Putin says gunmen in Moscow attack tried to escape to Ukraine, Kyiv denies involvement

Update Putin says gunmen in Moscow attack tried to escape to Ukraine, Kyiv denies involvement
Camouflage-clad gunmen opened fire with automatic weapons at concertgoers near Moscow on Friday, killing at least 60 people and injuring 145. (AFP)
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Updated 23 March 2024
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Putin says gunmen in Moscow attack tried to escape to Ukraine, Kyiv denies involvement

Putin says gunmen in Moscow attack tried to escape to Ukraine, Kyiv denies involvement
  • Daesh claimed responsibility for the attack, deadliest in Russia since Beslan school siege in 2004
  • Authorities detain total of 11 people after the attack, which killed 133

MOSCOW: Russian authorities arrested the four people suspected of taking part in the attack on a suburban Moscow concert hall that killed at least 133 people and believe they were headed to Ukraine, President Vladimir Putin said Saturday during an address to the nation.
Kyiv, meanwhile, strongly denied any involvement in Friday’s attack on the Crocus City Hall music venue in Krasnogorsk, which the Daesh group’s affiliate in Afghanistan claimed responsibility for in a statement posted on social media channels linked to the group. Kyiv accused Putin and other Russian politicians of falsely linking Ukraine to the assault in order to stoke fervor in Russia’s war in Ukraine, which recently entered its third year.
A US intelligence official told The Associated Press that US agencies had confirmed that IS was responsible for the attack.
Putin said authorities have detained a total of 11 people in the attack, which also injured scores of concertgoers and left the venue a smoldering ruin. He called it “a bloody, barbaric terrorist act” and said Russian authorities captured the four suspected gunmen as they were trying to escape to Ukraine through a “window” prepared for them on the Ukrainian side of the border.
Putin also said that additional security measures have been imposed throughout Russia, and he declared Sunday to be a day of mourning.
Investigators on Saturday were combing through the charred wreckage of the hall for more victims, and the authorities said the death toll could still rise. Hundreds of people stood in line in Moscow early Saturday to donate blood and plasma, Russia’s health ministry said.
“We faced not just a thoroughly and cynically prepared terror attack, but a well-prepared and organized mass murder of peaceful innocent people,” Putin said.
The attack, which was the deadliest in Russia in years, came just days after Putin cemented his grip on power in a highly orchestrated electoral landslide and as the war in Ukraine drags on.
Some Russian lawmakers pointed the finger at Ukraine immediately after the attack. But Mykhailo Podolyak, an adviser to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, denied any involvement.
“Ukraine has never resorted to the use of terrorist methods,” he posted on X. “Everything in this war will be decided only on the battlefield.”
Ukraine’s foreign ministry accused Moscow of using the attack to try to stoke fervor for its war efforts.
“We consider such accusations to be a planned provocation by the Kremlin to further fuel anti-Ukrainian hysteria in Russian society, create conditions for increased mobilization of Russian citizens to participate in the criminal aggression against our country and discredit Ukraine in the eyes of the international community,” the ministry said in a statement.
Images shared by Russian state media Saturday showed a fleet of emergency vehicles still gathered outside the ruins of Crocus City Hall, which could hold more than 6,000 people and has hosted many big events, including the 2013 Miss Universe beauty pageant that featured Donald Trump and other VIPs.
Videos posted online showed gunmen in the venue shooting civilians at point-blank range. Russian news reports cited authorities and witnesses as saying the attackers threw explosive devices that started the fire. The roof of the theater, where crowds had gathered for a performance by the Russian rock band Picnic, collapsed early Saturday as firefighters spent hours fighting the blaze.
In a statement posted by its Aamaq news agency, the IS’s Afghanistan affiliate said it had attacked a large gathering of “Christians” in Krasnogorsk.
A US intelligence official told the AP that American intelligence agencies had gathered information in recent weeks that the IS branch was planning an attack in Moscow, and that US officials had privately shared the intelligence earlier this month with Russian officials.
The official was briefed on the matter but was not authorized to publicly discuss the intelligence information and spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity.
Messages of outrage, shock and support for the victims and their families have streamed in from around the world.
On Friday, the UN Security Council condemned “the heinous and cowardly terrorist attack” and underlined the need for the perpetrators to be held accountable. UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres also condemned the terrorist attack “in the strongest possible terms,” his spokesman said.
Putin, who extended his grip on Russia for another six years in this week’s presidential vote after a sweeping crackdown on dissent, had publicly denounced the Western warnings of a potential terrorist attack as an attempt to intimidate Russians. “All that resembles open blackmail and an attempt to frighten and destabilize our society,” he said earlier this week.
In October 2015, a bomb planted by IS downed a Russian passenger plane over Sinai, killing all 224 people on board, most of them Russian vacation-goers returning from Egypt. The group, which operates mainly in Syria and Iraq but also in Afghanistan and Africa, also has claimed several attacks in Russia’s volatile Caucasus and other regions in the past years. It recruited fighters from Russia and other parts of the former Soviet Union.


