Beijing's show of strength unites Xi, Kim and Putin in symbolic walk of solidarityNew Foto - Beijing's show of strength unites Xi, Kim and Putin in symbolic walk of solidarity

HONG KONG (AP) — As Chinese troops prepared to showcase their military strength during alavish paradein central Beijing, President Xi Jinping was flanked byRussian President Vladimir PutinandNorth Korean leader Kim Jong Un. The prominent position of the three leaders at thesymbolic eventto mark the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II represents a show of unity during ongoing pressure from the United States. Putin and Kim were amongsome two dozen top foreign leaderswho attended a high-profile event that signals China's growing diplomatic influence in the Global South and other emerging economies. While other leaders walked behind the trio towards the viewing platform overlooking Tiananmen Square, Xi and Kim smiled as they chatted through an interpreter. Xi also talked to Putin while they walked.

Beijing's show of strength unites Xi, Kim and Putin in symbolic walk of solidarity

Beijing's show of strength unites Xi, Kim and Putin in symbolic walk of solidarity HONG KONG (AP) — As Chinese troops prepared to showca...
Syria detains defence, interior ministry members suspected of Sweida violenceNew Foto - Syria detains defence, interior ministry members suspected of Sweida violence

By Tala Ramadan (Reuters) -Syria has interrogated and detained members of its defence and interior ministries suspected of committing abuses against civilians in the predominantly Druze province of Sweida in July, the committee investigating the violence has said. Hundreds of people were killed in Sweida in violence that began between tribes and Druze factions but which worsened after Syrian troops were dispatched to the area. Bereaved relatives accused government forces of committing execution-style killings on camera. Syria appointed a committee to investigate the violence on July 31. Its spokesperson Ammar Izzedin told Syrian and regional media outlets on Tuesday night that members of both the interior and defence ministries had been questioned and referred to the judiciary over their suspected involvement in abuses. Izzedin declined to say how many personnel were detained, but said they were Syrian nationals who carried out the atrocities in an individual capacity. He told regional broadcaster Al-Hadath the committee had confronted the suspects with "the video footage in which they were seen" committing abuses without specifying what they were. Izzedin said the footage was "enough" as evidence since the fighters had filmed themselves, but that several had also confessed to committing the abuses after being shown the videos. "They were detained by the interior and defence ministries to be transferred to the judiciary when the investigations are concluded to be publicly tried for the crimes they committed against Syrians," Izzedin said. He told local outlet Syria TV that the committee was keen to act swiftly to arrest the suspects even as it continued its investigative work. He did not immediately respond to Reuters requests for additional comment. Amnesty International urged Syrian authorities on Tuesday to hold members of government forces accountable for extrajudicial executions of Druze men and women on July 15 and 16 in Sweida. In March, Syria's military was accused of mass killings of members of the Alawite minority, to which much of ousted Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's ruling elite belonged. A Syrian government fact-finding committee said in July that 1,426 people had died in March in attacks on security forces and subsequent mass killings of Alawites, but concluded that commanders had not given orders for the revenge attacks. It said 298 suspects were linked to violations against Alawites and 265 involved in the initial attack on security forces, and said they had been referred to the judiciary. (Reporting by Tala Ramadan; Additional reporting by Firas Makdesi; Writing by Maya Gebeily and Tala Ramadan, Editing by William Maclean)

Syria detains defence, interior ministry members suspected of Sweida violence

Syria detains defence, interior ministry members suspected of Sweida violence By Tala Ramadan (Reuters) -Syria has interrogated and detaine...
Sudan's latest tragedy counts a village wiped out by a landslideNew Foto - Sudan's latest tragedy counts a village wiped out by a landslide

