UN slams Ukrainian deadly attack on Belgorod as unacceptable

Khaled Khiari, Assistant Secretary-General in the UN Department of Political and Peacebuilding Affairs (UN DPPA) called for an end to such attacks against civilians after 21 people, including two children, were killed in the attack on Saturday.

“Attacks against civilians and civilian infrastructure violate international humanitarian law, are unacceptable, and must end now,” Khiari said as he briefed the Security Council at an emergency meeting convened on Saturday afternoon.

According to Khiari “the strikes were reported as among the deadliest cross-border attacks” on Russia since Moscow began its special military operation against Ukraine in February 2022.

Russia had called for the emergency meeting following the attacks on Belgorod, which is home to more than 300,000 residents.

Russia’s permanent ambassador to the UN Vasily Nebenzya also slammed Ukraine for using internationally banned cluster munitions, and Czech-produced Vampir missiles in a “deliberate act of terrorism” that targeted civilians in Belgorod.

He urged Czechia and other Western States to account for where their assistance is going.

“There’s no use pretending,” he said. “The European Union countries are complicit in the crimes committed by the gang in Kyiv.”

Nebenzya said US and UK “consultants” helped to plan the strikes on Belgorod and warned that “organizers and perpetrators” of the attack “will be punished.”

‘London behind Kiev’s terrorist act’

The Russian Foreign Ministry’s spokeswoman, Maria Zakharova blamed the UK, the US, and their European allies for the large-scale attack by Kiev’s forces.

“Britain is behind the terrorist act,” Zakharova said in an audio statement, adding that London, together with Washington “have been instigating the Kyiv regime” to commit terrorist acts amid the failed summer counteroffensive.

“Amid the lack of even the smallest chances to improve the Ukrainian Armed Forces’ miserable situation on the ground, [Washington and London] resorted to the tactics of terrorist attacks against civilians,” Zakharova said.

Zakharova recalled that the UK had virtually prohibited Kyiv from holding talks with Moscow, focusing on a “battlefield victory” instead.

She referred to an earlier interview by a Ukrainian senior legislator, David Arakhamia.

The politician, who heads President Vladimir Zelensky’s Servant of the People party in parliament and led the Ukrainian delegation at the Istanbul talks, had told the Ukrainian TV channel 1+1 that the conflict could have ended in spring 2022.

Moscow, at that time, had offered to hold peace with Kyiv in exchange for neutrality and a promise not to join NATO, he said in late November.

However, according to Arakhamia the then-British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who visited Kyiv in early April, told Ukrainian officials not to “sign anything” with the Russians and to “just continue fighting” instead.

The Saturday attacks came after Russia launched fresh airstrikes against Ukraine, targeting the Ukrainian military facilities in the south, west, and east of the country, with heavy damage reported at multiple sites.

Fighting along the frontline in Eastern Ukraine is largely bogged down by the strong defense lines and winter weather after Kyiv’s much-hyped summer counteroffensive failed to advance in any direction along the roughly 1,000 km frontier between the two countries.

MNA/Press TV

UN agency warns of infectious disease spread in Gaza

The spread of diseases in Gaza has intensified, especially due to the recent mass displacement throughout southern Gaza and the need for some families to move several times, Xinhua reported citing the OCHA statement on Saturday.

The agency added that this situation increases pressure on the already overwhelmed Palestinian health system, which is struggling to meet the enormous needs of the population at a time when the majority of hospitals across the strip are out of service.

It explained that nearly 180,000 people suffer from upper respiratory infections, while there are 136,400 cases of diarrhea, with half of them reported among children under the age of five.

Meanwhile, 55,400 people have had scabies, 5,330 have chickenpox, 42,700 suffer from skin rashes, and 126 suffer from meningitis.

The statement pointed out that 1.9 million people in Gaza, or approximately 85 percent of the whole population, have become internally displaced, including those who are forced to move frequently to seek refuge.

It added that the lack of food and survival items and poor hygiene exacerbate the already difficult living conditions of the displaced and prompt the spread of diseases.

The World Food Program warned a few days ago that the Palestinian enclave is facing the fifth stage of acute food insecurity and that the risk of famine is increasing daily amid intensified conflict and restricted humanitarian access.

