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Iran says it won't be rushed into 'quick' nuclear deal

By - Jul 25,2022 - Last updated at Jul 25,2022

TEHRAN — Iran said on Monday it will not be rushed into a "quick" deal reviving its faltering 2015 nuclear accord with world powers, as negotiations remain deadlocked.

"They demand that Iran makes a quick decision, [insisting that] time is limited and Iran must respond quickly," Foreign Ministry spokesman Nasser Kanani told reporters, referring to Western parties to the nuclear deal.

Kanani said the Islamic republic will "not sacrifice the country's fundamental interests... with a rushed process".

It was being put under "psychological pressure and unilateral expectations", he said.

But "if the US acts constructively and positively, an agreement is close", Kanani said.

The 2015 deal gave Iran sanctions relief in exchange for curbs on its atomic programme to guarantee that it could not develop a nuclear weapon, something it has always denied seeking.

But the US' unilateral withdrawal from the accord in 2018 under then-president Donald Trump and Washington's reimposition of biting economic sanctions prompted Iran to begin rolling back on its own commitments.

Talks in Vienna that started in April 2021 to restore the deal have stalled since March amid differences between Tehran and Washington on several issues.

The two sides negotiated indirectly through the European Union coordinator.

Qatar hosted indirect talks last month between the United States and Iran in a bid to get the Vienna process back on track, but those discussions broke up after two days without any breakthrough.

On Thursday, State Department spokesman Ned Price said Iran “doesn’t seem to have made the political decision — or decisions, I should say — necessary to achieve a mutual return to compliance” with the deal.

Tensions have also risen concerning Iran’s compliance with nuclear commitments it made to world powers.

In June the UN’s International Atomic Energy Agency said Iran was removing 27 surveillance cameras at its nuclear facilities as the IAEA passed a resolution censuring Tehran over its lack of cooperation.

On Monday the head of Iran’s nuclear organisation, Mohammed Eslami, said the cameras would not be reconnected until after the relaunch of the nuclear deal.

Eslami said the cameras were aimed at showing that the West’s claims that Iran is seeking “an atomic bomb” are baseless.

“If these claims are maintained, there is no reason to have cameras,” Eslami said.

French President Emmanuel Macron on Saturday told his Iranian counterpart Ebrahim Raisi that reviving the landmark deal was “still possible” but must happen “as soon as possible”. 

Macron’s comments came after Britain’s spy chief voiced doubt that the deal can be revived, saying Iran’s supreme leader and ultimate decision maker Ayatollah Ali Khamenei remained opposed.

“I don’t think the supreme leader... wants to cut a deal. The Iranians won’t want to end the talks either so they could run on for a bit,” MI6 chief Richard Moore said late last week.

Tunisians vote on constitution set to bolster one-man rule

By - Jul 25,2022 - Last updated at Jul 25,2022

A handout photo provided by the Tunisian presidency press service shows President Kais Saied voting in a referendum on a draft constitution he put forward, at a polling station in the capital Tunis, on Monday (AFP photo)

TUNIS — Tunisians were voting on Monday on a new constitution promoted by President Kais Saied, which has been criticised for giving his office nearly unchecked powers and threatening to install an autocracy in the birthplace of the Arab Spring.

The referendum comes a year to the day after Saied sacked the government and froze parliament in a power grab that his rivals condemned as a coup.

His moves were however welcomed by many Tunisians fed up with a grinding economic crisis, political turmoil and a system they felt had brought little improvement to their lives in the decade since the 2011 overthrow of dictator Zine Al Abidine Ben Ali.

Few doubt Monday's vote will pass, but turnout will gauge Saied's popularity after a year of increasingly tight one-man rule that has seen scant progress on tackling the North African country's economic woes.

Early on Monday, a handful of voters had queued up waiting for the opening a polling station in Tunis, guarded by a pair of soldiers and four police officers.

After casting their ballots, they emerged with purple ink on one finger to prevent fraud.

The electoral board said by 08:30 GMT an "encouraging" 6.3 per cent of voters had cast ballots.

Speaking mid-morning, Saied told journalists the country faced a "historic choice" and a free vote.

"Together we are founding a new republic based on genuine freedom, justice and national dignity," he said. 

Voter Imed Hezzi, a 57-year-old waiter, said he had "lots of hope" Saied would improve the country.

