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EU envoy visits Iran with hope to revive nuclear talks

By - Oct 14,2021 - Last updated at Oct 14,2021

This handout photo provided by the Iranian foreign ministry shows Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Ali Bagheri (right) posing for a photo with European External Action Service (EEAS) deputy secretary general, Enrique Mora, in Tehran on Thursday (AFP photo)


TEHRAN — The EU envoy charged with coordinating talks on reviving the Iran nuclear deal, Enrique Mora, met Iranian deputy foreign minister Ali Bagheri in Tehran on Thursday.

The talks come a day after US Secretary of State Antony Blinken warned of "other options" if diplomacy fails, as his visiting Israeli counterpart reserved the right to use force.

"I will raise the urgency" of resuming the talks, Mora tweeted before his arrival in the Islamic republic.

The 2015 nuclear deal, which gave Iran sanctions relief in return for curbs on its nuclear activities, has been on life support since 2018, when then US president Donald Trump unilaterally pulled out.

Trump reimposed crippling sanctions while Iran, which insists its nuclear programme is for civilian purposes only, gradually rolled back its own commitments.

Mora's trip to Tehran comes amid mounting pressure from EU countries as well as the United States for a swift resumption of talks on Washington's return to the agreement.

Iran's foreign ministry said Mora's visit "is a follow-up to consultations between the two sides on matters of shared interest, particularly Iran-EU relations, Afghanistan and the nuclear agreement".

Bagheri, in charge of the nuclear file for Iran, tweeted that the meeting would include talks about the "removal of cruel sanctions".

'Other options' 

US President Joe Biden, who took office in January, has signalled a willingness to return to the nuclear deal.

Talks were held earlier this year in Vienna between Iran and the remaining parties to the agreement -- Britain, China, France, Germany and Russia - with the US taking part indirectly.

The talks have been on hold since a June election in Iran led to a change of president.

New President Ebrahim Raisi -- an ultraconservative former judiciary chief -- is thought to be less ready than his predecessor Hassan Rouhani to make concessions to the West for the sake of a deal.

Iran has said repeatedly that it is ready to resume talks "soon" but no date has yet been announced.

Blinken told reporters on Wednesday that he hoped for the success of talks with Iran but warned that "the runway that we have left to do that is getting shorter and shorter".

Referencing visiting Israeli Foreign Minister Yair Lapid's threat to use force, Blinken said without elaborating: "We are prepared to turn to other options if Iran doesn't change course."

'Adventurous threats' 

Tehran has been seeking European guarantees that there will be no repetition of Trump's unilateral withdrawal.

Mora attended Raisi's inauguration in August, drawing criticism of the EU from Israel, a fierce critic of the nuclear deal with its arch foe Iran.

Israel has been engaged in a shadow war with Iran, targeting its military sites in ally Syria and carrying out a sabotage campaign against its nuclear programme.

Iran warned Israel in a letter to the UN Security Council chief Thursday against any attack on its nuclear facilities.

"We warn the Zionist regime against any miscalculation or military adventure targeting Iran and its nuclear programme," Iran's ambassador to the UN Majid Takht Ravanchi wrote in the letter published by the Tasnim news agency.

He accused Israel of taking its "provocative and adventurous threats... to alarming levels" and said that the "systematic and explicit threats by the Zionist regime... prove that it is responsible for terrorist attacks against [Iran's] peaceful nuclear programme in the past".

Turkey lashes out at US, Russia after Syria attacks

By - Oct 13,2021 - Last updated at Oct 13,2021

ISTANBUL — Turkey on Wednesday said the United States and Russia bore responsibility for a spate of deadly attacks on its border with Syria, stressing that Ankara reserved the right to self-defence.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan warned on Monday that Turkey had "no patience left" with Syrian-based Kurdish militias it blames for cross-border rocket strikes and attacks against its personnel.

Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu on Wednesday accused the US and Russia of failing to adequately police a buffer zone in northern Syria, set up under two agreements in 2019, and aimed at pushing the Kurdish forces away from Turkey.

"Unfortunately, Russia and the United States also bear responsibility for the latest attacks aimed at civilians and the police," Cavusoglu told a televised news conference.

"We will do whatever is needed to cleanse the terrorists from those regions."

Turkey has blamed the reported attacks on Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG), which Ankara views as the Syrian branch of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK).

Washington relied heavily on the YPG to defeat the Daesh terror group extremists who overran large swathes of Syria and neighbouring Iraq in 2014.

The PKK is proscribed as a terrorist organisation by the US and EU. Ankara wants Washington to cut its ties with the YPG and fully back Turkey’s campaigns in Syria.

Turkey’s official Anadolu news agency said two special forces officers were killed and two wounded when their armoured personnel carrier was hit by a guided missile fired by the YPG in northern Syria on Sunday.

The US embassy on Tuesday expressed condolences to the officers’ families and condemned reported mortar attacks fired from Syria at Turkey’s south-eastern border district of Karkamis.

But Cavusoglu said the US message showed “insincerity” since Washington had armed and trained the YPG.

“You are providing them with arms and then making a statement for show only. The insincerity is obvious there,” he said, referring to Washington.

“They do not stick to their promises, therefore we will do what’s necessary for our security.”

The Turkish lira this week touched historic lows against the dollar and euro on market fears of a new Turkish military operation in Syria.

Anti-missile defences tested to protect 'sensitive' sites — Iran

By - Oct 13,2021 - Last updated at Oct 13,2021

This handout photo made available by the Iranian army office on Wednesday shows an anti-aircraft missile launcher firing during the second day of a joint military exercise between the Iranian army and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (AFP photo)

TEHRAN — The Iranian military said on Wednesday it has successfully tested anti-missile defences for "sensitive" sites during war games in central Iran, after Israeli and US warnings over its nuclear programme.

"The country's air defences are perfectly prepared to protect sensitive and vital installations through a multi-layered defence system," said General Amir-Qader Rahimzadeh, commander of Hazrat Khatam Al Anbiya air base in Semnan, quoted by Fars news agency.

The exercises, begun on Tuesday, combined the army's "Majid" defence system with the "Dezful" system of the elite Revolutionary Guard Corps to destroy incoming cruise missiles.

Iran's central region is home to the Natanz enrichment plant and other nuclear sites.

The war games there came ahead of a visit to Iran on Thursday by a European Union envoy coordinating talks on reviving a troubled nuclear deal between Tehran and major powers including the United States.

"A solid and multi-layered defence against cruise missile attacks was one of the objectives of the joint air defence exercises that were carried out successfully," Rahimzadeh said.

State news agency IRNA said radars and electronic surveillance systems were also deployed in the operations.

Israel's Prime Minister Naftali Bennett warned in an address to the UN General Assembly last month that his country "will not allow" Tehran to develop a nuclear weapon.

Washington also is committed to ensuring "Iran never develops" a nuclear bomb, US President Joe Biden said in August, adding he was "putting diplomacy first".

Both Biden and Bennett were hinting at a possible use of military means, Ali Shamhkani, secretary of the Supreme National Security Council of Iran, has tweeted.

Tehran says its nuclear programme is for peaceful purposes.

EU envoy Enrique Mora is to visit Iran with mounting pressure from European countries, as well as from the Biden administration, for a swift resumption of negotiations on a US return to the 2015 nuclear deal.

It gave Iran sanctions relief in return for curbs on its nuclear programme, but has been on life support since 2018 when then US president Donald Trump unilaterally pulled out and reimposed crippling sanctions.

Iran has said repeatedly that it is ready to resume talks "soon".

