Israel Threatens to Hit ‘S-300’ Even If It Can’t Stop Its Arrival

Russian S-300 anti-missile rocket system move along a central street during a rehearsal for a military parade in Moscow May 4, 2009. REUTERS
Russian S-300 anti-missile rocket system move along a central street during a rehearsal for a military parade in Moscow May 4, 2009. REUTERS
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Israel Threatens to Hit ‘S-300’ Even If It Can’t Stop Its Arrival

Russian S-300 anti-missile rocket system move along a central street during a rehearsal for a military parade in Moscow May 4, 2009. REUTERS
Russian S-300 anti-missile rocket system move along a central street during a rehearsal for a military parade in Moscow May 4, 2009. REUTERS

A senior Israeli official said that Russia’s decision to provide advanced S-300 anti-aircraft missile defense systems to Syria posed a serious challenge for the Jewish state.

According to public broadcaster KAN, Syria has paid Russia a billion dollars for the anti-missile system, which will make it much more difficult for Israel to launch defensive air strikes against Iranian-linked targets in that country, as it has done over the last few years.

The official added that Russia will receive this amount when the missiles are actually transferred to the Syrian regime.

“The S-300 is a complex challenge for the State of Israel. We are dealing with the [decision] in different ways, not necessarily by preventing shipment [of the anti-aircraft system],” the official said.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told CNN that the move was “irresponsible” but said Israel was committed to continued deconfliction with Moscow in its military operations in the region.

Notably, Russian officials withdrew plans to export an S-300PMU1 system to Syria in 2013, heeding a request from the Israeli government.

Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said Moscow had in the past obliged Israel by refraining from providing Syria with the S-300.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, for his part, has confirmed that S-300 surface-to-air missile systems have begun arriving in Syria, adding a new layer of complexity to an already fraught situation in the region.

The decision came less than a week after Syrian gunners using a less capable S-200 SAM battery inadvertently shot down a Russian reconnaissance aircraft while attempting to target Israeli F-16s. All 15 Russian crew members aboard the Il-20 died when the aircraft crashed in the Mediterranean Sea.



Tehran Accuses Paris of 'Interfering' Over Detained Nationals

This handout picture taken in 2019, courtesy of the family and made available on May 3, 2024, shows Cecile Kohler during her 35 years old birthday party. (Photo by HANDOUT / FAMILY HANDOUT / AFP)
This handout picture taken in 2019, courtesy of the family and made available on May 3, 2024, shows Cecile Kohler during her 35 years old birthday party. (Photo by HANDOUT / FAMILY HANDOUT / AFP)
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Tehran Accuses Paris of 'Interfering' Over Detained Nationals

This handout picture taken in 2019, courtesy of the family and made available on May 3, 2024, shows Cecile Kohler during her 35 years old birthday party. (Photo by HANDOUT / FAMILY HANDOUT / AFP)
This handout picture taken in 2019, courtesy of the family and made available on May 3, 2024, shows Cecile Kohler during her 35 years old birthday party. (Photo by HANDOUT / FAMILY HANDOUT / AFP)

Iran condemned as "interfering" Tuesday a French foreign ministry statement accusing it of "state hostage-taking" and "blackmail" in the detention of four French nationals.

"We strongly condemn such unprofessional, interfering and inappropriate positions while resorting to false references," foreign ministry spokesman Nasser Kanani told state news agency IRNA.

"The people mentioned in the statement of the French foreign ministry were arrested based on solid evidence and witnesses, and the French government is well aware of their crimes."

Teacher Cecile Kohler and her partner Jacques Paris were detained in Iran in May 2022. They are accused of seeking to stir up labor unrest, accusations their families vehemently deny.

"France condemns this policy of state hostage-taking and this constant blackmail by the Iranian authorities," the French foreign ministry said in a statement on May 7, calling for the couple's release.

Kanani called on Paris "to avoid resorting to such statements and using words outside of diplomatic decency, which have negative consequences on relations between the two countries."

Kohler and Paris both made televised confessions after their arrest that France described as "forced,” AFP reported.

Two other French citizens are held by Iran -- a man identified only by his first name, Olivier, and Louis Arnaud, a banking consultant who was sentenced to five years in jail on national security charges last year.

The four are among at least a dozen European passport holders in Iranian custody, some of them dual nationals.


