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Lawmakers have warmly welcomed the appointment of Interior Minister Sheikh Ahmad Al-Nawaf Al-Sabah as a new prime minister and urged him to start a new era in the country and fight corruption, as he pledged to HH the Amir, he would safeguard democracy and the constitution.
An Amiri order was issued yesterday naming the 66-year old Sheikh Ahmad, the son of HH the Amir Sheikh Nawaf Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah, to replace the outgoing premier Sheikh Sabah Al-Khaled Al-Sabah who resigned more than three months ago following a grilling by opposition MPs. In a letter sent to the Amir yesterday, Sheikh Ahmad pledged to safeguard “the constitution, democracy and the state of institutions established by our ancestors”. He also vowed to exert all efforts to achieve comprehensive development.
MPs expressed optimism that Sheikh Ahmad will be able to take Kuwait out of ongoing political disputes that stalled reforms and development and vowed to lend him all cooperation needed. Opposition MPs, who were at loggerheads with the outgoing prime minister, were overjoyed by the appointment of Sheikh Ahmad, seen as close to the opposition.
MP Ahmad Al-Azmi said the new premier has inherited a heavy legacy by a sequence of previous cabinets which strongly harmed Kuwait. MP Saud Al-Mutairi expressed the hope that the new head of government will succeed in averting the mistakes of the previous governments to “build a new Kuwait”. MP Mohammad Al-Huwailah considered that the public support to the premier should form a launching pad for a new agenda of national action and comprehensive reforms.
MP Muhannad Al-Sayer said he was looking for an end to an era of sponsoring corruption and political blackmail and the start of another where citizens will be true partners. MP Muhalhal Al-Mudhaf called for achieving political and economic reforms, safeguarding public funds and seriously holding corrupt people to account.
MP Mubarak Al-Hajraf called for adopting a new policy for reforms and fighting corruption. He also called for pardoning politicians who fled the country. MP Abdullah Al-Mudhaf said that the overwhelming popular support for the new premier is the way to succeed. MP Osama Al-Shaheen said the new premier took immediate and decisive reforms as an interior minister and “we are looking for similar reforms” in the government./KT
Türkiye has accused Greece of pushing a boat carrying migrants out of Greek territorial waters and back into Turkish ones.
The defence ministry in Ankara said on Monday that the incident occurred near Rhodes on Sunday, and posted drone footage on social media that showed the coast guard pulling the boat into Turkish waters near the southwestern resort of Marmaris.
The Greek coast guard had no immediate comment.
The footage shows the occupants of one boat attaching a rope from its stern to a small rubber dinghy, which the boat then tows in reverse before detaching from it and moving off.
It was not clear how many people were in the dinghy.
Endangering the lives
Athens has repeatedly denied accusations by rights groups and United Nations refugee agency UNHCR that it pushes migrants out of Greek waters, saying it intercepts boats at sea to protect its borders.
Greece was the frontline of Europe's migration crisis in 2015 and 2016 when around a million refugees fleeing war and poverty in Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan arrived, mainly via Türkiye.
The number of arrivals has fallen sharply since then.
International human rights groups have repeatedly condemned Greece’s illegal practice, saying it violates humanitarian values and international law by endangering the lives of vulnerable migrants, including women and children.
Source: Reuters
Protesters have stormed a United Nations base in the eastern Congolese city of Goma, demanding the departure of peacekeepers from the region.
Hundreds of people blocked roads and chanted anti-UN slogans before storming the headquarters of the UN peacekeeping mission in Goma on Monday, an AFP journalist said.
The protesters smashed windows and looted computers, furniture and other valuables from the headquarters while UN police officers fired tear gas in a bid to push them back, the journalist reported.
A logistical base on the outskirts of the city was also stormed, and a student was shot in the leg, they added.
The UN peacekeeping mission in the Democratic Republic of Congo, known as MONUSCO, has come under regular local criticism for its perceived inability to stop fighting in the conflict-torn east.
Over 120 armed groups roam the volatile region, where conflict has displaced millions of people and civilian massacres are common.
'Incapacity' to protect
Ahead of Monday's protest, the Goma youth branch of the ruling UDPS party released a statement demanding MONUSCO "withdraw from Congolese soil without conditions".
The statement added that MONUSCO "has already proved its incapacity to provide us with protection".
Khassim Diagne, the deputy special representative of the UN secretary general to MONUSCO, said the UN is not opposed to protests but that violence is unacceptable.
