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Libya ‘mass grave’ with seven bodies found

By - Aug 22,2022 - Last updated at Aug 22,2022

TRIPOLI — Libyan authorities said on Monday that seven unidentified bodies were found in the western town of Tarhuna, where scores of corpses have been discovered in mass graves in recent years.

A “mass grave” was discovered on Sunday in a “public waste dump” and seven bodies have been exhumed, the North African country’s missing persons authority said in a statement.

Mass graves were initially discovered in Tarhuna in June 2020 following the withdrawal of forces of Khalifa Haftar, an eastern Libya-based military chief who had spent a year trying to seize the capital Tripoli, 80 kilometres northwest of Tarhuna.

More than 250 bodies have since been found in the farming town, which was controlled for years by the Kaniyat militia — run by six brothers from the Kani family who imposed their dominance by slaughtering opponents and their families.

After starting their reign of terror in 2015, the militia “often abducted, detained, tortured, killed, and disappeared people who opposed them or who were suspected of doing so”, according to residents’ testimonies cited by Human Rights Watch.

Lions they kept were rumoured to be fed on the flesh of their enemies.

For a time, the group sided with Tripoli-based militias, but when Haftar launched his assault to seize the capital, the clan switched sides and offered him Tarhuna as a rear base.

When Haftar’s forces were routed, the Kani brothers disappeared — some are believed killed, others to be in hiding.

Oil-rich Libya was plunged into over a decade of chaos and lawlessness following a 2011 NATO-backed uprising that led to the removal and killing of longtime dictator Moamer Kadhafi.

Dozens of militias and terror groups took advantage of the power vacuum.

A UN fact-finding mission last year found that all parties to Libya’s decade-long conflict have violated international humanitarian law since 2016, with some possibly guilty of war crimes.

Tensions remain high in Libya, where two rival prime ministers are vying for power.

 

EU says Iran nuclear deal meeting possible 'this week'

By - Aug 22,2022 - Last updated at Aug 22,2022

MADRID — A possible meeting on resurrecting the Iran nuclear deal could be held "this week" after Tehran submitted its response to an EU proposal, the European Union's top diplomat said on Monday.

Efforts to revive the so-called JCPOA — the 2015 agreement between world powers and Tehran aimed at curbing Iran's nuclear ambitions — are at a critical juncture.

"A meeting was scheduled to take place in Vienna at the end of last week, but it was not possible," EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell told a news conference in Santander, Spain.

"It is possible that it could take place this week."

Earlier this month, after more than a year of talks coordinated by Borrell and his team, the EU submitted what it called a "final" text.

The document aims at fully restoring the nuclear deal by bringing the United States back into it, after then-president Donald Trump had Washington withdraw in 2018.

That move prompted Iran to roll back its commitments under the JCPOA and steadily enrich its stock of uranium to close to weapons-grade levels.

Borrell said the negotiations had gone as far as they could go and "this is the inflection point".

"There was an Iranian response that I considered reasonable to transmit to the United States.

“The United States has not formally replied yet. But we are waiting for their response and I hope that response will allow us to finish the negotiation — I hope so, but I can’t assure you of it.”

The other parties to the JCPOA are Britain, China, France, Germany and Russia.

French President Emmanuel Macron on Monday spoke by phone to Israeli Prime Minister Yair Lapid, who claimed the new terms “go beyond the limits of the original JCPOA”.

Tehran is Israel’s arch foe and Lapid warned that reviving the landmark accord could boost funding to Iran’s regional proxies.

“It will pave the way for significant investment to flow into Iran’s terrorist network and to strengthening the Iranian military,” said a statement from Lapid’s office.