Iranian Director 'Secretly' Leaves Iran Ahead of Cannes

FILES) Iranian director Mohammad Rasoulof poses as he arrives on May 27, 2017 for the 'Un Certain Regard' prize ceremony at the 70th edition of the Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, southern France. (Photo by LOIC VENANCE / AFP)
FILES) Iranian director Mohammad Rasoulof poses as he arrives on May 27, 2017 for the 'Un Certain Regard' prize ceremony at the 70th edition of the Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, southern France. (Photo by LOIC VENANCE / AFP)
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Iranian Director 'Secretly' Leaves Iran Ahead of Cannes

FILES) Iranian director Mohammad Rasoulof poses as he arrives on May 27, 2017 for the 'Un Certain Regard' prize ceremony at the 70th edition of the Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, southern France. (Photo by LOIC VENANCE / AFP)
FILES) Iranian director Mohammad Rasoulof poses as he arrives on May 27, 2017 for the 'Un Certain Regard' prize ceremony at the 70th edition of the Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, southern France. (Photo by LOIC VENANCE / AFP)

Iranian film director Mohammad Rasoulof said Monday he had left Iran clandestinely after being sentenced to jail on national security charges, a day ahead of the opening of the Cannes Film Festival where his new film is in the main competition.

"I am grateful to my friends, acquaintances, and people who kindly, selflessly, and sometimes by risking their lives, helped me get out of the border and reach a safe place on the difficult and long path of this journey," Rasoulof, whose film "The Seed of the Sacred Fig" is to premiere at Cannes, wrote on his official Instagram page.

Taking aim at the country’s leaders, Rasoulof said he was joining millions of Iranians across the world in the exile of a "cultural Iran" outside a "geographical Iran" which "suffers under the boots of your religious tyranny."

"They (Iranians in exile) are impatiently waiting to bury you and your system of oppression in the depths of history," he wrote.

Rasoulof was sentenced by an Iranian court to eight years in jail, of which five were due to be served, on charges of "collusion against national security", his lawyer Babak Paknia said last week.

"I can confirm that Mohammad Rasoulof has left Iran and will attend the Cannes festival," Paknia told AFP on Monday.

Rasoulof, 51, was not believed to have been in jail. It is common in Iran for defendants to be outside prison when sentences are handed out and later called to jail to serve their terms.

A statement from his French distributors was more circumspect on his attendance in Cannes, saying Rasoulof was "currently staying in an undisclosed location in Europe, raising the possibility that he might be present at the world premiere of his most recent film."

"We are very happy and much relieved that Mohammad has safely arrived in Europe after a dangerous journey. We hope he will be able to attend the Cannes premiere," Jean-Christophe Simon, CEO of Films Boutique and Parallel45, added in the statement.

Rasoulof, who won the Golden Bear, the Berlin Film Festival's top prize, in 2020 with his anti-capital punishment film "There Is No Evil", had himself been detained in July 2022.

He was released in late 2023 after anti-government protests that began in September 2022 subsided.

The distributors said the identity of cast and crew as well as details of the plot and script of the new film have been kept under wraps "due to concerns about reprisals by the Iranian regime."

Rasoulof said in the statement issued by the distributors that a number of the actors in the new film managed to leave Iran but others remain in the country and subject to lengthy interrogations by the intelligence services aimed at pressuring him to pull the film from Cannes.

The director, whose passport was confiscated in 2017, said he had to choose between prison and leaving Iran.

"With a heavy heart, I chose exile," he said, adding he had left "secretly".


Russia Repels Massive Ukraine Air Attack on Sevastopol, Official Says 

A view shows cars damaged by shelling, what local authorities called a Ukrainian military strike, in the course of the Russia-Ukraine conflict in Belgorod, Russia, May 14, 2024. (Mayor of Belgorod City Valentin Demidov via Telegram/Handout via Reuters)
A view shows cars damaged by shelling, what local authorities called a Ukrainian military strike, in the course of the Russia-Ukraine conflict in Belgorod, Russia, May 14, 2024. (Mayor of Belgorod City Valentin Demidov via Telegram/Handout via Reuters)
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Russia Repels Massive Ukraine Air Attack on Sevastopol, Official Says 

A view shows cars damaged by shelling, what local authorities called a Ukrainian military strike, in the course of the Russia-Ukraine conflict in Belgorod, Russia, May 14, 2024. (Mayor of Belgorod City Valentin Demidov via Telegram/Handout via Reuters)
A view shows cars damaged by shelling, what local authorities called a Ukrainian military strike, in the course of the Russia-Ukraine conflict in Belgorod, Russia, May 14, 2024. (Mayor of Belgorod City Valentin Demidov via Telegram/Handout via Reuters)

Russian air forces repelled a "massive" air attack by Ukraine on Sevastopol, though debris from a missile fell onto a residential area, the Russia-installed governor of the Crimean port, Mikhail Razvozhayev, said on Wednesday.

