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A protester storms a live broadcast on Russia’s most-watched news show, yelling ‘Stop the war!’

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A protester storms a live broadcast on Russia’s most-watched news show, yelling ‘Stop the war!’

A state tv worker burst onto the stay broadcast of Russia’s most-watched information present on Monday night, yelling “Cease the struggle!” and holding up an indication that mentioned “They’re mendacity to you right here,” in a unprecedented act of protest in opposition to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

The lady, Marina Ovsyannikova, labored for Channel 1, the state-run tv channel whose information broadcast she stormed, in accordance with a Russian rights group that’s giving her authorized help. The group additionally launched a video through which Ms. Ovsyannikova says she is “deeply ashamed” to have labored to supply “Kremlin propaganda.”

The information present, “Vremya,” is among the many Kremlin’s flagship propaganda retailers, watched by thousands and thousands of Russians each night. The off-script intervention underscored how dissent is seeping into public consciousness in Russia, even after President Vladimir V. Putin has stifled opposition to the struggle and has enacted a regulation to punish anybody spreading no matter the federal government deems “false information” about its Ukraine invasion with as much as 15 years in jail.

“We’re Russian folks, pondering and good ones,” she mentioned within the video she recorded, calling for Russians to protest in opposition to the struggle. “Solely we now have the facility to cease all this craziness.”

On Monday night, Ms. Ovsyannikova walked onto the set because the anchor was describing Russian talks with Belarus over easy methods to soften the blow from Western sanctions, on-line movies present. She unfurled an indication with a Ukrainian and a Russian flag that mentioned, in English, “No struggle” and “Russians in opposition to struggle.” In Russian, it mentioned: “Cease the struggle. Don’t imagine the propaganda. They’re mendacity to you right here.”

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The anchor Yekaterina Andreyeva, a veteran who has hosted the “Vremya” newscast for greater than twenty years, continued to learn her script whilst Ms. Ovsyannikova protested behind her. Inside a couple of seconds, the present minimize away from the set. Afterward, in accordance with the Tass state information company, Channel 1 mentioned it was “investigating an incident with an outsider within the body throughout a stay broadcast.”

Ms. Ovsyannikova was detained after the protest and was being held at a small police station at Moscow’s Ostankino broadcasting middle, in accordance with OVD-Information, an activist group that helps Russians detained for protesting. Extra particulars on her situation weren’t instantly out there.

The second went viral on-line in Russia, regardless of the Kremlin’s current efforts to dam dissent on the web. Inside hours, Ms. Ovsyannikova’s Fb web page had greater than 26,000 feedback, with many individuals thanking her or praising her for her bravery in Russian, English and Ukrainian.

Her protest adopted Mr. Putin’s signing of a regulation earlier this month that successfully criminalizes any public opposition to or impartial information reporting concerning the struggle. The regulation may make it against the law to easily name the struggle a “struggle” — the Kremlin says it’s a “particular army operation” — on social media or in a information article or broadcast. Underscoring journalists’ fears of the regulation, the impartial newspaper Novaya Gazeta blurred out Ms. Ovsyannikova’s antiwar poster in an image of the protest it posted on Twitter.

Since Mr. Putin launched the invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, the federal government has additionally blocked entry inside Russia to the web sites of main Russian-language retailers which can be based mostly outdoors the nation, and to Fb, the social community widespread with the Westward-looking city center class the place criticism of the invasion has been sturdy. On Monday, it additionally began blocking entry to Instagram, which is a vastly widespread venue for reporting and activism in Russia.

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Hundreds of protesters have taken to the streets and squares of Russian cities to protest in current weeks, solely to be met with heavy police presences. There have been some 15,000 arrests, in accordance with a tally compiled by OVD-Information. Whereas Mr. Putin has been adept at ruthlessly stifling dissent prior to now, he may face a problem if the protests metastasize into a bigger motion that punctures the official struggle narrative.

The English-language content material of Ms. Ovsyannikova’s poster mirrored how some Russians are eager to indicate that the struggle in opposition to Ukraine shouldn’t be being fought of their identify. Despondent over their nation’s future and afraid of potential conscription and closed borders, tens of hundreds of Russians have fled to Turkey, Armenia, Georgia, Central Asia and Europe because the Russian invasion started.

Alina Lobzina reported from Istanbul.

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Iran's supreme leader calls on Muslims to assist Lebanon in confronting Israel

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Iran's supreme leader calls on Muslims to assist Lebanon in confronting Israel

Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei called on Muslims on Saturday “to stand by the people of Lebanon and the proud Hezbollah with whatever means they have and assist them in confronting the … wicked regime (of Israel).”

In a statement after the Israeli army said it had killed Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, Khamenei said: “The fate of this region will be determined by the forces of resistance, with Hezbollah at the forefront,” state media reported.

He has been transferred to a secure location inside the country with heightened security measures in place, two regional officials briefed by Tehran told Reuters.

The sources said Iran was in constant contact with Lebanon’s Hezbollah and other regional proxy groups to determine the next step after Israel announced that it had killed Hezbollah terror chief Hassan Nasrallah in a strike on south Beirut on Friday.

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Nasrallah was killed alongside Hezbollah’s commander of the southern front, Ali Karaki, and a host of other senior Hezbollah members in a strike on Hezbollah’s military headquarters in the Lebanese capital.

Khameini in hiding: Decision comes after emergency meeting

On Friday, Khameini held an emergency meeting with top advisors in Tehran, as per the New York Times citing Iranian sources.