Israel waged the brutal war on Gaza on October 7 after the Palestinian resistance movement Hamas carried out a historic operation against the occupying entity in response to the Israeli regime’s decades-long violence against Palestinians.

Since the start of the aggression, the Tel Aviv regime has killed at least 21,500 Palestinians, mostly women and children, and injured 55,600 others.

The Tel Aviv regime has imposed a “complete siege” on the territory, cutting off fuel, electricity, food, and water to the more than two million Palestinians living there. 

AMK/PR

Teachers of Murdered Indian-Origin Teen Express Grief, Say She Was 'Brilliant', 'Amazing Singer'

Teachers of Murdered Indian-Origin Teen Express Grief, Say She Was 'Brilliant', 'Amazing Singer'

Arianna Kamal’s classmates and teachers remember her as a brilliant student

New Delhi:

Teachers and classmates of an 18-year-old Indian-origin teen who was found dead along with her parents in Massachusetts remember her as a brilliant student and an amazing singer.

The teen Arianna Kamal, and her parents Rakesh Kamal and Teena Kamal were found dead in their $5 million Dover mansion in an apparent domestic violence incident.

Dover is 32 km from downtown Boston, the capital of the US state of Massachusetts.

Arianna was a student of Middlebury College. The college in a statement said she was participating in a first-year seminar, Mindfulness in Education, taught by Melissa Hammerle, the visiting assistant professor of education studies.

Arianna was also involved in an organisation for students with an interest in foraging, and with the Women in Computer Science student organisation, the college said.

“She loved singing and was interested in going to Italy with the college opera group,” Ms Melissa, who taught the Indian-origin teen, said in the statement.

“Aria was beloved by the college choir,” added music teacher Jeffrey Buettner. “She loved singing together, and her choir community was deeply meaningful to her in her first semester.”

The college said once it returns from the break, it will work with Aria’s friends and possibly with her extended family to plan an appropriate remembrance.

“We know that this news will be difficult for those who knew Aria, those with experiences of domestic violence, those grieving other losses, and for our whole community, especially as most of us are apart from our Middlebury campus community during winter break,” the college said.

Arianna had graduated from the prestigious Milton Academy this summer. The school in a statement said she “was a sweet, smart, kind young woman who was just beginning to realize her full potential.”

Her mother, Teena, was involved in the school as well.

“Milton Academy is heartbroken to learn of the death of Arianna Kamal, a recent graduate of the class of 2023, as well as the deaths of her parents, Rakesh Kamal and Teena Kamal. Our thoughts are with all members of the Kamal family, their friends and our entire school community,” the full statement said.

Teena and her husband, who also went by Rick, had previously run a now-defunct education systems company called EduNova.

The Kamals had purchased the 19,000-square-foot estate – which boasts 11 bedrooms – for $4 million in 2019, according to media reports. The family members were the only ones living in the mansion at the time in the area, one of the richest in the state.

Their company was launched in 2016 but was dissolved in December 2021, state records show. Teena was listed on EduNova’s website as the chief operating officer of the company, describing her as an alum of Harvard University and Delhi University.

OIC welcomes South Africa’s filing of genocide case against Israel at ICJ

The Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) has welcomed South Africa’s decision to file a lawsuit against Israel at the International Court of Justice (ICJ), after nearly three months of Israeli aggression against Palestinians in Gaza.

The OIC in a statement on Saturday called on the ICJ to respond swiftly and take urgent measures to put an end to the genocide committed by Israel in the besieged Palestinian territory, the Qatar News Agency (QNA) reported.

“The OIC stressed that Israel, the occupying power, is committing genocide by its indiscriminate targeting of [the] civilian population, killing and injuring tens of thousands of Palestinians, forcibly displacing them, preventing them from obtaining basic needs and humanitarian aid and destroying buildings, and health, educational and religious institutions,” the statement read.

South Africa filed a lawsuit on Friday that says Israel’s actions are “genocidal in character because they are intended to bring about the destruction of a substantial part of the Palestinian national, racial and ethnical group.”

The application said Israeli attacks breach the UN’s Genocide Convention, urging the ICJ to “order Israel to cease killing and causing serious mental and bodily harm to Palestinian people in Gaza.”

It further said that “Israel has engaged in, is engaging in and risks further engaging in genocidal acts against the Palestinian people in Gaza.”