According to preliminary information, no one was injured, Razvozhayev said on his Telegram messaging channel. He added that "several air objects" were destroyed by Russia's air defense systems over the Black Sea overnight.

The scale of the attack and the extent of the damage were not immediately known. Russia annexed Crimea from Ukraine 10 years ago in a move broadly condemned by Kyiv's Western allies.

Reuters could not independently verify Razvozhayev's reports. There was no immediate comment from Ukraine.

Both Ukraine and Russia say they do not target civilians in the war which erupted when Russia invaded its smaller neighbor in February of 2022, which Moscow has called a "special military operation".

The war has killed thousands, displaced millions and turned Ukrainian cities into rubble.

Kyiv says that targeting Russia's military, transport and energy infrastructure undermines Moscow's war effort and is an answer to the countless deadly attacks by Russia.

Separately, the governor of the Belgorod region in Russia's southwest on the border with Ukraine, said that two people were injured there in a fresh Kyiv attack that also damaged a power line, several houses and cars.

Ukraine's attacks on Belgorod, which lies across from the battered region of Kharkiv where Russian forces are making advances, have increased in recent weeks and according to Russia are more deadly.


US State Dept Moves $1 Bln Weapons Aid for Israel to Congressional Review, Officials Say 

An Israeli military helicopter lands at an area next to the northern border with the Gaza Strip, as seen from the Israeli side of the border, southern Israel, 14 May 2024.  (EPA)
An Israeli military helicopter lands at an area next to the northern border with the Gaza Strip, as seen from the Israeli side of the border, southern Israel, 14 May 2024. (EPA)
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US State Dept Moves $1 Bln Weapons Aid for Israel to Congressional Review, Officials Say 

An Israeli military helicopter lands at an area next to the northern border with the Gaza Strip, as seen from the Israeli side of the border, southern Israel, 14 May 2024.  (EPA)
An Israeli military helicopter lands at an area next to the northern border with the Gaza Strip, as seen from the Israeli side of the border, southern Israel, 14 May 2024. (EPA)

The US State Department has moved a $1 billion package of weapons aid for Israel into the congressional review process, two US officials said on Tuesday.

The latest weapons package includes tank rounds, mortars and armored tactical vehicles, one of the officials told Reuters.

President Joe Biden said last week he had delayed a shipment of 2,000-pound (907-kg) bombs and 1,700 500-pound bombs to Israel over concerns they might be used for a major invasion of Rafah, a town in southern Gaza.

White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan told reporters on Monday that the US would continue to provide the military assistance provided in a $26 billion supplemental funding bill passed last month, but the White House paused the bombs because "we do not believe they should be dropped in densely populated cities."

The chairmen and ranking members of the Senate Foreign Relations and the House Foreign Affairs committees review major foreign weapons deals.

Biden has urged Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu not to invade Rafah without safeguards for civilians, seven months into a war that has devastated Gaza.

Biden's support for Israel in its war against Hamas has emerged as a political liability for the president, particularly among young Democrats, as he runs for re-election this year.


Harvard Students End Protest as University Agrees to Discuss Middle East Conflict

 Tents and signs fill Harvard Yard by the John Harvard statue in the Pro-Palestinian encampment at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on May 5, 2024. (AFP)
Tents and signs fill Harvard Yard by the John Harvard statue in the Pro-Palestinian encampment at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on May 5, 2024. (AFP)
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Harvard Students End Protest as University Agrees to Discuss Middle East Conflict

 Tents and signs fill Harvard Yard by the John Harvard statue in the Pro-Palestinian encampment at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on May 5, 2024. (AFP)
Tents and signs fill Harvard Yard by the John Harvard statue in the Pro-Palestinian encampment at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on May 5, 2024. (AFP)

Protesters against the war between Israel and Hamas were voluntarily taking down their tents in Harvard Yard on Tuesday after university officials agreed to discuss their questions about the endowment, bringing a peaceful end to the kinds of demonstrations that were broken up by police on other campuses.

The student protest group Harvard Out of Occupied Palestine said in a statement that the encampment “outlasted its utility with respect to our demands.” Meanwhile, Harvard University interim President Alan Garber agreed to pursue a meeting between protesters and university officials regarding the students’ questions.

