World
Zambian killed in Ukraine was prisoner Russia pardoned: Official
International Affairs Minister Stanley Kakubo stated Russia instructed him Lemekhani Nyirenda joined the struggle in Ukraine in trade for amnesty.
Russia had pardoned an imprisoned Zambian scholar so he might be a part of the combat in Ukraine, the place he was killed on the entrance traces, in accordance with the southern African nation’s overseas affairs minister.
Minister Stanley Kakubo stated on Friday that Russia’s International Affairs Minister, Sergey Lavrov, instructed him by phone that Lemekhani Nyirenda was pardoned on August 23 to hitch the navy operation, in trade for an amnesty.
Russia beforehand introduced that 23-year-old Nyirenda had been killed on the battlefield in Ukraine in September, prompting Zambia to ask how he had ended up preventing within the struggle.
“We had been knowledgeable that Russia permits for prisoners to be supplied a possibility for pardon in trade for participation within the particular navy operation,” Kakubo stated.
In line with Zambian authorities, Nyirenda was in Russia learning nuclear engineering on the Moscow Engineering Physics Institute.
He obtained a jail time period in April 2020 of 9 years and 6 months for a drug offence and had been serving his sentence in Moscow when he was “conscripted” to combat, his father stated.
Minister Kakubo stated Nyirenda’s stays had arrived in Moscow on Friday and had been anticipated in Zambia on Sunday.
Russia has additionally knowledgeable Zambia that cash owed to Nyirenda, along with all of the documentation referring to his amnesty, recruitment and loss of life, could be handed to a Zambian consultant who would accompany the physique, the minister stated.
In November, the top of Russia’s Wagner mercenary group, businessman Yevgeny Prigozhin – additionally an in depth ally of President Vladimir Putin – admitted he recruited Nyirenda from jail claiming the Zambian willingly agreed to go and combat towards Ukraine.
Prigozhin stated on the time that Nyirenda died a “hero” and was “one of many first to interrupt into the enemy trenches on September 22”.
Previous to Nyirenda’s loss of life, the federal government had not been conscious that the coed had been recruited, Kakubo stated.
The Wagner group has launched giant recruitment drives in Russian prisons, seeking to ship extra fighters into Ukraine to assist the faltering Russian invasion that started on February 24.
World
TVLine Items: Conan O’Brien Must Go Renewed, Harry Potter Baking Competition and More
ad
World
Chances of Cyprus peace talks restart look dimmer as Turkish Cypriot leader sees no common ground
Chances of restarting formal talks to mend Cyprus’ decades-long ethnic division appeared dimmer Wednesday as the leader of the breakaway Turkish Cypriots told a U.N. envoy that he saw no common ground with Greek Cypriots for a return to negotiations.
Turkish Cypriot leader Ersin Tatar said that he conveyed to the U.N. secretary general’s personal envoy, María Ángela Holguín Cuéllar, that talks can’t happen unless separate Turkish Cypriot sovereignty in the island’s northern third first gains the same international recognition as the Cyprus republic in the Greek Cypriot south.
CYPRUS’ PRESIDENT CALLS ON EU TO TAKE ACTION AGAINST INFLUX OF SYRIAN REFUGEES FROM LEBANON
Tatar was quoted by Turkish Cypriot media as saying that a permanent Turkish military presence coupled with military intervention rights are prerequisites to any peace deal, despite Greek Cypriot attempts to “remove Turkey” from the settlement equation.
Tatar also expressed irritation with Holguín’s contacts with civil society groups that support an accord that would reunify Cyprus as a federation made up of Turkish Cypriot and Greek Cypriot zones, in line with a U.N.-endorsed framework.
The majority of Greek Cypriots reject a deal that would formalize a partition through a two-state deal, the permanent stationing of Turkish troops on the island, the right for Turkey to militarily intervene as well a demand for a Turkish Cypriot veto on all federal-level government decisions.
The Turkish Cypriot leader’s remarks don’t waver from a line that he’s consistently kept since his 2022 rise to power. But the fact that he remains unyielding despite four months of Holguín’s shuttle diplomacy doesn’t bode well for a talks restart.
Holguín was appointed at the start of the year to determine what the chances are of resuming formal talks seven years after the last major push for a deal collapsed amid much acrimony.
An agreement has defied numerous, U.N.-facilitated rounds of talks since 1974 when the island was cleaved along ethnic lines following a Turkish invasion preceded by a coup aimed at uniting the island with Greece. Only Turkey recognizes a Turkish Cypriot declaration of independence, and although Cyprus is a European Union member, only the south enjoys full membership benefits.
