All Rescued Tunnel Workers Normal, Can Go Home: AIIMS-Rishikesh

All Rescued Tunnel Workers Normal, Can Go Home: AIIMS-Rishikesh

The workers were rescued from the collapsed tunnel in Uttarkashi on Tuesday night (File)

Rishikesh:

The AIIMS-Rishikesh on Thursday declared all 41 workers who were evacuated from Silkyara tunnel after a 17-day ordeal fit to return home.

Briefing the media here on their health condition, Dr Ravikant, head of general medicine department, said the workers were thoroughly examined and their blood test, X-ray and ECG reports were normal.

“They are physically normal and clinically stable. We have given them clearance to return home,” he said.

However, Dr Ravikant said one of the workers from Uttarakhand stayed back at the facility for the treatment of a congenital medical condition.

A worker from Uttarakhand has been incidentally diagnosed with Atrial Septal Defect, an anomaly that is present at birth, he said.

“His physical condition and vitals are normal. He has been shifted from the Disaster Ward to the Department of Cardiology for further investigations. This disorder is not related to tunnel collapse,” he said.

The workers were rescued from the partially collapsed tunnel in Uttarkashi on Tuesday night after a long-drawn operation. After being kept under medical observation for a night at the community health centre at Chinyalisaur, they were airlifted on Wednesday to AIIMS, Rishikesh for a thorough examination of their health parameters.

As they have come out of a tunnel after 17 days, the workers might need acclimatisation, the doctor said, adding they have been advised to go to the nearest hospital after two weeks for a check-up.

“On the basis of their major organ screening, we can say they are fit to travel. As they were taken good care of during their confinement in the tunnel with regular feeding, there was no case of starvation. Most of them are young or of middle age. That also helped them stay fit,” Ravikant said.

Doctors from the AIIMS-Rishikesh will stay connected with the workers through tele-medicine to monitor their mental health for the next few weeks, he said in reply to a question.

About how they will be taken home, the hospital authorities said respective state governments are working out details of their departure.

The number of workers from Jharkhand is the highest at 15. A nodal officer from Jharkhand who is at AIIMS said on Thursday that they will be airlifted.

The responsibility of commute of the rest of them will be handed over to authorised representatives from their states as and when they approach the hospital administration, the hospital authorities said.

“Our priority is to ensure that all workers are safely transported to their home by officials authorised by their respective state governments,” another doctor said at the media briefing.

Apart from 15 workers from Jharkhand, eight are from Uttar Pradesh, five each from Odisha and Bihar, three from West Bengal, two each from Uttarakhand and Assam, and one from Himachal Pradesh.

Meanwhile, Navayuga Engineering Company Limited (NECL), the firm for which the 41 labourers worked at the Silkyara tunnel, has given a cheque of Rs 2 lakh to each of the rescued workers as compensation and announced a bonus of two months for them when they report back to duty. The NECL is a private company employed by the National Highways and Infrastructure Development Corporation Limited (NHIDCL) to carry out the construction work of the Silkyara tunnel.

“The company has given a compensation of Rs 2 lakh each, as an compensation, irrespective of cadre or any other position,” NECL’s HR department head Rajeev told PTI.

The management has also decided to give two months’ bonus to all the employees at the site. “We have also advised all our employees to take rest for a few days before coming back to work,” he said. 

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

Shane Macgowan, Folk-Punk Pogues Frontman, Dies Aged 65

Shane Macgowan, Folk-Punk Pogues Frontman, Dies Aged 65

Shane MacGowan

Shane MacGowan, songwriter and lead singer of Celtic folk-punk band The Pogues, died early Thursday at the age of 65 after a long illness, his widow announced.

“Shane who will always be the light that I hold before me… has gone to be with Jesus and Mary and his beautiful mother Therese,” wrote MacGowan’s widow Victoria Mary Clarke in an Instagram post. Later, the band said on its official website that “Shane died peacefully at 3.30 am this morning (30 November, 2023) with his wife and sister by his side.”

MacGowan, who had been in and out of hospital in Dublin since July, is most famous for penning the Christmas classic “Fairytale of New York”, a duet sung with Kirsty MacColl in 1987. 