Airplane flies over Beirut’s southern suburbs as seen from Sin El Fil, Lebanon, September 28, 2024. (credit: REUTERS/MOHAMED AZAKIR)

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi accused Israel of using several US “bunker buster” bombs to strike Beirut on Friday.

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“Just this morning, the Israeli regime used several 5,000-pound bunker busters that had been gifted to them by the United States to hit residential areas in Beirut,” he told a UN Security Council meeting on the Middle East.

Further, US President Joe Biden directed the Pentagon to “assess and adjust as necessary US force posture” in the Middle East, according to the White House.

“He has also directed his team to ensure that US embassies in the region take all protective measures as appropriate,” a statement read. The White House said Biden was briefed “several times” on Friday about the Middle East. An official added that Vice President Kamala Harris was also briefed.



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North Korea expands list of crimes punishable by death: report

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North Korea expands list of crimes punishable by death: report

North Korea is expanding its list of crimes punishable by death, according to reports.

Supreme leader Kim Jong Un’s regime expanded the list of offenses warranting the death penalty from 11 to 16 via revisions of criminal law, according to Yonhap News Agency.

New offenses warranting execution as a punishment include: anti-state propaganda and agitation acts, illegal manufacturing, and the illicit use of weapons are included in the new codes. 

KIM JONG UN PROMISES TO ‘STEADILY STRENGTHEN’ NORTH KOREA’S ‘NUCLEAR FORCE’

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un delivers a speech during a meeting of Central Committee of the Workers’ Party of Korea in Pyongyang, North Korea. (Korean Central News Agency/Korea News Service via AP)

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The legal modifications were codified via multiple amendments between May 2022 and December 2023, according to a report from the Korea Institute for National Unification (KINU). 

The tightening of the criminal code is intended to strengthen the Kim regime’s grip on the population through its continued monopolization of the marketplace and military. 

Earlier this month, North Korea promised to refine its weapons development and strengthen its nuclear capabilities. 

NORTH KOREA’S KIM JONG UN REPORTEDLY ORDERED DOZENS OF OFFICIALS EXECUTED AFTER DEADLY FLOODS

Kim Jong Un made the comments Monday at a state event celebrating the country’s 76th anniversary.

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“The obvious conclusion is that the nuclear force of the DPRK and the posture capable of properly using it for ensuring the state’s right to security in any time should be more thoroughly perfected,” the dictator said.

North Korea missile launch

A 24-hour Yonhapnews TV broadcast at Yongsan Railway Station in Seoul, South Korea shows North Korean leader Kim Jong Un overseeing the test-fire of a new tactical ballistic missile, the Hwasongpho-11-Da-4.5. (Kim Jae-Hwan/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)

“DPRK” is an abbreviation for North Korea’s official name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

Kim Jong Un warned that the United States’ increased involvement in the region has forced the regime to pursue more powerful weapons as a deterrence mechanism.

“The DPRK will steadily strengthen its nuclear force capable of fully coping with any threatening acts imposed by its nuclear-armed rival states and redouble its measures and efforts to make all the armed forces of the state, including the nuclear force, fully ready for combat,” the supreme leader said.

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The 14th Supreme People’s Assembly, the unicameral legislative body of the country, amended the national constitution last year to enshrine nuclear weaponization as a core principle.

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Eight killed in Russian drone attacks on medical centre in Sumy, Ukraine

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Eight killed in Russian drone attacks on medical centre in Sumy, Ukraine

The second attack hit the hospital in northeastern Ukraine as patients evacuated, authorities and witnesses say.

At least eight people have died in two consecutive Russian drone attacks on a medical centre in the northeast Ukrainian city of Sumy, Ukrainian officials have said.

The first attack on Saturday morning killed one person, and it was followed by another attack while patients and staff were evacuating, Ukraine’s Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko said.

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on his Telegram channel that Russia had hit the hospital using Shahed drones, stating that eleven people were injured.

Sumy lies just across the border from Russia’s Kursk region where Kyiv launched a shock offensive on August 6, which it says is aimed partly at creating a “buffer zone” inside Russia.

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Regional prosecutors said the first attack in Sumy on Saturday took place at about 7:35am (04:35 GMT), hitting the hospital where there were 86 patients and 38 staff.

The second attack took place at about 8:25am (05:25 GMT) as rescuers and police were providing assistance and evacuating patients at the scene, prosecutors said.

Dobrobat, a volunteer group that helps repair damaged homes, wrote on Facebook that its volunteers were working at the scene when the second attack came.

It posted a video showing thick smoke, explosions and people rushing to shelter as sirens wailed.

“People are just lying on the street dead,” a volunteer said, filming himself at the scene on his phone.

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‘Victory plan’

Ukraine’s air force said it shot down 69 of 73 Russian drones launched overnight as well as two of the four missiles. City authorities in Kyiv said about 15 drones had been shot down over the Ukrainian capital and its outskirts.

In Russia, the Defence Ministry said Saturday that air defences overnight had shot down four Ukrainian drones over the Belgorod region and one over the Kursk region, both areas bordering Ukraine.

On Thursday, Zelenskyy visited the United States to lobby support for Ukraine, meeting with US President Joe Biden and Democratic Party presidential candidate Kamala Harris to detail what he has described in recent weeks as his “victory plan”.

He had previously described the five-point plan as a “bridge” towards a strong enough negotiating position for Ukraine to force Russia to end the war on Kyiv’s terms.

Before the meeting, Biden announced an additional $8bn in military aid for Ukraine, a package including the provision of Joint Standoff Weapon (JSOW) munitions to “enhance Ukraine’s long-range strike capabilities”.

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