Staff

Staff

WASHINGTON (AP) — Jerome Powell delivered a tough message at the start of a news conference Wednesday: Inflation is way too high, and the Federal Reserve is laser-focused on taming it with higher borrowing costs.

Yet despite his resolute words, the Fed chair also said for the first time that the central bank’s actions are already having an effect on the economy in ways that could slow the worst inflation the nation has endured in four decades.

With the Fed’s benchmark interest rate now at a level that’s believed to neither stimulate nor restrain growth, Powell said the pace of rate hikes could slow in the coming months. And he pointed to signs that many businesses are having an easier time filling jobs, a trend that would limit pay increases and potentially slow inflation.

“There were some hints that we’re closer to the end than the beginning” of the Fed’s efforts to tighten credit, said Michael Feroli, an economist at JPMorgan Chase and a former Fed staffer.

Powell’s suggestion that the Fed could moderate its future rate hikes after it announced a three-quarter-point hike Wednesday — its second in a row of that substantial size — helped touch off a celebratory rally in the stock market, with the S&P 500 jumping 2.6% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq rocketing 4.1%, its biggest gain in more than two years.

Some economists didn’t share the market’s optimism. They noted that Powell kept the door open to another big rate increase when the Fed next meets in September. The Fed chair also indicated that even if the economy were to fall into a recession, the central bank would keep raising rates if it deemed that necessary to curb still-high inflation.

When asked at his news conference whether a recession would alter the Fed’s course of rate hikes, Powell said simply, “We’re going to be focused on getting inflation back down.”

Here are five takeaways from the Fed’s interest-rate setting policy meeting and Powell news conference:

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POWELL: U.S. NOT IN RECESSION

A slew of recent data has signaled the economy is weakening. Economists are increasingly forecasting a recession for later this year or in 2023. Powell, though, pointed Wednesday to the robust labor market as evidence the economy isn’t in recession, at least not yet.

Employers, he noted, added 2.7 million jobs in the first half of the year, the 3.6% U.S. unemployment rate is near a 50-year low and wage growth is strong.

“It doesn’t make sense that the economy could be in recession with this kind of thing happening,” the Fed chair said.

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JOBS OVER GDP

On Thursday, the government will estimate second-quarter gross domestic product, the broadest measure of the nation’s output of goods and services. Some economists think the GDP report will show that the economy contracted for a second straight quarter, which would meet an informal definition of recession.

But even if it does, the definition of recession that is most widely accepted is the one determined by the National Bureau of Economic Research, a group of economists whose Business Cycle Dating Committee defines a recession as “a significant decline in economic activity that is spread across the economy and lasts more than a few months.”

Powell also noted that the government’s estimate of quarterly GDP is often significantly revised later and that the initial reports on economic growth should be taken with “a grain of salt.”

The Fed chair did sound a cautionary note, pointing out that there are signs that momentum in the job market is easing. Job openings have declined modestly, more people are seeking unemployment aid and hiring is lower than it was at the start of the year.

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SLOWER GROWTH, HIRING GOOD

But even those signs of a slightly weaker job market are not all bad news, at least from the Fed’s perspective.

The Fed wants to cool the economy through its rate hikes, which make home mortgages, auto loans and business borrowing more expensive. As consumers and businesses spend less, the resulting pullback in demand can bring inflation down closer to the Fed’s 2% annual target.

“We think it’s necessary to have growth slow down, and growth is going to be slowing this year,” Powell said.

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HOW HIGH WILL RATES GO?

Since early this year, the Fed has steadily ratcheted up its forecasts for how fast and how high it would have to raise rates to conquer inflation. On Wednesday, though, Powell said that estimates that Fed policymakers made a month ago for where rates would go next was still the best guide.

In June officials projected that the Fed’s key rate would reach between 3.25% and 3.5% at the end of this year, which Powell said was a “moderately restrictive” level. And at least two additional rate hikes were forecast for next year.