More than 100 Yemen rebels killed south of Marib

By - Oct 13,2021 - Last updated at Oct 13,2021

Fighters loyal to Yemen's separatist Southern Transitional Council are deployed at the scene of a car bomb explosion in Yemen's southern port city of Aden on October 10 (AFP photo)

RIYADH — More than 100 Yemeni rebels have been killed south of Marib, the Saudi-led coalition said on Wednesday, reporting a heavy toll for the third straight day in fighting for the strategic city.

The Iran-backed Houthis' latest casualties in the Abdiya district "exceeded 108", the coalition said, after announcing more than 156 dead on Monday and over 134 on Tuesday.

That brought the unconfirmed toll to about 400 in the area this week as an analyst said the rebels have made significant advances.

The coalition, which relies heavily on air strikes to combat the Shiite Houthis, did not reveal how it arrived at those figures. They could not be independently verified by AFP.

"We have conducted 19 operations targeting (Houthi) militia members in the past 24 hours in Abdiya, destroying 12 of their military vehicles and their losses exceeded 108 members," the coalition said in a statement carried by state-run Al Ekhbariya television.

Fighting for Marib, the internationally recognised government's last bastion in oil-rich northern Yemen, has left heavy casualties since the rebels renewed their campaign to seize Marib last month.

The Houthis said they were “on the edges of the city” in a video statement on Tuesday.

Adam Baron, a political analyst focused on Yemen and the wider region, said the rebels had made “significant” territorial gains.

“The advances are quite significant on both a strategic and psychological level, these are areas that were seen as quite secure just a year or two ago,” he told AFP.

Yemen has been devastated by a seven-year war pitting the rebels against the government supported by a Saudi-led military coalition.

The rebels overran the capital Sanaa, just 120 kilometres to the west of Marib, in 2014, prompting the Saudi-led intervention to prop up the government the following year.

Tens of thousands of people have been killed and millions have been displaced since then. Many fled to Marib, whose population has ballooned since the war began.

As well as the deaths in Abdiya, six people were killed in a car-bombing on Sunday that targeted the governor of Aden, the government’s provisional seat of power. He survived the attack.

Prime Minister Maeen Abdulmalek Saeed called the Aden blast an “escalation” by the rebels.

Saudi Arabia accuses Iran of supporting the Houthis with weapons and drones, but Tehran says it only provides political support to the rebels.

The Houthi insurgents have also repeatedly targeted Saudi Arabia in cross-border attacks, using drones and missiles.

Lebanon political crisis brews over fate of blast judge

By - Oct 13,2021 - Last updated at Oct 13,2021

A protester holds a sign showing faces of the August 2020 Beirut Port blast victims (AFP photo)

BEIRUT — Lebanon’s month-old government called off a Cabinet session on Wednesday as a political crisis brewed within its ranks over whether to remove a judge investigating the massive August 2020 Beirut port blast.

The debate comes at a time when Lebanese are desperately waiting for the government, formed in September after protracted horse-trading, to tackle Lebanon’s dire economic crisis.

Judge Tarek Bitar was forced to suspend his probe on Tuesday after former ministers he had summoned on suspicion of negligence filed lawsuits against him.

He is now emerging as the target of a political campaign led by the Shiite movements Hizbollah and Amal.

Hizbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah accused him this week of political bias.

Senior Amal lawmaker and former minister Ali Hasan Khalil threatened a “political escalation” if the course of the investigation “was not rectified”, after Bitar on Tuesday issued an arrest warrant against him for failing to show up for questioning.

A Cabinet session on Tuesday ended with a row as ministers affiliated with Hizbollah and Amal pressed the government to support their demand to replace Bitar, according to a senior official who asked to remain anonymous because he is not authorised to speak to the media.

A follow-up session scheduled for Wednesday was postponed, signalling no agreement has been reached between factions in the Cabinet, with some ministers arguing the government should not intervene in judicial matters.

Supporters of Hizbollah and Amal called for an anti-Bitar rally on Thursday near the Justice Palace in Beirut, the site where relatives of blast victims usually stage protests denouncing political interference.