Students at many college campuses this spring set up similar encampments, calling for their schools to cut ties with Israel and businesses that support it.

The latest Israel-Hamas war began when Hamas and other militants stormed into southern Israel on Oct. 7, killing around 1,200 people and taking an additional 250 hostage. Palestinian militants still hold about 100 captives, and Israel's military has killed more than 35,000 people in Gaza, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, which doesn’t distinguish between civilians and combatants.

Harvard said its president and the dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Hopi Hoekstra, will meet with the protesters to discuss the conflict in the Middle East.

The protesters said they worked out an agreement to meet with university officials including the Harvard Management Company, which oversees the world's largest academic endowment, valued at about $50 billion.

The protesters’ statement said the students will set an agenda including discussions on disclosure, divestment, and reinvestment, and the creation of a Center for Palestine Studies. The students also said that Harvard has offered to retract suspensions of more than 20 students and student workers and back down on disciplinary measures faced by 60 more.

“Since its establishment three weeks ago, the encampment has both broadened and deepened Palestine solidarity organizing on campus,” a spokesperson for the protesters said. “It has moved the needle on disclosure and divestment at Harvard."


Ukraine Sees Signs Kharkiv Front Stabilizing, but Warns of Buildup Near Sumy Region

 Emergency workers inspect an apartment building damaged by a Russian air strike, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kharkiv, Ukraine May 14, 2024. (Reuters)
Emergency workers inspect an apartment building damaged by a Russian air strike, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kharkiv, Ukraine May 14, 2024. (Reuters)
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Ukraine Sees Signs Kharkiv Front Stabilizing, but Warns of Buildup Near Sumy Region

 Emergency workers inspect an apartment building damaged by a Russian air strike, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kharkiv, Ukraine May 14, 2024. (Reuters)
Emergency workers inspect an apartment building damaged by a Russian air strike, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kharkiv, Ukraine May 14, 2024. (Reuters)

Ukraine's top military spy said on Tuesday Kyiv's troops appeared close to stabilizing the situation after Russia's ground attack into the Kharkiv region, but warned of a buildup of Russian forces to the north near the Sumy region.

A cross-border attack on a new flank in Sumy region would likely stretch Kyiv's depleted defenders even further after Russia's incursion in the north of Kharkiv region opened a new front on Friday, forcing Ukraine to rush in reinforcements.

Russia has already made inroads into the north of Kharkiv region in two areas and said on Tuesday it had taken a 10th border village, Buhruvatka.

The police chief in Vovchansk, a town 5 km from the border that has been the target of one of the main Russian thrusts, reported exchanges of fire in the north of the town.

Regional governor Oleh Syniehubov said two people had been killed on Tuesday in shelling there. More than 7,500 people from Vovchansk and nearby border areas had been evacuated.

"For five days we never left the house, we didn't see anyone, we were so afraid to go out we never even opened the door," Natalia Yurchenko, who was evacuated from Vovchansk, told Reuters.

Apart from the devastation and the blow to Ukrainian morale in the region, home to Ukraine's second largest city of Kharkiv, the incursion is a distraction for Kyiv's defensive operations in the east where Russia has focused its offensive for months.

Military spy chief Kyrylo Budanov said Moscow had already committed all the troops it had in the border areas for the Kharkiv operation, but that it had other reserve forces that he expected to be used in the coming days.

"As of yesterday evening, a rapid trend towards a stabilization of the situation had emerged - that is, the enemy is, in principle, already blocked at the lines that it was able to reach," he said in televised comments.

Top Ukrainian officials say they do not believe Russia has the troop numbers to capture the city of Kharkiv.

Russia was maintaining the tempo of its attacks in the region, according to data compiled by the Ukrainian General Staff which said there had been 13 Russian assaults so far on Tuesday, compared with 13 on Monday and 22 the day before.

Budanov described the situation as fluid and rapidly changing, saying the "active phase" of the Russian operation was still under way.

TEST OF MANPOWER

Budanov said Russia had small groups of forces in the border areas near Ukraine's Sumy region in the vicinity of the Russian town of Sudzha from where Russian natural gas transits into Ukraine by pipe on its way to European customers.

"As for the Sumy region, the Russians actually planned an operation in the Sumy region from the very beginning... but the situation did not allow them to take active actions and start the operation," he said.

The Russian assault is a test of Ukrainian manpower, which military analysts say is running short and needs to be replenished.

