You are here

World

World section

Macron names new foreign, defence ministers in Cabinet shake-up

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

PARIS — French President Emmanuel Macron named new foreign and defence ministers on Friday as part of a government reshuffle intended to create fresh momentum ahead of parliamentary elections next month.

France's ambassador to London, Catherine Colonna, was picked as foreign minister, making her only the second woman to hold the prestigious job.

Sebastien Lecornu, former minister for overseas territories, was promoted to the defence ministry, Macron's chief of staff Alexis Kohler announced at the presidential palace.

Macron decided to shuffle the portfolios despite the conflict in Ukraine, Europe's biggest since World War II.

"It's a government that is equal [in terms of gender] and balanced in terms of people who were already ministers and new figures," Prime Minister Elizabeth Borne told reporters.

Macron needs a parliamentary majority in polls next month in order to push through his domestic reform agenda which includes welfare and pension changes, as well as tax cuts.The biggest surprise came in the education ministry where renowned left-wing academic Pap Ndiaye, an expert on colonialism and race relations, will take over from right-winger Jean-Michel Blanquer.

Ndiaye first gained national prominence with his 2008 work "The Black Condition, an essay on a French minority" and is an outspoken critic of racism and discrimination.

In his first public comments, he acknowledged that he was "perhaps a symbol, one of meritocracy, but also perhaps of diversity"."I don't take pride in it, but rather a sense of the duty and responsibilities which are now mine," he said.

Far-right leader Marine Le Pen called his elevation "the last step in the deconstruction of our country, its values and its future". 

On Monday, Macron named Borne to the post of prime minister, the first time a woman has held France's top Cabinet job in more than 30 years and only the second time in history.Opposition figures had accused the president of deliberately delaying naming a new Cabinet, almost four weeks since his reelection on April 24, when he defeated far-right leader Le Pen.The issue has been the subject of feverish media speculation in recent days, overshadowing the parliamentary campaign and drowning out opposition parties.

Macron's centrist LREM party, allied with the centrist MoDem and centre-right Horizons among others, is expected to face its biggest challenge from a rejuvenated left-wing next month. Head of the France Unbowed Party, Jean-Luc Melenchon, is eyeing a comeback in the parliamentary elections on June 12 and 19 after finishing third in the presidential polls.

Melenchon has persuaded the Socialist, Communist and Greens parties to enter an alliance under his leadership that unites the left around a common platform for the first time in decades. He said the new government represented "neither audacity nor renewal. All dull and grey".

"In one month everything will change," he added.

As with previous Macron governments, the cabinet is evenly split between men and women, but has a new emphasis on environmental protection which has been named as a policy priority.The Cabinet features separate ministers for "ecological transition" as well "energy transition", with campaign groups such as Greenpeace urging Macron to match his rhetoric with actions.The president has also continued his habit of attracting talent from opposition parties, with senior Republicans Party MP Damien Abad named as minister for solidarity, autonomy and handicapped people.

Abad, 42, is the son of a miner from Nimes in southern France and became the first handicapped MP to be elected in 2012. He has arthrogryposis, a rare condition that affects the joints.

Elsewhere in the government, Economy Minister Bruno Le Maire and hard-line Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin both remain in their positions.

New Foreign Minister Colonna is a veteran ambassador, former government spokeswoman under late president Jacques Chirac and one-time minister of European affairs. She has served as French envoy in London at a particularly rocky time for Franco-British relations due to tensions over Brexit, fishing rights and immigration.

In a highly unusual step, she was summoned by the British government in October 2021 as Paris and London clashed over fishing rights in the Channel.

"I wanted to thank everyone who understood we are friends of this country and will keep working for a better future," she wrote on Twitter in a valedictory message on Friday.

She will replace veteran Foreign Affairs Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian, while Lecornu takes over defence from Florence Parly. France has promised to step up its weapons supplies to Ukraine which include Milan anti-tank missiles as well as Caesar howitzers.

Russia says it destroyed Western weapons sent to Ukraine

Ukraine warns only talks can end war

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

This photo, taken on Friday, shows Russian servicemen patrolling at the Kakhovka Hydroelectric Power Plant, Kherson Oblast, amid the ongoing Russian military action in Ukraine (AFP photo)

MOSCOW — Moscow's forces destroyed a large shipment of Western-supplied weapons in northwestern Ukraine with long-range missiles, the Russian defence ministry said Saturday.

"High-precision long-range sea-based Kalibr missiles destroyed a large batch of weapons and military equipment near the Malin railway station in Zhytomyr region delivered from the United States and European countries," it said.

The ministry said the weapons were intended for Ukrainian forces in the eastern Donbas region, a Russian-speaking area that has been partially controlled by pro-Moscow separatists since 2014 and is now scene of some of the fiercest fighting in Ukraine.