"Tunisia will prosper from today onwards," he told AFP after casting his ballot. "The start of the new Tunisia is today."

 

'None of the safeguards' 

 

Some 9.3 million out of Tunisia's 12 million people are eligible to vote. 

No minimum participation has been set for the constitution to pass, nor any provision made for a "no" result, and Saied's critics have warned Tunisia risks sliding back towards dictatorship.

The new text would place the head of state in command of the army, allow him to appoint a government without parliamentary approval and make him virtually impossible to remove from office.

The president could also present draft laws to parliament, which would be obliged to give them priority.

The new charter “gives the president almost all powers and dismantles any check on his rule and any institution that might exert any kind of control over him”, declared Said Benarbia, regional director of the International Commission of Jurists.

“None of the safeguards that could protect Tunisians from Ben Ali-type violations are there any more.”

Saied’s charter would replace a 2014 constitution that was a hard-won compromise between Islamist-leaning and secular forces after three years of political turmoil.

His supporters blame the resulting parliamentary-presidential system and the dominant Islamist-influenced Ennahdha Party for years of political crises and corruption.

Saied’s draft constitution was published this month with little reference even to an earlier draft produced by a committee he appointed himself.

Sadeq Belaid, a mentor of Saied who led the process, warned the president’s first draft was far removed from that of the committee and risked creating a “dictatorial system”.

A slightly amended version did little to address such concerns.

Opposition parties and civil society groups have called for a boycott, while the powerful UGTT trade union has declined to take a position.

 

Revolutionary ‘correction’ 

 

Benarbia said the text “doesn’t even envisage the possibility of a no vote”.

Saied, a 64-year-old law professor, won the 2019 presidential election in a landslide, building on his image as incorruptible and distanced from the political elite.

He has appeared increasingly isolated in recent months, mostly limiting his public comments to official videos from his office — often diatribes against domestic foes he brands as “snakes”, “germs” and “traitors”.

He has vowed to protect Tunisians’ liberties and describes his political project as a “correction” and a return to the path of the revolution.

Mongia Aounallah, a 62-year-old retiree, said she hoped the referendum would lead to “a better life for our children’s children”.

“The schools are a catastrophe,” she said. “The situation is catastrophic. Everything is catastrophic.”

Day labourer Ridha Nefzi agreed.

“I came to vote to change the situation of the country,” the 43-year-old said.

“The country’s run into a brick wall. But today we turn a new page.”

But while Saied enjoys some popularity, that will be tested by soaring inflation, youth unemployment of 40 per cent and a tough loan deal with the International Monetary Fund.

Voting was set end at 10:00pm (2100 GMT) and results are expected late Tuesday or early Wednesday.

'Gang' kidnaps Saudi in Lebanon — judicial source

By - Jul 25,2022 - Last updated at Jul 25,2022

BEIRUT — Lebanese authorities launched an investigation on Monday into the kidnapping at the weekend of a Saudi lured to the country's eastern city of Bekaa to buy a property, a judicial official said.

The public prosecutor of the Bekaa region instructed security forces to "conduct investigations and gather information on his whereabouts, which is likely the Al Sharawneh neighbourhood" on the outskirts of Baalbek, the official told AFP, asking not to be named.

Unrest and clashes between rival influential families are common in Baalbek, where the Iran-backed Shiite movement Hizbollah is dominant.

The army often conducts raids in the city, notably in Al Sharawneh, over cases of drug trafficking, theft, kidnapping and other crimes.

A "gang" lured the victim to Lebanon to buy property and the man was taken directly to Baalbek on Sunday upon landing in Beirut, the official said.

A ransom demand has not been issued but the Saudi was likely taken "with the aim of financially extorting" him, he said.

In April, a gang kidnapped an Egyptian accountant in Baalbek. He was rescued by the army after two weeks in captivity.

On July 11, a Saudi dissident living in Beirut's southern suburbs was killed, and two of his brothers were arrested in connection with the murder.

The latest kidnapping comes three months after Riyadh announced the return of its ambassador to Beirut, following a diplomatic crisis last year between Lebanon and Arab states in the Gulf.

Riyadh also suspended fruit and vegetable imports from Lebanon in April last year, saying shipments were used for drug smuggling and accusing Beirut of inaction.