“We want to see an end to the conflict through peaceful means,” Lindiwe Zulu, South Africa’s minister of social development, told Al Jazeera about why Pretoria has filed the lawsuit.

“We believe that this is the right time – for us both as the African National Congress and our government – to step up to the next level in finding a solution,” she added.

Moreover, the Palestinian Hamas resistance movement praised South Africa’s action and described it as “a significant step to punish the leaders of the Zionist entity and present-day criminals, who have committed the most heinous murders in modern history.”

Hamas called upon the entire world to adopt a similar measure against the Israeli regime both at national and international courts of law.

“The regime threatens international peace and security, and must not be allowed to escape punishment for the brutal crimes it has perpetrated against children and defenseless civilians in Gaza,” it added.

South Africa has been one of the outspoken critics of Israeli’s ongoing onslaught against Palestinians and has led some initiatives to hold Israel accountable for its actions in Gaza.

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa has compared Israel’s policies in Gaza and the occupied West Bank with his country’s past apartheid system, which saw the minority white population rule the majority black nation using a system based on segregation as its base. The white-minority rule ended in 1994.

The country’s lawmakers last month voted in favor of closing down the Israeli embassy in Pretoria and suspending all diplomatic relations until the onslaught stops. 

Since the start of the aggression, Israel has killed more than 21,600 Palestinians, mostly women and children. It has also imposed a complete siege on the territory, cutting off fuel, electricity, food and water to the more than two million Palestinians living there.

Dalit Teen Pushed Into Hot Oil Cauldron For Protesting Sexual Harassment

Dalit Teen Pushed Into Hot Oil Cauldron For Protesting Sexual Harassment

The three accused have been arrested, police said. (Representational)

New Delhi:

In an incident shocking in its brutality, an 18-year-old Dalit woman working at an oil mill was pushed into a cauldron with hot oil when she protested sexual harassment. The incident, which took place at Baghpat in Uttar Pradesh, has left the teenager with serious burns. She has been moved to Delhi for treatment.

The three accused, including the mill owner, have been arrested.

A complaint filed by the woman’s brother yesterday says members of his family worked at an oil mill at Dhanaura Silvernagar village. His sister was working at the mill when the accused — mill owner Pramod and associates Raju and Sandip — started harassing her. When she protested, the accused allegedly hurled casteist abuses. They then pushed her into the cauldron full of hot oil, her brother has said.

In a statement recorded from her bed at a Delhi hospital, the 18-year-old said the accused misbehaved with her and verbally abused her before pushing her into the cauldron.

The woman has suffered burns on more than half of her body, with her legs and arms seriously scalded.

Based on her brother’s complaint, the police registered a case under sections relating to attempt to murder, assaulting a woman and under the SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act. “We have arrested the three accused and further action is being taken,” Circle Officer Vijay Chaudhary said.

Iran’s ties with Kazakhstan important: Amir-Abdollahian

Amir-Abdollahian met on Saturday with Gholamreza Hashemi, the new Iranian consul general to Kazakhstan’s city of Aktau.

The meeting took place in Tehran before Hashemi headed for Aktau to begin his diplomatic mission there.

Iran’s ties with Kazakhstan important: Amir-Abdollahian

Also on Saturday, the top diplomat met with Iran’s Ambassador to Tajikistan Alireza Haghighian.

The ambassador briefed the foreign minister on the growing cooperation between the two countries as well as results of the 16th meeting of Iran-Tajikistan Joint Economic Commission that was held recently.

Amir-Abdollahian said that Tajikistan has an important position in the Islamic Republic’s foreign policy as a friendly country that shares the same language and culture with Iran, stressing the need for further boosting bilateral relations.   

RHM/IRN

Thousands of settlers hold anti-Netanyahu protest rallies

According to the Sama news agency, Israeli settlers showed their resentment against the regime’s strategies and the officials’ ignorance when it comes to the lives of Israeli captives in the Gaza Strip.

The protesters called for the return of the Israeli captives, while numerous Hamas authorities announced they would not negotiate the freedom of the captives until the complete cessation of hostility.

The Palestinian resistance movement also underlined that officials of the Israeli regime would not be able to pave the way for freeing their captives without releasing Palestinian prisoners and merely by resorting to negotiations.