For the Fed to meet that year-end target would involve a half-point increase in September, and two quarter-point hikes in November and December. Such increases would represent a much more modest pace than the 2.25 percentage points of hikes the Fed has now carried out in just the past four meetings, the fastest pace since the early 1980s.

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THE FED ISN’T ALONE

Other major central banks around the world have also been imposing big rate increases to combat inflation, which has spiked in nearly all advanced economies.

The European Union raised its short-term rate by a half-point last week. Canada’s central bank announced a full percentage point increase earlier this month. Last month, the Swiss National Bank implemented a half-point hike, its first increase in 15 years.

Although higher rates around the world could help throttle inflation, they also carry the threat of causing a global economic slowdown.

This week, the International Monetary Fund downgraded its outlook for world economic growth to 3.2% this year. That was down from a 3.6% estimate in April and much slower than last year’s 6.1% pace.


LENORAH, Texas (AP) — To the naked eye, the Mako Compressor Station outside the dusty West Texas crossroads of Lenorah appears unremarkable, similar to tens of thousands of oil and gas operations scattered throughout the oil-rich Permian Basin.

What’s not visible through the chain-link fence is the plume of invisible gas, primarily methane, billowing from the gleaming white storage tanks up into the cloudless blue sky.

The Mako station, owned by a subsidiary of West Texas Gas Inc., was observed releasing an estimated 870 kilograms of methane – an extraordinarily potent greenhouse gas — into the atmosphere each hour. That’s the equivalent impact on the climate of burning seven tanker trucks full of gasoline every day.

But Mako’s outsized emissions aren’t illegal, or even regulated. And it was only one of 533 methane “super emitters” detected during a 2021 aerial survey of the Permian conducted by Carbon Mapper, a partnership of university researchers and NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

The group documented massive amounts of methane venting into the atmosphere from oil and gas operations across the Permian, a 250-mile-wide bone-dry expanse along the Texas-New Mexico border that a billion years ago was the bottom of a shallow sea. Hundreds of those sites were seen spewing the gas over and over again. Ongoing leaks, gushers, going unfixed.

“We see the same sites active from year to year. It’s not just month to month or season to season,” said Riley Duren, a research scientist at the University of Arizona who leads Carbon Mapper.

Carbon Mapper identified the spewing sites only by their GPS coordinates. The Associated Press took the coordinates of the 533 “super-emitting” sites and cross-referenced them with state drilling permits, air quality permits, pipeline maps, land records and other public documents to piece together the corporations most likely responsible.

Just 10 companies owned at least 164 of those sites, according to an AP analysis of Carbon Mapper’s data. West Texas Gas owned 11.

The methane released by these companies will be disrupting the climate for decades, contributing to more heat waves, hurricanes, wildfires and floods. There’s now nearly three times as much methane in the air than there was before industrial times. The year 2021 saw the worst single increase ever.

Methane’s earth-warming power is some 83 times stronger over 20 years than the carbon dioxide that comes from car tailpipes and power plant smokestacks. Congress and the Environmental Protection Agency have largely failed to regulate the invisible gas. That leaves it up to oil and gas producers — in some cases the very companies who have been fighting regulations — to cut methane emissions on their own.

“Methane is a super pollutant,” said Kassie Siegel, director of the Climate Law Institute at the Center for Biological Diversity, an environmental group. “If carbon dioxide is the fossil-fuel broiler of our heating planet, methane is a blowtorch.”

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan urged Iraqi government to stop accusing Ankara while pointing at PKK terror group as the perpetrator of the attack.

Northern Iraq, like northern Syria, has long been a safe haven for various terror groups, from the PKK to Al Qaeda and Daesh. Much of northern Iraq has been under the control of the Iraqi Kurdish Regional Government, which constantly complains about the PKK's presence and attacks in the region. 

On June 20, a mountain resort in Zakho, a border district, which is located in Iraqi Kurdish Regional Government’s Duhok governorate, was targeted by artillery shelling killing eight Arab civilians and wounding 23 people.

