Flights resume at the rebel-held airport in Yemen's capital, more than a week after Israeli strikesNew Foto - Flights resume at the rebel-held airport in Yemen's capital, more than a week after Israeli strikes

CAIRO (AP) — Flights resumed on Saturday to Yemen's capital of Sanaa, held by the country's Iran-backed Houthi rebels, more than a week aftermassive Israeli airstrikes disabled the airport. The Israeli strikes on May 6 — a rare daytime attack — destroyed the airport's terminal and left craters on its runway, according to Khaled al-Shaif, the head of the airport. At least six passenger planes were hit, including three belonging to the national carrier, Yemen Airway or Yemenia, he said. On Saturday, a flight operated by Yemenia landed at the Sanaa International Airport with 136 passengers on board, according to the Houthis' al-Masirah satellite news channel. The flight had departed from Jordan's capital, Amman, earlier in the day, the airliner said. Three more flights were scheduled on Saturday between Sanaa and Amman. The Israeli offensive was in response toa Houthi ballistic missile that hit the grounds of Ben-GurionInternational Airport near Tel Aviv, which briefly halted flights and commuter traffic. The Houthis have targeted Israel throughoutIsrael's war with the militant Hamas groupin Gaza, in solidarity with Palestinians there, while also targeting commercial and naval vessels on the Red Sea. The attacks have raised the Houthis' profile at home and internationally as the last member of Iran's self-described "Axis of Resistance" capable of launching regular attacks on Israel. Since mid-March, the U.S. military underPresident Donald Trumplaunched an intensified campaign of daily airstrikes targeting the Houthis. The two sides reached a deal to halt theU.S. campaign in return for the Houthis halting their attacks on shipping. However, the U.S.-Houthis deal did not stop the rebels' missile and drone attacks on Israel, which in turn responded with attacks on Yemen's Red Sea ports held by the Houthis. On Friday, the Israeli military said it struck the Hodeida and Salif ports, claiming that the Houthis were using the two facilities to transfer weapons. The Houthi-run health ministry said at least one person was killed and 11 others were wounded in Friday's airstrikes.

Flights resume at the rebel-held airport in Yemen’s capital, more than a week after Israeli strikes

Flights resume at the rebel-held airport in Yemen's capital, more than a week after Israeli strikes CAIRO (AP) — Flights resumed on Satu...
Arrival of Afrikaners renews focus on plight of thousands of other refugees still in limboNew Foto - Arrival of Afrikaners renews focus on plight of thousands of other refugees still in limbo