Co-formed by MacGowan, the Pogues fused punk and Irish folk music. He was born in England but spent much of his childhood in Ireland with his mother’s family.

The band became an international symbol of Irishness, both at home and for the sprawling diaspora, with MacGowan’s contribution recognised in a slew of tributes from political leaders.

“Shane will be remembered as one of music’s greatest lyricists,” Irish President Michael D. Higgins said in a statement.

“So many of his songs would be perfectly crafted poems, if that would not have deprived us of the opportunity to hear him sing them,” he said.

‘Iconic’

Taoiseach (prime minister) Leo Varadkar called MacGowan “an amazing musician and artist”. 

“His songs beautifully captured the Irish experience, especially the experience of being Irish abroad,” he wrote on X (formerly Twitter).

Micheal Martin, Varadkar’s deputy, said he was “devastated” by MacGowan’s death, calling him “iconic”.

“His passing is particularly poignant at this time of year as we listen to Fairytale of New York — a song that resonates with all of us,” he wrote.

There were tributes too from Sinn Fein, the former political wing of the Irish Republican Army paramilitary group which fought for decades against British rule in Northern Ireland.

The Pogues’ 1988 song “Streets of Sorrow/Birmingham Six”, which recounted the plight of six Irishmen wrongly imprisoned for deadly pub bombings in Birmingham, was banned from British airwaves.

The 1974 attacks that killed 21 and left scores more injured were blamed on the IRA.

The Birmingham Six saw their convictions quashed on appeal in 1991.

Sinn Fein president Mary Lou McDonald called MacGowan “a poet, dreamer and social justice champion”.

“He was a republican and a proud Irish man. Nobody told the Irish story like Shane. He sang to us of dreams and captured stories of emigration,” she said.

Her predecessor Gerry Adams a central figure in “The Troubles” and a close friend of MacGowan and Clarke said: “Ireland has lost a great patriot, a poet and friend of the down-trodden and marginalised.”

(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

BJP, Congress Take 2 Each, Change In Rajasthan, Telangana: NDTV Poll Of Polls

Exit polls 2023: Madhya Pradesh could be heading for a close fight.

New Delhi:

An aggregate of exit polls is predicting two strikes out of three in the heartland states for the BJP and one for the Congress. While Chhattisgarh Chief Minister Bhupesh Baghel gets to retain his job, his counterpart in Rajasthan, Ashok Gehlot, might just lose his, they indicate. There also seems a high possibility that Madhya Pradesh could  go to the BJP — again.

The biggest upset, though, could be reserved for Telangana, where K Chandrasekhar Rao’s Bharat Rashtra Samithi has been in power since the inception of the state in 2014. NDTV Poll of Polls — an aggregate of seven exit polls — shows the Congress ahead in 62 of the state’s 119 seats, the BRS on  44. The BJP can win seven seats and Asaduddin Owaisi’s AIMIM five seats. The majority mark stands at 60.

For Mizoram, an aggregate of six exit polls indicate a hung house. Two exit polls predict the BJP-MNF’s ruling alliance have a slim chance of victory. Only one predict a sweep for the new party Zoram People’s Movement (ZPM).

Exit polls, though, can often get it wrong.

An aggregate of nine exit polls on Chhattisgarh predict a second term for the Congress, which has been banking on Bhupesh Baghel’s report card for the last five years. The number of seats allotted to the party has been within the margin of early 40s to mid-50s. The majority mark in the 90-seat state stands at 46. NDTV Poll of Polls indicates that 49 seats can go to the Congress and 38 to the BJP.

Neighbouring Madhya Pradesh, though, could have bad news for the Congress, which might not be able to unseat Shivraj Singh Chouhan. The BJP’s three-time Chief Minister came to power yet again in 2020 despite a defeat in 2018, with the crossing over of Congress’s Jyotiraditya Scindia and his 20-plus loyalists.

An aggregate of nine exit polls indicates that the BJP may wind up with 124 of the state’s 230 seats, where the majority mark is 116. The Congress may get 102 seats.

The most definitive verdict is from News 24-Today’s Chanakya, which gives BJP 151 seats, and the Congress 74. Others predict a tight race.

The election was, held amid much speculation of anti-incumbency against the BJP, which has largely ruled the state since 2004. With four terms under his belt, Mr Chouhan is one of the BJP’s longest-ruling Chief Ministers.