Captagon pills, an amphetamine that is wreaking havoc in the kingdom and other Arab states, are produced mainly in Syria, neighbouring the Bekaa, and smuggled to the main consumer markets in the Gulf.

 

Syria's Kurds repatriate nearly 150 Daesh-linked Tajiki women, children

By - Jul 25,2022 - Last updated at Jul 25,2022

Members of Kurdish security forces deploy around buses carrying women and children from families of Daesh fighters, after they were handed over to Tajikistan, in Syria's Kurdish-majority city of Qamishli in the north-eastern Hasakeh province, on Monday (AFP photo)

QAMISHLI, Syria — Syria's semi-autonomous Kurdish administration handed Tajikistan 146 women and children related to Daesh group jihadists, a Kurdish official said on Monday, in the first such repatriation to the ex-Soviet state.

Thousands of foreign extremists joined Daesh as fighters, often bringing their wives and children to live in the "caliphate" declared by the group across swathes of Iraq and Syria in 2014.

The jihadists were dislodged in 2019 from their last scrap of territory in Syria by Kurdish-led forces backed by a US-led coalition, and Kurdish authorities have repeatedly called on countries to repatriate their citizens from crowded displaced camps.

But nations have mostly received them only sporadically, fearing a domestic political backlash.

The Kurds handed over "42 women and 104 children, including orphans, who were held in the Al Hol and Roj camps" in northeast Syria to Tajikistan's ambassador to Kuwait Zabidullah Zabidov, Kurdish foreign affairs official Fanar Al Kaeet said.

Zabidov is handling the repatriation process for Tajikistan.

The ex-Soviet state has been in contact with Syria's Kurds "for months" to repatriate their citizens, Kaeet said during a press conference in the northeastern city of Qamishli.

The women "did not commit any crimes or terrorist acts in northeastern Syria", he said.

Al Hol and Roj camps are home to tens of thousands of relatives of Daesh militants from Syria and abroad, with the former holding 10,000 foreigners.

Kurdish-led forces escorted the women, some in colourful clothing, others in long black robes, and the children, as they were bussed out to Qamishli airport, AFP correspondents in Qamishli reported.

Some women tried to hide their faces.

Young children timidly peeked through the bus windows, from behind thick curtains that hid the other passengers.

Rights groups have long decried grim living conditions and rampant criminality in the north Syrian camps holding militants' relatives.

According to Human Rights Watch, more than 41,000 foreign citizens — the majority under 12 years old — are being held in camps and prisons in northeast Syria over alleged Daesh links.

Floods kill 10 in war-torn Yemen, including four children

By - Jul 24,2022 - Last updated at Jul 24,2022

SANAA — Torrential rain lashed war-torn Yemen's capital and its environs Sunday, causing flooding and a building collapse that together killed 10 people, including four children, authorities said.

The four children were killed in the building collapse while another six people died when their car was swept away by floods in a district near Sanaa, according to officials.

Heavy rains cause devastating flooding in Yemen each year and the latest torrents have been building up over the past week. 

Traffic in the city, controlled by Houthi rebels fighting the Saudi-backed government, has come to a near standstill.

A three-storey building in Sanaa's historic district collapsed killing four children inside, a doctor at the city's Republican Hospital told AFP.

Floods swept away a car on a road in Dhamar governorate south of Sanaa killing the driver and five passengers, Nashwan Al Samawi, head of emergency operations in the governorate, told the Saba news agency. 

Conflict since 2014 between the Iran-backed Houthis and government forces has left hundreds of thousands dead in fighting or through illness and malnutrition. There has been a truce since April.

Two Palestinians killed in Israeli West Bank raid

By - Jul 24,2022 - Last updated at Jul 24,2022

Palestinian rescue teams rush to the scene of clashes between Israeli troops and Palestinian gunmen in the Old City of Nablus in the occupied West Bank early on Sunday (AFP photo)

NABLUS, Palestinian Territories — Israeli forces killed two Palestinians during an overnight raid in the occupied West Bank, officials on the two sides said on Sunday, in what Israel described as a shootout with gunmen.

The Israeli occupation army said it carried out operations and used live fire in several locations, including in Nablus, adding it arrested four "individuals suspected of involvement in terrorist activities". 

The Palestinian health ministry identified the dead as Muhamad Azizi, 25, who it said was killed by a bullet to the chest, and Abdul Rahman Jamal Suleiman Sobh, 28, who was shot in the head.

