mexico of meddling in its “internal affairs” by offering asylum and said Quito’s raid was justified because of the “real risk” that Glas would flee.

The Vienna Convention, a treaty governing international relations, states that a country cannot intrude upon an embassy on its territory.

Noboa “broke all the behavioral blueprints of traditional diplomacy”, Roberto Beltran Zambrano, a professor of conflict management at Ecuador’s Private Technical University of Loja told AFP.

The United States said it condemned any violation of the Vienna Convention, but added both Mexico and Ecuador were “crucial partners” for Washington and urged them to “resolve their differences in accord with international norms”.

 

‘This is crazy’ 

 

On Saturday, the embassy remained surrounded by police and the Mexican flag had been taken down.

Mexico’s Foreign Minister Alicia Barcena said diplomatic staff would leave Ecuador on commercial flights and with the support of “friendly embassies”.

Meanwhile in Mexico City, about 50 demonstrators rallied outside Ecuador’s embassy, accusing Quito of being “fascist”.

Glas, 54, was vice president under leftist president Rafael Correa between 2013 and 2017.

He was released from prison in November after serving time for receiving millions of dollars in kickbacks in a vast scandal involving Brazilian construction giant Odebrecht.

He faces another arrest warrant for allegedly diverting funds that were intended for reconstruction efforts after a devastating earthquake in 2016.

Ecuador’s government said Glas had been transferred to a maximum-security prison in the port city of Guayaquil, whose jails serve as de facto headquarters for the country’s violent drug cartels.

Former president Correa, who has been exiled in Belgium since 2017 and was sentenced in absentia to eight years in prison for corruption, wrote on X that “not even in the worst dictatorships has a country’s embassy been violated”.

He said Glas “was struggling to walk because he was beaten”.

Mexico meanwhile denounced “physical violence” against head of mission Roberto Canseco, who was pushed to the ground by officers while trying to prevent the invasion.

“How is it possible, it can’t be. This is crazy!” a shaken Canseco told local television.

 

Diplomatic spat 

 

The storming of the embassy came amid a diplomatic spat between Mexico and Ecuador.

Lopez Obrador had irked Quito by comparing a rise in crime in Mexico ahead of June elections to 2023 election violence in Ecuador, in which popular candidate Fernando Villavicencio was assassinated.

The Mexican president said the murder had caused a drop in the popularity of leftist candidate Luisa Gonzalez in favour of the 36-year-old President Daniel Noboa.

Pellegrini wins Slovakia presidential election

By - Apr 08,2024 - Last updated at Apr 08,2024

BRATISLAVA — Ukraine-sceptic government ally Peter Pellegrini won Slovakia’s presidential election Saturday against pro-Western diplomat Ivan Korcok.

Opposition-backed Korcok conceded defeat as nearly complete results showed he had received 47 percent of the vote against former Prime Minister Pellegrini’s 53 percent.

“It is a huge satisfaction,” Pellegrini said in Bratislava, vowing “to ensure that Slovakia remains on the side of peace and not on the side of war”.

Ahead of the run-off, Pellegrini had said he advocated peace talks with Russia. Korcok argued he did not believe Ukraine should give up territory to achieve peace.

Divisions over the Ukraine war dominated the run-off vote given the starkly opposing views of the conflict by the two candidates for the post that is largely ceremonial.

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine became a fixture of the electoral campaign in the EU and NATO member of 5.4 million people after populist Prime Minister Robert Fico, Pellegrini’s ally, questioned Ukraine’s sovereignty and called for peace with Russia.

The government in office since October includes Fico’s Smer party, Pellegrini’s Hlas and the small far-right SNS. It has discontinued military aid to Ukraine.

Pellegrini, 48, thanked his coalition partners after his win.

Korcok said he was “disappointed” but he respected the result.

“I want to express my belief that Peter Pellegrini will be independent and will act according to his own convictions and without orders,” the 60-year-old added.

“It turns out that it is possible to become the president of the Slovak Republic by spreading hatred. The campaign can also be won by making me a war candidate.”

Fico had called Korcok a “warmonger” in a video ahead of the run-off, whose turnout was 61 percent.

He “will support everything the West tells him without hesitation, including dragging Slovakia into the war”, the prime minister added.

Fico backed Pellegrini as “a moderate candidate who recognises the value of peace”.

Analyst Tomas Koziak had told AFP that in the event of a Pellegrini win, “Slovakia could go the ‘Orban way’,” referring to Kremlin-friendly Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban.

Earlier Saturday Pellegrini had argued that the election was “not about the future direction of foreign policy in Slovakia”.

He had said whatever the outcome, “We will continue to be a strong member of the European Union and NATO.”

Pellegrini was prime minister from 2018 to 2020 after Fico was toppled from a previous stint as premier following the murders of journalist Jan Kuciak and his fiancee.