The Israeli regime, which commenced the aggression against Palestinians in Gaza in order to eliminate resistance groups and liberate its captives, failed to reach these objectives; thus, it pursued negotiations; however, the Israeli officials’ excessive demands led to the failure of the talks and Israelis resumed their genocidal war on the besieged territory.

RHM/IRN

Mumbai Bomb Threat A Hoax, Caller Is Mentally Ill, Say Cops

Mumbai Bomb Threat A Hoax, Caller Is Mentally Ill, Say Cops

The caller claimed that there was going to be a bomb blast in Mumbai. (Representational)

Mumbai:

A 32-year-old man suffering from a mental ailment allegedly made a hoax call to the Maharashtra police’s control room about a bomb in Mumbai, police said on Sunday.

The police traced the man to Amravati, but no arrest was made as he was found to be mentally unstable, an official from Amravati police said.

The man, who lives in the Raja Peth police station limits, called the 112 emergency helpline number of the state police on Saturday evening, he said.

The caller claimed that there was going to be a bomb blast in Mumbai and disconnected the call, the official said.

Investigations revealed that the call was made from a mobile phone and its location was traced immediately, he said.

The man is mentally unstable and is undergoing psychiatric treatment, the official said.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

Israeli protesters call for Netanyahu’s ousting amid failure in Gaza war

Thousands of Israelis have held protests, calling on prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu to resign over his handling of the ongoing war on the Gaza Strip and failure to secure the release of the remaining captives held in the Palestinian territory.

The anti-regime demonstrations took place on Saturday night outside the Israeli military’s headquarters in Tel Aviv and Netanyahu’s private residence in Caesarea.

The protesters demanded immediate elections and a deal with the Palestinian Hamas resistance movement to release all the Israeli captives.

They carried banners reading, “Elections now,” “A diplomatic agreement,” “The cry of mothers: Get our soldiers out of Gaza now” and “Israel will not survive if we don’t bring him (Netanyahu) down.”

Israel waged the genocidal war on Gaza on October 7 after Hamas carried out Operation Al-Aqsa Storm against the usurping entity in retaliation for its intensified atrocities against the Palestinian people.

However, almost three months into the offensive, the Tel Aviv regime has failed to achieve its objectives of “destroying Hamas” and finding Israeli captives despite killing 21,672 Palestinians, mostly women and children, and injuring 56,165 others.

A week-long humanitarian ceasefire in late November saw an exchange between 240 Palestinian abductees held by Israel and 105 captives, including 81 Israelis and 24 foreigners, in Gaza.

Israel believes about 129 captives are still being held in Gaza, while there are thought to be 7,000 Palestinians in Israeli prisons, many detained without charge.

Speaking at a press briefing Saturday evening, Netanyahu said there was possible “movement” toward a new agreement for the release of the remaining captives, stressing, however, that he does not “want to raise exaggerated expectations.”

He also noted that the onslaught on Gaza will last “many months” and that the military needed time to “achieve its goals.”

Netanyahu fueling conflict with ‘poison machine’

Speaking at the Tel Aviv protest, Major General (reserve) Guy Zur said Netanyahu had “sacrificed” Israelis for his “political needs and love of power” and thus he “is not suited to lead us to victory.”

“Netanyahu and his people are unethical, have no authority or capability, and even now during the war they continue to fuel conflict with their ‘poison machine,’” Zur added.

Israel ‘lost war on October 7’

Another protester, Rotem Telem, said she participated at the rally out of a sense of “despair and fear” over the current situation.

“People on both sides are dying for no purpose. I’m afraid they’re telling us we’re winning a war which we lost on October 7,” she emphasized.

“We can’t win this war. You can’t change paradigms with war. Children dying is not a policy.”

She also said that Netanyahu “can’t make decisions based on the good of” Israel as his “narrow interest is personal survival.”

Israeli regime prioritized own ‘political ambitions’

Demonstrator Molly Manekar said that the Israeli regime has prioritized its “political ambitions” and that the issue of captives is not on its top priorities.

In order to release Israeli captives, she added, “a ceasefire must be taking place. There’s no other way.”

In Caesarea, protesters chanted for Netanyahu to “be removed now” and held signs with a bloody handprint and the word “Guilty.”