The Palestinian Red Crescent reported treating 19 wounded in Nablus, including 10 people hit by live fire. 

Israel's Prime Minister Yair Lapid said those targeted in the overnight raid were linked to recent "shooting attacks" on Israelis, and he commended the security forces for an "efficient and successful operation". 

Nabil Abu Rudeina, a spokesman for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, called the raid an “Israeli crime”. 

“The entire region will remain in a cycle of violence until the occupation is ended and a just peace is achieved,” he added in a statement to Voice of Palestine radio.

At least 52 Palestinians have been killed since late March, mostly in the West Bank, including Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu Akleh, a Palestinian-American dual national, who was covering an Israeli raid in Jenin.

Attack on Syria church gathering kills 2 — state media

By - Jul 24,2022 - Last updated at Jul 24,2022

DAMASCUS — Two people were killed and 12 injured on Sunday by bombardment of a church as it was being inaugurated in Syria's central province of Hama, the official SANA news agency reported.

"A rocket fired by terrorist organisations targeted a religious gathering in the town of Al Suqaylabiyah near Hama, killing two people and wounding 12," it said.

SANA said the attack came during a ceremony to inaugurate the Ayia Sofia church.

Britain-based war monitor the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which has a vast network of sources on the ground, confirmed the attack.

Giving a toll of one civilian killed and several wounded, the observatory said shelling or a drone attack by nearby rebel groups could be to blame.

Sunday's attack came two days after bombardment killed seven people including four children in the rebel-held Idlib region.

The observatory said Friday's fatalities in the Jisr Al-Shughur countryside of northern Syria were caused by Russian air strikes.

Around half of Idlib province as well as parts of Aleppo, Hama and Latakia provinces are controlled by Hayat Tahrir Al Sham, the former franchise in Syria of Al Qaeda.

Other rebel groups in the last pocket of armed opposition to the Damascus regime also remain active, with varying degrees of Turkish backing.

In March 2020, Russia and Turkey brokered a truce in Idlib and neighbouring areas that still holds, despite sporadic attacks from both sides, including Russian air strikes.

Syria’s war began in 2011 and has killed nearly half a million people and forced around half of the country’s pre-war population from their homes.

 

Iraq says preparing to host 'public' meeting between Iran, Saudi FMs

By - Jul 24,2022 - Last updated at Jul 24,2022

BAGHDAD — Iraq said on Saturday it was preparing to host a "public" meeting of the foreign ministers of Iran and Saudi Arabia as the two rivals seek to mend ties.

Since April last year, Iraq has hosted five rounds of talks between Sunni Muslim Saudi Arabia and Shiite-majority Iran, which support opposing sides in various conflicts around the region.

Those encounters were held privately and at a low level, involving security and intelligence officials.

But on Saturday, Iraqi Foreign Minister Fuad Hussein said his Iranian and Saudi counterparts would be meeting in Iraq at an undisclosed date.

"I contacted the foreign minister of Iran about this," Hussein said in an interview with Kurdish television channel Rudaw.

"We are preparing the meeting, trying to find the best time to invite the foreign ministers of Iran and Saudi Arabia," he said.

"It will be a public meeting, (unlike) previous encounters which were secret and were held between intelligence and security officials," Hussein added.

His comments came days after Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian told Iranian state television that his country and Saudi Arabia are ready to move reconciliation talks to a higher level.

Amir Abdollahian said on Thursday that “progress” had been made at previous rounds of talks between security officials hosted by Iraq.

He added that last week Iran had received a message from the Iraqi foreign minister who said “the Saudi side is ready to move the talks to the political and public level”.

Riyadh severed ties with Tehran after Iranian protesters attacked Saudi diplomatic missions in Iran in 2016.

Amir-Abdollahian said Thursday he hoped new negotiations will lead to the resumption of “normal diplomatic ties”.

Libya militia clashes kill 16 — health ministry

By - Jul 24,2022 - Last updated at Jul 24,2022

Members of the '444 Brigade' affiliated with Libya's ministry of defence man positions in the area of an overnight gunbattle in Tripoli's suburb of Ain Zara, on Friday (AFP photo)

TRIPOLI — At least 16 people were killed and 52 wounded in fighting between armed groups in Tripoli, the health ministry said on Saturday, following the latest politically driven violence to hit the Libyan capital.