Trump-Zelensky clash divides US Republicans, dims aid prospects

Trump-Zelensky clash divides US Republicans, dims aid prospects
Updated 12 sec ago
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Trump-Zelensky clash divides US Republicans, dims aid prospects

Trump-Zelensky clash divides US Republicans, dims aid prospects
  • Zelensky was in Washington to sign an agreement to jointly develop Ukraine’s rich natural resources with the United States
  • Zelensky was told to leave and the agreement was left unsigned

WASHINGTON: An angry White House clash between Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and Donald Trump divided the US president’s fellow Republicans and dimmed prospects that Congress will approve any further aid for Kyiv in its war with Russia.
On Saturday, Republican Senator Lisa Murkowski said there were “whispers from the White House that they may try to end all US support for Ukraine... I am sick to my stomach as the administration appears to be walking away from our allies and embracing Putin, a threat to democracy and US values around the world.” Other Republicans who had long supported Ukraine lashed out at Zelensky after Friday’s exchange, in which Trump and Vice President JD Vance berated the Ukrainian leader before the world’s media, accusing him of disrespect.
Senator Lindsey Graham called for Zelensky to change his tune or resign, just hours after attending a friendly meeting between Zelensky and a dozen senators.
“What I saw in the Oval Office was disrespectful, and I don’t know if we can ever do business with Zelensky again,” Graham, a close Trump ally, told reporters as he left the White House after the clash, which drove relations with Kyiv’s most important wartime ally to a new low.
“He either needs to resign and send somebody over that we can do business with, or he needs to change,” the South Carolina senator said.
Senator Bill Hagerty of Tennessee, who was ambassador to Japan during Trump’s first term, posted on X: “The United States of America will no longer be taken for granted.”
But even as most Republicans rallied behind Trump and Vance, some joined Democrats in defending Ukraine.
New York Representative Mike Lawler, in a post on X, called the Oval Office meeting “a missed opportunity for both the United States and Ukraine — an agreement that would undoubtedly result in stronger economic and security cooperation.”
Representative Don Bacon, a moderate Republican from Nebraska, threw his support behind Kyiv.
“A bad day for America’s foreign policy. Ukraine wants independence, free markets and rule of law. It wants to be part of the West. Russia hates us and our Western values. We should be clear that we stand for freedom,” he said in a statement.
Neither of the Republican lawmakers criticized Trump or Vance.

MINERALS DEAL
Zelensky was in Washington to sign an agreement to jointly develop Ukraine’s rich natural resources with the United States.
The Ukrainian leader had seen the meeting with Trump and Vance as an opportunity to persuade the US not to side with Russian President Vladimir Putin in his war with Moscow’s smaller neighbor. Instead, Zelensky was told to leave and the agreement was left unsigned.
Kyiv’s backers had hoped the deal would help win more support from Trump’s Republicans — who hold slim majorities in the Senate and House of Representatives — for future aid.
Congress has approved $175 billion in assistance since Putin launched his full-scale invasion three years ago, but the last measure passed in April, when Democrats controlled the Senate and Democrat Joe Biden was in the White House.
Even then, congressional Republicans slow-walked the bill under pressure from candidate Trump, who has been skeptical of further military aid to Ukraine, leading to delays in delivering weapons that put Ukrainian troops on the back foot in the battlefield.
If Trump, the party leader, had skin in the game and was promoting a “very big” minerals deal he had negotiated, analysts said, it would likely have rallied Republican support for Ukraine aid.
Some Republicans who have advocated for assisting Ukraine said they hoped relations could be rebuilt.
Representative Michael McCaul, chairman emeritus of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said he still hoped for a real and lasting peace that ensures Ukraine would be free from further Russian aggression.
“I also urge President Zelensky to sign the mineral deal immediately,” the Texas lawmaker posted on X. “It will create an economic partnership between the United States and Ukraine. It is in both of our interests to get this deal done.”