 

Iraq keeps up search after 4 bodies pulled from collapsed shrine

Between six and eight pilgrims reported trapped under debris

By - Aug 21,2022 - Last updated at Aug 22,2022

Iraqi rescue workers search for survivors trapped under the rubble of the Qattarat Al Imam Ali shrine following a landslide, on the outskirts of the Shiite holy city of Karbala, on Sunday (AFP photo)

KARBALA, Iraq  — Iraqi rescue workers on Sunday were desperately searching for survivors trapped under rubble after a landslide hit a Shiite Muslim shrine, killing at least four people.

"We have found four bodies, including of a woman" at the site near Karbala, central Iraq, civil defence official Abdelrahman Jawdat told AFP.

Between six and eight pilgrims had been reported trapped under the debris of the shrine, known as Qattarat Al Imam Ali, civil defence spokesman Nawas Sabah Shaker had said earlier.

Three children have been rescued following Saturday's disaster, emergency services said, adding that they were in "good condition" and being monitored in a hospital.

Rescue teams working through the night were able to provide supplies of oxygen, as well as food and water to some of those trapped through gaps in the rubble, state news agency INA said.

Iraqi President Barham Saleh on Twitter called on the "heroic" rescue workers to "mobilise all efforts to save the trapped people".

The emergency responders said earlier they were maintaining verbal contact with the victims "to reassure them".

"We are working hard, with the utmost precision, to reach" those trapped, said Jawdat, director of the civil defence media department.

"Any mistake could lead to further collapses."

One man at the scene, Bassem Khazali, said his nephew was among those buried.

"I am afraid that all the efforts undertaken will be in vain... We want to know what happened, why it happened," Khazali told AFP.

 

Sand, rocks collapse 

 

Shaker told AFP that "sand dunes and rocks collapsed onto the shrine building", blaming the saturation of the earth that had been caused by humidity.

The landslide on Saturday afternoon hit the shrine located in a natural depression about 25 kilometres west of the Shiite holy city of Karbala.

The rocks and sand started sliding because of the “saturation of the earthen embankment adjacent to the shrine”, the civil defence told INA.

“This led to the collapse of about 30 per cent of the area of the building, which measures about 100 square metres.”

Iraq’s holy city of Karbala is the burial place of Imam Hussein, grandson of the Prophet Mohammed.

The stricken shrine is dedicated to Imam Ali, the son-in-law of the Prophet Mohammed, who according to Shiite tradition stopped there with his army on his way to a battle in 657AD.

ICC chief prosecutor arrives in Sudan

By - Aug 21,2022 - Last updated at Aug 21,2022

International Criminal Court's Chief Prosecutor Karim Khan (centre) visits the Kalma camp for internally displaced people in Nyala, the capital of South Darfur, on Sunday (AFP photo)

KHARTOUM — The International Criminal Court's (ICC) Chief Prosecutor Karim Khan has arrived in Sudan, state media reported in the country still wracked by unrest since the 2019 ouster of its leader accused of genocide.

"The ICC prosecutor and a court delegation will hold a number of meetings with senior officials and he will be visiting the Darfur region," the state news agency SUNA said late Saturday.

Khan’s visit will continue until August 25, SUNA said, a year after he visited the country for talks on outstanding arrest warrants over crimes committed during the 2003 Darfur war under ousted president Omar Al Bashir.

His visit this year is the third by an ICC prosecutor to Sudan since Bashir’s ouster in April 2019.

Khan’s predecessor, Fatou Bensouda, held talks in Sudan in May 2021, bringing the strife-hit country’s former leaders one step closer to being tried at The Hague for war crimes.

Sudan has been reeling from deepening unrest, spiralling economic crisis, and a spike in ethnic clashes, including in Darfur, since a military coup last year led by army chief Abdel Fattah Al Burhan.

The October military coup upended a fragile transition put in place following the ouster of Bashir, who was deposed following months of protests.

Bashir remains wanted by the ICC over his role in the 2003 Darfur conflict, which pitted ethnic African minority rebels complaining of discrimination against his Arab-dominated government.