The fighting began on Thursday night and extended into Friday afternoon. The toll revises up an earlier figure of 13, including three civilians, provided by the ambulance service.

The clashes were between two armed groups with major clout in the west of the war-torn country: the Al Radaa force and the Tripoli Revolutionaries Brigade.

Several sources said one group's detention of a fighter belonging to the other had sparked the fighting, which extended to several districts of the capital.

On Friday, another group called the 444 Brigade intervened to mediate a truce, deploying its own forces in a buffer zone before they too came under heavy fire, an AFP photographer reported.

"All the wounded received medical care in hospitals" in Tripoli, the health ministry said in a statement.

It did not provide an update on how many civilians were among the dead.

Prime Minister Abdulhamid Dbeibah’s government suspended interior minister Khaled Mazen after the fighting, replacing him on an interim basis with Bader Eddine Al Toumi, the local government minister.

Mitiga, the capital’s sole functioning airport, was closed for several hours on Friday before it reopened late in the day.

Libya has been gripped by insecurity since a NATO-backed uprising toppled and killed longtime leader Muammar Qadhafi in 2011, leaving a power vacuum armed groups have been wrangling for years to fill.

Tensions have been rising for months in Libya as two prime ministers vie for power, raising fears of renewed conflict two years after a landmark truce ended a ruinous attempt by eastern military chief Khalifa Haftar to seize Tripoli by force.

The dead were the first civilian casualties of fighting in Tripoli since the 2020 truce.

Both groups involved in this week’s fighting are nominally loyal to Dbeibah’s Government of National Unity, appointed last year as part of a United Nations-backed peace process.

Dbeibah has refused to cede power to Fathi Bashagha, named in February as prime minister by a parliament based in Libya’s east after he made a pact with Haftar.

UAE vows to assist artefacts trafficking probe

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

This file photo taken on November 6, 2018, shows a visitor inside the Louvre Abu Dhabi museum, in the Emirati capital (AFP photo)

PARIS — The United Arab Emirates, home to the only foreign branch of the Louvre, has vowed to ensure a thorough investigation into the trafficking of artefacts linked to its parent museum in Paris.

Hundreds of artefacts are believed to have been pillaged from Egypt and other Middle Eastern countries during a wave of protests from 2011, known as the Arab Spring.

Investigators in France suspect the artefacts were then sold on to galleries and museums around the world.

The probe was opened in 2018, two years after the Louvre Abu Dhabi, which has become a civil party in the case, bought a rare pink granite stele depicting the pharaoh Tutankhamun and four other historic works for eight million euros ($8.5 million).

UAE Culture Minister Noura Al Kaabi said her country was doing its utmost in the investigation.

“We have a very transparent and constructive relationship with our French counterpart,” Al Kaabi told AFP in Paris this week as the UAE’s president visited the European ally.

“When the recent issue occurred, with regards to the unfortunate... trafficking, I think this is where for us we are helping the investigation to progress, making sure that it progresses clearly,” she said in rare comments by an Emirati official on the case that has roiled art markets.

In May, Jean-Luc Martinez, a former director of the Louvre in Paris, was charged with conspiring to hide the origin of archaeological treasures that investigators suspect had been smuggled out of Egypt in the chaos of the Arab Spring.

Martinez is accused of turning a blind eye to fake certificates of origin for the pieces. He is currently the French foreign ministry’s ambassador in charge of an entity that focuses on fighting art trafficking.

US prosecutors have seized five Egyptian antiquities from New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art as part of an international trafficking investigation involving the former head of the Louvre in Paris.

Antiquities trafficking has been linked to armed groups such as the Daesh group, and the case has shone a light on a transnational criminal problem that remains fiendishly difficult to target.

Al Kaabi said that for the UAE, a wealthy desert country heavily invested in culture in the past decade as part of a soft power strategy, it was “crucial that the provenance [of displayed items] is something that is clear”.

“The legality of it is something that we take very seriously. So we are supporting the investigation... and what we can do is respect the outcome of it,” the minister said.

Opened in 2017, the art collection of the Abu Dhabi branch of the Louvre is housed in a spectacular museum designed by French architect Jean Nouvel. In December, its licence was extended by 10 years to 2047.

It attracted some 2 million visitors in its first two years, before being forced to close for 100 days in early 2020 due to the coronavirus pandemic.

 

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