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US delegation aims for Black Sea ceasefire in Ukraine, Russia talks

US delegation aims for Black Sea ceasefire in Ukraine, Russia talks
The damaged 19-story hotel "Odessa" can be seen in the port city of Odesa on the Black Sea in southern Ukraine on March 19, 2025, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. (AFP)
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Updated 24 March 2025

US delegation aims for Black Sea ceasefire in Ukraine, Russia talks

US delegation aims for Black Sea ceasefire in Ukraine, Russia talks
  • Talks follow meeting between US, Ukrainian officials on Sunday
  • Teams will also discuss “the line of control” between the two countries

RIYADH/KYI: A US delegation will seek progress toward a Black Sea ceasefire and a broader cessation of violence in the war in Ukraine when it meets for talks with Russian officials on Monday, after discussions with diplomats from Ukraine on Sunday.
The so-called technical talks come as US President Donald Trump intensifies his drive for a halt to Russia’s three-year-old assault against Ukraine. Last week, he spoke with both Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and Russian President Vladimir Putin.
A source briefed on the planning for the talks said the US side was being led by Andrew Peek, a senior director at the White House National Security Council, and Michael Anton, a senior State Department official.
They met the Ukrainians on Sunday night and plan to sit down with the Russians on Monday.
The White House says the aim of the talks is to reach a maritime ceasefire in the Black Sea, allowing the free flow of shipping.
White House national security adviser Mike Waltz told CBS’ “Face the Nation” on Sunday that the US, Russian and Ukrainian delegations were assembled in the same facility in Riyadh.
Beyond a Black Sea ceasefire, he said, the teams will discuss “the line of control” between the two countries, which he described as “verification measures, peacekeeping, freezing the lines where they are.” He said “confidence-building measures” are being discussed, including the return of Ukrainian children taken by Russia.

ussia will be represented by Grigory Karasin, a former diplomat who is now chair of the Federation Council’s Foreign Affairs Committee, and Sergei Beseda, an adviser to the director of the Federal Security Service.
Ukraine’s defense minister, Rustem Umerov, the head of the Ukrainian delegation, said on Facebook that the US-Ukraine talks included proposals to protect energy facilities and critical infrastructure.
After Russian forces made gains in 2024, Trump reversed US policy on the war, launching bilateral talks with Moscow and suspending military assistance to Ukraine, demanding that it take steps to end the conflict.
US special envoy Steve Witkoff, who met Putin in Moscow in early March, played down concerns among Washington’s NATO allies that Moscow could be emboldened by a deal and invade other neighbors.
“I just don’t see that he wants to take all of Europe. This is a much different situation than it was in World War Two, Witkoff told Fox News.
“I feel that he wants peace,” Witkoff said of Putin.

Somewhat under control
Trump has long promised to end Europe’s deadliest conflict since World War Two. But his outreach to Putin has unnerved European allies, who fear it heralds a fundamental shift after 80 years in which defending Europe from Russian expansionism was the core mission of US foreign policy.
The war has killed or wounded hundreds of thousands of people, displaced millions and reduced entire towns to rubble.
Putin, whose forces invaded Ukraine in February 2022, said earlier this month he supported in principle Washington’s proposal for a truce but that his forces would fight on until several crucial conditions were worked out.
Heorhii Tykhyi, a Ukrainian Foreign Ministry spokesperson, said on Friday the Ukrainian and American sides were due “to clarify the modalities, the nuances of possible different ceasefire regimes, how to monitor them, how to control them, in general, what is included in their scope.”
Last Tuesday, Putin agreed to Trump’s proposal for Russia and Ukraine to stop attacks on each other’s energy infrastructure for 30 days and ordered the Russian military to cease them.
The agreement fell short, however, of a wider agreement that the US had sought, and which Kyiv backed, for a blanket 30-day truce in the war.
Trump said on Saturday that efforts to stop further escalation in the Ukraine-Russia conflict were “somewhat under control.”
The US hopes to reach a broad ceasefire within weeks, targeting a truce agreement by April 20, Bloomberg News reported on Sunday, citing people familiar with the planning.
Despite all the diplomatic activity, Russia and Ukraine have both reported continued strikes, while Russian forces have also continued to advance slowly in eastern Ukraine, a region Moscow claims to have annexed.


