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Bosnia’s Serb statelet calls referendum on verdict against leader

Bosnia’s Serb statelet calls referendum on verdict against leader
The regional leader, who has been in his post for seven years, has vowed to block elections in the Republika Srpska and to hold a series of referendums. (AFP)
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Updated 14 sec ago

Bosnia’s Serb statelet calls referendum on verdict against leader

Bosnia’s Serb statelet calls referendum on verdict against leader
  • Bosnia’s Serb statelet, whose President Milorad Dodik is defying a ban on him holding office, will stage a referendum on October 25 on the federal court verdict against him

SARAJEVO: Bosnia’s Serb statelet, whose President Milorad Dodik is defying a ban on him holding office, will stage a referendum on October 25 on the federal court verdict against him.
Lawmakers in the Republika Srpska’s (RS) regional parliament late Friday voted for the referendum as the political crisis around Dodik worsened, with his prime minister resigning on Monday, triggering a government reshuffle.
Dodik, 66, was convicted in February by a Bosnian federal court of undermining the fragile functioning of the Balkan country by flouting decisions by the international envoy enforcing a peace deal that ended Bosnia’s 1992-1995 war.
Dodik avoided a one-year prison sentence by paying a 19,000-euro ($22,000) fine, but an appeals court upheld a ruling that he be removed from the RS presidency and banned from political office for six years.
The regional leader, who has been in his post for seven years, has vowed to block elections in the Republika Srpska and to hold a series of referendums.
The one voted for late Friday was the first of those.
The question to appear on the October ballot, Bosnian Serb lawmakers decided, was: “Do you accept the decisions of the unelected foreigner (international envoy Christian Schmidt) and the unconstitutional verdict of the Bosnia-Herzegovina Court against the President of the RS, as well as the decision of the Bosnian Electoral Commission to revoke the mandate of the President of the RS, Milorad Dodik?“
Of the 65 lawmakers present in the RS parliament, 50 voted in favor. Opposition lawmakers in the chamber refused to cast a vote.
“I won’t get in your way... but you’re walking on a minefield,” warned one opposition member of parliament, Nebojsa Vukanovic, a fierce critic of Dodik.
Dodik has said he expects the Serbian population of the Republika Srpska to massively vote “no” to the referendum question. He has also threatened to hold a later referendum on independence for the Serbian entity.
The nationalist Bosnian Serb leader has been in power since 2006. He blames Schmidt, a former German minister who has been the international envoy for Bosnia since 2021, for his ordered ouster.
The RS parliament late Friday also adopted a number of “conclusions,” including one rejecting Schmidt’s authority, another demanding that Dodik continue as the statelet’s president, and one rejecting elections to choose a successor to him.
With the federal ban on Dodik holding office, Bosnia’s electoral commission is expected to call early elections for the RS presidency, which must be held within 90 days.
The outgoing RS prime minister, Radovan Viskovic, did not explain why he was resigning, in a Monday press conference held in the regional capital, Banja Luka.
He stated only that a new government would be formed, and that “I leave my successor a stable Republika Srpska.”
Viskovic was accused along with Dodik of undermining Bosnia’s constitutional order after the RS parliament voted to bar federal police and the judiciary from operating in the Serb entity.
Both have also been sanctioned by the United States for threatening the 1995 Dayton Peace Agreement and undermining Bosnia and Herzegovina’s sovereignty.
Bosnia has been split between Serbian and Bosnian-Croat political units since the end of the 1990s war, in which tens of thousands died. The country is held together by weak central institutions.


France summons Italian ambassador over challenge to Macron on Ukraine

Updated 6 sec ago

France summons Italian ambassador over challenge to Macron on Ukraine

France summons Italian ambassador over challenge to Macron on Ukraine
  • “You go there if you want. Put your helmet on, your jacket, your rifle and you go to Ukraine,” he told reporters, referring to Macron
PARIS: France summoned the Italian ambassador after Italy’s deputy prime minister challenged the French president for suggesting that European soldiers be deployed in Ukraine in a post-war settlement, a French diplomatic source said on Saturday.
Asked earlier this week to comment on French President Emmanuel Macron’s appeals to deploy European soldiers in Ukraine after any settlement with Russia, Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini used a Milanese dialect phrase loosely translatable as “get lost.”
“You go there if you want. Put your helmet on, your jacket, your rifle and you go to Ukraine,” he told reporters, referring to Macron.
Salvini, the populist leader of the right-wing League party and also Italy’s transport minister in the nationalist, conservative government led by Giorgia Meloni, has repeatedly criticized Macron, especially over Ukraine.
The Italian ambassador was summoned on Friday, the diplomatic source said, marking the latest in a series of diplomatic clashes between Paris and Rome before and after Meloni took power in 2022.
“The ambassador was reminded that these remarks ran counter to the climate of trust and the historical relationship between our two countries, as well as to recent bilateral developments, which have highlighted strong convergences between the two countries, particularly with regard to unwavering support for Ukraine,” the source said.
Macron, a vocal supporter of Ukraine over its war with Russia, has been working with other world leaders, notably British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, to mobilize support for Ukraine in the event of a ceasefire.