While the central Iraqi government and some powerful Shia groups associated with Muqtada al Sadr, an Iraqi Shia leader, accused Türkiye of the attack, Ankara denied any responsibility for it and condemned it in strong terms, stating that the ghastly act was committed by terror groups active in the region. 

“It is considered that such attacks — which aim at innocent civilians and are assessed to be organised by the terrorist organisation — target our country's just and determined stance in the fight against terrorism,” said the Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs in a statement. 

The attack has created a massive outrage across Iraq. While Türkiye rejected accusations from Iraq, who called on the UN to investigate the Duhok incident, Ankara also expressed its readiness “to take every step to reveal the truth,” indicating its willingness to work together with Baghdad to nail down the perpetrators of the attack. 

On Tuesday, the Turkish stance was recognised by Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert, the UN’s special envoy for Iraq, in a statement to the UN Security Council. 

"In my conversation with Iraq’s prime minister [Mustafa al-Kadhimi] yesterday, he once again emphasised the importance of a transparent and thorough investigation: independent or jointly," the UN envoy said.

"Meanwhile, I do understand that Türkiye is also ready to address the issue jointly, with Iraq, in order to determine exactly what happened," she said.

The UN employs various methods to reach peaceful resolutions to political conflicts and disagreements between different states, ranging from mediating and conducting negotiations between conflicting sides to setting up inquiry commissions to investigate particular incidents like the Duhok terror attack. 

What’s the international process? 

Aside from a judicial remedy, which is binding for both sides, all other approaches are dependent on the consent of the parties involved, says Enver Arikoglu, a professor of international law at Istanbul University. “One of the ways to investigate an incident like the Duhok attack is to form either an inquiry commission or a reconciliation commission,” Arikoglu tells TRT World. 

“What I understand from the recent UN statement is that they appear to be forming an inquiry commission to investigate what happened in Duhok’s Zakho border district. The commission, whose members will be approved by both sides, will collect material evidence, like pieces of shelling, to identify which types of weapons were used,” he says. 

As a result, despite Iraqi accusations against Türkiye, Baghdad’s version of the events that took place is not enough to determine what really happened in the Iraqi border town. 

“Turkish views should also be taken into account by the UN’s inquiry commission established to investigate the incident. Neutral military experts should also give their assessments. The legal evaluation of the incident will be made according to their assessments,” says Mesut Hakki Casin, a professor of international law at Yeditepe University. 

“In the end, the UN commission's decision on the incident is not a binding decision, being open for appeal in international courts,” Casin tells TRT World. 

‘Türkiye does not target civilians’

Turkish foreign ministry also called on Baghdad not to act “under the influence of the rhetoric and propaganda of the treacherous terrorist organisation and to cooperate in bringing the real perpetrators of this tragic incident into light,” referring to the PKK terrorism.  

Türkiye has long fought against PKK terrorism, which killed tens of thousands of people including children and women since the early 1980s. The PKK is recognised as a terrorist organisation by Türkiye, the EU and the US. 

Since the late 1990s, the PKK has used northern Iraq’s Qandil Mountains as its headquarters. As a result, Türkiye has conducted many cross-border operations in northern Iraq against the terror group and Turkish operations have been backed by Iraqi Kurdish regional authorities. 

While Türkiye continues to conduct its anti-terror operations in northern Iraq and Syria, Ankara has not targeted any civilians, according to Turkish authorities. Casin also underlines that the Turkish army has no such policy of targeting civilians. 

“According to the information we received from the Turkish Armed Forces, we did not conduct any attacks on civilians," said Mevlut Cavusoglu, the Turkish foreign minister.  

During an extensive interview with TRT on Monday, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan also pointed to the PKK for the deadly attack, saying that, “This is how we saw the true face of the PKK once again." 