Zambian government tries to stop a former president’s funeral taking place in South Africa

Zambian government tries to stop a former president’s funeral taking place in South Africa
Updated 8 sec ago

Zambian government tries to stop a former president’s funeral taking place in South Africa

Zambian government tries to stop a former president’s funeral taking place in South Africa
  • Court challenge the latest development in dispute between former President Edgar Lungu’s family and the Zambian government
  • Lungu, who was Zambia’s leader from 2015 to 2021, died of an undisclosed illness in a South African hospital on June 5
JOHANNESBURG: The Zambian government filed last-minute legal papers seeking to stop the private burial of former President Edgar Lungu in South Africa on Wednesday, forcing members of Lungu’s family to attend a court hearing dressed in their black funeral attire.
The hearing in the South African administrative capital, Pretoria, began around an hour before Lungu’s funeral service was due to take place. It was not clear when a judge would issue a ruling and if the ex-leader could be buried.
Meanwhile, mourners arrived for the funeral service at a Johannesburg church around 60 kilometers away.
The court challenge was the latest development in a nearly monthlong dispute between Lungu’s family and the Zambian government over where and how the former leader is buried.
The Zambian government wants Lungu to have a state funeral at home – something Lungu’s family have refused to allow because of his bitter political feud with current Zambian President Hakainde Hichilema.
Lungu, who was Zambia’s leader from 2015 to 2021, died of an undisclosed illness in a South African hospital on June 5 at the age of 68.
A state funeral for him in Zambia was canceled twice because of disagreements over the details. His family and lawyers said he left specific instructions that Hichilema should not attend his funeral, while the Zambian government said Hichilema was due to preside over the state funeral.
Zambia’s Attorney General Mulilo Kabesha filed papers in a South African court Tuesday seeking an urgent injunction to stop Wednesday’s funeral, according to Zambia’s national broadcaster ZNBC. The court papers demand that the former president be buried in Zambia with full military honors, as mandated by Zambian law and in keeping with the public interest, ZNBC reported.
Zambia’s government said it had already prepared a grave for Lungu at a cemetery where all presidents are traditionally buried. It added that any personal wishes must give way to the national interest.
Lungu’s family decided against repatriating his body and arranged their own funeral service and a private burial. Top members of Lungu’s political party traveled to South Africa for the funeral.
Lungu and Hichilema had a long history of political enmity in the southern African country.
Lungu beat Hichilema in a 2016 presidential election, and his government imprisoned Hichilema for four months in 2017 on charges of treason because his convoy didn’t give way to the president’s motorcade on a road. The move to imprison Hichilema was widely criticized by the international community and Hichilema was released and the charges dropped.
Hichilema defeated Lungu in a 2021 vote. Last year, Lungu accused Hichilema’s government of using the police to restrict his movements and effectively place him under house arrest. Lungu also accused the government of interfering in a court case that prevented him from running again in next year’s presidential election against Hichilema.
The government denied the accusations.

UK says it will buy F-35 jets capable of carrying nuclear bombs

UK says it will buy F-35 jets capable of carrying nuclear bombs
Updated 25 June 2025

UK says it will buy F-35 jets capable of carrying nuclear bombs

UK says it will buy F-35 jets capable of carrying nuclear bombs
  • NATO chief Mark Rutte called the announcement “yet another robust British contribution to NATO”
  • The UK phased out air-dropped atomic weapons in the 1990s, Its nuclear arsenal now consists of submarine-based missiles
THE HAGUE:The United Kingdom will buy 12 US-made F-35 fighter jets capable of carrying nuclear bombs and will join NATO’s shared airborne nuclear mission, in a major expansion of its nuclear deterrent, Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced Wednesday.
The government called it “the biggest strengthening of the UK’s nuclear posture in a generation.”
Starmer made the announcement while attending a NATO summit in the Netherlands. NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte welcomed the decision, calling it “yet another robust British contribution to NATO.”
The UK phased out air-dropped atomic weapons in the 1990s after the end of the Cold War. Its nuclear arsenal now consists of submarine-based missiles.
Only three NATO members – the US, Britain and France – are nuclear powers, while seven nations contribute to the alliance’s nuclear mission by contributing jets that can carry either conventional or weapons or American B61 bombs stockpiled in Europe.
The use of nuclear weapons by the UK as part of the mission would require the authorization of the alliance’s nuclear planning group as well as the US president and British prime minister.
Starmer also announced that the UK will provide 350 air defense missiles to Ukraine, funded by 70 million pounds ($95 million) raised from interest on seized Russian assets.
The announcements come as the UK and other NATO members pledge to increase spending on security to 5 percent of gross domestic product by 2035. The total includes 3.5 percent on defense and another 1.5 percent on broader security and resilience efforts.
The UK currently spends 2.3 percent of national income on defense and says that will rise to 2.6 percent by 2027.

