Iran’s foreign minister in first Japan visit since 2019

The purpose of the rare visit by Hossein Amir-Abdollahian to a G7 member country was not announced, but reports said Japan would press Iran to stop supplying Russia with army Pause

Amir-Abdollahian will meet with Japanese Foreign Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi, the Japanese foreign ministry said in a statement.

Amir-Abdollahian would also make a courtesy visit to Kishida, private broadcaster TBS reported.

TBS, citing unnamed government sources, said Japan would raise the issue of arms exports to Russia.

Japan and Iran have traditionally kept friendly ties despite key Tokyo ally Washington’s tense relations with Tehran.

Iran used to be a major oil exporter to resource-poor Japan, but volumes dropped sharply in recent years due to US economic sanctions on the Middle Eastern country.

Hayashi and Amir-Abdollahian have held telephone talks in the past, most recently in April this year.

In the April talks, Hayashi expressed Japan’s support for the 2015 nuclear accord and urged Iran to cooperate with the International Atomic Energy Agency, the UN nuclear watchdog.

Amir-Abdollahian’s visit to current G7 head Japan is the first visit by an Iranian top diplomat since December 2019 and the first under President Ebrahim Raisi.

The 2015 nuclear accord between Iran and six major powers – including Russia and China – was aimed at scaling down Iran’s activities in that sector in order to allay fears it was developing atomic weapons.

But the United States pulled out of the deal under former president Donald Trump and efforts to revive it under President Joe Biden have faltered, while Tehran has expanded its nuclear work.

Niger’s coup leaders have closed the country’s airspace until further notice, citing the threat of military intervention from their neighbours.

Flight tracking website Flightradar24 is showing that there are currently no aircraft in Niger’s skies.

The West African group of countries, Ecowas, had earlier warned it could use force if President Mohamed Bazoum was not reinstated by 23:00 GMT on Sunday.

A junta spokesman says Niger’s armed forces are ready to defend the country.

Mr Bazoum was detained on 26 July, and Gen Abdourahmane Tchiani, commander of the presidential guard, later proclaimed himself the new leader.

The military takeover has been internationally condemned, including by former colonial power France and the rest of the European Union, as well as the United Nations and the United States.

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Reading a statement on national television on Sunday, the representative from Niger’s junta said they had information that “a foreign power” was preparing to attack Niger.

After a crisis meeting in Nigeria, Ecowars military chiefs said on Friday they had drawn up a detailed plan for the possible use of force.

“All the elements that will go into any eventual intervention have been worked out here, including the resources needed, the how and when we are going deploy the force,” said Abdel-Fatau Musah, Ecowars commissioner for political affairs, peace and security.

And he added: “We want diplomacy to work, and we want this message clearly transmitted to them [Niger’s junta] that we are giving them every opportunity to reverse what they have done”.

They issued their ultimatum a week ago, demanding the generals relinquish power by midnight local time, which has now passed.

Ecowars is a regional trading bloc of 15 West African countries, including Nigeria, Senegal, Togo and Ghana.

The coup leaders seem to be showing no sign of willingness to cede power, and on Sunday thousands of their supporters rallied defiantly at a stadium in Niger’s capital Niamey.

Two of Niger’s neighbours – Burkina Faso and Mali – earlier warned they would treat any outside military intervention in Niger as “a declaration of war” against them. Burkina Faso and Mali are both Ecowas members but have been suspended from the bloc since being ruled by military juntas.

Niger is a significant uranium producer – a fuel that is vital for nuclear power – and under Mr Bazoum was a key Western ally in the fight against Islamist militants in West Africa’s Sahel region.

Why some in Niger want Russia in and France out
Africa Daily podcast: What’s behind the coup in Niger?
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Niger coup: The basics:
Where is Niger? It’s a vast country in West Africa, and one of the poorest countries in the world.

Why was there a coup? The military said it seized power because of insecurity and the economic situation, but there have been suggestions it came after reports the coup leader was about to be sacked.