"These are looters," he said. "We condemn them in the strongest terms".
The latest protest comes after the president of the Congolese senate, Modeste Bahati, told supporters in Goma on July 15 that MONUSCO should "pack its bags".
Source: AFP
The US Central Command (CENTCOM) has praised a PKK/YPG terrorist killed in northern Syria last week.
“Salwa Yusuk (AKA Ciyan Afrin) a Deputy Commander of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) — along with 2 fellow female fighters — was killed in an attack near Qamishli, Syria, on July 22, 2022,” CENTCOM said on Twitter on Sunday.
CENTCOM also extended condolences, praising the terrorist killed on Friday.
The YPG is the Syrian branch of the PKK, a designated terror group in the US, EU and Türkiye. US support for the YPG-dominated SDF has significantly strained relations with Ankara.
In its more than 35-year terror campaign against Türkiye, the PKK has been responsible for the deaths of at least 40,000 people, including women, children and infants.
Since 2016, Ankara has launched a trio of successful anti-terror operations — Euphrates Shield (2016), Olive Branch (2018) and Peace Spring (2019) — across its border in northern Syria to prevent the formation of a terror corridor and enable the peaceful settlement of residents.
'Terrorists neutralised'
On Monday, authorities in Türkiye announced that security forces had "neutralised" 15 YPG/PKK terrorists, including two so-called senior members, near the Turkish border in northern Syria.
The terrorists were targeted during their attempt to “disturb the peace and security in the region”, the Turkish National Defence Ministry said on Twitter.
Turkish authorities use the term “neutralise” to imply the terrorists in question surrendered or were killed or captured.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has vowed to root out terrorist organisations in Syria that threaten Türkiye's security, saying the PKK terror group also targets the territorial integrity of the war-torn country.
Source: AA
By: MURAT SOFUOGLU
The promise made by the Biden administration and NATO leadership to fight all kinds of terrorism was torn apart at the seams as CENTCOM sent condolence messages to the families of slain PKK terrorists.
Since the Russian attack on Ukraine began, the US has worked hard to label Russia as a state that "sponsors terrorism." Upon closer inspection, Washington's holier-than-thou attitude is exposed when it comes to its support for terrorism in northeastern Syria, where it has been backing the YPG, the Syrian wing of the PKK, a known terrorist organisation that has launched a decades-long terror campaign against Türkiye leading tens of thousands of deaths including children and women.
On July 23, it became clear that the US continues to encourage PKK terrorism as the United States Central Command, or CENTCOM, issued condolences to the families of three YPG/PKK terrorists killed in Qamisli, a border town in northeastern Syria.
CENTCOM's condolences over the deaths of three terrorists came at a sensitive time during which NATO has reassured Türkiye that the bloc will respect Ankara's security concerns, especially those related to PKK terrorism. NATO's pledge to its member-state came on the heels of Ankara’s objections to Sweden and Finland’s membership bids on the grounds that the two Nordic nations had become a safe haven for PKK activities.
While Washington has long insisted that so-called Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) did not comprise any PKK terrorists, Türkiye has constantly provided the US with strong evidence that the SDF was, indeed, an offshoot of the PKK, reiterating that it is merely a political front to hide the YPG/PKK presence among its ranks.
But Washington continues to back the terror group’s Syrian outfit, spending tens of millions of dollars of American taxpayers' money to arm it, despite the fact that the PKK is listed as a terrorist organisation in and by the US, the UK, the European Union and Türkiye.
An American ‘fiasco’
Reacting to Washington's expression of condolence to the YPG/PKK, Abdullah Agar, a Turkish security analyst, says CENTCOM's message was a great “insult” to both American people and US public order. “They have kept saying that the PKK and the YPG are separate entities. But the names they shared (for condolences) are clearly from PKK’s mountain squad,” Agar tells TRT World.
US Central Command's condolences of the deaths of YPG/PKK terrorists on Friday in northern Syria are "a highly provocative message" toward Türkiye according to experts. (AA)
Salwa Yusuk, a native of Afrin, which is a border town in northeastern Syria, was a well-known PKK terrorist who had a long association with the terror group. She joined the PKK in 1999, remaining active in Türkiye’s southeastern region. She had also operated in Syria and Iraq, rising through PKK ranks and maintaining strong ties with Duran Kalkan, one of the PKK’s top ringleaders, according to Turkish security experts.