CAIRO (AP) — A devastatinglandslide that killed an estimated 1,000 peoplein Sudan's Darfur region struck as the northeastern African nationreels from a civil warthat pushed some of its parts into famine. The nation of over 50 million peoplehas a long history of conflicts, including the one that created South Sudan in 2011. It's also known for its seasonal flooding that kills hundreds of people every year. Climate change has made the rainfall and flooding more deadly and destructive in recent years. The landslide After days of heavy rainfall, a landslide on Sunday wiped out the village of Tarasin in the Marrah Mountains area, more than 900 kilometers (560 miles) west of the capital, Khartoum. At least 1,000 people were killed, and only one of the residents survived, according to the Sudan Liberation Movement-Army, a rebel group that controls the area. The group's spokesman Mohamed Abdel-Rahman al-Nair said search efforts were underway and that about 100 bodies were recovered as of Tuesday evening. The U.N. humanitarian coordinator in Sudan, Luca Renda, said "between 300-1,000 people may have lost their lives," citing local sources. Marrah Mountains, where the village is located, are hard to reach. The UNESCO World Heritage site is located in a volcanic area with a summit of 3,000 meters (9,840 feet). The landslide happened in the peak of Sudan's flooding season, which runs from July to October. Widespread damage have been reported in other areas in Sudan in recent weeks, including Sofia village in South Darfur province where 100 houses were destroyed also on Sunday, according to the International Organization for Migration. The civil war Sudan plunged into chaos when simmering tensions between the military and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces exploded into street fighting in April 2023 in the capital, Khartoum and elsewhere in the country. The war has turned into a regional proxy conflict in which each side is backed by foreign governments. Darfur, which has suffered from decades of conflict and witnessed the first genocide in the 21st century, was among the worst hit areas in the ongoing war. The front lines have shifted following the military's capture of Khartoum and its sister city of Omdurman, in a major setback to the paramilitaries.Most of the fightinghave occurred in Darfur and the south-central region of Kordofan. The war was marked by atrocities including mass killings and rapes, which the International Criminal Court says it is investigating as potential war crimes and crimes against humanity, especially in Darfur. The RSF was blamed for most of the atrocities, and the former Biden administration accused the militia of committing genocide. The military was also accused of violating international law. The RSF grew out of the notorious Janjaweed militias, which were accused of genocide in the 2000s Darfur conflict. Famine and disease The war has killed tens of thousands of peopleand forced 14 million others to flee, including over 4 million who crossed into neighboring countries, some of which have suffered from conflicts or economic crises. The war created the world's largest humanitarian crisis. It made Sudan one of four areas where famine was detected in the last 15 years, along with South Sudan, Somalia and the Gaza Strip. The five famine-stricken areas are in Darfur and Kordofan, and other areas are expected to join the fold, according to the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC). Many areas, including Marrah Mountains and other parts of Darfur and Kordofan, have been inaccessible due to clashes, blockade and looting. At least 25 million — half the country's population — have been facing acute hunger, including over 3.6 million children who are acutely malnourished, the U.N. says. There have also been deadly disease outbreaks, including cholera, malaria and dengue in the past two years. An ongoing cholera outbreak in Darfur killed about 400 people and sickened over 9,000, according to a local aid group. A March outbreak in the White Nile province killed about 100 people and sickened over 2,700 others, according to the Health Ministry.

Sudan's latest tragedy counts a village wiped out by a landslide

Sudan's latest tragedy counts a village wiped out by a landslide CAIRO (AP) — A devastatinglandslide that killed an estimated 1,000 peop...
Egypt scraps decades-old rent caps, fuelling eviction fearsNew Foto - Egypt scraps decades-old rent caps, fuelling eviction fears

By Mariam Rizk and Mohamed Ezz CAIRO (Reuters) -The rent on Khaddara Ibrahim Ali's cramped apartment in downtown Cairo was just about the only expense she could count on staying stable as waves of soaring inflation and subsidy cuts ate away at her modest income. Thanks to a decades-old rent cap, Ali, 84, pays just under 11 Egyptian pounds ($0.23) per month for the eighth-story home where she has lived for half a century, overlooking a patchwork of ageing buildings and narrow streets in the Azbakeya district. But now even that is set to change. In July, Egypt's parliament approved the country's biggest rent overhaul in decades, scrapping rent caps and rules that had let tenants and their heirs stay in their homes indefinitely. The change, which will take effect for non-residential units over five years and for homes over seven years, impacts millions of households and has raised fears among many tenants who had counted on their rents to ensure a degree of economic stability. "I'm afraid all the time," Ali said. "After all this familiarity, I would just leave?" The law applies to "old rent" contracts signed before Jan. 31, 1996, when measures were taken to liberalise the rental market but not applied retroactively to units rented out before that. Since then, Egypt has seen a huge divergence in rental prices, with tenants in protected units often paying the equivalent of just a few cents even in upscale and gentrified districts. Supporters of the changes say they will bring long-awaited relief to landlords, who complain that rent caps have whittled their income to token amounts and stopped them from investing in maintenance. SAFETY NET PLEDGE "As a tenant, you think you became a pensioner, old and poor, and the landlord remained the same? Is this logic? Landlords and owners also include widowers, divorcees, and pensioners," said Cairo landlord Tarek Mohammed, 61, who rents out two apartments for six Egyptian pounds a month each and a shop for two pounds a month. Officials have also pledged to provide safety nets. On Aug. 27, Egypt's cabinet approved rules for allocating state housing to old-rent tenants under rent, rent-to-own, and ownership schemes. Mahmoud Fawzi, minister for parliamentary affairs, told a cabinet meeting in early August that the state had a "full and legal commitment" to make sure eligible tenants had suitable housing before the law went into effect and stressed that "there wouldn't be any family without shelter." The measures were taken after a court ruling last November declared the old rent laws unconstitutional and ordered the government to resolve the situation. Some experts have questioned whether the plan was sufficiently studied in the haste to meet the court order. "(The law) was rushed," said May Qabeel, a researcher at the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights. "The data they relied on hasn't been shared… We don't know the exact numbers, details of tenants, or property holdings." During the transitional periods of five and seven years rents will rise twentyfold in "prime" areas and tenfold in "mid-tier" and "economic" zones. Minimum rents are set at 1,000 Egyptian pounds in prime districts, 400 pounds in mid-tier, and 250 pounds in poorer neighbourhoods. The rents will then be reviewed and readjusted by a government committee, thereafter rising 15% annually during the remainder of the transition. For many, those prices are steep. Egypt's state-set minimum wage is 7,000 pounds per month, though many private-sector workers earn less, and housing already consumes nearly a quarter of household spending, Qabeel said. "(Spending on housing) will rise for everyone at a rate they can't handle ... amid constantly increasing prices, without compensation." PRESSURE ON HOUSING SUPPLY Egypt's housing supply is under heavy pressure. The country's social housing programme has delivered about 69,000 units per year over the past decade, according to Finance Ministry figures. In contrast, the Built Environment Observatory, a housing-focused think tank, estimates that nearly 530,000 families living in old rent apartments will need support. With long waitlists of applicants, the state will face a steep challenge in building and distributing homes quickly enough. Even if enough housing is delivered, relocating could impose even more financial strains, since many new homes could be located on Cairo's outskirts, farther from jobs and services, urban designer and researcher Ahmed Zaazaa said. Zaazaa said a sudden influx of units for sale or rent could also destabilise prices and accelerate gentrification in historic areas. Commercial areas could be transformed, with small grocers and workshops replaced by franchises. "If there are no safeguards, buildings may be demolished, new ones built under new rules, heights, and designs that erase historical or popular character," he said. For Mohammed Hassan, a 35-year-old shopkeeper in al-Khosos district, the law threatens not just his home but his livelihood as well. "My life is destroyed," he said. "I will leave my shop in five years and my house in seven years, where shall I go?" (Reporting by Mariam Rizk and Mohamed Ezz, Editing by Alex Dziadosz, William Maclean)