What next? It’s feared the military may seek to switch allegiance to Russia and close French and US bases there; for their part, Niger’s neighbors have threatened to use force to end the coup.

 

Israeli security forces say they have killed three alleged Palestinian militants in the north of the occupied West Bank, near the Jenin refugee camp.

The camp was the focus of a major military operation last month.

It marks a further escalation in a wave of violence over the weekend.

On Friday, armed Jewish settlers attacked a Palestinian village where a young Palestinian man was shot dead, while an Israeli security guard was killed in an attack in Tel Aviv.

In a statement, the army said the group was heading to carry out an attack and that an automatic rifle was found in their car.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu praised the security forces, saying: “We will continue to take action – everywhere and at any moment – against those who seek to attack us.”

The killings came the day after a Palestinian gunman fatally shot an Israeli security guard in Tel Aviv. Another guard shot and killed the attacker.

After the killing of three Palestinians on Sunday, Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh said: “These horrific crimes in Jenin would not have taken place had the perpetrators not felt safe from punishment.”

Palestinian armed groups condemned the killings, vowing for revenge.

“The enemy, which assassinated three of our Palestinian people, will not escape paying the price of its crimes,” said a spokesperson for Hamas who rules Gaza.

The Islamic Jihad, which has members in Gaza and the West Bank, said: “The enemy will realise that its foolishness and terrorism will be met by a strong response from the resistance.”

 

On Friday night, extremist settlers went on the rampage in a Palestinian village in the West Bank, killing a 19-year-old man. Israeli police say two settlers have been arrested.

The latest settler attack has been condemned as terrorism by Washington, its stronger language appearing to show increased frustration with the positions of Israel’s far-right government.

Five people have been arrested after a protest halted the Men’s Elite Road Race at the UCI Cycling World Championships in Scotland.

The event was paused with just over 190km (118 miles) of the 271km (168 miles) remaining, with the Edinburgh to Glasgow route blocked west of Falkirk.

The demonstration took place on a narrow stretch of the B818 near the Carron Valley Reservoir.

Police said five people were arrested after the protesters were removed.

Environmental group This Is Rigged claimed responsibility for the demonstration and said four of its activists were involved.

It was reported that protesters glued themselves to the road.

The race, which was won by Dutch rider Mathieu van der Poel, was paused for about 50 minutes before restarting.

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This Is Rigged has recently targeted the Scottish Parliament and Grangemouth oil and gas petrochemical plant.

In a statement posted on social media, This Is Rigged activist Cat said: “The fact that Ineos has been allowed to sponsor a team in the race around the Campsie Fells – which were engulfed in wildfires last month – is a disgrace and an insult to the both cycling community and the people of Scotland.

“We cannot continue with business as usual while our country burns and our futures are ruined. Time is of the essence and we need to act like it.”

 

The group called on the Scottish government to “stand up to Westminster and oppose all new oil and gas, and implement a fair transition now”.

It comes after he will back licences for 100 new oil and gas projects in the North Sea.

Graham Simpson, the Scottish Conservatives net zero and transport spokesman said: “This was a dangerous act of disruption which put both the protesters and athletes in this race at risk.

“It’s utterly nonsensical for a group which claims to stand for environmental protection to target an event promoting active, green travel like cycling – and raises a huge question mark about this publicity-seeking group’s true motives.”

Before the protest, Welsh cyclist Owain Doull and Ireland’s Rory Townsend were part of a nine-strong breakaway that had gone seven minutes clear of the main peloton. The lead group set away ahead of the other riders when the demonstration was cleared.

The race ended with 10 laps of a Glasgow city centre circuit.

The race was restarted after protesters were removed and a white powder was laid on the road

Van der Poel won the race despite falling while coming round a bend in the rain-soaked Glasgow city centre.

He saw off competition from two-time Tour De France winner Tadej Pogacar, as well as Wout van Aert and Mads Pedersen.

Road cycling commentator Phil Liggett earlier told the BBC’s Drivetime programme the event was the “pinnacle of the world of cycling”.