Poisoning Turkish-Iraqi ties

Ankara believes that the Duhok attack is orchestrated by illicit forces aiming to poison Turkish-Iraqi ties. 

But anti-Turkish forces in Iraq and the larger Middle East work hard to poison the growing political and economic ties between Türkiye and Iraq, a Shia-majority Arab state. After the Duhok incident last week, some Iraqi politicians called for boycotting Turkish goods and protests against Türkiye were held in some Iraqi cities, where the attack was used to provoke anti-Turkish sentiment across the country. 

“Their objective is to disrupt the positive relations between Iraq and Türkiye. We are no strangers to this," said Erdogan, reacting to Iraqi boycotts and protests against Ankara. 

But Erdogan also warned his Iraqi counterparts to “pay attention” to their statements. “We don't [want to] get into such a situation with our friend,” he said, referring to strong Turkish-Iraqi ties from trade to cultural connections. 

“Iraqi accusations toward Türkiye are unacceptable. It’s clear that there is American pressure on the government of Baghdad. Their target is to remove Turkish armed forces from northern Iraq,” says Casin, referring to Turkish anti-PKK cross-border operations in the region.

“Any border should be defended by both bordering states, but the Iraqi army has not had a military presence across Turkish-Iraqi border areas since the 1990s. As a result, according to UN principles, Türkiye has the right to self-defence in these territories [against the PKK and other groups],” says Casin. 

He also draws attention to the timing of the Duhok incident, which happened after the crucial trilateral meeting between Türkiye, Iran and Russia in Tehran last week. In the meeting, the three countries emphasised the territorial integrity of Syria and called on the US to exit the war-torn country. Erdogan also separately called on the US — which backs the YPG, the PKK’s Syrian wing — to leave Syria following the Tehran summit. 

“All these developments disturbed Washington,” says Casin, potentially pushing the US to use the Duhok incident to create political pressure over Türkiye. 

Source: TRT World

Four people protesting against a United Nations peacekeeping mission have been killed in the Congolese city of Uvira when troops fired warning shots which hit an electric cable that fell on them, officials said.

The protests had mostly fizzled out on Wednesday in the cities of Goma and Butembo but had spread to Uvira, in South Kivu province, where crowds threw rocks at a MONUSCO compound. 

"There was an isolated demonstration in Uvira. We had a tragedy because of the fall of an electric cable... indirectly related to the protest," South Kivu governor Theo Ngwabidje Kasi told Reuters. 

"I have asked for investigations to know if the bullet was fired by MONUSCO or by our forces," he said, adding that preliminary information suggested it had come from within the MONUSCO base. 

Calm had been restored by mid-afternoon, he said. 

Three UN peacekeepers and at least 12 civilians were killed on Tuesday in protests against the mission in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, known as MONUSCO, which protesters accuse of failing to protect them from militia violence. 

UN chief condemns violence

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres condemned the violence and called on the government to bring the perpetrators to justice. 

A UN spokesman also said the United Nations would investigate reports that peacekeepers had been responsible for civilian deaths. A Reuters reporter saw UN peacekeepers shoot dead two protesters in Goma. 

The UN mission, which has around 12,400 troops in the country and costs more than $1 billion per year, has been in the process of gradually withdrawing for several years. 

The UN children's agency said on Wednesday that many children had been manipulated into joining the protests and were exposed to violence.

"UNICEF condemns the instrumentalisation of children for political purposes and calls on authorities, members of civil society and parents to keep children away from protests in order to protect them," said Grant Leaity, UNICEF representative in the DRC, in a statement.

Source: Reuters

At least 20 people were killed and several wounded in separate bomb attacks in southern Somalia, police said.

A police officer in the town of Marka in the Lower Shabelle region told Anadolu Agency on Wednesday that a suicide bomber killed 13 people, including the town’s mayor, Abdullahi Ali Wafow, as well as security guard s and civilians.

Several others who were wounded were taken to hospitals for treatment.