Egypt scraps decades-old rent caps, fuelling eviction fears

Egypt scraps decades-old rent caps, fuelling eviction fears By Mariam Rizk and Mohamed Ezz CAIRO (Reuters) -The rent on Khaddara Ibrahim Ali...
Trump reacts as Putin, Kim Jong Un and Xi appear together at China's military paradeNew Foto - Trump reacts as Putin, Kim Jong Un and Xi appear together at China's military parade

President Donald Trump took to his social media platform as Chinese President Xi Jinping, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and Russian President Vladimir Putin appeared together in Beijing for China's largest-ever military parade on Wednesday. Trump accused Xi of "conspiring against" the United States as they attended the parade, which marked the 80th anniversary of Japan's surrender in World War II. "May President Xi and the wonderful people of China have a great and lasting day of celebration. Please give my warmest regards to Vladimir Putin, and Kim Jong Un, as you conspire against The United States of America," Trump wrote on social media as the parade was underway. MORE: North Korea's Kim crosses into China to meet Xi, Putin for Beijing military parade Trump referenced America's involvement in World War II in his post on, saying, "The big question to be answered is whether or not President Xi of China will mention the massive amount of support and 'blood' that The United States of America gave to China in order to help it to secure its FREEDOM from a very unfriendly foreign invader." "Many Americans died in China's quest for Victory and Glory. I hope that they are rightfully Honored and Remembered for their Bravery and Sacrifice!" the president wrote. In his remarks at the parade, held in front of the Tiananmen Gate, Xi hailed the Chinese People's Liberation Army as a "heroic force" and spoke of nations and treating each other as equals. "The Chinese nation is a great nation that does not fear violence, and that stands independent and strong," Xi said. "In the past, when confronted with a life-or-death struggle between justice and evil, light and darkness, progress and reaction, the Chinese people stood united, rose up in resistance, and fought for the survival of the country, the rejuvenation of the nation and the cause of human justice." Yuri Ushakov, a top aide to Putin, dismissed Trump's conspiracy allegations. "I want to say that no one organized any conspiracies, no one was weaving anything, no conspiracies," Ushakov told Russian journalist Pavel Zarubin, who is close to the Kremlin and has previously interviewed Putin. "Moreover, no one even had that in their minds, none of these three leaders had that," Ushakov said. MORE: 'They do not surrender': Ukraine commander details fight with North Koreans in Russia "Everyone understands the role that the United States, the current administration of President Trump and President Trump personally play in the current international arrangements," Ushakov said in a video posted by Zarubin to his Telegram channel. Kim, Xi and Putin gathered for the military parade amid Ukrainian and Western concerns over the collaboration of the three nations in bolstering Moscow's full-scale invasion of Ukraine, ongoing since February 2022. Putin sent an invitation to meet with Kim on the sidelines of the military parade, according to Putin's top foreign policy aide. The North Korean Foreign Ministry said in a Wednesday statement that Kim was "enveloped in an atmosphere of the warmest friendship and enthusiastic welcome" on his arrival in Beijing. Ukrainian and Western governments have accused North Korea of supplying significant amounts of ammunition and troops to support Russia's war, while Kyiv and its NATO backers have identified China as Moscow's prime source of materiel and a vital economic lifeline. ABC News' Tanya Stukalova and Somayeh Malekian contributed to this report.

Trump reacts as Putin, Kim Jong Un and Xi appear together at China's military parade

Trump reacts as Putin, Kim Jong Un and Xi appear together at China's military parade President Donald Trump took to his social media pla...

 

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