“The Tour De France is for the multi-day cyclist and the world championship is for the one-day expert,” he said. “They are the two highest rewards in the world of cycling.”

The race started at 09.30 near the Scottish Parliament before heading through Edinburgh city centre towards the Queensferry Crossing.

The cyclists had set off from Edinburgh on the 168 mile route
The race passed Strathclyde University in Glasgow

It then went through south Fife and across the Clackmannan Bridge into the Falkirk area.

The cyclists then headed west towards the Carron Valley – where the protest stopped the race – before continuing over Crow Road into East Dunbartonshire.

The race then descended through Glasgow’s west end into the city centre.

Riders completed 10 laps of a 14.3km (8.9 mile) Glasgow City Circuit before finishing in George Square.

A rolling road closure was in operation across the event route, with roads closed for about 30-45 minutes.

Roads around the Glasgow City Circuit were closed completely.

There was heavy rain in Glasgow city centre during the closing stages of the race
Mathieu van der Poel is the new men’s road race world champion

After the event, Glasgow City Council leader Susan Aitken said: “It was great to see the streets of Glasgow provide the backdrop for such a stunning sporting occasion.

“The city turned out in force to watch the men’s road race and spectators were rewarded with an incredible display of skill, stamina and bravery.

“The crowds generated a superb atmosphere to spur the riders on and there was drama right to the end.

“This an event that will have been viewed all across the world and Glasgow has again shown its passion for sport before a global audience.”

The race is part of the UCI Cycling World Championships which sees the world’s best cyclists compete across a range of disciplines being brought together for the first time in one “mega event”.

It will see action across the country – from mountain biking in the Tweed Valley to elite track cycling in Glasgow’s Sir Chris Hoy velodrome.

There will also be time trials around Stirling and para-cycling road races in Dumfries.

The Women’s Elite Road Race on Sunday 13 August follows a 154km (96 mile) route from Loch Lomond to Glasgow via the Stirling countryside. It ends with six laps of Glasgow city centre.

Elections likely to be delayed as CCI ‘unanimously’ approves 2023 census

ISLAMABAD: The upcoming general elections in the country will likely be delayed as the Council of Common Interest (CCI) meeting on Saturday “unanimously” approved the 2023 census.

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif chaired a meeting of the CCI to decide the fate of the 2023 census amid reports of division among the coalition partners over the matter.

The meeting was attended by Sindh Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah and Punjab Caretaker Chief Minister Mohsin Naqvi.

Finance Minister Ishaq Dar, Planning Minister Ahsan Iqbal, Aviation Minister Khawaja Saad Rafique, Commerce Minister Syed Naveed Qamar, Adviser to the PM on Kashmir Affairs and Gilgit Baltistan Qamar Zaman Kaira and other officials also participated in the huddle.

According to a statement issued following the meeting, the census 2023 was approved with the consensus of all four chief ministers and representatives of all political parties.

During the meeting, PM Shehbaz appreciated the provincial governments and the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics (PBS) for playing an important role in completing the census.

The Ministry of Planning briefed the participants on the digital census. Moreover, the results of 2023 census were also presented during the CCI meeting.

The current total population of Pakistan is 241.49 million as per the seventh census with an annual growth rate of 2.55%.

The population growth rate of Balochistan is 3.2% — higher than the rest of the provinces.

“The population has increased by 350 million in the last six years which is a matter of concern. Pakistan’s population growth rate is more than its economic growth,” the PM said.

PM Shehbaz added that the government will have to stop the population growth as well as overcome the challenges by increasing the pace of economic development.

The population of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa is 40.85 million, Punjab 127.68 million, Sindh 55.69 million, Balochistan 14.89 million and Islamabad’s population stands at 2.36 million, the meeting was briefed.

The CCI huddle unanimously approved the latest digital census despite the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), a key ally of the Pakistan Democratic Movement (PDM)-led government, had publicly expressed reservations over it.