Since taking up the case, Bitar has summoned an array of former premiers and ministers as well as top military and security officials for questioning on suspicion of criminal negligence.

He also called in two other ex-ministers for questioning this week before he was forced to pause his probe for the second time in less than a month.

The country’s political leaders, including a group of former premiers, have criticised him for trying to investigate officials who can only be tried by a special court.

Rights groups Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have repeatedly accused officials of interfering with the course of the investigation in order to dodge accountability.

 

Algeria court dissolves civil society group involved in protests

By - Oct 13,2021 - Last updated at Oct 13,2021

ALGIERS — An Algiers court on Wednesday dissolved civil society group Youth Action Rally (RAJ), which has been a key part of the country’s pro-democracy protest movement, a rights group said.

The move came after the authorities accused the RAJ of acting in violation of a law on associations “and in contradiction of the objectives listed in its statutes”.

“The administrative court delivered its verdict to dissolve the RAJ. It’s scandalous,” Said Salhi, vice president of the Algerian League for the Defence of Human Rights, told AFP.

The league urged respect for the right to freedom of association and organisation, which Salhi said was “the cornerstone of any democracy”.

He urged a halt to “attacks on the Algerian people’s democratic gains” and expressed his group’s “solidarity” with the RAJ activists.

The RAJ called the decision “unjust and absurd” and said its lawyers would appeal.

“The RAJ will fight and defend the association so it continues to exist on the ground,” the group said in a statement.

“This verdict will not weaken us, will not erase our 28 years of existence, resistance and struggle for citizenship, freedom and democracy,” it added.

Rights group Amnesty International called the decision “a devastating blow for human rights in Algeria”.

“It is also an alarming indicator of the authorities’ determination to tighten their crackdown on independent activism and suppress the rights to freedom of expression, association and peaceful assembly,” Amnesty’s regional deputy director Amna Guellali said in a statement.

“Shutting down civil society organisations... in a bid to silence critics and crush dissent is unlawful and unacceptable,” she added.

In a statement published late last month, the RAJ had rejected accusations against it, saying they were “based mainly on the public activities of the association during the Hirak” protests.

The group’s actions were “compatible” with the association’s mandate to “promote youth involvement in the city’s management”, it argued.

 

Libya mass graves reveal 25 more bodies

By - Oct 12,2021 - Last updated at Oct 12,2021

TRIPOLI — A further 25 unidentified bodies have been found in mass graves in the Libyan town of Tarhuna, Libyan authorities said on Tuesday, following years of brutal militia rule.

The farming town was controlled for years by the Kaniyat militia, run by six brothers who imposed their dominance by slaughtering opponents and their entire families.

Around 200 bodies have so far been found, according to the department for uncovering the remains, which said another "five graves were discovered" containing another 25 corpses.

The latest grim finds come after another 10 bodies were uncovered on October 4.

On the same day, a UN fact-finding mission found that all parties to Libya's decade-long conflict have violated international humanitarian law since 2016, with some possibly guilty of war crimes.

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 Tripoli.

The Kaniyat, members of the Kani family, had after seizing control of the town in 2015 then allied with Haftar, providing him with a rear base for his Tripoli operation which he launched in 2019.

The group "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.

Members of the Kaniyat have been sanctioned by the United States and Britain.

Their chief Mohamed Al Kani was shot dead in the eastern city of Benghazi in July and others are rumoured to have fled east or abroad, reports that are not possible to verify.

Libya has seen a decade of violence since the fall in 2011 of dictator Muammar Qadhafi in a NATO-backed rebellion, with a myriad of militias and foreign forces becoming involved.

A ceasefire between eastern and western powers after Haftar's defeat last year paved the way for a UN-led political transition, with a unity government taking power this year to lead Libya to elections.