Meanwhile, Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky warned Saturday that only a diplomatic breakthrough rather than an outright military victory could end Russia's war on his country, as Moscow cut gas supplies to Finland.

"There are things that can only be reached at the negotiating table," Zelensky said, just as Russia claimed its long-range missiles had destroyed a shipment of Western arms destined for Ukraine's troops.

Zelensky also appealed for more military aid, even as US President Joe Biden formally signed off on a $40-billion package of aid for the Ukrainian war effort.

And the Ukrainian leader insisted his war-ravaged country should be a full candidate to join the European Union, rejecting a suggestion from France’s President Emmanuel Macron and some other EU leaders that a sort of associated political community be created as a waiting zone for a membership bid.

“We don’t need such compromises,” Zelensky said during a joint press conference with visiting Portuguese Prime Minister Antonio Costa.

“Because, believe me, it will not be compromise with Ukraine in Europe, it will be another compromise between Europe and Russia. I am absolutely sure of that,” he warned.

After just over 12 weeks of fierce fighting, Ukrainian forces have halted Russian attempts to seize Kyiv and the northern city of Kharkiv, but are under renewed and intense pressure in the eastern Donbas region.

Moscow’s army have flattened and seized the south-eastern port city of Mariupol and subjected Ukrainian troops and towns in the east to a remorseless ground and artillery attacks.

Zelensky’s Western allies have shipped modern weaponry to his forces and imposed sweeping sanctions on the Russian economy and President Vladimir Putin’s inner circle.

But the Kremlin has responded by disrupting European energy supplies and on Saturday cut off gas shipments to Finland, which angered Moscow by applying to join the NATO alliance.

Against this backdrop, Zelensky told Ukrainian television the war would end “through diplomacy”.

The conflict, he warned, “will be bloody, there will be fighting but will only definitively end through diplomacy” — promising only that the result would be “fair” for Ukraine.

“Discussions between Ukraine and Russia will decidedly take place. Under what format I don’t know — with intermediaries, without them, in a broader group, at presidential level,” he said.

In order to side-step financial sanctions and force European energy clients to prop up his central bank, Putin has demanded that importers from “unfriendly countries” pay for gas in rubles.

Russian energy giant Gazprom said it had halted supplies to neighbouring Finland as it had not received ruble payments from Finland’s state-owned energy company Gasum by the end of Friday.

Gazprom supplied 1.49 billion cubic metres of natural gas to Finland in 2021, about two thirds of the country’s gas consumption but only 8 per cent of its total energy use.

Gasum said it would make up for the shortfall from other sources, through the Balticconnector pipeline, which links Finland to Estonia, a fellow European Union member.

Moscow cut off gas to Poland and Bulgaria last month in a move the European Union described as “blackmail”, but importers in some other EU countries more dependent on Russian gas plan to open ruble accounts with Gazprom’s bank.

Finland and neighbouring Sweden this week broke their historical military non-alignment and applied to join NATO, after public support for the alliance soared following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

 

 ‘Grave mistake’ 

 

Moscow has warned Finland that joining NATO would be “a grave mistake with far-reaching consequences” and Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu said it would respond by building military bases in western Russia.

But both Finland and Sweden are now apparently on the fast track to join the military alliance, with US President Joe Biden this week offering “full, total, complete backing” to their bids.

All 30 existing NATO members must agree on any new entrants, and Turkey has condemned Sweden’s alleged tolerance for the presence of exiled Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) militants, but diplomats are confident of avoiding a veto.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan urged Swedish and Finnish leaders to abandon financial and political support for what he called “terrorist” groups.

Erdogan told Swedish Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson that “Sweden’s political, financial and weapon support to terrorist organisations must end”, his office said.

Russia’s foreign ministry on Saturday imposed travel bans on 26 Canadians “in response to the latest anti-Russian sanctions announced by Canadian authorities”.

Among the new additions is Sophie Trudeau, the wife of Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

Moscow has now imposed travel bans on 963 people, according to a foreign ministry list released Saturday, including Biden and Hollywood actor Morgan Freeman.

On the ground in Ukraine, the fighting is fiercest in the eastern region of Donbas, a Russian-speaking area that has been partially controlled by pro-Kremlin separatists since 2014.

In Severodonetsk, a frontline city now at risk of encirclement, 12 people were killed and another 40 wounded by Russian shelling, the regional governor said.

And in the neighbouring Donetsk region, according to Ukraine’s interior ministry, Russian fire hit a church sheltering scores of civilians, including children and clergy. At least 60 people were rescued, and the final casualty toll was not immediately clear.

