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Lavrov hails Moscow-Beijing ties, accuses US of provocations

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Lavrov hails Moscow-Beijing ties, accuses US of provocations

Russia’s prime diplomat says the West is trying to find methods to anger China on a bunch of points, together with Taiwan and Tibet.

Russian International Minister Sergey Lavrov has hailed joint navy drills between Moscow and Beijing as a transfer that strengthens the pair’s new strategic partnership.

Addressing reporters in Moscow on Wednesday, Lavrov additionally accused the West of trying to find methods to anger China on a bunch of points, such because the standing of Tibet and Taiwan.

He stated China was too highly effective for the US to face towards by itself, so Washington was being pressured to “mobilise” the West to assist its anti-Beijing agenda.

Because the struggle in Ukraine rages, China and Russia have put apart many years of mutual mistrust and stepped up navy workouts to align their international insurance policies.

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They signed a “no limits” partnership final February, days earlier than Moscow despatched its armed forces into Ukraine and their financial hyperlinks have boomed as Russia’s connections with the West have shrivelled.

Nevertheless, Beijing is treading rigorously.

President Vladimir Putin has publicly acknowledged that his Chinese language counterpart, Xi Jinping, has “considerations” over Russia’s actions in Ukraine.

Lavrov warned that Russia’s showdown with the West over Ukraine was a part of a worldwide coverage shift that can evolve over a protracted interval.

“The method of forming a multipolar world order will likely be lengthy; it’s going to take an epoch,” he stated. “And we’re in the course of that course of now.”

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He cited Western efforts to hamper the widening cooperation between Russia and China, sustaining they’d not succeed.

Russia’s relations with the West “won’t ever be the identical”, he stated, as he accused the West of failing to look at signed agreements with Moscow.

“By no means once more there will likely be a scenario whenever you lie, signal paperwork after which refuse to fulfil them,” he stated.

Final month, the Chinese language and Russian navies held joint drills within the East China Sea.

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In keeping with China’s Japanese Theater Command of the Folks’s Liberation Military, the workouts had been designed to display “the dedication and functionality of the 2 sides to collectively reply to maritime safety threats”.

In the meantime, Russia and China are additionally stated to be “sharing a toolkit” of approaches and methods to undermine NATO, based on Julianne Smith, US ambassador to NATO.

“These two are more and more sharing a toolkit that ought to concern the NATO alliance, Smith informed the Monetary Instances in an article revealed in December.

“There’s simply no query that the [People’s Republic of China] and Russia are each working to divide … the transatlantic companions. And we are actually very conscious, all of us have a deeper appreciation of these efforts and are intent on addressing them,” Smith stated in an interview.

NATO in June listed China amongst its strategic challenges for the primary time, saying Beijing’s ambitions and “coercive insurance policies” undermined the Western navy bloc’s “pursuits, safety and values”.

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Lavrov compares West’s method to Hitler’s ‘ultimate answer’

Elsewhere in his speech on Wednesday, Lavrov stated the US had assembled a coalition of European international locations to resolve “the Russian query” utilizing Ukraine as a proxy, in the identical manner Adolf Hitler had sought a “ultimate answer” to eradicate Europe’s Jews.

“Simply as Hitler wished a ‘ultimate answer’ to the Jewish query, now, for those who learn Western politicians … they clearly say Russia should undergo a strategic defeat,” he stated.

Al Jazeera’s Ali Hashem, reporting from Moscow, stated Lavrov’s information convention was an try and contextualise the struggle into the “Russian-Western confrontation”.

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Analysis-Apple Set for Music, TV Streaming Fight in India After Airtel Deal

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Analysis-Apple Set for Music, TV Streaming Fight in India After Airtel Deal
By Munsif Vengattil and Aditya Kalra NEW DELHI (Reuters) – Apple’s partnership with India’s second-biggest telecoms firm will give the iPhone maker a sorely needed boost in a content market where it lags far behind the likes of Spotify and Walt Disney. The U.S. technology giant, working to boost …
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Trudeau called out by steelworker who refuses to shake his hand during blunt exchange: 'Don't believe you'

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Trudeau called out by steelworker who refuses to shake his hand during blunt exchange: 'Don't believe you'

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau got an earful during a photo op from a cash-strapped steelworker who told the leader his policies have left his family scratching to make ends meet.