At least 134 Yemen rebels dead in strikes south of Marib — coalition

By - Oct 12,2021 - Last updated at Oct 12,2021

A man walks through the mud past tents at a temporary camp for people displaced by the conflict, which has been inundated after heavy rains, in Yemen's south-western province of Taiz, on Saturday (AFP photo)

RIYADH — More than 130 Yemen rebels have been killed in air strikes south of Marib, a flashpoint of the civil war, the Saudi-led coalition said on Tuesday.

Dozens of strikes were carried out in the Abdiya district of Marib province. Marib city is the internationally recognised government's last outpost in northern Yemen.

"We targeted nine military vehicles of the Huthi militia in Abdiya, and their losses exceeded 134 members," said a coalition statement carried by official Saudi media.

Hundreds of Iran-backed Houthi rebels and military have died since fighting for the strategically vital city flared anew last month.

The Houthis warned they were “on the edges of the city”, in a video statement released on Tuesday.

Rebel forces “today are on the edges of the city of Marib from several sides after defeating traitors and mercenaries... from several districts in Marib and liberating them completely,” spokesman Yahya Saree said.

Yemen has been devastated by a seven-year conflict pitting the Shiite rebels against the government supported by a Saudi-led military coalition.

Tens of thousands of people have been killed and millions have been displaced since the conflict flared in 2014, when the Houthis seized the capital Sanaa.

The latest toll comes just a day after the coalition announced the deaths of 156 rebels in similar strikes in Abdiya. The rebels rarely announce casualties in their own ranks.

The Houthis renewed their campaign to capture Marib last month. The resulting clashes and air strikes have left hundreds of rebels and loyalists dead.

On Sunday, six people died in a car-bombing that targeted a convoy carrying the governor of Aden, the government’s provisional seat of power. He survived the attack.

Prime Minister Maeen Abdulmalek Saeed called the Aden blast an “escalation” by the rebels.

“This is an escalation of violence by Houthi militias... a radical government in Iran is pushing the Houthis towards more violence,” Maeen Abdulmalek Saeed told reporters in Cairo.

Pro-Iran groups denounce Iraq election as 'scam'

Sadrists claim largest bloc in legislature

By - Oct 12,2021 - Last updated at Oct 12,2021

Supporters of Iraqi Shiite cleric Moqtada Al Sadr celebrate in Baghdad's Tahrir Square on Monday following the announcement of parliamentary election results (AFP photo)

BAGHDAD — Two days after Iraq's legislative election, pro-Iranian Shiite Muslim parties and armed groups on Tuesday denounced early poll results as "manipulation" and a "scam".

Sunday's parliamentary election, the fifth in the war-scarred country since the 2003 US-led invasion toppled leader Saddam Hussein, was marked by a record low turnout of 41 per cent.

Parties representing Iraq's Shiite Muslims have dominated Iraqi politics since the aftermath of the invasion, but early results from Sunday's vote deepened a rift between powerful factions within that camp.

According to preliminary results from the electoral commission, the biggest winner was the movement of Shiite cleric and political maverick Moqtada Sadr, which increased its lead to 73 of the assembly's 329 seats.

This boosts the leverage in chosing Iraq's next prime minister and Cabinet for Sadr, a one-time leader of a militia that fought against US troops who has recently adopted a more nationalistic and anti-Iran rhetoric.

Losses were booked by pro-Iranian Shiite parties with links to the armed groups that make up the paramilitary network known as Hashed Al Shaabi, or Popular Mobilisation Forces.

The Fatah (Conquest) Alliance, previously the second largest bloc in parliament, suffered a sharp decline from 48 to only about a dozen seats, according to observers and results compiled by AFP.

"We will appeal against the results and we reject them," said a joint statement by several of the Shiite parties, including the Fatah Alliance.

"We will take all available measures to prevent the manipulation of votes," added the statement also signed by the party of former prime minister Haider Al Abadi, who served from 2014 to 2018.