 


Lawyers sue to block Trump administration from sending 10 migrants to Guantanamo Bay

Lawyers sue to block Trump administration from sending 10 migrants to Guantanamo Bay
Updated 02 March 2025
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Lawyers sue to block Trump administration from sending 10 migrants to Guantanamo Bay

Lawyers sue to block Trump administration from sending 10 migrants to Guantanamo Bay
  • The migrant detention center at Guantanamo operates separately from the US military’s detention center and courtrooms for foreigners detained under President George W. Bush during what Bush called its war on terror

Civil rights attorneys sued the Trump administration Saturday to prevent it from transferring 10 migrants detained in the US to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, their second legal challenge in less than a month over plans for holding up to 30,000 immigrants there for deportation.
The latest federal lawsuit so far applies only to 10 men facing transfer to the naval base in Cuba. Like a lawsuit the same attorneys filed earlier this month for access to migrants already detained there, the latest case was filed in Washington and is backed by the American Civil Liberties Union.
At least 50 migrants have been transferred already to Guantanamo Bay, and the civil rights attorneys believe the number now may be about 200. They have said it is the first time in US history that the government has detained noncitizens on civil immigration charges there. For decades, the naval base was primarily used to detain foreigners associated with the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.
Trump has said Guantanamo Bay, also known as “Gitmo,” has space for up to 30,000 immigrants living in the US and that he plans to send “the worst” or high-risk “criminal aliens” there. The administration has not released specific information on who is being transferred, so it is not clear what crimes they are accused of committing in the US and whether they have been convicted in court, or merely charged or arrested.
The 10 men involved in the lawsuit came to the US in 2023 or 2024. Seven are from Venezuela, and the lawsuit said two had been tortured by the Venezuelan government for their political views. A man from Afghanistan and one from Pakistan came to the US, the lawsuit said, because of threats from the Taliban. One man fled Bangladesh because he was threatened over his political party membership, the lawsuit said.
“The purpose of this second Guantanamo lawsuit is to prevent more people from being illegally sent to this notorious prison, where the conditions have now been revealed to be inhumane,” said Lee Gelernt, an ACLU attorney and lead counsel on the case. “The lawsuit is not claiming they cannot be detained in US facilities, but only that they cannot be sent to Guantanamo.”
The White House and the Defense and Homeland Security departments did not immediately respond to emails Saturday seeking comment about the lawsuit. The two agencies, Secretaries Pete Hegseth and Kristi Noem, US Immigration and Customs Enforcement and its acting director are the defendants.
In a Jan. 29 executive order expanding operations at Guantanamo Bay, Trump said that one of his goals is to “dismantle criminal cartels.” But the men’s attorneys said none of them have gang affiliations, and the lawsuit said four of them were falsely identified as gang members based on their tattoos, including one of a Catholic rosary.
Transfer to Guantanamo violates constitutional right, attorneys say
Their attorneys described their latest lawsuit as an emergency filing to halt imminent transfers and challenge the Trump administration’s plans. They contend that the transfers violate the men’s right to due legal process, guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment to the US Constitution
The latest lawsuit also argues that federal immigration law bars the transfer of non-Cuban migrants from the US to Guantanamo Bay and that the US government has no authority to hold people outside its territory, and the naval base remains part of Cuba legally. The transfers are also described as arbitrary.
In addition, the lawsuit argues that Guantanamo Bay “does not have the infrastructure” to hold even the 10 men.
“The reason for doing so is solely to try to instill fear in the immigrant population,” the lawsuit said.
The men’s attorneys allege that many of the people who have been sent to Guantanamo Bay do not have serious criminal records or even any criminal history. Their first lawsuit, filed Feb. 12, said migrants sent to the naval base had “effectively disappeared into a black box” and couldn’t contact attorneys or family. The Department of Homeland Security said they could reach attorneys by phone.
In another, separate federal lawsuit filed in New Mexico, a federal judge on Feb. 9 blocked the transfer of three immigrants from Venezuela being held in that state to Guantanamo Bay. Their attorneys said they had been falsely accused of being gang members.
Guantanamo ‘perfect place’ to house migrants, secretary of defense says
The migrant detention center at Guantanamo operates separately from the US military’s detention center and courtrooms for foreigners detained under President George W. Bush during what Bush called its war on terror. It once held nearly 800 people, but the number has dwindled to 15, including 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed.
Hegseth, who was assigned to Guantanamo when he was on active duty, has called it a “perfect place” to house migrants. Trump has described the naval base as “a tough place to get out of.”
A United Nations investigator who visited the military detention center in 2023 said conditions had improved, but military detainees still faced near constant surveillance, forced removal from their cells and unjust use of restraints, resulting in “ongoing cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment under international law.” The US said it disagreed “in significant respects” with her report.