Khartoum then responded by unleashing the notorious Janjaweed militia, recruited from among the region’s mainly Arab nomadic peoples.

Human rights groups have long accused Bashir and his former aides of using a scorched earth policy, raping, killing, looting and burning villages.

The United Nations says 300,000 people were killed and 2.5 million displaced during the conflict.

In 2020, Sudan signed a peace deal with key rebel groups, including in Darfur, that was hoped to end the conflict in the far-flung region.

Several ex-rebel leaders have since taken top positions in government.

Since his ouster, Bashir has been held in Khartoum’s Kober prison along with several of his former aides who are also wanted by the ICC. He faces charges of genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity.

UAE ambassador to return to Iran after six-year absence

By - Aug 21,2022 - Last updated at Aug 21,2022

In this undated photo the Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque in Abu Dhabi, capital of the United Arab Emirates, is seen (AFP photo)

DUBAI — The United Arab Emirates said on Sunday that its ambassador to Tehran would resume duties within days, six years after ties were downgraded in support of Saudi Arabia.

Ambassador Saif Mohammed Al Zaabi "will resume his duties at the UAE embassy in the Islamic republic of Iran in the coming days to contribute to further advancing bilateral relations", the Emirati foreign ministry said in a statement.

The move seeks to "achieve the common interests of the two countries and the wider region", it added.

With Middle East political alignments shifting, UAE presidential adviser Anwar Gargash in mid-July called for an easing of regional tensions and signalled the ambassador's possible return.

The UAE scaled back its ties with the Islamic republic in 2016, in solidarity with Saudi Arabia, after Iranian protesters attacked the kingdom's diplomatic missions in Iran following Riyadh's execution of Shiite Muslim cleric Nimr Al Nimr.

Other Arab Gulf countries including Kuwait made similar moves.

Iran said earlier this month that Kuwait had sent its first ambassador to Tehran since 2016.

In July, the Emirati and Iranian foreign ministers held a telephone conversation and discussed boosting ties, UAE state media reported at the time.

The oil-rich UAE has previously said that Arab Gulf states should take part in "collective diplomacy" to reach an agreement with Iran, which has been in talks with Western powers on reviving a 2015 nuclear deal.

On Tuesday the European Union and United States said they were studying Iran's response to a "final" draft of such an agreement.

In 2020, the UAE established diplomatic relations with Israel, a move which Tehran condemned.

But Abu Dhabi has been pursuing a policy of rapprochement with former regional rivals including Qatar and Turkey as well as Iran, with which it had maintained strong economic ties despite the diplomatic downgrade.

Iran reformist alliance calls for release of politician Tajzadeh

By - Aug 20,2022 - Last updated at Aug 20,2022

TEHRAN — Iran’s leading reformist coalition on Saturday called for the release of politician Mostafa Tajzadeh, held since July over accusations of undermining state security.

“In the name of the Reform Front of Iran, I urge you to release [Tajzadeh] as soon as possible,” the head of the coalition, Behzad Nabavi, wrote in an open letter to the judiciary.

He called for Tajzadeh’s case to be “examined in an open court session” by an “impartial” prosecutor, according to the letter published in local media.

Formed in March 2021 by close associates of reformist former president Mohammad Khatami, the Front brings together parties and movements from Iran’s reformist camp.

Tajzadeh served as deputy interior minister under Khatami, who held office from 1997 to 2005.

The 65-year-old’s trial began last week at a branch of Iran’s Revolutionary Court.

According to the judicial authority’s news agency Mizan Online, Tajzadeh faced “three counts, including conspiracy against national security”.

He also faces accusations of “publishing lies to disturb public opinion”, the Mehr news agency has reported.

Tajzadeh had previously served seven years in prison, having been arrested in 2009 during protests disputing the reelection of then president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

He declined to speak in court during last week’s hearing after a request for him to talk one-on-one with his lawyer was rejected, the defence said.

