Category: Uncategorized

  • Macron hosts Ukraine and allies to try to cement security guarantees

    Macron hosts Ukraine and allies to try to cement security guarantees


    EPA A man holding a dog walks near the site of a Russian drone strike on a private medical clinic. He has a hat and gloves and is walking on snow.EPA

    Russia has intensified attacks – particularly against Ukraine’s energy sector

    French President Emmanuel Macron is hosting Ukraine’s leader Volodymyr Zelensky and other key allies of the country as efforts intensify to agree security guarantees for Kyiv in the event of a ceasefire with Russia.

    Heads of state and top officials from more than 30 countries – part of the so-called Coalition of the Willing – are meeting in Paris, including US mediators in peace talks Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, President Donald Trump’s son-in-law.

    Zelensky met Trump recently and said his plan to end the war with Russia was 90% agreed.

    However, the proposals have yet to be presented to Russia, whose response so far has been far from encouraging.

    The outstanding 10% of the agreement that’s yet to be decided concerns territorial concessions Kyiv is being asked to agree to.

    Moscow currently controls about 75% of the Donetsk region, and some 99% of the neighbouring Luhansk. The two regions form the industrial region of Donbas.

    Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 and has been making slow progress on the ground recently and, therefore, is unwilling to compromise on its aim to seize full control of Donbas.

    Russia has also consistently opposed any idea of a temporary ceasefire and has intensified its attacks in Ukraine, particularly aimed at paralysing its power supplies in the middle of a harsh winter.

    Ukraine has also hit back with drones – the latest target being an oil depot in the Lipetsk region of western Russia.

    UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer and Nato Secretary General Mark Rutte are among the participants at the Paris meeting.

    Leaders are expected to seek agreement on details that include a multi-national force to reassure Ukraine after a peace deal, what security guarantees to offer Ukraine in the event of a renewed Russian attack – as well as helping Ukraine’s armed forces and its economy.

    For months, the so-called “backstop” has been on the agenda – the desire among Ukraine’s European allies to secure a pledge from the US that it will be involved in responding to Russia should it violate the terms of a peace deal.

    Following talks between Zelensky and Trump in Florida last month, the Ukrainian leader said Washington had offered security guarantees for 15 years – but a time frame for their implementation is not yet clear.

    The talks in Paris are being overshadowed by the aftermath of the US’s military action in Venezuela, where elite troops went in to seize the country’s President Nicolás Maduro and take him to face drugs and weapons charges in New York.

    Following the raid, Trump said the US would “run” Venezuela for an unspecified period of time.

    He also said the US was returning to last century’s policy of US supremacy in its sphere of influence in the Western hemisphere.

    Looming larger over the Paris talks is Trump’s subsequent insistence that the US wants to annex Greenland – the semi-autonomous territory that is part of Denmark, a Nato ally.

    The repeated threat prompted Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen to say any such move from the US would be the end of the trans-Atlantic alliance.

    European leaders have been reluctant to criticise Trump’s intervention in Venezuela and its perceived implications for the world order.

    But many, including Starmer and Macron, have sided with Denmark over Greenland.

    As host of the talks, Macron will be keen not to have the issue derail the focus on Ukraine.



    Source link

  • Children among 13 killed after drone hits home in el-Obeid city, medics say

    Children among 13 killed after drone hits home in el-Obeid city, medics say


    At least 13 people have been killed – eight of them children – after a drone strike on a house in the Sudanese city of el-Obeid, says the Sudan Doctors’ Network.

    Most of the dead were part of the same family, the medical group added.

    Although no group has claimed responsibility, the medics say the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) carried out the attack in an area controlled by the army, and which it has been trying to penetrate for months.

    As the civil war between Sudan’s army and RSF rebels approaches its third year, the scale of suffering has seen it described as the world’s worst humanitarian crisis by the UN and aid agencies.

    To date, more than 11 million people have been forced from their homes by the violence, and hundreds of thousands of people have been killed. Widespread sexual violence is also being used as a weapon of war.

    Both the RSF and the Sudanese Armed Forces are accused of atrocities.

    Witnesses say Monday’s drone attack on the house in el-Obeid happened in a residential neighbourhood.

    The Sudan Doctors’ Network says it “reflects a dangerous escalation of the policy of indiscriminate killing and systematic bombing of safe residential areas”.

    The city of el-Obeid remains under army control despite the RSF’s advance elsewhere in the wider state of North Kordofan.