The double murder sparked large rallies that forced Fico’s resignation as Kuciak had been working on links between the Italian mafia and Smer-SD.

Pellegrini will replace outgoing President Zuzana Caputova, who is staunchly pro-Ukraine like Korcok.

Afghan kids learn in makeshift schools six months after major quake

By - Apr 07,2024 - Last updated at Apr 07,2024

ZINDAH JAN, Afghanistan — Children sit shoulder to shoulder crammed in rows on the floor of a shipping container with lesson books in their laps, the remains of their school unrepaired in the six months since a major earthquake devastated their village in western Afghanistan.

Hundreds of schools are still damaged since a series of strong quakes jolted Afghanistan’s Herat province in October, with many students returning to lessons in tents and containers in March, according to the Herat education department.

Girls and boys in the village of Nayeb Rafi in Zindah Jan district studied in a packed container tucked between tents and small, blue homes newly built on a barren stretch of land.

“I really want to study, to have a school, and become a teacher to teach my friends,” said 11-year-old Siyah Gul.

She wants to make the most of her lessons in the makeshift classroom before she is soon excluded under Taliban government rules which bar girls and women from secondary education and universities.

The October quake killed more than 1,500 people and damaged or destroyed more than 63,000 homes, according to an assessment published in February by the United Nations, the European Union and the Asian Development Bank.

Many people are still living in tents and temporary shelters, the World Health Organization said in February.

Education is the second-most affected sector, the report said, with nearly 300 public schools and other learning centres damaged and 180,000 students facing learning disruptions.

 

‘Completely destroyed’ 

 

In the village of Chahak, deep cracks scar the walls and ceilings of its pale blue schoolhouse. Broken windows still hang from their hinges and piles of dust fill the corners of classrooms.

“Chahak village was completely destroyed by the earthquake and we still haven’t been provided with permanent shelters,” said teacher Mohammad Naseem Nasrat.

“Our school too, which was wrecked by the earthquake, has not been restored so far. I don’t know if there are plans to or not,” said the 25-year-old, adding that the village’s children “face an uncertain future” without proper schools.

Decades of conflict have devastated Afghanistan’s education system, with an estimated 3.7 million children out of school, 60 percent of them girls, according to the UN children’s agency UNICEF.

Poverty and access to schools in remote areas are major hurdles, while cultural norms often prevent girls from attending school.

One in five children aged between five and 17 are engaged in child labour, according to the United Nations, in a country facing deep economic, humanitarian and climate crises.

Eleven-year-old Sefatullah’s school in Kashkak village was destroyed by the recent quakes.

“We don’t have books and notebooks to study and write in,” he said.

Four children were killed when the school collapsed, said teacher Mohammad Dawood, who now gives lessons in a framed tent with a large UNICEF logo on the outside.

The makeshift school serves two villages, six classes and has only one teacher — Dawood.

“On days when it is windy or raining, we are in big trouble, we can’t carry on with this situation for much longer,” he said.

'I am still fine': New York rattled by small earthquake, aftershock

By - Apr 07,2024 - Last updated at Apr 07,2024

The earthquake that rattled New York City had a 4.8 magnitude and an epicentre in neighbouring New Jersey, according to the United States Geological Survey (USGS) (AFP photo)

NEW YORK — UN Security Council diplomats were shaken in their chairs, planes got briefly grounded, and furniture rattled across New York Friday when an earthquake jolted the city that never sleeps.

No one was hurt, though, and New York's iconic skyline remained intact.

"I AM FINE," reported the Empire State Building on its X account.

The tremor had a 4.8 magnitude, according to the United States Geological Survey (USGS).

Near the epicenter in Lebanon, New Jersey, Dominika Uniejewska, a 50-year-old retail worker, said "I'm still shaking" after being woken up by the quake.

"I've never experienced such a strong earthquake. I did experience some before, but it was nothing compared to that. The whole house was really shaking. The bed was shaking, the house was making rumbling noises," she said.

"I ran to check on my dog. The dog was okay."

In Brooklyn, buildings shook, rattling cupboard doors and fixtures, an AFP correspondent reported.

"I'm nervous, I'm shaking. Many people are scared right now," said Brooklyn resident Ana Villagran, 62.

Shortly before 6:00 pm (22:00 GMT) the region was shaken by an aftershock which the USGS said was 4.0 magnitude.

"I AM STILL FINE," the Empire State building wrote on X.

At the United Nations, which has its headquarters in New York, a Security Council meeting on the situation in Gaza was temporarily paused after the initial tremor.

"Is that an earthquake?" said Save the Children representative Janti Soeripto who was speaking at the time. One diplomat joked: "One for the memoirs."