Marka, 90 kilometers (55 miles) from the Somali capital Mogadishu, is a major town that houses several African Union peacekeeping mission contingents. The attack took place near the Marka administration headquarters.

Abdiaziz Laftagareen, president of the Southwest State, condemned the suicide bombing and the killing of the mayor, calling him "one of the best civil servants" in the country.

The Al Shabaab terrorist group claimed responsibility for the attack.

In the same region, a landmine explosion rocked a busy livestock market in the town of Afgoye, killing at least seven people and wounding more than 14 others, according to regional security officials in Lower Shabelle.

The attack in Afgoye also devastated nearby buildings and shops, according to Mohamed Hassan, an eyewitness who spoke to Anadolu Agency by phone.

Afgoye is located 30 kilometers (18 miles) southwest of Mogadishu.

Negotiations

Somalia's new President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud said this month that ending Al Shabab's insurgency required more than a military approach, but that his government would negotiate with the group only when the time is right.

The militants have been seeking to overthrow the fragile foreign-backed government in Mogadishu for about 15 years. 

Its fighters were driven out of the capital in 2011 by an African Union force but the group still controls swathes of countryside and has the capacity to wage deadly strikes on civilian and military targets.

Last week, Al Shabab launched a rare incursion into neighbouring Ethiopia, with regional authorities there saying they had killed about 100 militants.

Türkiye strongly condemned the deadly terrorist attacks in Somalia.

“We are deeply saddened to learn that many people, includi ng officials and civilians, lost their lives or were injured in the terrorist attacks that took place today” in Afgoye and Marka, the Turkish Foreign Ministry said in a statement./TRT

At least 66 people were killed in terrorist attacks in several towns in Mali, according to security sources.

"The Malian Armed Forces (FAMa) repelled terrorist attacks targeting positions in Savare, Sokolo and Kalumba early this Wednesday, July 27. The response, carried out with energy and professionalism, has enabled the attackers to be routed and pursued," Colonel Souleymane Dembele, the army’s director of information and public relations, said in a statement.

A report on the fighting showed 54 dead, including six soldiers, and 25 soldiers wounded, including five seriously, in Sokolo in the region of Segou in south-central Mali, where a coordinated response was orchestrated against the attackers, who were routed.

The same source also reported 12 dead "on the friendly side," including three civilians from a road construction company, following a "vigorously repelled" terrorist attack in Kalumba in the Nara region near the Mauritanian border.

The assessment of the attack is still ongoing, according to the military authorities.

"The aerial pursuit made it possible to attack terrorist logistical bases under cover of vegetation in the vicinity, thus reducing the enemy’s potential," Dembele added.

On the central Moptiside, infiltration attempts targeted one of the checkpoints of a military camp as well as air force installations without success as suspicious movements were contained by FAMa.

'Kamikaze attacks'

The attacks are part of a series that have targeted Malian army posts recently.

On July 21, three soldiers and three terrorists were killed in simultaneous complex attacks in several locations.

The following day, one soldier and seven terrorists were killed in a car bomb attack on the facility of the Directorate of Material, Hydrocarbons and Transport of the Armed Forces (DMHTA) in Kati near the capital Bamako.

"These armed groups are actually demonstrating their overall weakening by carrying out desperate actions of kamikaze attacks, actions on civilians, and the planting of improvised explosive devices," Dembele said.

The military communication from the West African country, one of the most plagued by terrorist attacks in the Sahel for years, does not name the attacking terrorist group.

One of the intelligence reports proves that one of the attackers is based in a neighboring country, according to the military body, which intends to "determine the connections and possible complicities" after investigations. 

Source: AA

Five Islamic, liberal and national political groups on Tuesday welcomed the appointment of Sheikh Ahmad Al-Nawaf Al-Sabah as the new prime minister and urged reforms that include changing the electoral system. In a joint statement, the five groups expressed the hope that the next government will undertake reforms that lead to the election of a true representative National Assembly through the amendment of the election system and an effective monitoring of the general polls.

