Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,306

On Monday, September 22, 2018, this is how things are going.

Fighting

  • According to Sergei Aksyonov, the Russian-appointed head of Crimea, a drone attack on the Crimean Peninsula, three people were killed and 16 were hurt in the town of Foros, according to a post on Telegram.
  • The attack was carried out by “strike drones equipped with high-explosive payloads” in a resort area without any “military targets” according to Russia’s Ministry of Defense.
  • According to Russia’s state news agency TASS, a Ukrainian drone attacked a gas station in Pervomaisk, in the country’s Luhansk region, killing two people, according to the Russian Ministry of Emergency Situations for Luhansk.
  • According to TASS, Ukraine was purposefully targeting gas stations during a time of fuel shortages, according to Anna Soroka, a Russian-appointed human rights commissioner for the Luhansk region.
  • In addition, one person was killed and three people were critically injured in a Ukrainian drone attack on Vasylivka in Russian-occupied Zaporizhia, according to TASS, along with one other person who was killed in a Ukrainian attack on Belgorod.
  • The Saratov Oil Refinery in the Saratov region of Russia was attacked on Saturday night, according to the General Staff of Ukraine, which reportedly resulted in fires and explosions. The General Staff stated in a Facebook statement that “the results of the damage are being clarified” that Ukrainian forces also attacked the Samara Novokuibyshevsk Oil Refinery.

Regional security

    A Russian reconnaissance aircraft, according to Germany’s air force, was tracked by two Eurofighter jets as it flew over neutral airspace over the Baltic Sea.

  • Estonia, Poland, and Romania reported recent airstrikes from Russia or drones entering their skies.
  • In response to Russia’s flagrant invasion of Estonian airspace, the UN Security Council will hold an urgent session on Monday, according to Estonia’s ministry of foreign affairs.
  • A planned NATO North Atlantic Council meeting, according to two officials, will take place on Tuesday to address Estonia’s airspace violation, according to two officials.
  • Donald Trump, president of the United States, said to reporters on Sunday, “Yeah, I would. I would”.

diplomacy and politics

  • In a post on X, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy announced that his country would meet with Trump this week as part of the UN General Assembly’s “very intense week.”
  • By using the proceeds from Russian banks’ frozen assets, French President Emmanuel Macron claimed that European nations were adhering to international law. In response to a question from CBS News about recent comments made by Trump, he added that if Russia’s central bank seizes the assets, “total chaos” might ensue.
  • Maria Zakharova, a spokesman for the Russian Foreign Ministry, responded, “If Russia’s frozen assets are sequestered in Europe, there won’t be chaos, but rather very harsh countermeasures from Russia.” And they are aware of this, according to the Russian agency RIA Novosti.
  • Russian Colonel General Alexander Lapin, a senior commander who served in Russia’s first conflict with Ukraine, was fired from military service, according to an unnamed source citing an unnamed source, according to Russian media outlet RBC on Sunday.

Syria sets October date for first election since al-Assad’s fall

On October 5, Syria will elect a new People’s Assembly, the first parliament to be elected since Bashar al-Assad’s ouster late last year.

According to the state-run SANA news agency, the vote will take place “across all electoral districts.”

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The new government’s announcement comes as it works to reestablish state institutions and gain legitimacy amid regional and international efforts to stabilize the nation’s shattered nation.

President Ahmed al-Sharaa will choose a third of the assembly’s 210 seats directly. The electoral commission’s local committees will select the rest, according to local committees’ selection. The chamber will be given the task of ratifying treaties that could transform Syria’s foreign policy and passing legislation that will replace decades of state-controlled economic policies.

Following al-Assad’s ouster in December after nearly 14 years of civil war, the new parliament is expected to “lay the groundwork for a wider democratic process,” according to SANA. Critics, however, warn that the country’s marginalized communities are not adequately represented by the current system.

Initial estimates indicated that the election would take place in September. Due to security concerns, the electoral commission previously stated that polling would be postponed in the provinces of Suwayda, Hasakah, and Raqqa.

Hasakah and Raqqa are still largely under the control of the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, despite the fact that Suwayda was the site of recent fighting between Druze fighters and Sunni Bedouin tribes in July.

The interim period until the election was outlined in a constitutional declaration issued by al-Sharaa’s government in March.

The document defends women’s rights and freedom of expression while maintaining Islamic law’s crucial role. Opponents expressed concern that the framework would transfer too much power to the Syrian government.

Al-Sharaa, a former al-Qaeda leader whose Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) organization was crucial in al-Assad’s fall, has also used regional diplomacy to bolster his government and Syria’s security.

Israel bristles as UK leads Western recognition of Palestine

A tiny cornerside cafe, oddly unnamed and half-hidden, buzzed with mid-morning chatter two blocks from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s residence in West Jerusalem, where Balfour and Gaza Streets meet behind layers of steel barricades and weekly pro-hostage rallies.

As phones lit up with news that United Kingdom Prime Minister Keir Starmer had announced formal recognition of a Palestinian state, a few patrons looked up, while others shrugged.

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“Of course I’m angry”, said Shira Hazan, 55, a shop owner and longtime supporter of Netanyahu’s Likud party. What changes, though? Our soldiers are not buried in Britain. It’s just politics while Iran is shooting at us”.