The Pakistan Bureau of Statistics (PBS) also reportedly informed the federal government that it had completed all the formalities.

The general elections are likely to be delayed by a couple of months as the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) would need additional time to conduct the delimitation exercise afresh.

Under the law, if a new census is notified, the ECP is bound to hold elections on the basis of new data.

It is important to note that the ruling coalition has agreed to dissolve the National Assembly prematurely on August 9 — three days before its term ends — giving the electoral body 90 days to conduct polls.

PPP, MQM-P divided

Meanwhile, the two main coalition partners of PM Shehbaz Sharif — Muttahida Qaumi Movement-Pakistan (MQM-P) and PPP had opposite views on the enumeration.

The PPP has on multiple occasions said that polls should be held on the basis of the 2017 census, reiterating that any delay in polls will not be accepted.

On Friday, while speaking on the floor of the Senate, Minister for Climate Change Sherry Rehman said that the census issue was controversial and would open up a new Pandora’s box of delimitation of constituencies.

“This issue could be used to delay the election. We don’t want elections to be delayed, rather it should be held on time and under the Constitution,” she maintained.

On the other hand, MQM-P has shared its concerns on the matter with the prime minister, stressing that elections on the previous enumeration would not be acceptable.

PML-N ‘ready’ to address concerns

Moreover, Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) leader Talal Chaudhry told Geo News that there’s no harm in delaying polls as it is more important that the election results are acceptable to everyone.

‘Polls may be delayed by 4 months’

Talking to Geo News on Friday, former secretary ECP Kanwar Dilshad said that if the CCI approves the census 2023, elections will be held in 2024.

“If the gazette notification of the new digital census is issued on the recommendations of the CCI, then the ECP is legally bound under Article 51(5) of the Constitution to conduct fresh delimitation,” he said.

Toshakhana case: What was PTI chief doing when police came to arrest him?

LAHORE: Shortly after a court in Islamabad found him guilty of corruption in the Toshakhana case Saturday, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) Chairman Imran Khan was arrested.

Additional district and sessions Judge (ADSJ) Humayun Dilawar ordered the police to arrest Khan — who wasn’t present at the hearing as he was at his Zaman Park residence in Lahore.

The Punjab Police entered the Lahore residence of Khan, who was removed as the prime minister via a no-confidence motion last year in April, through the back door.

When they approached Khan, he was wearing a blue tracksuit and was eating lunch.

Khan told the police that he needs to eat, but the law enforcers insisted that they had to arrest him on court orders and that he could eat later on.

The police then took the PTI chairman into their custody and stopped his guards within the home’s premises.

His arrest triggered protests in several cities of the nation, with the party vowing to challenge the lower court’s decision in the superior courts.

The former prime minister was sent to jail for three years Saturday after a court in the capital found him guilty of graft in the Toshakhana case, a move likely to bar him from standing in elections due later this year.

Anyone convicted of a criminal offence is disqualified from contesting elections in Pakistan, and parliament is likely to be dissolved in the next two weeks before it completes its term, with a national vote to be held by later this year or early next year.

“His dishonesty has been established beyond doubt,” Judge Dilawar wrote in the ruling seen for a case centred on gifts he received and did not properly declare while he was premier.

The judge also fined him Rs100,000 (around $350).

Death toll rises to 30 in northern China floods

Officials reported the deaths in Baoding, about 150 kilometres (90 miles) from Beijing, adding that 18 people were missing.

Storm Doksuri, a former super typhoon that hit mainland China last Friday, has brought the most severe rains to the region since records began 140 years ago.

By noon Saturday (0400 GMT), more than 600,000 of Baoding’s 11.5 million residents had been evacuated from areas deemed to be at risk, officials said.

The torrential rain that hit northeast China on Saturday battered the provinces bordering Russia and North Korea.

A red alert remains in force in Beijing due to “geological risks” such as landslides linked to the bad weather.

Clean-up operations are ongoing after the overwhelming rainfall, which destroyed infrastructure and flooded entire districts.