That shortfall is compounded by months of delays in vital US military aid, some of which Secretary of State Antony Blinken said during a trip to Kyiv on Tuesday had finally arrived, with more on the way that would "make a real difference".

Emil Kastehelmi, an open-source intelligence analyst with Black Bird Group, told Reuters the most important battle in the Russian push was taking place in Vovchansk, some 45 kilometers from the city of Kharkiv.

"If Russia wants to go further south, Vovchansk needs to be captured. In this town, Ukraine is putting up a fight, and it seems that stronger Ukrainian defenses are starting to appear around 6-8 km from the border in other places too," he said.

Tamaz Gambarashvili, head of Vovchansk's military administration, said in televised comments that the town was "almost destroyed".

"It's completely under (Kyiv's) control, but there are small groups that try to enter the outskirts of the city, so there is a shooting battle," he said.

Liz Throssell, spokesperson for the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, said her office was "deeply concerned" at the plight of civilians in Kharkiv region where she said at least eight people had been killed and 35 injured since Friday.


World Court to Hold Hearings Over Israel’s Rafah Attacks 

Palestinians who fled Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip carry their belongings from the back of a truck as a man pulls his suitcase upon their arrival to take shelter in Khan Younis on May 12, 2024, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas. (AFP)
Palestinians who fled Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip carry their belongings from the back of a truck as a man pulls his suitcase upon their arrival to take shelter in Khan Younis on May 12, 2024, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas. (AFP)
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World Court to Hold Hearings Over Israel’s Rafah Attacks 

Palestinians who fled Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip carry their belongings from the back of a truck as a man pulls his suitcase upon their arrival to take shelter in Khan Younis on May 12, 2024, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas. (AFP)
Palestinians who fled Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip carry their belongings from the back of a truck as a man pulls his suitcase upon their arrival to take shelter in Khan Younis on May 12, 2024, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas. (AFP)

The UN's International Court of Justice will hold hearings on Thursday and Friday to discuss new emergency measures sought by South Africa over Israel's attacks on Rafah during the war in Gaza, the tribunal said Monday.

The hearings on May 16 and 17 will deal with South Africa's request to the court to order more emergency measures against Israel over its attacks on Rafah, the tribunal added, part of an ongoing case which accuses Israel of acts of genocide against Palestinians.

Israel has previously said it is acting in accordance with international law in Gaza, and has called South Africa's genocide case baseless and accused Pretoria of acting as "the legal arm of Hamas".


Western Fears Arise of Iran’s Access to Nigerien Uranium with Russian Support

Iranian President Ibrahim Raisi receives the Nigerien Prime Minister and his accompanying delegation in January. (Iranian Presidency)
Iranian President Ibrahim Raisi receives the Nigerien Prime Minister and his accompanying delegation in January. (Iranian Presidency)
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Western Fears Arise of Iran’s Access to Nigerien Uranium with Russian Support

Iranian President Ibrahim Raisi receives the Nigerien Prime Minister and his accompanying delegation in January. (Iranian Presidency)
Iranian President Ibrahim Raisi receives the Nigerien Prime Minister and his accompanying delegation in January. (Iranian Presidency)

New information circulated about Iran’s endeavor to reach a deal with Niger, under which it would buy at least 300 tons of the so-called “yellowcake uranium” through Russian mediation.
Niger has the biggest uranium reserve in Africa and the third largest in the world. Until 2021, the country was the first source of uranium imports to Europe, but in 2022, it lost this position to Kazakhstan, which has a 26.8 percent share, followed by Niger (25.3 percent), then Canada (22 percent), and finally Russia (16.8 percent).
The exploitation of Nigerien uranium is managed by French company Orano, which is controlled by the French state. Other companies operate in the same sector, such as the Chinese CNNC and the South Korean KEPCO, in addition to the Nigerien National Company.
French newspaper Le Monde quoted Emmanuel Gregoire, from the Institute for Development Research, as saying that the uranium mining sector has not seen profound changes despite the numerous coups d’état that the country has witnessed since its independence.
In news recently published by the Africa Intelligence website, which specializes in African affairs, it was reported that the Nigerien authorities are “secretly negotiating” with Iran to sell it 300 tons of “concentrated” uranium. The news was confirmed by Le Monde in its issue of May 10.
According to the French newspaper, US intelligence revealed, at the beginning of 2024, secret talks for a deal worth $56 million. But on April 16, the Nigerien Military Council denied the US “fake news” that spoke of “signing a secret agreement on a uranium deal with Tehran.”
Senior Nigerien officials visited Moscow and Tehran last year, to enhance bilateral military cooperation. Le Monde quoted official Western sources as saying that Russia has facilitated the “nuclear” rapprochement between Tehran and Niamey, undoubtedly due to agreements concluded between Iran and Russia to support the Russian war in Ukraine.