This will lead to the election of reformist MPs who are expected to cooperate with government projects to serve the Kuwaiti people, the statement said.  Kuwait Democratic Forum, the National Islamic Alliance, The Salaf Alliance, The Popular Action Front and the Islamic Constitutional Movement (ICM) signed the statement.

Sheikh Ahmad was named on Sunday to form the next Cabinet after the outgoing prime minister Sheikh Sabah Al-Khaled Al-Sabah resigned more than three months ago amid a prolonged political deadlock. The ex-premier was grilled by three opposition lawmakers and a non-cooperation motion was filed against him. A large number of MPs have welcomed the appointment of Sheikh Ahmad and called on him to fight corruption and undertake reforms. After forming the Cabinet, HH the Amir is expected to dissolve the national assembly and call for fresh polls.

The ICM yesterday selected five candidates to contest the upcoming polls, one in each constituency. The candidates include current MPs Osama Al-Shaheen, Hamad Al-Matar and Abdulaziz Al-Saqaabi in the first, second and third electoral districts. They also selected Moath Al-Duwailah and Saad Al-Hajeri in the fourth and fifth constituencies.

In the meantime, leading opposition MP Hasan Jowhar said yesterday that the Kuwaiti voters should be allowed to freely elect their representatives. “Fair election is the first challenge to the credibility of the next cabinet in fighting corruption and an indicator to its reformist policy” Jowhar said on Twitter./KT

By Faten Omar

KUWAIT: Users of various social media platforms in Kuwait have reported an increase in online scams by fraudsters who use those platforms as their base, with a significant increase reported in dangerous and highly targeted online scams. Taking advantage of people’s fears and concerns, scammers trick users into clicking on links or attachments that contain malwares.

To understand the issue from a legal standpoint, Kuwait Times spoke to Mohammad Al-Jasem, lawyer and Interpol-accredited expert in international law enforcement cooperation. “Internet fraud has two sides: One where the money transfer happens inside the country, and one where the transfer happens outside the country,” he said. “In all cases, there are two ways to track this crime through the IP address.”

He added, “If the money transfer was within Kuwait, the victim can file a case with the scammer’s username, and the Department of Cybercrime in Kuwait can trace him via the IP address. The department contacts website owners to collect data of the scammer. It tracks the internet line and reveals the data about the wanted person.”

Jasem revealed that scams through bank money transfers could be tricky. In case the transfer was made within local banks, the government can trace the name of the bank account’s holder and the exact transferred amount, Jasem explained. “On the other hand, if the money is transferred outside the country, once the IP address is determined, correspondence is carried out,” he said. “But most social networking platforms or major companies do not cooperate in this regard under the pretext of maintaining their clients’ privacy, except in murder threat cases.”

He indicated that scamming through social media platforms can be a real problem. There are cases in which the scammer’s accounts could be blocked but the money of the victims could never be refunded. “The amount can be tracked through the bank, where sometimes there is a cooperation between the Cybercrime Department and the relevant departments in other countries of the Interpol offices,” he explained.

“The scam’s money is considered a form of money laundry, because the source of money is illegal,” he pointed out. “The crimes are linked to each other. The most difficult case is the unencrypted transfer. Transfers are delivered to anyone who has an ID, even if it is forged, and most scammers use this method. It is considered a smart scam.”

Group-IB, one of the global leaders in cyber security, released a report, on Tuesday, saying that it has identified a wide-scale phishing campaign targeting users in the Middle East by impersonating well-known postal services from several Arab countries including Kuwait. Since as early as 2020, over 270 domains were discovered making use of the regional delivery and postal service brands. All the domains were part of a single massive phishing infrastructure.