Rajasthan, which routinely votes out the incumbent since early ’90s, is apparently sticking to the custom, overturning Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot’s high hope of bucking the trend.

Seven of nine exit polls have predicted a comfortable victory for the BJP — only two offer Congress the hope that it might scrape through. Most exit polls expect the BJP numbers to stay above 100 in the 200-member house.

Though election had  taken place on 199 seats following the death of a Congress candidate, the majority mark will be 101.

NDTV Poll of Polls indicates that the BJP can get 104 seats, the Congress 85.

In 40-seat Mizoram, only two of six exit polls predict that the BJP and its ally, the Mizo National Front, might make it to the seat of power again.

The aggregate of six exit polls indicates the ruling alliance can get 15 seats, the new Zoram People’s Movement (ZPM) 17, which could put Congress, expected to win seven seats, in the position of the kingmaker.

The chances of hung house in the northeastern state run high, with a multi-cornered contest that included the rising ZPM, which projected a young face for the state’s top job. All exit polls have given the new party a chunk of seats, pushing the Congress to the third spot in the state. India-Today-Axis My India predicts a sweep for the ZPM.

Arvind Kejriwal’s Aam Aadmi Party which also joined the race, could also bleed votes for the MNF, which won 26 of the 40 seats in the last election..

For the Congress, the real sweet spot in this election could be Telangana, next-door to Karnataka, where it won a huge victory earlier this year, beating the BJP hollow. The party had launched a high-octane campaign in Telangana since, under the upbeat leadership of its young state chief Revanth Reddy.

Telangana has been out of the Congress’s reach since 2014, when the state was carved out of Andhra Pradesh, despite its facilitating the formation from the Centre.

With K Chandrasekhar Rao, who led the statehood agitation, heading the Telangana Rashtra Samithi — now renamed Bharat Rashtra Samithi in keeping with its leader’s national ambitions — there seemed little scope for the party to be dislodged from power.

The votes for this round of elections, dubbed the semi-final before the next year’s general election, will be counted on Sunday.

The results are expected to impact not just the BJP, which is hoping for a third straight term in 2024.

A positive outcome for the Congress in Chhattisgarh and Telangana can even raise its stocks within the INDIA alliance, giving it more heft ahead of the Lok Sabha polls.

Both Congress, BJP Hopeful Of Victory In Rajasthan After Exit Polls

Both Congress, BJP Hopeful Of Victory In Rajasthan After Exit Polls

Polling in Rajasthan was held on November 25 (File)

The Congress and the BJP were hopeful of victory in the Rajasthan assembly polls after exit poll predictions were announced on Thursday.

While most pollsters predicted an edge for the BJP in Rajasthan, three exit polls in their upper limit forecast a Congress win in the desert state.

Polling in Rajasthan was held on November 25 and the votes will be counted on December 3.

Senior BJP leader Rajendra Rathore said his party’s tally will be higher than that predicted by exit polls because “there was an undercurrent against the Congress”.

“The polling percentage this time was at an all-time high…, which also indicates that there was anti-incumbency,” he said.

Reacting to the exit poll predictions, BJP MP and party candidate from the Tijara assembly constituency Baba Balaknath said, “The people of Rajasthan want freedom from the Congress, given their record of corruption. The BJP is going to form the government with a majority in Rajasthan as well as Madhya Pradesh.” BJP MP and party candidate from the Jhotwara seat Rajyavardhan Singh Rathore told reporters that people want a transformation and the results will be in favour of the party on December 3.

Congress leaders were expressed hope that the party would win and form the government in the state.

“Exit polls indicate that ‘raaj nahi rivaz’ (trend, not rule) is set to change in Rajasthan as the Congress is going to win a majority,” Congress spokesperson Gourav Vallabh said on the exit polls.

He was referring to the trend in Rajasthan of the incumbent party being voted out every five years.

Congress candidate and minister Pratap Singh Khachariyawas said the Congress could form the government as people have validated its development model.

“The possibility of Congress forming the government is high,” he said.

In Rajasthan, India Today-Axis My India forecast a tight race, predicting 86-106 seats for the Congress, 80-100 seats for the BJP and others 9-18.