China has been hit hard by extreme weather in recent months, from record-breaking heatwaves to deadly flooding.

Natural disasters caused 147 deaths or disappearances last month, China said Friday, after the heaviest rains since records began hit the country’s capital.

China’s Ministry of Emergency Management said 142 of the deaths or disappearances recorded in July were caused by flooding or geological disasters.

Streets became rivers

Dramatic aerial photographs taken by AFP of Zhuozhou on Wednesday showed shopping streets turned into rivers of brown water, while others showed farmland in the surrounding areas completely submerged and floodwater stretching for miles.

AFP saw rescuers using boats to ferry instant noodles, bread and drinking water to residents who could not or did not want to leave properties engulfed by water.

Millions of people have been hit by extreme weather events and prolonged heatwaves around the globe in recent weeks, events that scientists say are being exacerbated by climate change.

Ma Jun, director of the Beijing-based NGO the Institute of Public and Environmental Affairs, said that while the typhoon had brought the rain, rising ocean temperatures due to climate change were also causing the extreme weather.

“China has suffered unprecedented extreme heatwaves since last year… This year, there are record-breaking high temperatures in Northern China,” Ma told AFP this week.

“These heatwaves are linked to global warming, and this is what most climate scientists around the world tend to agree,” he said.

Saudi dives into Ukraine peace push with Jeddah talks

The meeting, which Ukrainian organisers had said would include representatives from around 40 countries but not Russia, began on Saturday in the Red Sea coastal city of Jeddah, participants said.

Agenda of the session features three hours of statements from various delegations before a two-hour closed discussion and a dinner.

“I predict that the conversation will not be easy, but the truth is on our side,” Andriy Yermak, the head of Ukraine’s presidential office, said in an interview broadcast earlier.

“We have many disagreements and we have heard many positions, but it is important that we share our principles,” added Yermak, who also heads Kyiv’s delegation to Jeddah.

“Our task is to unite the whole world around Ukraine.”

Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb 24 last year, failing in its attempt to take the capital but seizing swathes of eastern territory that Western-backed Ukrainian troops are fighting to recapture.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s office said this week that the meeting would focus on his 10-point peace formula that calls for the full withdrawal of Russian troops and restoration of Ukraine’s borders, including the territory of Crimea, annexed by Russia since 2014.

However, Russia has in the past made it clear that any negotiations would need to take into account “new territorial realities”.

Bringing in BRICS

The Jeddah meeting follows talks in Copenhagen in June that were designed to be informal and did not yield an official statement.

US National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan is leading Washington’s delegation to the Saudi city, a senior White House official said.

While Washington does not expect a major breakthrough or joint statements to come out of Saturday’s session, diplomats instead said the Ukraine-organised meetings were intended to engage a range of countries in debates about a path towards peace — notably members of the BRICS bloc with Russia that have adopted a more neutral stance on the war in contrast to Western powers.

China, which says it is a neutral party in the conflict but has been criticised by Western countries for refusing to condemn Russia, announced it would send its special representative for Eurasian affairs, Li Hui, to the meeting.

The meeting highlights Saudi Arabia’s “readiness to exert its good offices to contribute to reaching a solution that will result in permanent peace”, the official Saudi Press Agency said.

The world’s biggest crude exporter which works closely with Russia on oil policy, Riyadh has touted its ties to both sides and positioned itself as a possible mediator in the war.

Takes two to tango, Pakistan tells India

“There should be some resonance of reciprocity from New Delhi as well,” said Pakistan’s US ambassador, and a former president of Azad Kashmir, while addressing a meeting in Washington. “It takes two to tango. It can’t be a monologue. It needs to be a dialogue.”

Addressing a summit in Islamabad earlier this week, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif had expressed his willingness to hold talks with India.

On Aug 3, the US also backed efforts to resume India-Pakistan talks. Asked to comment on Mr Sharif’s offer, US State Depart­ment spokesman Matthew Miller said: “As we have long said, we support direct dialogue between India and Pakis­tan on issues of concern.” India, however, has rejected Pakistan’s offer, saying that Islamabad needs to create an ‘environment’ for peace before the talks resume.