Tajzadeh “did nothing but express his opinions”, the Reform Front said, adding that he has been held in “solitary confinement” since his arrest.

He had made an unsuccessful attempt to run in Iran’s presidential elections in 2021, but his candidacy was rejected.

The Iranian authorities have made several high-profile arrests in recent months, including of acclaimed filmmakers Jafar Panahi and Mohammad Rasoulof.

 

Air-con and hot meals: Iraq protest camps dig in for long haul

By - Aug 18,2022 - Last updated at Aug 18,2022

Volunteers prepare food for supporters of the Iraqi Coordination Framework during a sit-in on a bridge leading to the heavily-guarded Green Zone of the capital Baghdad, on Monday (AFP photo)

 

BAGHDAD — In the capital of crisis-torn Iraq, two tent cities have sprung up as rival Shiite blocs have set up protest camps, complete with cooked meals and air-conditioners against the blistering heat.

As the war-scarred country's political impasse has dragged on ever since inconclusive October elections, both sides are digging in for the long haul in and near Baghdad's high-security Green Zone.

Supporters of firebrand cleric and political kingmaker Moqtada Sadr, who has hundreds of thousands at his beck and call, came in late July when they stormed parliament and then set up camp on the lawns outside.

The gathering is a show of strength by Sadrists against their Shiite opponents from a pro-Iran faction called the Coordination Framework, in the midst of a tug-of-war over Iraq's political future.

The pro-Iranian group followed suit by organising their own sit-in, on an avenue leading to the Green Zone, the district housing government institutions and foreign embassies.

The camps are organised in the "mawkeb" tradition, where stalls provide food and drinks to pilgrims during Ashura and Arbaeen — two major festivals on the Shiite Muslim calendar — on their journey to the holy city of Karbala.

"We grabbed our pillows and came," Fadel Rahman, a 33-year-old Sadrist, told AFP.

Along with about 20 other people, he said he helped to finance a mawkeb with a contribution of about $170.

"We serve meals to the protesters. There is tea and cold water, which is the most important thing in this heat," Rahman said, as temperatures soared above 40ºC.

His demand is “to remove the corrupt” — a catch cry of Sadrists who are seeking the dissolution of parliament and an early general election.

More than 10 months on from Iraq’s last legislative election, the country still lacks a prime minister and government.

Negotiations to end the crisis have stalled against a backdrop of behind-the-scenes haggling and a flood of bitter invective between the two rival camps.

The avenue leading to the parliament building in Baghdad is lined by colourful tents shielding the Sadrists from the sun.

In all, their camp is supplied by 70 mawakeb, dishing out around 100 kilogrammes each day of rice alone, as well as other food and drinks, at a cost of $4,000, an organiser told AFP.

The lucky ones have mobile air-conditioners that are plugged into the parliament’s power supply. Sandwiches are distributed to them by volunteers.

The back of a pick-up truck has been transformed into a mobile canteen where stews, rice and beans simmer in large pots.

“Every night we get together with my friends to decide on the next day’s menu,” said Mohamed Hussein, 33, sweating under the sun as he served up lunch.

In the opposing camp, supporters of the Coordination Framework are less numerous than the Sadrists.

They have occupied an avenue leading to the Green Zone for a week, demanding a government capable of improving the daily lives of Iraqis and solving electricity and water shortages, among other problems.

A banner hanging from a tent calls for “Respect for state institutions, especially the legislative and judicial branches”.

The Coordination Framework is also seeking support from the mawakeb, according to one official.

“Thousands of people are affected by the delay in forming the government. They are willing to provide any form of support for a government to be formed,” he said, asking to remain anonymous.

One of the protesters at the sit-in, 45-year-old Abu Ali Al Zayadi, said it was here to stay “until the realisation of our legitimate demands, and especially the formation of a government”.