While Dainik Bhaskar gave 98-105 seats to the BJP and 85-95 to the Congress, Jan Ki Baat pollsters forecast that the BJP would get 100-122 and 62-85 for the Congress.

TV9 Bharatvarsh-Polstrat predicted 100-110 for the BJP and 90-100 for the Congress. Times Now ETG poll predicted 108-128 seats for the BJP and 56-72 for the Congress in Rajasthan.

Today’s Chankaya gave a simple majority to the Congress, projecting that it would get 101 seat as against the BJP’s 89.

While India TV-CNX put the Congress’ tally at 94 to 104 in the 200-member House and the BJP’s at 80-90, Republic TV-Matrize gave 115-130 seats to the BJP and 65-75 to the Congress.

P-MARQ pollsters gave 105-125 seats to the BJP and 69-91 to the Congress.

Jist-TIF-NAI predicted that in Rajasthan there would be continuation of the state’s revolving door tradition, forecasting 110 seats for the BJP and the Congress 70. 

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

Opinion: Promote South Asian regionalism

We must avoid making hasty conclusions on India-Maldives ties based on an election result as they have several dimensions, from history and culture to economic linkages

Published Date – 11:45 PM, Thu – 30 November 23


Opinion: Promote South Asian regionalism


By Dhananjay Tripathi

For Indian foreign policy, South Asia as a region becomes more of a challenge. South Asian regionalism has not moved much, and there is little to showcase as an achievement. In the last decade, China has also made deep inroads politically and economically in the region. It is no longer a China-Pakistan all-weather friendship, the only cause of worry for Indian policymakers. Through its substantial economic investment in the region, China has developed close ties with different South Asian countries.


Today, China is formidably present in Nepal, has a strong investment in Sri Lanka, supplies military hardware to Bangladesh, and is sincerely trying to resolve the border dispute with Bhutan. For India, all of these are issues of concern and adding to this is the recent election results in the Maldives.

An island country in the Indian Ocean Region (IOR), the Maldives is strategically located and referred to by a few analysts as a gateway to the Indian Ocean. The country is small; nevertheless, it has a critical relevance in light of the growing competition between India and China in the IOR.

The island nation recently elected a new government headed by Mohamed Muizzu of the People’s National Congress (PNC). The PNC is a new political party in the Maldives, although Muizzu is quite an experienced politician. He was the housing minister, served as a mayor of Male, and is close to the former Maldivian president, Abdulla Yameen.

As the housing minister, Muizzu was directly responsible for the implementation of the Sinamale Bridge project. This bridge connects the capital Male to Velana International Airport and is one of Maldives’ important China-supported infrastructure projects. While critics raised question of the Chinese debt trap, many in the Maldives believe the Sinamale Bridge eased their lives in Male. This is why there is always a mixed response in the Maldives on the Sinamale Bridge, while most Indian experts only read it in the context of China.

Indian Troops

It was Abdulla Yameen, who, as President of the Maldives (2013-2018), positioned himself close to China. Yameen failed to get another term and, after that, faced several corruption charges. Yameen played the ‘anti-India card’ as his political opponent, and earlier President Ibrahim Mohamed Solih (2018-2023) was close to New Delhi. To counter Solih, Yameen, now convicted for corruption, started an ‘India-out’ campaign. There are Indian troops in the Maldives, but only for maintaining some essential and emergency services. There are patrol vessels, Dornier aircraft and helicopters mainly for surveillance and medical evacuation and 77 Indian personnel for its operation and maintenance.

Going by his election propaganda, Muizzu was expected to take a political stand on the presence of these troops in the Maldives, so one should not be surprised by his current posturing. However, Muizzu has to think about alternatives for continuing the emergency services currently provided by the Indian personnel. Moreover, by taking a strong public standpoint on Indian troops and some 100 agreements immediately after his swearing-in ceremony, he already indicated the direction of his foreign policy. This kind of move by any new government requires some caution as it reveals all of a player’s cards at the beginning of the game.

Balanced Approach

The Maldives is a country where almost 29,000 Indians work in different sectors like healthcare, education and tourism. It is one of the favourites for Indian tourists and acquired the status of a star destination after the end of the pandemic. Indian tourists are still at the top of Maldives’ list of arrivals and average stays.