Thousands of COVID-negative Beijing residents sent to quarantine

Beijing has been battling its worst outbreak since pandemic started

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

Workers wearing protective gear stack up boxes over a cart to deliver in a neighbourhood during a COVID-19 coronavirus lockdown in the Jing'an district in Shanghai on Wednesday (AFP photo)

BEIJING — Thousands of COVID-negative Beijing residents were relocated to quarantine hotels overnight due to a handful of infections, as the capital begins to take more extreme control measures resembling virus-hit Shanghai.

Beijing has been battling its worst outbreak since the pandemic started. The Omicron variant has infected over 1,300 since late April, leading city restaurants, schools and tourist attractions to be closed indefinitely.

China's strategy to achieve zero COVID cases includes strict border closures, lengthy quarantines, mass testing and rapid, targeted lockdowns.

Over 13,000 residents of the locked-down Nanxinyuan residential compound in southeast Beijing were relocated to quarantine hotels overnight on Friday due to 26 new infections discovered in recent days, according to photos and a government notice widely shared on social media.

"Experts have determined that all Nanxinyuan residents undergo centralised quarantine beginning midnight May 21 for seven days," authorities from Chaoyang district said Friday.

"Please cooperate, otherwise you will bear the corresponding legal consequences."

Social media photos showed hundreds of residents with luggage queueing in the dark to board coaches parked outside the compound.

"Some of us have been locked down for 28 days since April 23, and we all tested negative throughout," wrote one resident on the Twitter-like Weibo.

"A lot of my neighbours are elderly or have young children."

"The transfer really makes us feel like we're in a wartime scene," resident and real estate blogger Liu Guangyu posted on Weibo early Saturday.

Liu told AFP that they were only notified of the move half a day in advance, but said he was satisfied with the hotel.

Residents were told to pack their clothes and essential belongings, and that their homes would be disinfected afterwards, according to screenshots shared on Weibo.

Last month, thousands of COVID-negative Shanghai residents were bussed to makeshift quarantine centres hundreds of kilometres away as the metropolis of 25 million doubled down on efforts to contain the spread of the virus.

Weibo users expressed widespread anxiety that Beijing authorities were taking a similar approach to Shanghai, where residents have chafed under a months-long lockdown that has denied many people adequate access to food and medical care.

The Weibo hashtag “All residents of Nanxinyuan compound were dragged to quarantine” was blocked by Saturday morning.

“This is exactly the same as Shanghai, the first step is to cut off water and electricity, then demand keys... then disinfect homes. Electrical appliances, wooden furniture, clothes, food, they’re all done for,” read one comment.

Chaoyang District disease control authorities told AFP that it does not release information externally and to rely on the Beijing authorities’ COVID press conference.

Beijing authorities on Saturday extended work from home guidance to one more district, one day after halting the vast majority of public bus and subway services.

WHO authorises China's CanSinoBIO COVID-19 vaccine

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

GENEVA — The World Health Organisation (WHO) on Thursday authorised the use of Chinese manufacturer CanSinoBIO's single-shot COVID-19 vaccine — the ninth jab to get the WHO green light.

The WHO granted emergency use listing (EUL) to the Tianjin-based firm's Convidecia vaccine as China battles a resurgence of the virus triggered by the Omicron variant.

It is the third Chinese-made vaccine to be approved by the WHO, after Sinovac and Sinopharm.

Convidecia was found to have 64 per cent efficacy against symptomatic disease and 92 per cent efficacy against severe COVID-19, the WHO said.

"The vaccine meets WHO standards for protection against COVID-19 and ... the benefits of the vaccine far outweigh risks," the UN health agency said in a statement.

The WHO's vaccine experts recommended it for people aged 18 and above.

The jab has already been rolled out in China, Argentina, Chile, Malaysia, Mexico and Pakistan.

The WHO has now given EUL status to nine COVID-19 vaccines and variations thereof, Pfizer/BioNTech, AstraZeneca, Janssen, Moderna, Sinovac, Sinopharm, Bharat Biotech, Novavax and now CanSinoBIO.

The UN health agency began reviewing rolling data on the CanSinoBIO vaccine in August.

The WHO says EUL approval gives countries, funders, procuring agencies and communities assurance that the vaccine has met international standards.

Ukraine steelworks defenders surrender as Kyiv accuses Moscow of war crimes

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

An aerial view of damaged residential buildings and the Azovstal steel plant in the background in the port city of Mariupol on Wednesday, amid the ongoing Russian military action in Ukraine (AFP photo)

KYIV, Ukraine — Russia said on Thursday that 1,730 Ukrainian soldiers had surrendered this week at the Azovstal steel plant in Mariupol, showing some emerging on crutches after an all-out battle that has become emblematic of the nearly three-month-old war.

The number included 80 who were wounded and taken to a hospital in Russia-controlled territory in eastern Ukraine, the defence ministry in Moscow said.