 

 

 


Malaysia PM Says No Evidence of Ship-to-Ship Transfer of Iranian Oil off Malaysia 

Malaysia's Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim speaks at the Qatar Economic Forum in Doha on May 14, 2024. (AFP)
Malaysia's Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim speaks at the Qatar Economic Forum in Doha on May 14, 2024. (AFP)
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Malaysia PM Says No Evidence of Ship-to-Ship Transfer of Iranian Oil off Malaysia 

Malaysia's Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim speaks at the Qatar Economic Forum in Doha on May 14, 2024. (AFP)
Malaysia's Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim speaks at the Qatar Economic Forum in Doha on May 14, 2024. (AFP)

Malaysia Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said on Tuesday there was "not one shred of evidence" of ship-to-ship transfers of sanctioned Iranian oil off Malaysia, amid US concern that Iran was using Malaysian service providers to move its oil.

A senior US Treasury official said last week the United States saw Iran's capacity to move its oil as being reliant on providers in Malaysia.

That official also said the United States was trying to prevent Malaysia from becoming a jurisdiction where the Palestinian group Hamas could both fundraise and then move money.

Speaking at an economic forum in Qatar, Anwar said Malaysia does not have the capacity to monitor ship-to-ship transfers in international waters.

Malaysia has long been a vocal supporter of the Palestinian cause and has advocated for a two-state solution to the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians.

Anwar during his trip met Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Qatar.

Anwar said that while he maintains good relations with the political wing of Hamas, he had no involvement with its military operations.

"I have no involvement or discussions with the military apparatus (of Hamas)," he said at the forum.


Migration Tracking Group: 76 Million People Were Displaced Within their Countries in 2023

Internally displaced women wait in a queue to collect aid from a group at a camp in Gadaref on May 12, 2024. (Photo by AFP)
Internally displaced women wait in a queue to collect aid from a group at a camp in Gadaref on May 12, 2024. (Photo by AFP)
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Migration Tracking Group: 76 Million People Were Displaced Within their Countries in 2023

Internally displaced women wait in a queue to collect aid from a group at a camp in Gadaref on May 12, 2024. (Photo by AFP)
Internally displaced women wait in a queue to collect aid from a group at a camp in Gadaref on May 12, 2024. (Photo by AFP)

Conflicts and natural disasters left a record nearly 76 million people displaced within their countries last year, with violence in Sudan, Congo and the Middle East driving two-thirds of new movement, a top migration monitoring group said Tuesday.
The Internal Displacement Monitoring Center report found that the number of internally displaced people, or IDPs, has jumped by 50% over the past five years and roughly doubled in the past decade. It doesn't cover refugees — displaced people who fled to another country.
The report tracks two major sets of information. According to The Associated Press, it counted 46.9 million physical movements of people in 2023 — sometimes more than once. In most of those cases, such as after natural disasters like floods, people eventually return home.
It also compiles the cumulative number of people who were living away from their homes in 2023, including those still displaced from previous years. Some 75.9 million people were living in internal displacement at the end of last year, the report said, with half of those in sub-Saharan African countries.
Almost 90% of the total displacement was attributed to conflict and violence, while some 10% stemmed from the impact of natural disasters.
The displacement of more than 9 million people in Sudan at the end of 2023 was a record for a single country since the center started tracking such figures 16 years ago.
That was an increase of nearly 6 million from the end of 2022. Sudan’s conflict erupted in April 2023 as soaring tensions between the leaders of the military and the rival Rapid Support Forces broke out into open fighting across the country.
The group reported a total of 3.4 million movements within Gaza in the last quarter of 2023 amid the Israeli military response to the Oct. 7 attacks in Israel. That means that many people moved more than once within the territory of some 2.2 million. At the end of the year, 1.7 million people were displaced in Gaza.
Group director Alexandra Bilak said the millions of people forced to flee in 2023 were the “tip of the iceberg,” on top of tens of millions displaced from earlier and continuing conflicts, violence and disasters.
The figures offer a different window into the impact of conflict, climate change and other factors on human movement. The UN refugee agency monitors displacement across borders but not within countries, while the UN migration agency tracks all movements of people, including for economic or lifestyle reasons.