Over the years, India has made huge investments in the Maldives, supporting development and community-based programmes. Notably, India had given enough Covid-19 vaccines to the Maldives. It financially backed it during the crisis resulting from a drought in the tourism industry due to the pandemic. India was also the first responder during the 2004 tsunami and when Male faced a severe water crisis in 2014. Due to the geographical proximity, India is naturally the most dependable neighbour of the Maldives, and maintaining solid political ties with such a country is significant for any Maldivian establishment.

Swinging between India and China is now a visible part of the foreign policy of many countries in the sub-continent. We have noticed a similar trend in Nepal, but Kathmandu remains sensitive about keeping a balance between India and China. For geo-strategically located Maldives, the country must not become a battleground of geo-political rivalry between major powers. The IOR is gaining immense relevance among the world’s major powers, and the Maldives has to consider these factors by taking a long-term perspective, on how to engage both with China and India.

What for India?

The overdose of bilateralism and lack of a regional approach is causing trouble for the Indian foreign policy in South Asia. India would have dealt better with the region by strengthening regional institutions and investing in South Asian regionalism. India is primarily a South Asian power and has to consolidate its position in the region to achieve larger objectives in world politics.

Relying on a few political parties and personalities in the region will not help it in the long run, and India must develop a regional strategy. Also, the strong presence of China in the region is a reality, and this fact cannot be wished away. The better way to deal with China is to promote South Asian regionalism to benefit all and create regional interdependence. Due to its economic size, India is likely to gain in the process and so are the other economies of the region. Indeed, for India there is a need for rethinking on South Asia and the Maldives must be taken as a case study.

Lastly, we must avoid making hasty conclusions on India-Maldives ties based on an election result. India-Maldives ties have several dimensions, from history and culture to economic linkages. India should continue with its development policy in Maldives. Likewise, it is equally vital for President Muizzu to maintain a cordial relationship with New Delhi for the long-term interest of his country.

Tripathi

IRGC chief: Israel will vanish with another al-Aqsa Storm

Iran’s Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) chief Major General Hossein Salami says Operation al-Aqsa Storm showed that the collapse of Israel is much closer and easier than thought.

“There is 70 km from Gaza to Tel Aviv, 120 km from northern Palestine and southern Lebanon to Tel Aviv, and 40 km from the West Bank to Tel Aviv. The time for the collapse of this fake regime is short,” he told a group of Basij members in Qazvin Thursday.

“If like in Operation al-Aqsa Storm, the driving engine of the Palestinians starts moving again, the Zionist regime will be removed from the political geography of the world in 48 hours,” he said.

Gen. Salami said “few people thought the army and the security establishment of the Zionist regime is so close to collapse”.

“Operation al-Aqsa Storm showed the Zionists living in the occupied territories and America the fact that the collapse of the regime is much, much closer and easier than they imagine,” he added.

Gen. Salami said no Israeli sleeps peacefully at night anymore because the nightmare of another attack has become a constant companion of the occupiers who “are in a painful situation” after the Oct. 7 operation.

“Today, anxiety and confusion over the defeat of the Zionist regime can be seen in the faces of American officials more than ever, since there is no prospect of saving the fake Israeli regime, and its supporters cannot talk about its survival.”

The IRGC chief said to escape defeat, Israel and its supporters have chosen a very dangerous strategy that will never lead to victory.

The US, he said, can no longer endure the pressure of resistance forces on its overstretched forces in the region.

Over the past week, Gen. Salami also said, 2,000 Israeli soldiers have fled the West Bank and Gaza because they cannot continue the war.

“On the other hand, the damage of the war is at least 300 million dollars a day, and one out of every three jobs in Israel has been lost, and all hotels have turned into accommodation for their refugees.”

The situation in Palestine is quite the opposite, Gen. Salami said.

“The Gazans are patient, grateful, thoughtful and exceptional people who will surely achieve victory in the near future because of their perseverance,” he said.   

This is while “Israel and America are stuck in a quagmire in which they sink deeper, the more they struggle”, the IRGC chief added.

Gen. Salami touched on the strict censorship in the Israeli media about the regime’s losses in the Gaza war.