Holguín has refrained from speaking at length about her contacts over the last few months, but she noted in an interview with Kathimerini newspaper that it was up to the leaders to “listen to the people” and that she had been surprised at Tatar’s rejection of her proposal for a three-way meeting with Cypriot President Nikos Christodoulides.
Holguín will “soon” prepare a report for U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres about her findings over the last five months, according to U.N. deputy spokesman Farhan Haq.
Christodoulides struck a more upbeat note on Wednesday, saying that efforts for a resumption of talks continue and that time should be given for diplomacy to work.
World
Possible to cooperate with 'some' far-right personalities, says Michel
Michel’s comments at the Copenhagen Democracy Summit on Tuesday put him at odds with his own liberal family, Renew Europe, which is firmly opposed to cooperation with either ECR or ID.
It is possible to cooperate with “some” far-right personalities, says European Council President Charles Michel.
Michel made the comment at the Copenhagen Democracy Summit on Tuesday when he was asked about the upcoming elections to the European Parliament, where hard- and far-right parties are projected to enjoy a significant boost in representation.
“The question in the European Parliament will be: What are the political parties ready to cooperate (with), to collaborate to support Ukraine, to defend the democratic principles and to make the EU stronger?” Michel said on stage.
“If I’m observing the reality of some of those political parties that you qualify as the ‘far right,’ the reality is sometimes a bit more balanced in some of those personalities within those parties – personalities with whom it is possible to cooperate because they can share the same goals, the same views on those topics,” he went on.
“And with some others, in my opinion, it’s not possible to cooperate.”
Michel did not mention any party or personality by name, but his remarks seemed to refer to Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, whose three-party coalition has been described as the most right-wing in the country’s history.
Due to its strident Eurosceptic tone, Meloni’s campaign for Italy’s leadership had sent alarms ringing in Brussels. However, upon coming into office, the premier baffled critics by adopting a more pragmatic approach to EU politics, proving constructive on key issues such as support for Ukraine and migration reform, while remaining opposed to the Green Deal.
Meloni and her allies from the European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) group, including Poland’s Law and Justice (PiS) and Spain’s Vox, are seeking to secure a sizeable share of seats in the next Parliament and further tilt the agenda to the right.
The shift has raised questions over how much the traditional mainstream parties are willing to accommodate, or even align with, the demands from the extreme right. In recent years, the centre-right European People’s Party (EPP) has struck working arrangements with ECR forces in Italy, the Czech Republic, Sweden and Finland.
Last week, Croatian Prime Minister Andrej Plenković, a prominent EPP politician, signed a new deal with the ultra-nationalist Homeland Movement, a party that intends to join the far-right Identify and Democracy (ID) group in the European Parliament.
Plenković’s move revived concerns about the normalisation of the far right, a phenomenon that progressives say threatens European democracy and integration.
Focus on the substance
For Michel, though, what matters is the results.
“What is important, in my opinion, is the policy, is the substance, and what are the decisions we are making,” Michel said in Copenhagen.
“I don’t want to give one concrete example, but I remember that sometimes in the (European) Council when there were elections in one member state, there were some doubts and some worries,” he added, in another apparent reference to Meloni.
“And then we have seen that it was possible to work with the leadership of countries, including when in one coalition you have some political parties more oriented to the right.”
Michel’s comments put him at odds with his own liberal family, Renew Europe, which is firmly opposed to cooperation with either ECR or ID.
Last week, Renew Europe joined the socialists and the greens in a statement condemning growing violence against lawmakers, activists and journalists, which they linked to the rise in support for far-right parties.
“For our political families, there is no ambiguity: We will never cooperate nor form a coalition with the far right and radical parties at any level,” the statement said.
Michel, who will leave office later this year after completing his mandate at the top of the European Council, said he was “confident” that centrist parties would continue to play an “essential role” in the EU’s future.
“I know that this is usual a few weeks before the elections, that we are worried and that we think that the worse will come,” he said.
“I am a bit more calm. I am a bit more serene.”
-
Politics1 week ago
House Dems seeking re-election seemingly reverse course, call on Biden to 'bring order to the southern border'
-
World1 week ago
Stand-in Jose Raul Mulino wins Panama presidential race
-
News1 week ago
Compass Direct LLC’s 2024 Registration in North Carolina
-
News1 week ago
UCLA to resume in-person classes after Gaza protest crackdown
-
World1 week ago
Tech compliance reports, Newsletter
-
News1 week ago
Columbia University cancels its main commencement ceremony after weeks of turmoil
-
News1 week ago
Man, 75, confesses to killing wife in hospital because he couldn’t afford her care, court documents say
-
World1 week ago
Pentagon chief confirms US pause on weapons shipment to Israel