The ministry released a video appearing to show the surrendered soldiers hobbling out of the sprawling plant after it was besieged for weeks. Russian troops patted them down and inspected their bags as they exited.

The International Committee of the Red Cross said it had registered "hundreds of Ukrainian prisoners of war" from the plant in Mariupol, a port city levelled by Russian shelling.

Ukraine accuses Moscow's forces of war crimes against civilians in Mariupol and elsewhere, and has begun the first prosecution of a Russian soldier.

Vadim Shishimarin, a shaven-headed Russian sergeant from Irkutsk in Siberia, pleaded guilty to a war crime and faces a life sentence.

He admitted to shooting dead Oleksandr Shelipov, an unarmed 62-year-old man, in Ukraine's Sumy region on February 28, four days into the invasion.

Shishimarin was remorseful as he took the dock for a second day on Thursday.

"I know that you will not be able to forgive me, but nevertheless I ask you for forgiveness," he said, addressing Shelipov's wife in the cramped courtroom in Kyiv.

 

Folk celebration 

 

But while Mariupol has fallen, Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky said the wider invasion was an "absolute failure" as he marked "Vyshyvanka Day", an annual celebration of Ukrainian folk traditions.

Wearing an embroidered shirt instead of his usual military khaki top, Zelensky said on the Telegram social media platform that his people remained "strong, unbreakable, brave and free".

Zelensky's defiance, and his army's dogged resistance, have earned the West's admiration and a steady flow of military support. G-7 finance ministers were meeting in Germany to thrash out more cash support.

G-7 partners have to “assure Ukraine’s solvency within the next days, few weeks”, German Finance Minister Christian Lindner told the newspaper Die Welt.

But German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said there could be “no shortcuts” to membership of the European Union for Ukraine. Ukraine’s Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba condemned the “second-class treatment” of his country.

 

Famine warning 

 

Russia’s actions are already redrawing the security map of Europe.

US President Joe Biden was to host the leaders of Finland and Sweden later Thursday to discuss their bids to join NATO, after the Nordic neighbours decided to abandon decades of military non-alignment.

“I warmly welcome and strongly support the historic applications from Finland and Sweden for membership in NATO,” Biden said, offering US support against any “aggression” while their bids are considered.

Beyond Europe, the invasion also threatens to bring famine, UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres said.

“Malnutrition, mass hunger and famine” could follow “in a crisis that could last for years”, Guterres warned, urging Russia to release grain exports from occupied Ukraine.

Russia and Ukraine produce 30 per cent of the global wheat supply, and the war has already sent food prices surging around the world.

 

‘Time to run’ 

 

Despite their last-ditch resistance in places such as Mariupol, and the successful defence of Kyiv, Ukrainian forces are retreating in the east.

The losses often come after weeks of battles over towns and small cities that are pulverised by the time the Russians surround them in a slow-moving wave.

“I tell everyone that there is no reason to worry when the banging is from outgoing fire,” Volodymyr Netymenko said as he packed up his sister’s belongings before evacuating her from the burning village of Sydorove in eastern Ukraine.

“But when it is incoming, it is time to run. And things have been flying at us pretty hard for the past two or three days.”

In the Russian region of Kursk, one person died and others were injured in an attack on a village on the border with Ukraine, the local governor said.

 

War crimes trials 

 

A second war crimes trial was due to open in Ukraine Thursday.

The International Criminal Court is deploying its largest-ever field team to Ukraine, with 42 investigators, forensic experts and support staff to gather evidence of alleged war crimes.

Ukrainian civilians are bearing the brunt of incessant Russia mortar fire raining down on the eastern city of Severodonetsk.

Nella Kashkina sat in the basement next to an oil lamp and prayed.

“I do not know how long we can last,” the 65-year-old former city worker said.

“We have no medicine left and a lot of sick people, sick women, need medicine. There is simply no medicine left at all.”

Biden attacks white supremacist 'poison' after racist shooting

By - May 19,2022 - Last updated at May 19,2022

BUFFALO — President Joe Biden on Tuesday called out what he branded the "poison" of white supremacist ideology behind a deadly mass shooting in Buffalo, New York, and said that racism is being stoked for political gain.

Speaking in the city where a white teen is accused of murdering 10 African Americans in a neighbourhood supermarket, Biden said, "What happened here is simple and straightforward: terrorism, terrorism. Domestic terrorism."

"White supremacy is a poison running through our body politic and it's been allowed to fester right in front of our eyes," Biden said, condemning "those who spread the lie for power, for political gain and for profit".

In a searing speech that also called for restrictions on ownership of assault-style rifles, Biden listed the victims, fighting tears as he recounted how one of the dead, named as 53-year-old Andre Mackniel, had been buying a birthday cake for his three-year-old son when the gunman entered the store.