He said out of 1,600 tanks and personnel carriers brought to Gaza by Israel, 300 have been hit and hundreds of Israelis killed based on accurate information including aerial photos, wiretapping and other intelligence means as well as accurate field information.

“Today, all the news we hear is about Gaza and the Palestinians, but we don’t hear or see anything about the turmoil in the cities of the Zionist regime, where the situation is much worse than what even we wish for. This fact forced them to agree to a ceasefire.”

IND vs AUS: India eye to seal series, take on Australia in fourth T20

India’s second-string attack did not paint a good picture of itself by not defending 40-plus runs in the final two overs in the third match which the Australians won while chasing a daunting 223-run target

Published Date – 11:59 PM, Thu – 30 November 23


IND vs AUS: India eye to seal series, take on Australia in fourth T20


Raipur: India’s young bowling unit, which has been under the pump, will look to better its death overs performance while utilising Glenn Maxwell’s absence to its advantage in the fourth T20 International against Australia here on Friday.

India’s second-string attack did not paint a good picture of itself by not defending 40-plus runs in the final two overs in the third match which the Australians won while chasing a daunting 223-run target.


There is a possibility of a minor tweak in the Indian line-up after Prasidh Krishna gave away 68 runs in four overs, including 21 in the final over.

Deepak Chahar is back in the T20 mix and his ability to move the new ball should be considered for his inclusion in the playing XI along with death overs specialist Mukesh Kumar, who is back after one-match break.

Both Prasidh and Avesh Khan lack variety and innovation as they keep pitching the ball at the same length. Both bowl in late 130s or early 140s but consistently pitch it back of the length and the nature of Indian tracks make it a cannon fodder for batters.

Also not being able to use variations like conventional or wide yorkers has been the undoing of these bowlers who also didn’t execute slower deliveries properly.

In the batting line up, Shreyas Iyer’s comeback means only Tilak Varma looks a candidate who could be benched as five others — Yashasvi Jaiswal, Ruturaj Gaikwad, Ishan Kishan, skipper Suryakumar Yadav and finisher Rinku Singh select themselves.

India will also look to exploit the absence of a marauding Maxwell who pulled off a heist of sorts to singlehandedly bring Australia back into the five-match series with a win in a last-ball finish in Guwahati.
But the hosts will fancy their chances with Maxwell, and other influential players such as Steve Smith and Adam Zampa not figuring in the playing XI here, having left for home after a long stay in the country where they won their sixth World Cup title recently.

Cricket Australia (CA) released many of its top players including Maxwell midway into the series keeping in mind their workload and fitness ahead of the T20 World Cup.

The Suryakumar Yadav-led second-string India are smarting from a classic Maxwell innings, and the home team bowlers will be relieved that he will not walk out to bat at the Shaheed Veer Narayan Singh International Stadium.

Instead, they will probably be bowling to players such as Tim David, Josh Phillippe and big-hitter Ben McDermott, a far better proposition at the moment than challenging Maxwell, who has enhanced his reputation as one of Australia’s greatest white-ball batters in the past five-six weeks.

The runs, and the manner and situation in which he has accumulated them, has catapulted Maxwell into a level not meant for others. India’s bowlers, though, will still have to contend with Travis Head, on a high after his scintillating match-winning hundred in the World Cup final against India, and the seasoned Matthew Wade, who is leading the side in the ongoing series.

Like in Guwahati, dew could again have a say on a December evening in this part of the world, and the captain winning the toss would opt to bat second without an iota of doubt, leaving the team batting first to deal with the wet ball in the second innings.

The reinforcements have already joined the Australian squad and are available for the penultimate match of the series that started barely three days after their triumphant World Cup campaign, the tight scheduling leaving many former players surprised.

India’s batting has been served well by the likes of young Yashasvi Jaiswal, Ishan Kishan, Rinku Singh, Tilak Varma and the skipper himself when required. These players are expected to fire again but one man whose confidence will be sky high is Ruturaj Gaikwad, who is coming off a blazing 123 off 57 balls.

The likes of Jason Behrendorff, Kane Richardson and Tanveer Sangha could find the going tough one more time. So far, the unfriendly conditions meant the series has been a nightmare for the bowlers with five 200-plus totals in six innings, and the trend is expected to continue in the remainder of the rubber.