Russia says captured two villages in Ukraine’s Donetsk region

Russia says captured two villages in Ukraine’s Donetsk region
Updated 4 min 52 sec ago

Russia says captured two villages in Ukraine’s Donetsk region

Russia says captured two villages in Ukraine’s Donetsk region
  • Russia on Saturday said its forces in east Ukraine had taken two villages in the Donetsk region, upping military pressure on the ground as world leaders struggle to broker an end to the conflict

MOSCOW: Russia on Saturday said its forces in east Ukraine had taken two villages in the Donetsk region, upping military pressure on the ground as world leaders struggle to broker an end to the conflict.
Russian forces are slowly advancing in the embattled eastern region, grinding closer to Kyiv’s key defensive line in costly meter-for-meter battles.
Moscow’s defense ministry said on Telegram that Russian forces captured the villages of Sredneye and Kleban-Byk.
The taking of Kleban-Byk would mark a further advance toward Kostiantynivka — a key fortified town on the road to Kramatorsk, where a major Ukrainian logistics base is located.
On Friday, Russia said its troops had captured three villages in the Donetsk region it claimed to have annexed in September 2022.
The latest Russian advances come as hopes dim for a summit between Russian and Ukrainian presidents — a solution campaigned for by US President Donald Trump as part of his efforts to end the conflict.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Friday “no meeting” was planned as Trump’s mediation efforts appeared to stall, while Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Russia was trying to prolong the offensive.
Also Friday, Trump told reporters he would make an “important” decision in two weeks on Ukraine peace efforts, specifying that Moscow could face massive sanctions — or he might “do nothing.”


Two Dutch teens found dead in Istanbul hotel

Two Dutch teens found dead in Istanbul hotel
Updated 23 August 2025

Two Dutch teens found dead in Istanbul hotel

Two Dutch teens found dead in Istanbul hotel
  • The boys, aged 15 and 17, were deceased when police and paramedics arrived at the hotel where they were staying
  • Istanbul police have launched an investigation with initial suspicion falling on a restaurant meal they had eaten

ISTANBUL: Two Dutch teenagers were found dead in their Istanbul hotel room and their father hospitalized, Turkish media reported on Saturday, with initial suspicion falling on a restaurant meal they had eaten.
The boys, aged 15 and 17, were deceased when police and paramedics arrived at the hotel where they were staying, in the Fatih district, near Istanbul’s Blue Mosque and Grand Bazaar, according to the NTV television channel.
“When they arrived, ambulance paramedics noted the two children were deceased. The father was taken to hospital by ambulance” in a state of shock, the channel reported.
The three had been vacationing in Turkiye and were believed to have gone to the touristy Taksim district for dinner, media said.
The 57-year-old father told police he had gone with his sons to Taksim “but did not eat,” the Haber Turk news outlet reported.
Later that evening, after returning to the hotel, the father called out to the boys, who did not respond. A hotel employee, Mehmet Kirdag, heard the father crying for help, NTV reported.
“When I knocked at the door and entered, the two sons were dead, one of them in bed, the other on the floor... When paramedics arrived, the two young men were deceased. The father was in a state of shock,” Kirdag said.
Istanbul police have launched an investigation, NTV reported.


Pakistan lake formed by mountain mudslide threatens ‘catastrophic’ floods

Pakistan lake formed by mountain mudslide threatens ‘catastrophic’ floods
Updated 23 August 2025

Pakistan lake formed by mountain mudslide threatens ‘catastrophic’ floods

Pakistan lake formed by mountain mudslide threatens ‘catastrophic’ floods
  • The new lake “can cause a catastrophic flood,” said Zakir Hussain, director general of the Provincial Disaster Management Authority

PESHAWAR: A 7-km (4-mile) lake in northern Pakistan, created by a mountain mudslide, is threatening to burst and unleash potentially “catastrophic” floods downstream, officials warned on Saturday.
The mud flow descended into the main Ghizer River channel and blocked it completely on Friday, creating the lake in Gilgit Baltistan province, the National Disaster Management Authority said.
The blockage created a “dam-like structure” that poses a significant threat of bursting, it said in a situation report by its provincial office.
The new lake “can cause a catastrophic flood,” said Zakir Hussain, director general of the Provincial Disaster Management Authority.
Four downstream districts — Ghizer, Gilgit, Astore and Diamer — face a serious threat, he told Reuters.
Ghizer is north of the mountain districts in northwest Pakistan where floods triggered by the worst of this year’s monsoon rains and cloudbursts have killed nearly 400 people since August 15.
A video shared by the national authority on a WhatsApp group where it issues statements shows black mud sliding down the mountain before landing in the river. Reuters could not independently verify the video, which an official at the authority said was shot by residents.
Similar mud flows landed in the river from different mountainsides, said provincial government spokesperson Faizullah Faraq.
A shepherd on higher ground, the first to spot the mud flow crashing down, alerted villagers and local authorities, he said. As a result of the warning, he said, nearly 200 people in dozens of scattered houses tucked in the mountainsides and the river’s surroundings were rescued.
The lake has started discharging water, meaning the threat of a burst is receding, but flash floods in downstream districts cannot be ruled out until the lake is completely cleared, Faraq said.
The communities downstream have been directed to stay on high alert and vacate areas along the river, he said.
Floods across Pakistan have killed 785 since the monsoon started in late June, the national authority said, warning of two more rain spells by September 10.


Chinese bridge collapse kills at least 12 construction workers

Chinese bridge collapse kills at least 12 construction workers
Updated 23 August 2025

Chinese bridge collapse kills at least 12 construction workers

Chinese bridge collapse kills at least 12 construction workers
  • Sixteen workers were on the bridge in northwest China’s Qinghai province when a steel cable snapped about 3 a.m. Friday

BEIJING: The collapse of an under-construction railway bridge over a major river in China has killed at least 12 workers and left four others missing, state media reports said.
Aerial photos from the official Xinhua News Agency show a large section missing from the bridge’s curved aquamarine arch. A bent section of the bridge deck hangs downward into the Yellow River below.
Sixteen workers were on the bridge in northwest China’s Qinghai province when a steel cable snapped about 3 a.m. Friday during a tensioning operation, Xinhua said. Boats, a helicopter and robots were being used in the search for the missing.
The bridge is 1.6 kilometers (1 mile) long and its deck is 55 meters (180 feet) above the surface of the river below, the English-language China Daily newspaper said.