Biden's harshest comments were directed at what he described as the "perverse ideology" of white supremacists that police say inspired the shooter.

In a manifesto, the alleged mass killer referred to the so-called "replacement theory", which claims the existence of a leftist plot to overwhelm the white population with non-white immigrants.

Biden described “a hate that through the media and politics [and] the internet has radicalised angry, alienated, lost and isolated individuals into falsely believing that they will be replaced — that’s the word, replaced — by ‘the other’.”

“No more. I mean no more. We need to say as clearly and forcefully as we can that the ideology of white supremacy has no place in America,” he said to applause.

 

‘Soul of the nation’ 

 

Earlier Tuesday, Biden and his wife, Jill Biden, laid a bouquet at a makeshift memorial outside the supermarket where the slaughter took place.

A strong breeze tugged at balloons and flowers piled under a tree while the Bidens paid their respects, the president making the sign of the cross before giving way to a delegation of elected officials laying their own bouquets.

Biden then went into private meetings with relatives of the victims and first responders.

Payton Gendron, the 18-year-old murder suspect, planned the shooting for months, and scoped out the location ahead of time, according to a stream of posts attributed to him on social media sites.

Gendron first wrote about killing Black people in December and decided to target the Buffalo store based on its large surrounding African American population, according to US media analysis of hundreds of pages of messages.

The so-called replacement plot allegedly motivating Gendron is a conspiracy theory that, like bizarre QAnon beliefs, has spread from the furthest fringes of society to surprisingly mainstream areas, most notably Tucker Carlson’s enormously influential nightly talk show on Fox News.

 

‘They don’t understand America’ 

 

The White House has steadfastly refused to join some who directly blame Carlson and several prominent Republicans for promoting the theory and, by extension, bearing responsibility for white supremacist violence.

However, Biden’s strong comments in Buffalo left little doubt that he was referring not just to the actual shooter but the powerful voices spreading the ideology.

He recalled that he had left retirement to take on Donald Trump in the 2020 presidential election after being shocked that Trump refused to clearly condemn neo-Nazis demonstrating in Charlottesville, Virginia.

“Democracy is in a danger like it hasn’t been in my lifetime,” he said. “Hate and fear have been given too much oxygen by those who pretend to love America. They don’t understand America.

“Now’s the time for people of all races, of every background, to speak up as a majority of America and reject white supremacy,” he said. “We can’t allow them to destroy the soul of the nation.”

Later, Biden was asked by reporters about Carlson and the Republican members of Congress who have echoed supremacist language.

Biden did not name names but said “anybody who echoes a replacement [theory] is to blame”, even if “not for this particular crime”.

“It’s wrong. It’s just simply wrong,” he said.

At a White House event, Vice President Kamala Harris, who is the first Black and Asian person ever to hold the office, also made pointed remarks, saying there were “people in incredible position of power..., people with the biggest pulpits spreading this kind of hate”.

Finland, Sweden apply to join NATO as first Ukraine war crimes trial begins

Ukraine opens first war crimes trial of Russian soldier

By - May 19,2022 - Last updated at May 19,2022

Soldiers of the P18 Gotland Regiment of the Swedish army camouflage their armoured vehicles during a field exercise near Visby on the Swedish island of Gotland on Tuesday (AFP photo)

BRUSSELS — Finland and Sweden on Wednesday submitted a joint application to join NATO as Russia's invasion of Ukraine forces a dramatic reappraisal of security in Europe.

The reversal of the Nordic countries' longstanding policy of non-alignment came as Ukraine opened the first war crimes trial of a Russian soldier since the invasion began.

Vadim Shishimarin, 21, from Irkutsk in Siberia, pleaded guilty to killing an unarmed 62-year-old man in Ukraine's Sumy region on February 28 — four days into the invasion.

"By this first trial, we are sending a clear signal that every perpetrator, every person who ordered or assisted in the commission of crimes in Ukraine shall not avoid responsibility," prosecutor general Iryna Venediktova said.

Russia's government has no information on Shishimarin, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said, adding that many such cases reported by Ukraine are "simply fake or staged".

Peskov further accused Kyiv of a "complete lack of will" towards peace talks, after Ukrainian negotiator Mykhaylo Podolyak said stop-start dialogue was "on hold", having failed to yield any breakthroughs.

The Kremlin also intensified a tit-for-tat round of diplomatic expulsions against European countries, ordering out dozens of personnel from France, Italy and Spain.

At NATO headquarters in Brussels, alliance chief Jens Stoltenberg formally received the applications from the Finnish and Swedish ambassadors, calling them "an historic step".

"All allies agree on the importance of NATO enlargement. We all agree that we must stand together and we all agree that this is an historic moment which we must seize," he said.