Russia: OSCE turning into appendage of West, in ‘deplorable state’


Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov attends the 30th OSCE Ministerial Meeting in Skopje, Republic of North Macedonia, on November 30, 2023. (AFP)

The Russian foreign minister says the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) is in a critical situation, and its future is “unclear.”

In his address to the OSCE Ministerial Council in Skopje, North Macedonia, on Thursday, Sergei Lavrov said after decades of work, the organization “is now in a deplorable state, and its prospects remain unclear.”

The OSCE was founded to ease tensions between the East and the West during the Cold War. It helps its members to coordinate on issues such as human rights and arms control.

Russia accuses the organization of turning away from its founding principles.

Lavrov said after the end of the Cold War, the OSCE was supposed to become an inclusive platform for creating sustainable security architecture in Europe and promoting international cooperation. “Unfortunately, Western political elites, arrogating to themselves the right to shape the future of mankind, made a short-sighted choice in favor… of NATO.”

“The OSCE is essentially being turned into an appendage to NATO and the EU. The organization – let’s face it – is on the brink of the abyss. Here is a simple question: Does it make sense to invest energy in its revival?”

The foreign minister said a campaign by Western states to thwart the OSCE’s renaissance is going on by creating parallel institutions that in practice seek to alienate Russia and Belarus.

Lavrov said the United States and its European allies have virtually destroyed any chance of broad-based East-West cooperation by imposing unprecedented sanctions on Moscow over the war in Ukraine. In this sense, the European Union, which supported the restrictions, “continues to dutifully play its unenviable role and bear the brunt of the consequences of America’s Ukraine adventure, while humbly abandoning those forms of economic partnership that have ensured the [bloc’s] prosperity… for many decades.”

The Russian foreign minister also accused the West of waging a “hybrid war” against Russia and said the European Union had become an “aggressive political project.”

Russia says the OSCE’s agenda is “almost completely Ukrainized.”

Iran objects to Israel regime’s Presence at COP28 in UAE

In a telephone conversation on Thursday, the Iranian foreign minister and his Emirati counterpart Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan talked about the latest developments in Gaza following the second extension of a ceasefire after weeks of deadly Israeli strikes on Palestinians.

The senior Emirati diplomat also briefed the Iranian foreign minister on the United Arab Emirates’ plans to host the 2023 United Nations Climate Change Conference, known as COP28.

The 28th United Nations Climate Change Conference is being held from November 30 until December 12 at Expo City in Dubai.

Expressing gratitude to the President of the United Arab Emirates Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan for inviting Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi to COP28, Amir-Abdollahian outlined Iran’s views about the conference.

The Iranian foreign minister called into serious question the presence of Israeli representatives in the conference in Dubai against a backdrop of the Zionist regime’s most recent war crimes and genocidal atrocities in Gaza.

Pointing to the extension of a temporary ceasefire in Gaza, Amir-Abdollahian stressed the need for collective efforts to fully stop the Zionist regime’s war crimes and pave the way for the massive delivery of humanitarian aid supplies to the people of Gaza.

The UN Security Council is expected to adopt an effective resolution in favor of the Palestinian people, he underlined.

For his part, the Emirati foreign minister expounded on his country’s regional and international efforts to ensure a truce in Gaza, saying Abu Dhabi will do its utmost to guarantee the continuation of the ceasefire and broaden humanitarian aid for the people of Gaza.

MNA/TSN

Turkey to work for permanent truce in Gaza: Erdogan

“We will accelerate our contacts to release the captives and make the ceasefire permanent,” Erdogan said on X, formerly known as Twitter, on the occasion of the International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People, Xinhua reports.

“Hopefully, our initiatives will continue in a multi-dimensional manner in the future,” he said.

The Turkish government continues to dispatch humanitarian aid for the people of Gaza and has so far sent 12 relief planes and one ship to Egypt, according to Erdogan.

A second ship carrying 1,500 tons of humanitarian aid set sail earlier on Wednesday, according to the Turkish president.

“We take care of the treatment of injured people, especially cancer patients and children, by transporting them to Türkiye. Examinations for locations of the field hospitals we will establish in Gaza are underway,” Erdogan said.

MNA/PR