 

 'Under control' 

 

A short time later many diplomats' cell phones blared with the sound of the emergency alert system confirming the quake.

"Residents are advised to remain indoors and to call 911 if injured," the emergency alert said.

Flight operations were halted at several airports in the region including New York's La Guardia, Newark in New Jersey and in Philadelphia.

“Air traffic operations are resuming as quickly as possible,” the Federal Aviation Administration said in a statement.

Social media users reported feeling the earthquake from Philadelphia up to New York and eastward along Long Island.

Several users posted images of knocked over garden furniture captioned, “We will rebuild.”

“Earthquakes are uncommon but not unheard of along the Atlantic Coast, a zone one study called a ‘passive-aggressive margin’ because there’s no active plate boundary between the Atlantic and North American plates,” the USGS wrote on X.

Moderately damaging earthquakes strike somewhere in the urban corridor roughly twice a century, and smaller earthquakes are felt roughly every two to three years, USGS said.

US President Joe Biden was briefed on the situation, spokeswoman Karine Jean-Pierre said.

Social media users jokingly questioned whether an earthquake coming days before the April 8 solar eclipse, which will be visible across swaths of the northeastern United States, heralded the end of the world.

New York Governor Kathy Hochul acknowledged New Yorkers were “not accustomed” to earthquakes and — at a hastily convened press briefing — warned residents to be wary of any possible aftershocks.

 

France says to build 'balanced partnerships' with Africa

By - Apr 07,2024 - Last updated at Apr 07,2024

NAIROBI — France will aim to renew ties with Africa and build "balanced partnerships" that are beneficial to the continent, the country's top diplomat Stephane Sejourne said on Saturday.

Relations have spiralled downwards between France and some former African colonies as the continent becomes a renewed diplomatic battleground, with Russian and Chinese influence growing.

Appointed in January, Sejourne began his first visit to Africa on Saturday in Kenya and will later head to Rwanda before making a final stop in Ivory Coast.

"France's vocation will be to renew and build balanced, mutually respectful partnerships with African countries, for the benefit of all countries," he said at a press briefing alongside his Kenyan counterpart Musalia Mudavadi.

"That's what our roadmap is all about: diversifying these partnerships and making them beneficial for the countries in which we are going to invest."

Sejourne said Africa was a "priority" of French foreign policy because the "continent is on the way to becoming a cultural, economic and diplomatic power... that will count in the world's balance".

In Kenya, an east African economic powerhouse, France has strengthened its commercial presence, with the number of French companies operating in the country almost tripling from 50 to 140 in a decade.

But a huge trade imbalance in favour of the European nation has cast a shadow on their relations.

“It is a work in progress,” said Mudavadi.

“The process of us addressing the trade imbalance requires consistent programmes and join efforts like we are doing,” he said, adding that French companies had provided 34,000 direct jobs in Kenya.

The two ministers said they had agreed on areas of cooperation, including sports and transport infrastructure.

They also called for the reform of the global climate financing framework to help poorer countries develop cleanly and adapt to the worsening impacts of climate change.

In December, at COP28, the two countries and Barbados launched a coalition to bring together countries wishing to create, within two years, an international tax capable of raising billions of dollars to help developing countries tackle climate change.

In Rwanda, Sejourne will attend the commemorations of the 30th anniversary of the 1994 genocide that left 800,000 people dead, mostly the minority Tutsi but also Hutu moderates.

 

Taiwan helicopters pluck quake-stranded tourists to safety

By - Apr 07,2024 - Last updated at Apr 07,2024

HUALIEN, Taiwan — Taiwan rescue helicopters flew sorties on Saturday to pluck tourists to safety after a massive earthquake cut off roads and blocked tunnels, leaving hundreds stranded for days in the mountains.

At least 10 people were killed and more than 1,100 injured by the magnitude 7.4 quake that struck the island on Wednesday, with strict building codes and widespread disaster readiness credited with averting an even bigger catastrophe.

The quake caused massive landslides that blocked tunnels and long stretches of winding road that cut across the island from east to west, and also a coastal highway from north to south carved out of steep cliffs.

Hualien, the epicentre around 100 kilometres south of the capital Taipei, has been roiled by over 300 aftershocks, including one of magnitude 5.2 on Saturday morning.

But helicopters from the National Airborne Service Corps were flying into cut-off areas near the scenic Taroko National Park to pluck stranded visitors to safety.

An AFP staffer saw one flight ferry 12 people to safety, and a second with 16.

“Priority was given to the elderly, the weak, women, children, and people with chronic diseases,” said Taiwan news website ET Today.

“Although everyone was tired after coming down the mountain, they all still showed smiles.”

One airlift brought people from the luxury Silks Place hotel, where more than 400 tourists and staff had been stranded.