Yasmin Aguilar resettled in Boise, Idaho as a refugee from Afghanistan years ago, but the dangers for her relatives worsened over time. Late last year, after years of waiting, her brother and sister were finally on the cusp of joining her. Then President Donald Trump took office for his second term. Trump in January suspended the decades-old refugee program. It left their approvals in limbo and their families stuck in Pakistan, unable to work and increasingly fearing deportation to Afghanistan. This week, her family's struggles contrasted sharply with the fast-tracked arrival of 59 Afrikaners, members of a White ethnic minority in South Africa that Trump says suffers from racial discrimination. At least nine are now resettling in Idaho. Aguilar, 54, said people at risk should be able to seek safety, including the South African families moving to Twin Falls, an agricultural town about 120 miles from Boise. But she said other refugees, including Afghans who supported the U.S. war efforts, deserve similar consideration. Now she's among the refugee advocates, sponsors and relatives hoping the controversial arrival of Afrikaners brings renewed attention to the plight of tens of thousands of refugees like her siblings who went through years of waiting, vetting and approvals but remain stuck – some in camps and third countries – despite the admission of the Afrikaners. On May 15, those hopes faced a setback when a federal judge pulled back his order that would have required the Trump administration to admit 12,000 refugees who had arranged travel.  Instead he is requiring 160 admissions for those who had travel set for within two weeks of Jan. 20 when Trump took office, with the rest decided on a case-by-case basis. Aguilar, who bought a larger home with her husband to house her relatives years ago, enduring delays from the pandemic and Trump's first term refugee restrictions, said she's 'trying to be hopeful." "I'm glad that people are searching for safety. I don't have any issue about that," she said in an interview with USA TODAY."We have to have a fair system for everyone." The newly arrived Afrikaners, part of a minority ethnic group who once ruled the country's system of apartheid that ended in 1994 when Nelson Madela was elected president, flew on May 12 to Washington D.C.'s Dulles airport. Most did not speak to reporters, but Will Hartzenberg, a 44-year-old farmer, toldThe Atlanticthat his family was headed to Idaho, where farms and mountains reminded him of home. He said his parents and sister had been shot during an attack on the family farm in 1993. Trump this week said "a genocide" was taking place and that "White farmers are being brutally killed." He also cited South Africa's Expropriation Act governing the acquisition of private land for the "public interest." Disparities in land ownership continue decades after apartheid ended. South African President Cyril Ramaphosa has disputed Trump's claims. And the group Genocide Watch has noted that while South Africa's population is 8% White,White residents make up just 2%of its murder victims. Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau greeted the arrivals at Dulles and said he respected "what you had to deal with" and "the long tradition of your people," in reference to the Afrikaner ethnic group. "Welcome to the United States of America," Landau told them. "It is such an honor for us to receive you here today." The move brought swift criticisms. Refugees typically must first be designated by the United Nations. Most wait years for interviews and vetting before a small fraction are resettled to third countries. The Afrikaners were approved following a Trump order in February. The Episcopal Church decided May 12 it would no longer work with refugees for the federal government after it was asked to help settle the Afrikaners. "It has been painful to watch one group of refugees, selected in a highly unusual manner, receive preferential treatment over many others who have been waiting in refugee camps or dangerous conditions for years," Presiding Bishop Sean Rowe said in a letter. Other agencies that do similar work were busy this week helping some of the families resettle in communities across the country. They will receive the same services that would be available to any new refugee arrival, including case management, employment services, housing assistance and limited financial assistance, according to the U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants. In North Carolina, Marc Wyatt, head of the group Welcome House Raleigh Ministries, told USA TODAY his group was helping furnish apartments for several Afrikaner families. While the group's designation as refugees was "quite controversial," he said his Christian faith teaches him to welcome any stranger. In Alabama, Errol Langton 48, a former vegetable farmer, told theNew York Timeshe'd faced threats and suffered financially because of antipathy toward Afrikaners. He already had a brother in Birmingham, Alabama, where he has resettled. In New York, Charl Kleinhaus, 46,told the BBChe wanted to ensure his children would be safe after getting threats about his land. He remarked about how quickly he got to the country. Along with the larger freeze, the Department of Homeland Security said recently it would end Temporary Protected Status for Afghans in July, arguing there was an improved security and economic situation. That's something Afghans such as Aguilar dispute. "I mean, I feel sorry for the Afghans that they can't get here. But I know there's a process there," Kleinhaus said. "And I know when and if you are approved for the process, they take care of you." Eskinder Negash, president of the U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants, a resettlement group, said in a statement he hoped the admissions would spark a reopening for other refugees. So far, however, there were few signs of it apart from plans to bring in more South Africans. "We are hopeful that the arrival of this group of refugees indicates the government's intention to restart the U.S. refugee program and help other refugees in need of resettlement services," he said. In Twin Falls, nine people, who are part of two families, were preparing to start new lives, said Holly Beech, a spokesperson for the Idaho Office for Refugees. Over the last decade, the state resettled about 800 refugees a year, an average taking into account Trump's first term restrictions, the pandemic, the fall of Kabul and the war in Ukraine. A Twin Falls resettlement agency holds an annual picnic where refugees cook food as a thank you to the community, she said. Elsewhere, there is also support for refugees, who are highly vetted in contrast to those who cross the southern border to seek asylum. That's how Joe Mitchell, a retiree who has helped sponsor Afghan refugees in his town of Idaho Falls, sees it. "Even though Idaho is a red state and Idaho Falls is even redder, our community has been outstanding as a welcoming community," Mitchell said. He and his wife, Kim Mitchell, said the Afghans they sponsored through the Welcome Corps, since canceled by the Trump administration, attend community college and are all working and supporting themselves. But two men's wives, one with a child, are still seeking to be reunited through a family reunification program. One hasn't yet met his child, who was born after he fled. "Why doesn't my dad come? Doesn't he love me?" Kim Mitchell said the child asks her mother often. Since the Jan. 20 pause, in which Trump's executive order cited the inability "to absorb large numbers of migrants, and in particular, refugees, into its communities in a manner that does not compromise the availability of resources for Americans" and other issues, only a handful of refugees have been able to resettle in Idaho, officials said. Danilo Zak, director of policy for resettlement agency Church World Service, said there are more than 100,000 people in the U.S. refugee pipeline who are now stranded, including 22,000 who had completed all their medical and security screenings and 12,000 who had travel booked. After Trump halted the refugee program, freezing funding for processing and resettlement aid, a group of refugees and resettlement agencies filed a federal lawsuit challenging shutdown. On May 15, a federal judge revamped his earlier order that the U.S. resettle the 12,000 after an appeals court clarification. This led the judge to require the resettlement of just those who had travel arranged for the two weeks following the shutdown. Eligibility for others would be examined on a case-by-case basis. How that will work is still being determined. Trump's executive order pausing the program required a report from the secretaries of state and homeland security every 90 days, "until I determine that resumption of the USRAP is in the interests of the United States."No 90-day report has yet been released, said Melissa Keaney, supervising attorney for the International Refugee Assistance Project. USA TODAY reached out to the State Department for comment on whether it would expand refugee admissions. Keany said she hoped the Afrikaner resettlements would illustrate that it would not be burdensome to restart resettlement. Presidents, however, have wide leeway in setting refugee resettlement targets. "It clearly shows the government can provide a fast and efficient process," she said. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Afrikaners' quick arrival in US renews focus on refugees still waiting