Muslim apparent winner in New York City Democratic primary race for mayor

Muslim apparent winner in New York City Democratic primary race for mayor
Updated 25 June 2025

Muslim apparent winner in New York City Democratic primary race for mayor

Muslim apparent winner in New York City Democratic primary race for mayor
  • Ex-Gov. Andrew Cuomo concedes to Uganda-born Indian Zohran Mamdani
  • Mamdani strongly opposes Gaza war, Cuomo received significant pro-Israel campaign donations

CHICAGO: Zohran Mamdani, 33, a Uganda-born Indian Muslim who served in the New York State Assembly in Queens, appears to have defeated former Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo in Tuesday’s Democratic primary race for mayor.

The two bitterly debated on opposite sides of the Gaza war. Last year, Cuomo joined the legal team to defend Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who is charged with war crimes and faces an arrest warrant from the International Criminal Court.

Cuomo, 67, conceded the election, even though New York has a special provision that kicks in when no one receives more than 50 percent of the vote.

The Ranked Choice Voting law allows votes cast for other candidates with lower totals to be assigned to their second ballot choice.

New Yorkers vote to rank candidates from “most preferred” to “least preferred.” If their first preferred candidate does poorly, their next preferred choice receives their vote.

Mamdani received 43.5 percent of the votes while Cuomo received 36.4 percent, with 95 percent of nearly 1 million votes cast. Nine other candidates received between 11 percent and 0.1 percent.

Mail-in ballots postmarked by Tuesday that have yet to arrive by mail can still be counted for one week after the election.

The shifting of votes under the Ranked Choice Voting system is not likely to be released until July 1, leaving a slim chance of uncertainty.

Cuomo told the New York Times that he may run as an independent in the November mayoral election.

If the preliminary victory holds for Mamdani, he is expected to face incumbent Mayor Eric Adams, an independent who did not face a primary contest.

Mamdani’s unofficial victory is still considered formidable as the majority of the city’s voters are Democrats.

He is a strong opponent of the Gaza war, while Cuomo received significant pro-Israel lobbying campaign donations.

The two candidates traded accusations of antisemitism and Islamophobia. Cuomo attacked Mamdani when he refused to condemn the phrase “globalize intifada,” put to him by a media podcaster.

Mamdani said he believed the phrase spoke to “a desperate desire for equality and equal rights in standing up for Palestinian human rights,” while stressing his opposition to antisemitism and commitment to non-violence.

For years, the Cuomo name was politically formidable. Cuomo served as governor of New York from 2011 to 2021.

Before that, he was New York State attorney general and US secretary of housing and urban development. He is the son of the late Mario Cuomo, who also served as governor of New York.

The Republican candidate in the November election will be Curtis Sliwa, who made a name for himself founding a band of unarmed volunteers called “The Guardian Angels” in 1979, providing protection to targets of random crime.