Ambassador Khan, however, reiterated the talks offer at a meeting called to mark Aug 5 as the “day of usurpation”.

A large number of Pakistani and Kashmiri Americans, members of civil society and human rights activists attended the event. Messages from President Arif Alvi and Prime Minister Sharif reiterated their unswerving commitment to the Kashmir cause.

Videos highlighting the struggle of Kashmiri people and Indian atrocities were also played. Pakistan released a set of documents, authored by human rights groups and media activists, showing the situation in the Indian-occupied territory.

Britain’s Shadow Minister for Legal Aid Afzal Khan said Labour MPs had urged the government not to abdicate its historical responsibility and to play its part in promoting sustainable peace and prosperity in the region. Human rights activist Shamim Shawal said that 9,000 girls were missing since 2019 and 181 children were missing since 2022.

‘Adapt and innovate’

Muzammil Ayub Thakur, president of the World Kashmir Freedom Movement, advised the people of Kashmir to “learn to adapt and innovate” to make sure that their struggle for freedom succeeds.

The Chancellor of East West University, Chicago, Wasiullah Khan, urged Kashmiris to continue their peaceful struggle for freedom.

Senator Abdul Qayyum said peace-loving nations must stand with all oppressed people of the world, including the Kashmiris.

Mohsin Ansari, the presi­dent of Islamic Circle of North America, offered continued support of his organisation to the people of Kashmir.

Professor Imtiaz Khan of George Washington University said the people of India should learn to look beyond the rhetoric of their government and see how it was suppressing the Kashmiri people.

Cambodia’s outgoing leader Hun Sen has marked his 71st birthday with official confirmation of his party’s landslide victory in last month’s election.

Electoral officials said on Saturday that his ruling Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) had swept 120 of 125 seats.

Critics called July’s poll a sham after the main opposition, the Candlelight Party, was banned on a technicality.

But the result allows Hun Sen to proceed with a plan to appoint his son as his successor in the coming days.

Hun Manet, 45, was until recently the commander of the Royal Cambodian Army and has long been groomed for the role. The transition was first flagged in 2021, but until July it was unclear when the change of power would occur.

Saturday’s confirmation that Hun Manet had been elected an MP removed the only remaining procedural hurdle to his taking office.

His father is now expected to ask the King to appoint him prime minster on Monday. Hun Sen has said the succession is designed to maintain peace and avoid “bloodshed” should he die in office.

He is expected to become president of the Senate early next year and will serve as acting head of state when King Norodom Sihamoni is abroad.

Since he came to power following the fall of the murderous Khmer Rouge regime four decades ago, Hun Sen’s rule has become increasingly authoritarian.

He has consolidated power through control of the military, police and moneyed interests. Observers say he has dispatched opponents through co-opting, jailing or exiling them.

Indeed, there was little doubt over the result of last months poll, with some critics branding it more like a coronation than an election.

The Candlelight Party, Cambodia’s main opposition and the sole credible challenger to Hun Sen, was disqualified from contesting the election in May after officials accused the party of filing incorrect paperwork.

Apart from the CPP, the royalist Funcinpec Party took five seats, while the remaining 16 opposition parties all failed to gain any representation.

The CPP took 6,398,311 votes from a total of 8.2 million ballots cast, or 78% of the popular vote. Before the poll, the government criminalised any attempt to boycott the election or spoil the ballot papers.

The US, EU and other Western nations refused to send observers to the poll, saying it was neither free not fair.

EU officials said the vote was “conducted in a restricted political and civic space where the opposition, civil society and the media were unable to function effectively without hindrance”.

Hun Manet celebrated Saturday’s result by posting a photo to Instagram showing his young son presenting Hun Sen with a bouquet of blue and yellow flowers, captioned with the message: “Happy birthday to respected and beloved father”.