“The #US complaints about this on ‘counter-terrorism’ grounds ring very hollow. All of the ‘#SDF’ commanders are #PKK operatives, and that is well-known to be true of Salwa Yusuk (Ciyan Afrin or Jian Tolhildan), a veteran of the terrorist-insurgency in #Turkey,” wrote Kyle Orton, a British expert on terrorism and the Syrian conflict, on Twitter.
“The other two #PKK officials, operating under ‘#SDF’ colours in Syria, killed by #Turkey near Qamishli on 22 July were much younger and less senior than Salwa Yusuk (b. 1980): they were Joana Hisso (Roj Khabur), born in 1992, and Ruha Bashar (Barin Botan), born in 2003,” Orton tweeted.
While Ankara is yet to make a statement on the killing of Yusuk and her two terrorist associates, Turkish media reported that terrorists were killed in an anti-terror operation in northern Syria by Turkish Army.
“It is a great fiasco for the US to support a terror group to put pressure over another terrorist group,” says Agar, referring to US strategy to use the YPG/PKK as a proxy against Daesh.
‘A terrible policy’
Supporting the YPG/PKK is “a terrible policy and it should stop,” says Matthew Bryza, a former US diplomat, who also worked in the White House under different Republican and Democrat administrations. Bryza, too, considers the issuing of condolences for the deaths of YPG/PKK members as “a sort of highly provocative message” toward Türkiye.
The debate over US support for the YPG/PKK is “off-track” in Washington because anti-Turkish lobbying groups have tried to conceal the fact that Türkiye is not opposing the entire Kurdish population in Syria, Bryza tells TRT World, clarifying that Türkiye is, rather, “opposing one terrorist group which has Marxist-Leninist ideology.” However, that part of the story is not discussed in Washington, according to Bryza.
Another problem regarding the US’s Syria policy is its failure to address the roots of the Daesh insurgency. If Americans really want to fight Daesh, instead of supporting groups like the PKK, they need to fix the problematic sociological structures that feed terrorism in Syria and Iraq, Agar says. But Agar sees no signs of any real US reforms to solve social and economic problems in Syria and Iraq.
“The US does not really aim to fight Daesh; they use the YPG/PKK to divide Syria and Iraq and destabilise Türkiye,” says the analyst.
Among other powerful American institutions, the US CENTCOM, which is responsible for Washington’s Middle East operations, has developed direct and asymmetric relations with terror groups like the YPG/PKK, according to Agar.
As a result, CENTCOM's engagements with groups like the YPG/PKK also affect US policy-making with regards to Syria and Iraq, he says. The US CENTCOM is instrumental in Washington’s access to groups like the YPG/PKK through “dirty relationships,” he concludes.
Source: TRT World
The first ships to export Ukraine grain from the country's Black Sea ports may move within a few days under a deal agreed on Friday by Ukraine, Russia, Türkiye and the United Nations, a UN spokesperson said.
A Joint Coordination Center will liaise with the shipping industry and will publish detailed procedures for ships in the near future, said deputy UN spokesperson Farhan Haq.
UN World Food Programme optimistic on Ukraine grain export deal
The World Food Programme (WFP) said it was optimistic about a UN-brokered deal to reopen Ukrainian ports for grain exports but warned the agreement alone will not solve the global food crisis even if it is implemented effectively.
The WFP itself has had to cut aid this year in key hunger hotspots like Yemen and South Sudan due to global inflation and critical funding gaps, both exacerbated by the Ukraine conflict.
The current global food crisis is not a price crisis alone, and that man-made conflict, climate shocks and the Covid-19 pandemic will continue to drive up global food insecurity even if Friday's deal holds, a WFP spokesperson said.
Ukraine claims it has destroyed 50 Russian ammunition depots
Ukraine said its forces had used US-supplied HIMARS rocket systems to destroy 50 Russian ammunition depots since receiving the weapons last month.
Defence Minister Oleksiy Reznikov underlined the growing impact that the High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems (HIMARS) are having as Ukraine tries to repel Russia's attack.
Reznikov also said Ukraine had received three Gepard anti-aircraft armoured fighting vehicles, the first of 15 expected, and that Kiev was expecting to take delivery of several dozen Leopard tanks.
This cuts their (Russian) logistical chains and takes away their ability to conduct active fighting and cover our armed forces with heavy shelling
Oleksiy Reznikov, Ukraine's Defence Minister
Russia wants to end Ukraine's “unacceptable regime” - Lavrov
Russia’s top diplomat said Moscow’s overarching goal in Ukraine is to free its people from its “unacceptable regime,” expressing the Kremlin’s military aims in some of the bluntest terms yet as its forces pummel the country with artillery barrages and airstrikes.