The pandemic-driven explosive growth of online shopping created a perfect storm for threat actors, who found fertile ground for inventing new attack scenarios. Globally, CERT-GIB identified more than 400 domains impersonating postal brands as part of this phishing campaign, with more than half of them (276) intended for users in the Middle East. In the Middle East specifically, scammers have impersonated over 13 different delivery brands, postal operators, and public companies from at least eight different countries, including Kuwait and other Arab countries.

Recently, Trend Micro, a global cyber security leader, released its annual “Navigating Frontiers New” report for 2021, highlighting the growing threat of cyber-attacks targeting individuals and digital infrastructures in a hybrid business environment.

The report indicated that Trend Micro solutions responded to more than 94.2 billion threats globally during 2021, a 42 percent increase in the number of detected detections compared to 2020. The report also revealed a huge increase in the number of attacks, which reached more than 53 billion during the second half of last year, compared to 41 billion threats in the first half of 2021.

In Kuwait, Trend Micro solutions blocked nearly 15 million e-mail attacks, responded to more than 1.7 million malware attacks, and prevented more than 3.5 million attacks related to victims clicking on malicious links. In addition, the report stated that networks The household in Kuwait were a magnet for cybercriminals who targeted systems, devices, and networks, and in this regard, Trend Micro’s “Smart Home Network” solutions blocked nearly 400,000 internal and external attacks, as well as prevented more than 700 thousand attacks from hackers, who are seeking to target or control home networks, from happening./KT

Myanmar's military executed four democracy activists on Monday under a counterterrorism law and the penal code. The executed activists included Kyaw Min Yu and former lawmaker and hip-hop artist Phyo Zeya Thaw, according to the Global New Light of Myanmar newspaper.

Thaw was a lawmaker from ousted leader Aung San Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy (NLD) party. The other two executed men were Hla Myo Aung and Aung Thura Zaw. They were convicted of killing a woman they allegedly believed was an informer for the military.

International rights groups as well as the United Nations have unequivocally condemned the executions.

Myanmar authorities have engaged in a brutal crackdown to quash protests against last year's military coup. The Assistance Association of Political Prisoners (AAPP) activist group said that 2,100 people have been killed by security forces since the coup in February 2021.

Opponents of the military authorities told DW they will resist the authoritarian rule with even more vigor following the executions.

No turning back

"There has been a wave of anger, sorrow and revulsion at the junta following the executions. These feelings have led to the strengthening of public resolve to continue the revolution," Khin Zaw Win, director of Tampadipa Institute in Yangon, told DW.

Win, who was also a prisoner of conscience in Myanmar for "seditious writings," said the executions marked a point of no return for the Southeast Asian country.

"With the executions, a new common ground has been established and this would help forge coordinated efforts. There can no longer be a case of sitting on the fence," he added.

William San, a student leader, agrees with this view. "We will fight till the end. This is undoubtedly tragic but these executions will strengthen our resolve."

Armed resistance

Myanmar is currently in the grip of a nationwide conflict between the military junta led by General Min Aung Hlaing and his opponents, including ethnic armed groups, civilian militias known as the People's Defense Forces (PDF), and the National Unity Government (NUG) that was set up by opponents of the military administration last April.

Since seizing power, the government has carried out several brutal military operations in the country. At the same time, the pro-democracy movement has transformed into a quasi-military force.

Many protesters have taken up arms to defend the civilian population from the regime, and opposition activists have formed the Campaign for Civil Disobedience (CDM) that has been organizing strikes and mass protests across the country.

Over a million people have been displaced internally due to the military actions, according to UN observers.

"More people will now organize themselves. The resistance will grow, and if the junta thought this [executions] was going to instil fear, it is terribly mistaken. Their misadventure will prove costly," Salai Za Uk Ling of the Chin Human Rights Organization told DW.

A rights group representing the Christian Chin population, Ling, who has advocated for human rights and democracy in Myanmar for nearly three decades, said the memories of the fallen heroes of the "Spring Revolution" would not go in vain.

"We'll fight and we'll win," he said.