France’s Macron urges calm after Trump and Zelensky clash

France’s Macron urges calm after Trump and Zelensky clash
Updated 01 March 2025
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France’s Macron urges calm after Trump and Zelensky clash

France’s Macron urges calm after Trump and Zelensky clash
  • Macron had also spoken to British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, European Council President Antonio Costa and NATO chief Mark Rutte
  • “I think that beyond the frayed nerves, everybody needs to calm down, show respect and gratitude,” Macron said

PARIS: French President Emmanuel Macron spoke to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and US President Donald Trump on Saturday and called for calm in an interview following Friday’s clash between the US and Ukrainian leaders at the White House.
The French presidency said Macron had also spoken to British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, European Council President Antonio Costa and NATO chief Mark Rutte, on the eve of a meeting of European leaders on Ukraine on Sunday in London.
In an extraordinary Oval Office meeting on Friday, Trump threatened to withdraw support for Ukraine, three years after Russia invaded its smaller neighbor, alarming Europeans who fear a rushed ceasefire would embolden an expansionist Russia.
“I think that beyond the frayed nerves, everybody needs to calm down, show respect and gratitude, so we can move forward concretely, because what’s at stake is too important,” Macron said in an interview with several Sunday newspapers.
Macron and Starmer had taken the lead in Europe to convince Trump not to rush to a ceasefire and to provide security guarantees to Ukraine, presenting him with a plan to deploy peacekeepers in Ukraine during meetings in Washington this week.
Macron said in the interview that Zelensky had told him he was willing to “restore dialogue” with the United States, including on a deal giving US access to revenues from Ukraine’s natural resources, but did not say what Trump told him in the call.
“America’s manifest destiny is to be alongside Ukrainians, I have no doubts about that,” he was quoted as saying by La Tribune Dimanche. “I want the Americans to understand that withdrawing support to Ukraine is not in their interest.”
Macron also said that at a planned European Union summit on March 6 he hoped there would be unanimous support for a joint debt plan at the EU level to raise “several hundred billion euros” for European defense.


At least 23 killed in terror attack in DR Congo

At least 23 killed in terror attack in DR Congo
Updated 01 March 2025
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At least 23 killed in terror attack in DR Congo

At least 23 killed in terror attack in DR Congo
  • The UN agency’s emergencies director, Mike Ryan, said an investigation was underway, but tests had been negative for hemorrhagic fevers such as Marburg and Ebola

BUNIA: At least 23 people were killed and about 20 taken hostage this week in the northeast of the Democratic Republic of the Congo by a group linked to Daesh, local sources said.
The attacks by the Allied Democratic Forces, or ADF, were carried out on Tuesday and Wednesday in the Ituri province along the border with Uganda.
“A total of 23 people executed by these rebels” in the villages of Matolo and Samboko, Jospin Paluku, coordinator of one of the leading civil society organizations in Mambasa territory, said, specifying that the toll is provisional.
At least another 20 civilians were “taken hostage, including the son of the village chief of Matolo,” he added.
Humanitarian groups confirmed the numbers and said they were likely to rise.

FASTFACT

The attacks by the Allied Democratic Forces were carried out in the Ituri province along the border with Uganda.