Lavrov said Moscow is determined to help Ukrainians “liberate themselves from the burden of this absolutely unacceptable regime.”
Lavrov accused Kiev and its Western allies of spouting propaganda intended to ensure that Ukraine “becomes the eternal enemy of Russia."
Russian and Ukrainian people would continue to live together. We will certainly help Ukrainian people to get rid of the regime, which is absolutely anti-people and anti-historical
Sergey Lavrov, Russian Foreign Minister
Kremlin says Odessa strike should not hamper grain exports
The Kremlin has said that Russian strikes on Ukraine's Black Sea port of Odessa "should not affect" a Türkiye-brokered and UN-backed deal between Moscow and Kiev to unblock grain exports.
"This cannot and should not affect the start of shipment," Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told reporters, two days after Moscow hit the port.
He said Moscow's strikes targeted "exclusively" military infrastructure and were "not connected with the agreement on the export of grain". The weekend strikes on Odessa came less than a day after Moscow and Kiev signed the landmark deal.
Russia says it destroyed HIMARS ammo depot in Ukraine
Russia's Defence Ministry says its forces have destroyed an ammunition depot for US-made HIMARS rocket systems in Bogdanovtsy, in Ukraine's Khmelnytskyi region.
The reports were not independently verified.
Russia has previously said it destroyed several of the HIMARS systems supplied to Ukraine by the West, in claims denied by Kiev.
Britain says fighting continues in Ukraine’s Donbass and Kherson
Inconclusive fighting has continued in both Donbass and Kherson regions in eastern and southern Ukraine, British military intelligence has said.
Russian commanders continue to face a dilemma - whether to resource Russia's offensive in the east, or to bolster the defence in the west, Britain's defence ministry said on Twitter.
The ministry added in its regular bulletin that on July 18, the British intelligence identified a Russian military vehicle refit and refurbishment facility near Barvinok, in Russia's Belgorod Oblast, which is 10 kilometres from the Ukrainian border.
"At least 300 damaged vehicles were present, including main battle tanks, armoured personnel carriers, and general support trucks," the update added.
Putin will not attend Japanese ex-PM Abe's funeral, Kremlin says
Russian President Vladimir Putin will not attend the state funeral of Japanese former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, the Kremlin has said.
"No, Putin has no plans to visit Japan and attend the funeral," Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told reporters, adding that Russia was yet to decide the country's presence at the funeral.
The Japanese government has notified all the countries it has diplomatic ties with, including Russia, of former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's state funeral, Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary Yos hihiko Isozaki said.
Zelenskyy says Ukrainians won't be 'cowed'
After five months of Russian attacks, Ukraine will continue to do all it can to inflict as much damage on its enemy as possible, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has said.
"Even the occupiers admit we will win," he said as he hailed the upcoming day of Ukrainian statehood, July 28, a new annual holiday that Zelenskyy announced in August last year. "We hear it in their conversations all the time. In what they are telling their relatives when they call them."
Like every day in the last months, Zelenskyy said that Ukraine was not letting up. "We do everything to inflict the highest possible damage on the enemy and to gather for Ukraine as much support as possible."
He said Ukraine had an important week ahead, with the holiday approaching in the midst of what he called a "cruel war." "But we will celebrate against all odds. Because Ukrainians won't be cowed."
Russian investigator seeks new tribunal for Ukraine
The head of Russia's investigative committee has said Moscow had charged 92 members of Ukrainian armed forces with "crimes against humanity" and proposed an international tribunal backed by countries including Bolivia, Iran and Syria.
The government's Rossiiskaya Gazeta quoted committee head Alexander Bastrykin as accusing "more than 220 persons, including representatives of the high command of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, as well as commanders of military units that shelled the civilian population."
The Ukrainians were involved in "crimes against the peace and security of humanity, which have no statute of limitations," he said.
Source: Reuters
Gazprom, the Russian energy giant, has said it is cutting daily deliveries of gas to Europe via the Nord Stream pipeline to 33 million cubic metres a day –– about 20 percent of the pipeline's capacity –– from Wednesday, leading Ukraine to call the West to action over the "gas war".
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said the cuts showed that Europe should bolster sanctions against Russia. "This is an open gas war that Russia is waging against a united Europe," Zelensky said.