Dim hope for a peaceful resolution

Another member of the United League of Arakan (ULA) said the miliary regime has increased its use of terror by killing, torturing and raping civilians in the past 18 months.

"Radio Free Asia recently published images and videos showing junta soldiers bragging about how they murdered civilians in cold blood and looted peoples' properties," a senior ULA leader told DW on condition of anonymity.

Myanmar's mountainous ethnic regions have faced similar assaults in the past. Some of these ethnic fighters are now training the PDF in its battle against the military.

"Now there will be an increased integration with ethnic resistance organizations and we will mount a fierce resistance. We cannot afford the country to slip into a hopeless situation," the ULA leader added.

According to the Special Advisory Council for Myanmar (SAC-M), an independent group of international experts working to support the struggle for human rights and justice in Myanmar, the junta has incarcerated at least 11,759 political prisoners without access to legal representation, and many have been sentenced to death since the coup.

There have been several reports of systematic torture in military detention centers.

"What makes these executions revolting is the military's blatant attempt to gain judicial legitimacy despite the fact that the military court is a sham and a mockery of justice," Chris Sidoti of SAC-M told DW.

Others like Isaac Khen from the NUG say the military is not ready to solve the country's problems peacefully.

"This [the executions] is an eye-opener for those who believe the military leaders can be approached and that political solutions to the conflict can be found," he said.

European Union member states have reached agreement on how to cut their consumption of gas by 15 percent and reduce their dependence on Russian supplies.

Tuesday's breakthrough came hours after Ukraine accused Russian forces of launching multiple missile strikes at targets on the Black Sea coast near the southern port city of Odessa and in Mykolaiv.

In Brussels, EU ministers debated how to reduce gas consumption this winter, a response to what Russia's critics have called Moscow's manipulation of supplies as an economic weapon.

"In an effort to increase EU security of energy supply, member states today reached a political agreement on a voluntary reduction of natural gas demand by 15 percent this winter," the council of ministers said.

"The purpose of the gas demand reduction is to make savings ahead of winter in order to prepare for possible disruptions of gas supplies from Russia that is continuously using energy supplies as a weapon."

Luxembourg's energy minister Claude Turmes tweeted that Hungary was the only member state in the 27-member bloc to vote against the plan.

Earlier, Czech industry minister Jozef Sikela, whose country holds the rotating EU presidency, said Russian President Vladimir Putin was behind state-run Gazprom's plan to cut gas deliveries to Europe.

Russia's Gazprom said it was cutting daily gas deliveries to Europe via the Nord Stream pipeline to 33 million cubic metres a day — about 20 percent of the pipeline's capacity — from Wednesday.

In February, Russia attacked its neighbour Ukraine. In response, EU members have imposed an escalating series of economic sanctions packages on Moscow — only to find their own energy supplies under threat.

New Russian air strikes

On the battlefield, Russia targeted Ukraine’s Black Sea regions of Odessa and Mykolaiv with air strikes, hitting private buildings and port infrastructure along the country's southern coast, the Ukrainian military said.

The attacks come days after Russian strikes hit the port of Odessa, in the aftermath of a Türkiye-brokered deal to resume exports of grain from Ukraine that have been disrupted by Moscow's military offensive.

"A massive missile attack, with the use of aircraft, was launched from the Black Sea on the south of Ukraine," the country's southern military command said on Facebook.

Rescuers were working on the ground near Odessa where "residential buildings" near the coast were hit in the strikes, the military said.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy published a video showing debris scattered around heavily damaged houses in Zatoka, a popular resort village to the west of Odessa. "No military bases, no troops. Russian terrorists just wanted to shoot," he said in an Instagram post.

The military said that "port infrastructure" was targeted in the neighbouring Mykolaiv region, which was also hit by S-300 missile systems deployed in the Russia-controlled Kherson region.

Authorities said a "critical infrastructure object", a motor vehicle business and the city's boiler facility had been damaged.

Source: Agencies

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