The membership push could represent the most significant expansion of NATO in decades, doubling its border with Russia, and President Vladimir Putin has warned it may trigger a response from Moscow.

But the applications face resistance from NATO member Turkey, which accuses the Nordic neighbours of harbouring anti-Turkish extremists.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan demanded "respect" from NATO over his government's concerns.

Western allies remain optimistic they can overcome Turkey’s objections and for now, several including Britain have offered security guarantees to Finland and Sweden to guard against any Russian aggression.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the Nordic applications would not have been expected a short time ago, “but Putin’s appalling ambitions have transformed the geopolitical contours of our continent”.

 

Mediators for Azovstal 

 

On the ground, in Ukraine’s ruined port city of Mariupol, a unit of soldiers had been holding out in the Azovstal steelworks, but Moscow said on Wednesday that 959 of the troops had surrendered this week.

Kyiv’s defence ministry said it would do “everything necessary” to rescue the undisclosed number of personnel still in the plant’s tunnels, but admitted there was no military option available.

“The evacuation mission continues, it is overseen by our military and intelligence,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said in his nightly address.

“The most influential international mediators are involved.”

Those who have left Azovstal were taken into Russian captivity, including 80 who were heavily wounded, the Russian defence ministry said.

The ministry, which published images showing soldiers on stretchers, said the injured were transported to a hospital in the eastern Donetsk region controlled by pro-Kremlin rebels.

The defence ministry in Kyiv said it was hoping for an “exchange procedure... to repatriate these Ukrainian heroes as quickly as possible”.

But their fate was unclear, with Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov refusing to say whether they would be treated as criminals or prisoners of war.

Putin had “guaranteed that they would be treated according to the relevant international laws”, Peskov said.

 

‘My war is not over’ 

 

Despite their last-ditch resistance in places such as Mariupol, and their successful defence of Kyiv, Ukrainian forces are retreating across swathes of the eastern front.

White smoke from burning fields marks the pace of Russia’s advance around the village of Sydorove, on the approaches to the militarily important city of Slovyansk and Ukraine’s eastern administrative centre in Kramatorsk.

Army volunteer Yaroslava, 51, sat on a slab of concrete jutting out from the remains of a school in Sydorove where her husband’s unit had set up camp before it was hit by a Russian strike.

She stared at a spot where rescuers and de-miners had spotted a motionless hand reaching out from the rubble.

“We had settled in London before the war but felt like we had no choice but to come back,” Yaroslava said.

“My two sons have just signed three-year contracts with the army. We will fight. We will still fight,” she said without moving her eyes.

“My war is not over.”

The war crimes trial in Kyiv, expected to be followed by several others, posed a test of the Ukrainian justice system at a time when international bodies are also conducting their own investigations.

Shishimarin faces a possible life sentence. Prosecutors said the sergeant was commanding a unit in a tank division when his convoy came under attack.

He and four other soldiers stole a car and encountered the man on a bicycle, shooting him in cold blood, according to the prosecutors.

The International Criminal Court said Tuesday it was deploying its largest-ever field team to Ukraine, with 42 investigators, forensic experts and support staff being sent into the field to gather evidence of alleged atrocities.

The US State Department also announced it was creating a special unit to research, document and publicise Russian war crimes.

Spain deepens economic ties with gas-rich Qatar

By - May 19,2022 - Last updated at May 19,2022

MADRID — Spain and Qatar deepened their economic ties on Wednesday during a visit by Sheikh Tamim Bin Hamad Al Thani as Madrid seeks to diversify its gas supplies following Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

During the two-day visit, the Qatari emir's first since he took power in 2013, the two countries signed 12 agreements on matters relating to business and the economy, education, science and health, a Spanish government statement said, without giving further details.

And Qatar agreed to increase its investment in Spain by another $5 billion "in the coming years," Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said.

Neither side gave a timetable for the investment, nor did they specify which sectors would benefit.

Previously, Qatari funding has been invested in several sectors: civil aviation, construction, energy and communications.

One agreement between Qatar's QIA sovereign wealth fund and the state-run Spanish Development Financing Company (COFIDES) would seek "to identify investment opportunities" in line with Spain's plans for its EU COVID recovery funds, namely making its economy greener and more digitalised, it said.

Sanchez hailed the increased investment as “a gesture of confidence in the Spanish economy and Spanish businesses which will strengthen bilateral ties”.

Before the pandemic, Qatari investment in Spain stood at 2.67 billion euros ($2.8 billion) in 2019, the Spanish government said, making it the country’s 24th biggest investor.

But with Wednesday’s announcement, Qatar has agreed to almost triple that figure.

 

Increased gas imports? 