Thousands protest military rule in Sudan

By - Aug 18,2022 - Last updated at Aug 18,2022

People march in a demonstration demanding the return of civilian rule, near the airport in the south of Sudan's capital Khartoum on Thursday (AFP photo)

KHARTOUM — Sudanese security forces on Thursday fired tear gas at thousands who took to the streets to renew demands for civilian rule after last year's military coup, AFP correspondents said.

Protesters were seen in the capital Khartoum carrying Sudanese flags and chanting: "No, no to military rule", and "Civilian rule is the people's choice," eyewitnesses said.

Security forces fired rounds of tear gas to disperse the protesters, according to AFP correspondents.

Sudan has been rocked by near-weekly protests and a violent crackdown that has so far left at least 116 people killed since army chief Abdel Fattah Al Burhan led a military coup last October.

The power grab upended a transition to civilian rule launched after the 2019 ouster of strongman Omar Al Bashir, who ruled for three decades.

Sudan has been reeling from political unrest, a spiralling economic crisis and a spike in ethnic clashes in its far-flung regions.

Last month, Burhan pledged in a televised address to step aside and make way for Sudanese factions to agree on a civilian government.

Civilian leaders who were ousted in the coup dismissed his move as a “ruse”, and pro-democracy protesters have held fast to their rallying cry of “no negotiation, no partnership” with the military.

Earlier this month, Burhan’s deputy and paramilitary commander Mohamed Hamdan Daglo admitted that last October’s coup had failed to bring about change in Sudan.

“The whole thing failed and now we [Sudan] have become worse off,” he said.

Last month, Sufi religious leader Al Tayeb Al Jed launched an initiative aimed at ending Sudan’s political crisis.

The move was welcomed by Burhan, as well as Islamist groups that were part of the Bashir’s regime.

'Tornado of fire': Algeria forest blazes kill 38

By - Aug 18,2022 - Last updated at Aug 18,2022

A photo shows a burnt forest following raging fires in Algeria's city of Kala on Thursday (AFP photo)

EL KALA, Algeria — Algerian firefighters on Thursday battled two dozen blazes fanned by hot winds that have killed at least 38 people and left destruction across the drought-hit North African country.

Deadly forest fires have become an annual scourge in the North African country, where climate change is turning large areas into a tinderbox in the baking summer months.

As residents have lost their homes to the flames, authorities have been accused of being ill-prepared, with few firefighting aircraft available, despite record casualties in last year's blazes.

The justice ministry has launched an enquiry into the possibility that some of the blazes were started deliberately, after comments to that effect by Interior Minister Kamel Beldjoud.

At least 38 people have been killed including more than 10 children, according to multiple sources, including local journalists and the fire service.

Most were in the El Tarf region near Algeria's eastern border with Tunisia, an area which has been sweltering in 48 degree Celsius heat.

At least 200 more people have suffered burns or respiratory problems, according to various Algerian media.

Algerian television showed people fleeing their burning homes, women carrying children in their arms.

A journalist in El Tarf described “scenes of devastation” on the road to El Kala in the country’s far northeast.

“A tornado of fire swept everything away in seconds,” he told AFP by telephone. “Most of those who died were surrounded while visiting a wildlife park.”

An AFP team in El Kala saw burned-out cars, exhausted people and charred trees amid the strong smell of smoke.

A witness, who asked not to be named, said 12 people had been burned to death in their bus as they tried to escape when the fire ripped through a wildlife park.

The fire service said Thursday afternoon that 1,700 firefighters had been deployed to battle the fires, of which 24 were still raging.

A journalist in the mountainous area of Souk Ahras told AFP that a huge blaze in a forest nearby had sparked panic in the city of half a million people, where nearly 100 women and 17 newborn babies had to be evacuated from a hospital.

Lack of aircraft 

 

The scenes sparked fears of a repeat of the large-scale fires of last year which killed at least 90 people and ravaged 100,000 hectares of forest and farmland in the country’s north.

That disaster provoked bitter criticism of authorities over the lack of fire-fighting aircraft.