 

The head of the EU observer mission, Viola von Cramon, said the vote had been “calm and orderly” and that “there was nothing technically wrong with the majority of polling stations observed”.

Results from some polling stations were still being counted, nearly 48 hours after voting ended.

 

‘Scam and rip-off’ 

 

One of Hashed’s most powerful factions, the Hizbollah Brigades, rejected the election as “the biggest scam and rip-off the Iraqi people have been subjected to in modern history”.

“The Hashed Al Shaabi brothers are the main targets,” its spokesman Abu Ali Al Askari charged.

The Hashed was formed in 2014 and went on to play a major role in the defeat of the Daesh terror group, which had expanded its self-declared “caliphate” centred in Syria and taken over a third of Iraq.

The Hashed has since been integrated into Iraq’s state security apparatus and many lawmakers linked to it were elected to parliament in 2018.

Prime Minister Mustafa Al Kadhemi brought forward the vote from 2022 to appease a youth-led protest movement that erupted two years ago against graft, unemployment, crumbling public services and Iranian influence in politics.

Iraq is a major oil producer but nearly a third of its almost 40 million people live in poverty, according to UN figures, and the COVID pandemic only deepened a long-running economic crisis.

The protest movement ended after hundreds of demonstrators were killed. More activists have since been targeted in bloodshed and abductions which the movement blames on pro-Iran armed groups.

Premier Kadhemi’s political future is now uncertain, with few observers willing to predict who will emerge as leader after the usual haggling between factions that follows Iraqi elections.

Another notable trend in the election were gains by the pro-Iranian State of Law Alliance of former prime minister Nuri Al Maliki, who served from 2006 to 2014. His party can count on about 30 seats.

The Taqadom party of the influential parliament speaker Mohamed Al Halbussi, a Sunni, claimed to have won some 40 seats.

In the Shiite south, Imtidad, a newly created party representing the protest movement, won nine seats, according to a preliminary count by AFP.

The EU observer mission said it saw the low voter turnout as a “clear political signal”, hoping that it would be “heard by the political elite”.

 

 

UN slams 'horrific' violence against migrants in Libya

By - Oct 12,2021 - Last updated at Oct 12,2021

African migrants gather at a makeshift shelter in the capital Tripoli's suburb of Ain Zara, on Monday (AFP photo)

GENEVA — The United Nations on Tuesday denounced violence against migrants in Libya after security forces shot dead at least half a dozen asylum seekers in recent days.

Libyan authorities have denied the shooting at an overcrowded detention facility in Tripoli following mass arrests targeting migrants.

The UN's International Organisation for Migration said six people were killed and at least 24 injured.

On Tuesday the UN Refugee Agency said it was "extremely worried about the continued suffering of migrants and asylum seekers in Libya".

UNHCR spokeswoman Marta Hurtado said many migrants were experiencing "a myriad of daily violations and abuses at the hands of both state and non-state actors.

"This series of horrific events over a period of eight days is just the latest example of the precarious, sometimes lethal, situation facing migrants and asylum seekers in Libya," she said.

The killings came a week after sweeping raids in Tripoli, mostly targeting irregular migrants, left at least one person dead and 15 wounded, with thousands more detained, according to the UN Support Mission in Libya.

Hurtado condemned what she termed “a perceptible increase in heavy-handed security operations and raids targeting migrants and asylum seekers” held in atrocious conditions.

She added that Libyan authorities had an obligation to protect everyone on their territory, including migrants and asylum seekers, and urged “impartial and independent investigations” into the use of force against them.

Libya is a key departure point for tens of thousands of migrants, mainly from sub-Saharan Africa, hoping to reach Europe.

Human traffickers have profited from Libya’s decade of chaos following the 2011 revolution, carving out a lucrative but brutal trade.

Official centres for migrants detained in war-battered Libya are riddled with corruption and violence, including sexual assault, according to the UN and rights groups.

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