 

“In the current international context of the conflict in Ukraine, this new bilateral and strategic agreement strengthens Qatar’s significance for Spain, meeting not only investment criteria but also that of energy security,” the government statement said.

Qatar, one of the world’s three biggest exporters of liquefied natural gas (LNG), is currently Spain’s fifth-largest supplier after the United States, Algeria, Nigeria and Egypt.

The country accounted for 4.4 per cent of Spain’s total gas imports in April and the Spanish government hopes to increase this share as Madrid seeks to diversify its gas supplies following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

“We are working closely with our European counterparts to continue discussions about liquefied natural gas supply agreements in the long-term,” Abdullah Al Hamar, Qatar’s ambassador to Spain, told the Spanish daily 20minutes on Tuesday.

European states are increasingly looking to other sources of natural gas as they try to wean themselves off dependence on Russia, with LNG easily shipped by boat from countries such as Qatar and the United States.

After Madrid, the Qatari leader will continue his tour of Europe, visiting Germany, Britain, Slovenia and Switzerland, where he will attend the World Economic Forum in the mountain resort of Davos which runs from May 22-26.

Qatar will host the World Cup later this year.

 

Spain, Portugal detect suspected monkeypox cases

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

A  woman and her child, both infected with monkeypox await treatment at the quarantine of the centre of the International medical NGO Doctors Without Borders (Medecins sans frontieres - MSF), in the Central African Republic (AFP photo)

MADRID — Spain and Portugal have detected around 30 suspected cases of monkeypox, officials said on Wednesday after British authorities found several cases of the viral infection which is rare in Europe.

Health officials have noted some of the UK infections may be through sexual contact — in this instance among gay or bisexual men — which would be a new development in understanding transmission of the virus.

The World Health Organisation said Tuesday it was coordinating with UK to investigate the outbreak.

In Portugal, 20 suspected cases of monkeypox — endemic in parts of Central and Western Africa — have been detected in the Lisbon region, the health ministry said in a statement.

“The cases were all among males, the majority of them young, who had ulcerated lesions,” it added.

In Spain, the authorities have detected eight suspect cases of the smallpox-like disease that “still must be confirmed” by analysis, the health ministry said.

Spanish and Portuguese health authorities did not release any information on the sexual orientation of the monkeypox patients or suspected cases.

Symptoms of monkeypox in humans include lesions, fever, muscle ache and chills. Most people recover from the illness within several weeks.

Transmission is usually via close contact with infected animals such as rodents and monkeys, and is limited between people. It has only been fatal in rare cases.

The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA), a public health protection body, said on Monday it had detected four new cases after registering three cases earlier in May.

All four of the additional cases were men who have sex with men or self-identify as gay or bisexual, the UKHSA said.

None have known connections with the three earlier confirmed cases, the first of which was linked to travel from Nigeria, raising fears of community spread of the virus.

 

Russia says hundreds of Ukrainians surrender at Azovstal

Finnish lawmakers vote overwhelmingly in favour of joining NATO

By - May 17,2022 - Last updated at May 17,2022

A Ukrainian self-propelled Howitzer moves on a field near Sydorove, eastern Ukraine, on Tuesday, on the 83rd day of the Russian invasion of Ukraine (AFP photo)

KYIV, Ukraine — Russia said on Tuesday that 265 Ukrainian soldiers had surrendered after staging a last stand at the besieged Azovstal steelworks in Mariupol, prompting Kyiv to call for a prisoner exchange.

Moscow claimed control of the strategic port city of Mariupol last month after a weeks-long siege, but hundreds of Ukrainian soldiers remained holed up in underground tunnels beneath the huge Azovstal industrial zone.

"Over the past 24 hours, 265 militants laid down their arms and surrendered, including 51 heavily wounded," the Russian defence ministry said.

It added that those needing medical help were taken to a hospital in a part of the eastern Donetsk region controlled by pro-Kremlin rebels.

The ministry published images showing wounded soldiers being carried on stretchers, some being searched and others being boarded onto buses.

Elsewhere, lawmakers in Finland, which shares a 1,300-kilometre border with Russia — voted overwhelmingly in favour of joining the NATO military alliance.

It paves the way for a joint application with Sweden to be submitted in the coming days, amid fears they could be next after Russia's invasion of Ukraine, which has killed thousands and sent millions fleeing.

 

ICC deployment 

 

Ukraine earlier said 264 fighters from Azovstal were evacuated to Russia-controlled territory, including 53 wounded.

On Tuesday, the defence ministry expressed hope of an "exchange procedure... to repatriate these Ukrainian heroes as quickly as possible".

For those still in Azovstal, it said it was doing "everything necessary for their rescue", although it said a military intervention was not possible.

The fate of the soldiers remains unclear and is likely to cause concern in Ukraine, which has accused Moscow of war crimes during the conflict.