Authorities have rented a Russian Beriev BE 200 water bomber plane, but it has suffered a breakdown and is not expected to be operational again until Saturday, Interior Minister Kamel Beldjoud said.

The civil protection service and the army do have access to several firefighting helicopters.

Experts have called for a major effort to bolster the firefighting capacity of Africa’s biggest country, which has over four million hectares of forest.

One specialist, who asked not to be named, told AFP that in the 1980s the country had 22 Grumman aircraft for battling forest fires but that they had been “sold on the cheap, without any alternative solution being proposed”.

Algeria had agreed to buy seven firefighting aircraft from Spanish firm Plysa, but cancelled the contract following a diplomatic row over the Western Sahara in late June, according to specialist website Mena Defence.

Since early August, fires have destroyed over 800 hectares of forest and 1,800 hectares of woodlands, according to Beldjoud, who said some had been caused by arson.

On Thursday, Prime Minister Aymen Benabderrahmane defended the government’s response to the fires, saying strong winds had exacerbated them and promising that “authorities are deploying all their means” to extinguish the blazes.

Iraqi leaders, bar Sadr, agree to work on political roadmap

By - Aug 18,2022 - Last updated at Aug 18,2022

Supporters of Iraqi Shiite cleric Moqtada Al Sadr gather during a protest against the nomination of a rival Shiite faction for the position of prime minister, outside the Iraqi parliament building in the Green Zone in the capital Baghdad on Tuesday (AFP photo)

BAGHDAD — Iraq's main political leaders — but not firebrand Shiite cleric Moqtada Sadr — agreed on Wednesday to work on a roadmap aimed at ending the country's political impasse, after talks called by the premier.

They also pledged to keep talking, and urged Sadr to join what Prime Minister Mustafa Al Kadhemi called the "national dialogue".

Ten months after a general election last October, war-scarred Iraq still has no government, new prime minister or new president, because of disagreement over forming a coalition.

Tensions have been rising since July between the two main Shiite factions, one led by Sadr, the other by the pro-Iran Coordination Framework. Attempts to mediate have so far proved fruitless.

Sadr wants parliament dissolved to pave the way for new elections, but the Coordination Framework wants to set conditions and demands a transitional government before new polls.

After Wednesday's talks, a statement from Kadhemi's office said the meeting resulted in "several points agreed upon".

These included a commitment to finding a solution through a continuing dialogue "to present a legal and constitutional roadmap to address the current crisis".

Early elections were not ruled out, with the statement saying that "resorting to the ballot box once again through early elections is not an unprecedented event in the history of democracies", but without explicitly calling for them.

The Coordination Framework was represented at Wednesday's talks by two former premiers, Nuri Al Maliki and Haider Al Abadi.

Also present were Hadi Al Ameri and Faleh Al Fayyad, senior officials in the Hashed Al Shaabi network of former paramilitaries, now part of the national forces.

Maliki is a longtime foe of Sadr, the influential populist cleric whose bloc emerged from last October's elections as parliament's biggest, but still far short of a majority.

Sadr supporters have been staging a sit-in outside parliament in Baghdad's high security Green Zone for more than two weeks, and the Coordination Framework began a rival Baghdad protest on Friday.

President Barham Saleh and parliamentary speaker Mohammed Al Halbussi also attended the talks, as did officials of the two main Kurdish parties and the UN envoy in Iraq, Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert.

As the meeting got under way, a terse press release from the Sadr faction said simply that it was not taking part “in the national dialogue”.

Announcing the talks on Tuesday, Kadhemi’s office had said they aimed “to start a profound national dialogue and deliberation; to find solutions to the current political crisis”.

Earlier Tuesday, Sadr had backtracked after previously urging his supporters to join a massive rally as the standoff appeared to be getting worse.

He said a “million-man demonstration” planned for Baghdad on Saturday was being postponed indefinitely.

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