Footage of the tense exchange in Sault Ste. Marie, a city in Ontario, which was obtained by CTV News, went viral. The unidentified worker spurned Trudeau’s offer of doughnuts to complain about high taxes, medical bills and giveaways to people he deemed “lazy.”

“The 25% tariffs we just brought in is going to help you out … that’s going to keep your job,” Trudeau told the man.

“What about the 40% taxes I am paying? And I don’t have a doctor,” the employee of Algoma Steel shot back.

CANADA MOVES TO LIMIT IMMIGRATION AMID STRAINED RELATIONS WITH US

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Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau (Spencer Colby/The Canadian Press via AP)

Trudeau responded by saying that a multimillion-dollar investment from the Canadian government meant the man would have a job “for many years to come.” The man responded by saying that he expected Trudeau to be voted out.

“That’s what elections are for,” said the Liberal Party leader, who stayed calm and collected during the exchange. “I look forward to everyone exercising the right to vote. … We are going to invest in you and your job.”

“I don’t believe you for a second,” the steelworker shot back.

The man also mentioned that he felt unemployed Canadians got better access to affordable health care than he did after Trudeau referenced an initiative to help hundreds of thousands of Canadians get dental care.

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CANADA’S TRUDEAU TO REMAIN IN OFFICE DESPITE LOSS OF KEY SEAT IN SPECIAL ELECTION 

Justin Trudeau speaking at an event

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau (Arlyn McAdorey/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

“Probably like my neighbor who doesn’t go to work because she’s lazy?” the steelworker asked.

“You know what? Most Canadians try to stick up for each other, and that’s what we’ve got to keep doing,” Trudeau responded before wishing the man good luck. At the end, the laborer appeared to refuse a handshake from Trudeau.

The next federal election in Canada is set to take place on Oct. 20, 2025. Trudeau’s government has been scrutinized amid a cost-of-living crisis affecting the country, though Trudeau has remained optimistic.

“Inflation came down last month, beating out expectations,” the prime minister wrote in a Facebook post on July 17. “But, until Canadians can feel that relief in their wallets, at the grocery store, and on their mortgages, the job’s not done.”

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Trudeau during bilateral meeting with Zelenskyy

Justin Trudeau, Canada’s prime minister, center, is shown during a meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, not pictured, on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, Ontario, on Sept. 22, 2023. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Fox News Digital reached out to Trudeau’s office for comment.

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Taiwan court orders release of ex-Taipei mayor arrested in corruption probe

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Taiwan court orders release of ex-Taipei mayor arrested in corruption probe

Taiwan People’s Party leader Ko Wen-je freed after court finds insufficient evidence to justify his detention.

A court in Taiwan has ordered the release of a former mayor and presidential candidate who was arrested over his alleged role in a corruption scandal, citing insufficient evidence for his detention.

Taipei District Court on Monday ruled that Ko Wen-je, a former mayor of Taipei and the leader of the Taiwan People’s Party (TPP), should go free after finding that prosecutors had failed to make the case for his detention.

The court said prosecutors had not met the standard of there being a “high possibility” Ko had committed a crime.

“It cannot be concluded that the defendant… knowingly violated the law,” the court said in its ruling.

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Ko was arrested on Saturday as part of a probe into alleged corruption in the redevelopment of the Core Pacific City shopping centre in the Taiwanese capital.

Ko, who came third in January’s presidential election, told reporters outside court that there was “no evidence” of his involvement in the real estate scandal.

A surgeon by training, Ko entered politics in 2014 when he successfully ran for the mayorship of Taipei as an independent candidate.

Re-elected as mayor of Taipei in 2018, he founded the TPP the following year as a third force to challenge the dominance of the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) and China-leaning Kuomintang (KMT).

Under the TPP banner, Ko received about one-quarter of the vote in the last presidential election, which was won by the DPP’s William Lai Ching-te.

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While the TPP has only eight legislators in Taiwan’s 113-seat parliament, the party has gained outsized influence as both the DPP and KMT lack a ruling majority.

Ko, who draws much of his support from young people, is widely seen as a contender for the next election in 2028, although his popularity has been dented by a separate campaign funds scandal.

On Thursday, Ko said he would take a three-month leave of absence from the TPP leadership to take responsibility for the misreporting of campaign money and the use of election subsidies to set up a personal office space.

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