Arrival of Afrikaners renews focus on plight of thousands of other refugees still in limbo

Arrival of Afrikaners renews focus on plight of thousands of other refugees still in limbo Yasmin Aguilar resettled in Boise, Idaho as a ref...
Russia demanded Ukraine cede more territory at Turkey talks, Ukrainian source saysNew Foto - Russia demanded Ukraine cede more territory at Turkey talks, Ukrainian source says

By Tom Balmforth ISTANBUL (Reuters) -Russian negotiators at peace talks in Istanbul demanded Ukraine pull its troops out of all the Ukrainian regions claimed by Moscow before they would agree to a ceasefire, a senior Ukrainian official familiar with the talks told Reuters. That demand, along with others the Ukrainian official said were made at Friday's talks, went beyond the terms of a draft peace deal that the United States proposed last month after consultations with Moscow. The talks in Istanbul, the first direct contacts between the two sides in three years, ended with agreement for a prisoner exchange but failed to agree to a ceasefire. A Ukrainian source had said on Friday the Russians had made conditions he described as "non-starters", without giving details. At a briefing with reporters on Saturday, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov was asked about the terms that, according to the Ukrainian official, Moscow put forward, but he declined to comment, saying the discussions need to take place behind closed doors. The Ukrainian official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to reveal details of the talks, said Russian proposed the following terms for a peace deal: * The withdrawal of Ukrainian troops from the Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia, Kherson and Luhansk regions of Ukraine, only after which there can be a ceasefire. The regions are largely or partially controlled by Russian forces, but Ukrainian troops are still fighting to hold on to the remaining parts of the regions. There was no such demand in the draft deal prepared by the United States. * International recognition that five parts of Ukraine -- the Crimea peninsula annexed in 2014, as well as the Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions -- are Russian. The U.S. draft had proposed only U.S. de jure recognition for Crimea, and U.S. de facto recognition for Russian-controlled parts of the other regions. * Ukraine becomes a neutral state, has no weapons of mass destruction, and Kyiv's allies will not station any of their troops on Ukrainian soil. This demand was absent from the U.S. proposal. * All sides in the conflict renounce their claims to receive compensation for war damages. The U.S. proposal had stipulated that Ukraine receives compensation. According to the Ukrainian official, Russian negotiators transmitted those demands verbally, and did not share any document containing their terms. Ukraine has already said the Russian negotiating position in Istanbul showed it was not serious about peace. Kyiv's European allies are now pressing U.S. President Donald Trump to impose new sanctions on Russia. The head of the Russian delegation at the talks expressed satisfaction with the meeting, and said Moscow was willing to keep talking to Kyiv. The U.S. draft peace proposal from April was prepared after Trump envoy Steve Witkoff flew to Moscow for rounds of talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin. Kyiv and European allies drafted an alternative proposal, which stated there should be a ceasefire first so negotiations could start, and deferred any discussion of territory until later. (Additional reporting by Filipp Lebedev; Writing by Christian Lowe; Editing by Philippa Fletcher)

Russia demanded Ukraine cede more territory at Turkey talks, Ukrainian source says

Russia demanded Ukraine cede more territory at Turkey talks, Ukrainian source says By Tom Balmforth ISTANBUL (Reuters) -Russian negotiators...
Iran's President Pezeshkian says Trump speaks of peace and threatens at same timeNew Foto - Iran's President Pezeshkian says Trump speaks of peace and threatens at same time