    Analysts say it is a key target for the RSF because of its strategic location between Sudan’s capital city, Khartoum, and the Darfur region where they have established a parallel government and are accused of genocide.

    The attack comes days after the RSF hit a power plant in el-Obeid, and also follows what the army claims was an attempted RSF drone attack on the country’s largest hydro-electric dam near the northern town of Merowe.



    Source link

  • Venezuelan security forces detain journalists from foreign news organisations

    Venezuelan security forces detain journalists from foreign news organisations


    Alice Cuddy,reporting from Cúcuta, on the Colombia-Venezuela borderand

    Vanessa Buschschlüter,Latin America editor, BBC News Online

    Reuters Police officers stand guard near the National Assembly in Venezuela's capital, Caracas. They are chatting to one another while wearing helmets and holding large shields.Reuters

    Police guarded the National Assembly where Delcy Rodríguez was sworn in Monday

    At least 14 members of the press were detained in Venezuela on Monday as they were covering the aftermath of the seizure of Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro by US forces.

    The union representing media workers in Venezuela said all but one of those detained were employed by foreign news organisations and were released later on Monday, with one reporter deported.

    Foreign news media have long faced restrictions in Venezuela, with very few being granted visas to work in the country.

    Their detention came as Delcy Rodríguez was sworn in as the interim president and shortly after she said that she was willing to co-operate with the Trump administration, which has said it would “run” Venezuela.

    The union said the media workers were detained by Venezuelan security forces at the National Assembly and its environs, and in the neighbourhood of Altamira – all in the capital, Caracas.

    At least two of them were seized by agents working for Venezuela’s military counterintelligence agency, while others were detained by Venezuela’s intelligence service.

    They said they had their equipment searched, their phones checked and their social media posts and messages read, the union statement added.

    A Colombian and a Spanish reporter were also detained at Venezuela’s border with Colombia near Cúcuta.

    The two reporters were held for hours incommunicado before being released back into Colombia, the statement said.

    The union called the incidents “alarming” and called for the release of 23 media workers who remain in detention in the country.

    The repression has not been confined to media workers.

    One community leader in the neighbourhood of Petare, in Caracas, told BBC Mundo that there were “hooded men with guns patrolling, checking people’s WhatsApp statuses”.

    Caracas resident José, 60, said that people were not able to talk freely about what was happening, with a heavy police and military presence on the streets, as well as pro-Maduro armed groups, known as “colectivos”, wearing masks.

    A 33-year-old masseuse, who did not want to be named, said there was “so much fear in the streets and in our homes”.

    Members of the government appeared keen to show that the security forces were visible in communities, with the Interior Minister, Diosdado Cabello, posting a photo of himself on Monday night posing with armed police.

    Their presence has struck fear in people critical of the government.

    One woman described how there are “military people on every corner and groups of armed civilians supporting the government who are causing fear among the population”.

    Another person who asked to remain anonymous told the BBC that “the regime is not allowing news to come out of here.” They added that “there are uniformed personnel on the streets stopping people and checking their phones”.

    Instagram/@Minsjustice_VE Interior Minister Diosdado Cabello poses with a group of uniformed men, some of whom are holding machine guns, with others wearing helmets and/or body armour.Instagram/@Minsjustice_VE

    Interior Minister Diosdado Cabello (shown right-of-centre wearing a black cap with red writing) posted this photo on Instagram

    The journalist detentions come at a volatile time in Venezuela, where just days ago the country’s leader, Nicolás Maduro, and his wife were seized by US forces in a pre-dawn raid in which dozens of his bodyguards and security detail were killed.

    While the seizure prompted celebrations among Venezuelans who oppose Maduro and who have left the country, there were no public displays of joy in Venezuela.

    Opposition Venezuelans have long denounced the repression they face if they speak out against the Maduro government.

    More than 2,000 people were arrested during protests in the wake of the 2024 presidential election.

    The government-dominated electoral council declared Maduro the winner of that election but voting tallies collected by the opposition and verified by independent media suggest that it was won by the opposition candidate.

    In the crackdown which followed the election, members of the security forces checked people’s phone for messages critical of Maduro, prompting many Venezuelans to erase their social media accounts and message history.

    Many of those arrested at the time were sentenced to lengthy prison sentences after being sentenced for “treason”.

    According to pressure group Foro Penal, there are more than 800 political prisoners being held in Venezuela as of 5 January.



    Source link