Brazilian tourist found dead after falling from an Indonesian volcano

Brazilian tourist found dead after falling from an Indonesian volcano
Updated 25 June 2025

Brazilian tourist found dead after falling from an Indonesian volcano

Brazilian tourist found dead after falling from an Indonesian volcano
  • The tourist, 26-year-old Juliana Marins, began on June 21 summiting Mount Rinjani
  • Brazil’s government says that a young Brazilian hiker who had plunged hundreds of meters from the ridge of a towering Indonesian volcano

SAO PAULO: A young Brazilian hiker who fell hundreds of meters from the ridge of a towering Indonesian volcano and was trapped there for almost four days was found dead on Tuesday, Brazil’s government said. For days, millions of people in Brazil had watched, posted and prayed as rescuers tried to locate her.
The tourist, 26-year-old Juliana Marins, began summiting on June 21 Mount Rinjani, an active 3,726-meter (12,224-foot) volcano on the Indonesian island of Lombok, with a guide and five other foreigners when she fell some 600 meters (1,968 feet), Indonesian authorities said.
“No signs of life were found,” said Mohammad Syafii, head of Indonesia’s National Search and Rescue Agency.
Marins’ family in Brazil confirmed her death.
The Indonesian rescue team said it found Marins’ body beside a crater using a thermal drone after four days of intensive searches complicated by extremely harsh terrain and weather.
The difficult conditions and limited visibility delayed the evacuation process, Syafii said, as the rescue team climbed carrying Marins’ body to Sembalun basecamp but would have to wait until Wednesday for transport to a police hospital.
Brazil’s Foreign Ministry called her death a tragedy and said that the country’s embassy in Jakarta, the capital of Indonesia, had coordinated the rescue with local authorities.
Marins’ ordeal has riveted her home country, Brazil, with millions following the dramatic search-and-rescue efforts since news broke of her fall.
Authorities did not say when exactly she died.
Adding to the frenzy in Brazil over her ordeal, Brazil’s embassy in Jakarta had accused the Indonesian government of fabricating Marins’ rescue and misinforming her family that she had been located and given food and water just hours after her fall.
There was no immediate response from the Indonesian government on that claim.
Indonesia’s island of Lombok lies east of Jakarta and neighbors the island of Bali. Mount Rinjani, the country’s second-tallest peak, is a popular destination for trekkers.
In an Instagram post, Marins’ family thanked the many Brazilians who had prayed for their daughter’s safety.
Marins, a dancer who lived in Niteroi, outside Rio de Janeiro, had been traveling across Asia since February, her family said. She had visited the Philippines, Vietnam and Thailand before reaching Indonesia.


Taiwan says military drills will involve largest call-up

Taiwan says military drills will involve largest call-up
Updated 25 June 2025

Taiwan says military drills will involve largest call-up

Taiwan says military drills will involve largest call-up
  • Beijing insists Taiwan is part of its territory and has never renounced the use of force to bring the self-ruled island under its control
  • The Han Kuang exercises, which the defense ministry said would be held from July 9-18, are conducted every year across Taiwan

TAIPEI: Taiwan said Wednesday military drills to be held in July will involve the largest ever mobilization of reservists for the annual exercises, which are being extended to improve the island’s response to “grey zone” harassment by China.

Beijing insists democratic Taiwan is part of its territory and has never renounced the use of force to bring the self-ruled island under its control.

The Han Kuang exercises, which the defense ministry said would be held from July 9-18, are conducted every year across Taiwan to train its armed forces as China ramps up military pressure on the island.

Defense Minister Wellington Koo told parliament as many as 22,000 reservists would be called up to take part in the exercises, up from 14,647 last year.

“Our main objective is to verify how much time it takes for a reserve brigade to regain full combat capability after being called up,” Koo said.

Taiwan maintains a standing call-up system to train its reservists. This year the mobilization will be expanded as part of the annual Han Kuang military drills.

The defense ministry also said the annual drills would be extended to 10 days and nine nights, compared with five days and four nights last year.

Koo said the most significant change would be the inclusion of “grey zone harassment” scenarios, simulating a military escalation based on “regional developments.”

Taiwan accuses China of using “grey-zone” tactics – actions that fall short of an act of war – to weaken its defenses.

Beijing regularly deploys fighter jets, warships and coast guard ships near Taiwan, and has held several major military exercises around the island in recent years.

The Taiwan reservists called up will undergo a full 14-day training program, 10 days of which will be dedicated to participation in the drills.

In March, Taiwan’s defense ministry said it would simulate possible scenarios for a Chinese invasion in 2027 during Han Kuang drills.

Officials in the United States – Taipei’s main backer and biggest arms supplier – have previously cited 2027 as a possible timeline for a Chinese invasion of Taiwan.