(Reuters) -Iran's President Masoud Pezeshkian said on Saturday that U.S. President Donald Trump speaks simultaneously about peace and threats. "Which should we believe?" Pezeshkian said at a naval event in Tehran. "On the one hand, he speaks of peace and on the other, he threatens with the most advanced tools of mass killing." Tehran would continue Iran-U.S. nuclear talks but is not afraid of threats. "We are not seeking war," he said. Trump said on Friday that Iran had a U.S. proposal about its nuclear programme and knows it needs to move quickly to resolve a decades-long dispute. "More importantly, they know they have to move quickly or something bad — something bad's going to happen," Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One after departing the United Arab Emirates on Friday, according to an audio recording of the remarks. However, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi in a post on X said Tehran had not received a U.S. proposal. "There is no scenario in which Iran abandons its hard-earned right to (uranium) enrichment for peaceful purposes..." he said. Pezeshkian said Iran would not "back down from our legitimate rights". "Because we refuse to bow to bullying, they say we are source of instability in the region," he said. A fourth round of Iran-U.S. talks ended in Oman last Sunday. A new round has not been scheduled yet. (Reporting by Dubai newsroom; Editing by Susan Fenton)

Iran's President Pezeshkian says Trump speaks of peace and threatens at same time

Iran's President Pezeshkian says Trump speaks of peace and threatens at same time (Reuters) -Iran's President Masoud Pezeshkian said...
A Russian drone strike in northeastern Ukraine kills 9 people, officials sayNew Foto - A Russian drone strike in northeastern Ukraine kills 9 people, officials say

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — A Russian drone struck a passenger bus in Ukraine's northeastern Sumy region on Saturday, killing nine people and injuring four others, Ukrainian officials said. The attack came just hours after Moscow and Kyiv held theirfirst direct peace talks in years which failed to yield a ceasefire. Ukraine's national police released photos showing the aftermath of the strike in Sumy's Bilopillia city, around 10 kilometers (6 miles) from the front line and border with Russia. The Associated Press could not independently verify details of the strike and there was no comment from Moscow. "This is another war crime by Russia — a deliberate strike on civilian transport that posed no threat," the Sumy regional administration said in a post on the Telegram messaging app. A period of mourning has been declared in Bilopillia from Saturday through Monday, with local community chief Yurii Zarko calling the day of the attack "Black Saturday." The local media outlet Suspilne said the passengers on the bus were being evacuated from Bilopillia when the strike occurred. Authorities are working to identify some of the victims, most of them elderly women. The injured were taken to a hospital in Sumy, the regional capital. Three people were reported to be in serious condition. It wasn't immediately clear how the strike would affect peace efforts. On Friday, Russian and Ukrainian officials met in Turkey in an attempt to reach a temporary ceasefire, but the talks ended after less than two hours without a breakthrough. It was the first face-to-face dialogue between the two sides since the early weeks ofMoscow's February 2022 full-scale invasionof Ukraine. And while both sides agreed on a large prisoner swap, they clearly remained far apart on key conditions for ending the fighting. One such condition for Ukraine, backed by its Western allies, is a temporary ceasefire as a first step toward a peaceful settlement. The Kremlin has pushed back against such a truce, which remains elusive. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said he discussed the talks with U.S. PresidentDonald Trumpand the leaders of France, Germany, the U.K. and Poland. In a post on X froma European leadership meeting in Albania, he urged "tough sanctions" against Moscow if it rejects "a full and unconditional ceasefire and an end to killings." Kyiv and Moscow agreed in Istanbul to exchange 1,000 prisoners of war each, according to the heads of both delegations, in what would be theirbiggest such swap. Both sides also discussed a ceasefire and a meeting between their heads of state, according to chief Ukrainian delegate, Defense Minister Rustem Umerov. Medinsky, an aide to President Vladimir Putin, said both sides also agreed to provide each other with detailed ceasefire proposals, with Ukraine requesting the heads of state meeting, which Russia took under consideration. Zelenskyy was in Tirana, Albania, on Friday, meeting with leaders of 47 European countries todiscuss security, defense and democratic standardsagainst the backdrop of the war. He met with French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer and Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk. "Pressure on Russia must be maintained until Russia is ready to end the war," Zelenskyy said on X, posting a photo of the leaders during the call, the second for the group since May 10. ___ Arhirova reported from Istanbul. ___ Follow AP's coverage of the war in Ukraine athttps://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine

A Russian drone strike in northeastern Ukraine kills 9 people, officials say

A Russian drone strike in northeastern Ukraine kills 9 people, officials say KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — A Russian drone struck a passenger bus in ...

 

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