“The subsequent aftershocks were very large and serious,” a pastor identified only as Zhou told local media.

“I felt very nervous when I was sleeping, but with God’s blessing I was not afraid.”

Rescuers also airdropped boxes of food and supplies to a group of students, teachers and residents at an inaccessible elementary school.

Elsewhere, engineers were working around the clock to clear massive boulders from roads and tunnel entrances.

“Rescuers are not giving up,” said Taiwan’s vice president-elect Hsiao Bi-khim on Friday, calling them the “true heroes of a resilient Taiwan”.

Wednesday’s quake was the most serious in Taiwan since one of a magnitude of 7.6 hit the island in 1999.

The death toll then was far higher — with 2,400 people killed in the deadliest natural disaster in the island’s history.

Stricter regulations — including enhanced seismic requirements in its building codes — and widespread public disaster awareness appeared to have staved off a more serious catastrophe this time around.

A preliminary report by the National Centre for Research on Earthquake Engineering released Friday said 84 buildings had been “severely damaged” by the quake — most in Hualien county.

EU vows $290m for Armenia amid tensions with Russia

By - Apr 07,2024 - Last updated at Apr 07,2024

From left to right: Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and European Union Foreign Policy chief Josep Borrell, hold a joint press conference in Brussels on Friday (AFP photo)

BRUSSELS, Belgium — The European Union on Friday pledged a 270-million-euro ($290-million) financial package for Armenia, seeking along with Washington to boost ties with Yerevan as its relations with Russia crumble.

The announcement came after talks in Brussels aimed at ramping up cooperation between Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and US Secretary of State Antony Blinken.

Armenia, a former Soviet republic in the Caucasus, is looking to solidify economic support from the West as it edges away from traditional ally Russia. Armenia is angry with Moscow for failing to stop neighbouring Azerbaijan from recapturing territory in recent years.

Baku criticised the Brussels meeting and accused Armenia of opening fire at the Caucasus arch-foe neighbours’ volatile border.

Von der Leyen said the four-year “resilience and growth” package of financial grants for Armenia showed the EU stood “shoulder to shoulder” with Yerevan.

“Europe and Armenia share a long and common history and the time has come to write now a new chapter,” she said.

Pashinyan said Friday’s meeting in Brussels was proof of his country’s “expanding partnership” with the EU and United States. “I believe that our shared vision of a democratic, peaceful and prosperous future will continue to serve as the backbone and the guiding star of our mutually trusted relations,” he said.

Blinken said the US was also bolstering its economic support for Yerevan to $65 million this year to aid efforts to make Armenia “a strong, independent nation at peace with its neighbours”.

“We have to harness this moment of choice for the Armenian people and for its leaders,” he said.

Armenia has drawn Russia’s ire by criticising its role as a regional security guarantor and even floating the idea of applying to join the EU.

 

‘Geopolitical confrontation’ 

 

Yerevan has a long-standing alliance with Moscow.

But it was infuriated when the Kremlin -- consumed by the Ukraine war and annoyed by Pashinyan’s overtures to the West -- failed to stop Azerbaijan seize the Nagorno-Karabakh region from Armenian separatists last year.

Since then, Pashinyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev have voiced hope for a comprehensive peace agreement between their countries.

But the two sides on Tuesday traded accusations that the other had opened fire across their shared border, renewing fears of conflict.

Ahead of the talks in Brussels, Blinken and von der Leyen called Aliyev on Wednesday to try to ease tensions.

But Aliyev on Friday criticised the summit in Brussels as “directed against Azerbaijan” and working against cooperation in the region.

“High-ranking US and EU officials attempted to convince us that the meeting in Brussels is not directed against Azerbaijan, but it creates yet another source of tensions in the South Caucasus,” he said.

In the latest flare-up in tensions on Friday evening, the arch-foe Caucasus neighbours traded accusations of opening fire along their volatile shared border.

Azerbaijan’s defence said in a statement that Armenian military “using small arms, subjected to fire the Azerbaijan Army positions” stationed near the countries’ shared border.

Armenian defence ministry, for its part, dismissed the claim as “disinformation”. It said “units of the Azerbaijani armed forces opened fire from small arms toward Armenian combat positions” deployed at the frontier district of Gergharkunik.

Pashinyan said at the Brussels meeting that he remained “committed to the normalisation of relations with Azerbaijan”.

But Turkey, Azerbaijan’s main backer, warned that Armenia’s talks with the US and EU “undermine the neutral approach that should be the basis for the solution of the complex problems of the region”.

“This initiative, which excludes Azerbaijan, will pave the way for the South Caucasus to become an area of geopolitical confrontation, rather than serving peace,” Turkey’s foreign ministry said.

Pages

Pages



Newsletter

Get top stories and blog posts emailed to you each day.

PDF