The International Criminal Court said on Tuesday it was deploying its largest-ever field team to Ukraine, comprising 42 investigators, forensic experts and support staff.

In Moscow, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov did not answer questions about whether the Azovstal soldiers would be treated as war criminals or prisoners of war.

President Vladimir Putin “guaranteed that they would be treated according to the relevant international laws”, he said.

Separately, the speaker of Russia’s lower house of parliament, Vyacheslav Volodin, said that “Nazi criminals should not be subject to a prisoner exchange”.

He did not mention Azovstal in particular, but Moscow has on numerous occasions said that members of the Azov Battalion, considered “Nazi” by Russian authorities, are among those trapped at the steelworks.

 

Changed course of war 

 

Ukraine hailed the soldiers’ contribution to the wider fight following Russia’s invasion on February 24.

Holding the steelworks had delayed the transfer of 20,000 Russian troops to other parts of Ukraine and stopped Moscow from quickly capturing the southern city of Zaporizhzhia, the army said.

“Azovstal defenders ruined Russia’s plan to capture the east of Ukraine... This completely changed the course of the war,” tweeted presidential aide Mykhaylo Podolyak.

“83 days of Mariupol defence will go down in history as the Thermopylae of the 21st century,” he said, referring to the famous last stand by the Spartans against the Persians in 480BCE.

Despite the resources of its giant neighbour, Ukraine has managed to repel the Russian army for longer than many expected, fortified by weapons and cash from Western allies.

After circling the capital Kyiv in the early weeks of the war, Moscow has focused increasingly on the eastern region of Donbas, bordering Russia.

Ukrainian officials say Russian troops are withdrawing from around Kharkiv, the country’s second-largest city, to be redeployed to Donbas, and Kyiv on Monday claimed control of territory on the border.

 

Trying to stay alive 

 

But the area around Kharkiv has been under constant attack and Kyiv’s gains have come at a high cost, with villages gutted and destroyed by bombs.

In Ruska Lozova, just north of Kharkiv, Rostislav Stepanenko recounted to AFP how he survived shelling in his village, caught in the firing line between Russian and Ukrainian forces.

He had gone back to collect some belongings but returned empty-handed and stunned by the incessant artillery fire.

Asked what he did for a living, he joked that he was “trying to stay alive”.

And his age? “Hopefully, I will be 54, but today I wouldn’t expect that,” he said with a nervous smile.

 

‘Shelling without stopping’ 

 

In his nightly address on Monday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky reported “constant attacks in those areas where Russia is still trying to advance”, adding that Severodonetsk and other cities in Donbas remained the main targets.

Taking Severodonetsk, the easternmost city held by Ukrainian forces, would grant the Kremlin de facto control of Lugansk, one of two regions, along with Donetsk, that comprise Donbas.

Russia’s attempt to completely encircle Severodonetsk has been repelled, with Ukrainian forces blowing up railway bridges to slow their advance.

But Lugansk regional governor Sergiy Gaiday has said it was being shelled “without stopping” and early Tuesday said two buildings at the city’s general hospital had been hit overnight.

“We have 10 dead and three wounded in the region,” he wrote on Telegram.

Elsewhere, eight people were killed and 12 injured in Russian strikes on the village of Desna, in northeastern Chernigiv region, where a Ukrainian military base is located, emergency services said.

To the west, an official from Lviv’s Regional Military Administration said a military infrastructure facility “almost on the border with Poland” had been hit.

 

NATO bids ‘no 

direct threat’ 

 

Fearful of Russian aggression, Sweden and Finland are poised to give up decades of military non-alignment and join NATO.

Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Monday the move posed “no direct threat for us... but the expansion of military infrastructure to these territories will certainly provoke our response”.

Putin’s reaction was more moderate than comments made earlier on Monday by deputy foreign minister Sergei Ryabkov, who had called the expansion a “grave mistake with far-reaching consequences”.

The bids must be unanimously approved by the alliance’s 30 nations, and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Monday voiced his objection.

He accused Finland and Sweden of harbouring terror groups, including outlawed Kurdish militants.

But US Secretary of State Antony Blinken voiced confidence that the bids would succeed.

He is due to meet Turkey’s foreign minister in Washington on Wednesday, while US President Joe Biden will host the leaders of Finland and Sweden on Thursday.

The Nordic countries have also sent delegations to Turkey to meet with Turkish officials, and Finnish President Sauli Niinisto said Tuesday he was “optimistic” about securing Ankara’s support.

Germany, meanwhile, said it would ramp up its military collaboration with the two Nordic countries, especially in the Baltic Sea.

 

Pages

Pages



Newsletter

Get top stories and blog posts emailed to you each day.

PDF