"They don't care what will happen to the people, how they will suffer –– from hunger due to blocked ports, from winter cold and poverty... or the occupation. These are just different forms of terror," he said in his daily video message.
"That is why you have to hit back. Do not think about how to bring back the turbine, but strengthen the sanctions," he said.
US: Russian strike on Odesa port casts doubt on grain deal
Russia's attack on the Ukrainian port of Odessa casts doubt on a grain deal, the White House has said, adding that the United States would continue to explore options with the international community to increase Ukraine exports through overland routes.
The announcement comes after the Kremlin said it did not expect the Saturday missile strike targeting military infrastructure in Ukraine would affect a plan to restart exports from the country.
"We are going to be watching this closely to see if Russia meets their commitments under this arrangement since this attack casts serious doubt on Russia’s credibility," a National Security Council spokesperson said in a statement./agencies
At least three people, including a former Philippine town mayor, have been killed and others wounded in a brazen attack by a gunman in a university campus in the capital region.
The gunman, who was armed with two pistols, was captured after the shooting near the gate of the Ateneo de Manila University in suburban Quezon city on Sunday.
The university was put under lockdown and the graduation rite at a law school was canceled, police said.
Officials said those killed in the attack were Rosita Furigay, a former mayor of Lamitan town in southern Basilan province, her aide and a university guard.
Furigay’s daughter, who was supposed to attend the graduation ceremony, was wounded and taken to a hospital, a police report said, adding she was in a "stable condition."
Investigation underway
Supreme Court Chief Justice Alexander Gesmundo, who was supposed to be a speaker at the ceremony, was en route to the university when the attack happened and was advised to turn back, officials said.
Quezon city Mayor Joy Belmonte condemned the attack. “This kind of incident has no place in our society and must be condemned to the highest level,” she said in a statement.
Investigators were trying to determine a motive for the attack.
School and university shootings are rare in the Philippines despite its lax gun rules. But targeted killings of politicians are fairly common, particularly during elections.
The shooting happened despite heavy security and a gun ban imposed by police and other government forces in Quezon city.
Newly elected President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. is to deliver his first state of the nation address in the city on Monday before a joint session of Congress at the House of Representatives./agencies
Seventeen suspected Haitian migrants have died in a boat accident off the coast of the Bahamas.
"Rescue teams recovered 17 bodies from the water" –– 15 women, one man and one infant –– a government statement tweeted by Prime Minister Philip Davis said on Sunday.
Another 25 people were rescued and placed in the care of health officials, the statement said. At least one person is still missing, with search missions under way.
Preliminary investigations indicate that a speed boat left New Providence, the most populous island in the Bahamian archipelago, around 1:00 am on Sunday with about 60 people on board. Officials believe the boat was destined for Miami, Florida.
The vessel is believed to have capsized in the rough water, 11 kilometres off the coast of the island.
A multi-agency investigation involving the Royal Bahamas Police Force and Royal Bahamas Defense Force is under way "to determine the full circumstances surrounding a suspected human smuggling operation which has resulted in" the migrant deaths, the statement said.
Human-smuggling operations
Human smugglers are known to use the Bahamas –– a group of islands near the Florida coast –– as a jumping-off point for getting people into the United States, in what can often be a treacherous journey.
In March, the US Coast Guard intercepted 123 people on board a small vessel off Anguilla Cay, in the western Bahamas, and just a few days before, it detained more than 140 people off the coast of Andros, the largest island in the Bahamas.
Haiti, the poorest country in the Americas, is facing an acute political, economic and security crisis.
Source: AFP
Muhammad Ali's championship belt from his 1974 "Rumble in the Jungle" heavyweight title fight has been sold at an auction for $6.18 million.
The winner of the heated competition for the belt on Sunday was Indianapolis Colts owner Jim Irsay, according to Heritage Auctions in Dallas.
In a tweet, Irsay confirmed he acquired the belt for his collection of rock music, American history and pop culture memorabilia that is currently touring the country.
Memorable title-belt
The belt will be displayed on August 2 at Chicago's Navy Pier and on September 9 in Indianapolis.
"Proud to be the steward!" Irsay tweeted.
"After several hours of watching two bidders go back and forth over this belt, this proved to be a battle worthy of the Rumble itself," Chris Ivy, Heritage's director of sports auctions, said in a statement.
The 1974 fight was one of boxing's most memorable moments.
Ali stopped the fearsome George Foreman to recapture the heavyweight title in the African nation of Zaire. Ali won the fight in a knockout in the eighth round.
Source: AP