The victims were mostly farmers working in the fields, police said.
ADF, which is made of former Ugandan rebels, has been implanted since the mid-1990s in the northeast of the DRC, where it has killed thousands of civilians despite the deployment of the Ugandan army alongside the Congolese armed forces.
At the end of 2021, Kampala and Kinshasa launched a joint military operation against the ADF, called “Shujaa,” without so far managing to end their operations.
Paluku said it was the first ADF attack since the start of the year, after a three-month lull.
Meanwhile, the World Health Organization said that poisoning was suspected in an unexplained illness outbreak in the western DR Congo.
The health scare is the latest to befall the country that has seen outbreaks including mpox, as well as deadly violence in its conflict-wracked east.
In the western province of Equateur, there have been nearly 1,100 illnesses and 60 deaths since the start of the year, with symptoms including fever, headaches, joint pain, and body aches, according to the WHO.
The UN agency’s emergencies director, Mike Ryan, said an investigation was underway, but tests had been negative for hemorrhagic fevers such as Marburg and Ebola.
It “appears very much more like a toxic type event, either from a biologic perspective like meningitis or from chemical exposure,” Ryan said.
He said that local authorities had indicated that “there is a very strong level of suspicion of a poisoning event” related to a water source in a village.
“Clearly, at the center of this, it would appear that we have some kind of poisoning event,” he added.

 


Thousands of Namibians bid farewell to founding father Sam Nujoma

Thousands of Namibians bid farewell to founding father Sam Nujoma
Updated 01 March 2025
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Thousands of Namibians bid farewell to founding father Sam Nujoma

Thousands of Namibians bid farewell to founding father Sam Nujoma
  • Nujoma’s black-clad widow did not speak at Saturday’s ceremony, but in a speech read on her behalf the previous day, she described him as “steadfast, resolute, honest, and disciplined”

WINDHOEK: Thousands of Namibians and dignitaries gathered on Saturday to mourn the country’s independence leader, Sam Nujoma, as nearly a month of homage climaxed with a state funeral.

Nujoma, the guerrilla leader who won independence for the desert nation from apartheid South Africa, died on Feb. 9, aged 95.
His casket — draped in the blue, white, red, and green Namibian flag — was pulled in a gun carriage to its final resting place at the Heroes’ Acre, a mountainous memorial for the country’s liberation war dead outside the capital Windhoek.

FASTFACT

Nujoma, the guerrilla leader who won independence for the desert nation from apartheid South Africa, died on Feb. 9, aged 95.

Several African leaders, including South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, Angola’s Joao Lourenco, Emmerson Mnangagwa from Zimbabwe, and foreign officials counting Cuba’s parliamentary speaker Esteban Lazo Hernandez, attended the burial, which was broadcast live on state television.
Namibia’s President Nangolo Mbumba opened the tributes and called Nujoma “the most distinguished son of the soil.”
He was a “giant” among leaders, he said of the man who headed the South West People’s Organization that led the liberation struggle.
“You were the ultimate statesman,” he said, adding: “May your legacy become a source of strength as we continue to uphold your command of maintaining unity of purpose.”
Nujoma’s black-clad widow did not speak at Saturday’s ceremony, but in a speech read on her behalf the previous day, she described him as “steadfast, resolute, honest, and disciplined.”
“When my husband left for exile, my family and I were not spared from the hardships. Yet even in his absence, my husband’s love and strength enveloped us,” she told a memorial service marked by songs and prayer.
A 21-gun salute boomed as the bronze casket inscribed with Namibia’s coat of arms and Nujoma’s name was lowered into the grave in an imposing private mausoleum, as military aircraft conducted a flypast.
Born to poor farmers from the Ovambo ethnic group, Nujoma was the eldest of 10 children.
His first job was as a railway sweeper in 1949, and he attended night classes that spurred his political awakening.
He banded with black workers in Windhoek who resisted a government order to move to a new township in the late 1950s.
Nujoma began a life in exile in 1960, the same year he was elected to head SWAPO, which launched an armed struggle six years after South Africa refused a UN order to give up its mandate over the former German colony.
After independence, Nujoma became president in 1990 and led the country until 2005.
He gave up the reins of SWAPO two years after standing down from the presidency.
Over his three terms, Nujoma presided over a period of relative economic prosperity and political stability.
His policy on AIDS earned some international praise.
The white-bearded liberator came under fire for refusing to rehabilitate several hundred SWAPO fighters who were kept in prison in Angola and accused of being “spies” for South Africa.
Thousands of ordinary Namibians paid their final respects all through last month as his body was transported the entire length of the sparsely populated country before lying in state on Friday.
All flags across the southern African country were to fly at half mast, while sporting events were suspended during the mourning period.
Nujoma’s body was buried near former president Hage Geingob who died in office last year.