The headline was waved off with a flick of the hand, treating it as merely background noise, as did the majority of the patrons at the cafe who were seated next to her.

He remarked, “It’s colonial arrogance, nothing less,” while scrolling through his phone while wearing a knitted kippah.

But the UK’s recognition of Palestine, while not a United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) vote like Israel’s in 1948, could still set off a wave. The League of Nations, a major Western power that once held the Mandate for Palestine, was the first to officially recognize Palestinian statehood following the end of World War I to administer what is now the region that includes Gaza, the West Bank, and Israel.

In what appeared to be a coordinated move, Australia and Canada have also signed agreements, adding pressure to Israel and putting the three nations at odds with the US.

The announcement comes shortly before a special summit on the war in Gaza, to be held by the UNGA on Monday. The two-state solution is the only viable option to put an end to the region’s decades-long conflict, according to France and Saudi Arabia’s diplomatic initiative.

Numerous nations have pledged to support the more than 145 UN members who have already approved a Palestinian state, including France, Belgium, Luxembourg, and Malta.

Political push back

Although the statehood declaration was anticipated for some time, a swift and extensive retaliation was sparked by leaders from Israel’s divided political elite and key demographics.

Itamar Ben-Gvir, the far-right Israeli national security minister, announced within hours that he would push for the occupied West Bank’s recognition as “a prize for the murderous Nukhba terrorists,” in reference to the Hamas unit that led the southern Israeli assault on October 7, 2023.

He pledged “the complete dismantling of the ‘ Palestinian ‘ Authority” and added that he intended to “submit a proposal for the application of sovereignty at the upcoming cabinet meeting”.

The Hostages and Missing Families Forum, a group that advocates for the safe return of prisoners taken to Gaza during the 2023 Israeli attack, condemned what it called “the unconditional recognition of a Palestinian state while turning the blind eye to the fact that 48 hostages are still being held by Hamas in captivity.”

The opposition was also in the spotlight. Benny Gantz, the centrist former defence minister and a leading Netanyahu rival, warned that the move would only harden Hamas’s grip and complicate efforts to free the captives held in Gaza.

After October 7, acknowledging a Palestinian state only serves to bolster Hamas, prolongs the conflict, distances Iran’s and its proxies’ chances of a hostage deal, and sends a loud message of support, according to Gantz. He continued, “If advancing peace & stability in the Middle East is what you seek, dear Western Leaders, and not buckling to domestic political pressure, then Hamas must be put under the most pressure to relinquish power and return the hostages before anything else,” in an English-language post on X directed at Western capitals.

One of the lone voices calling Starmer’s recognition “a step in the right direction” is left-wing Israeli parliamentarian Ofer Cassif. He claimed that recognition is a “win-lose game” when, in reality, it could be a victory for both sides.

In response to pressure to remove him from the Knesset on the grounds that he supported armed struggle, Cassif signed a petition in January 2024 to support South Africa’s genocide case against Israel. He was eventually suspended for six months.

All other nations that haven’t yet done so should follow suit, Cassif said to Al Jazeera, “Recognition is a crucial first step toward a just peace.” It shouldn’t, however, develop into an end goal on its own. A complete arms embargo on Israel must follow, until the government of death and destruction ends the genocide in Gaza and dismantles the illegal occupation of the Palestinian territories”.

When asked about additional UN actions, he responded that, among other things, he would “absolutely” support a peacekeeping force and the reactivation of anti-apartheid mechanisms used in South Africa, including weapons and oil embargoes.

The worst moment, in my opinion.

Noam Achimeir, 29, a PhD candidate at Jerusalem’s Hebrew University who described himself as left-leaning, took issue with the timing of the Palestinian statehood announcements.

“Look, I believe in two states, I’ve marched for peace, and I’ve argued for years with my parents about the occupation.” But “this” Achimeir said. The worst moment ever occurred in this situation. People are still being held hostage in the form of missiles, families are hiding in shelters, and there are still survivors. When countries make a grand gesture right now, it feels like rewarding the people doing that to us”.

He added, however, that Israel is unable to “control millions of Palestinians forever.”

It might be symbolic, perhaps. But symbols matter”, he told Al Jazeera. “Maybe it forces us to accept that this conflict won’t just vanish” if Britain acknowledges Palestine.

Eliyahu Korenman, 42, a religious Zionist from Shilo, a Zionist who claimed to have supported Ben-Gvir in the previous election, said London’s decision “tells Hamas, Hezbollah, and Iran to keep firing rockets, holding hostages, killing Jews – and the world will reward you.”

“Every Israeli knows Palestine is just another word for surrender”, Korenman said. The timing, in essence, demonstrates that we were correct from the beginning. The only way forward is to keep going and expand, and to demonstrate to the world that we don’t require their approval. The world doesn’t understand that”.

Yael Ben Eshel, 27, a West Jerusalem resident who supported Netanyahu’s Likud, also made a mockery of the candidate.

“Truly,” Who cares? Britain hasn’t been a significant factor in this country for a long time. They can recognize Palestine, the moon, and nothing about the ground, she claimed, according to Al Jazeera. “We don’t wake up tomorrow and give up land because of what they say.

Ben Eshel continued, echoing Netanyahu’s comments last week about Israel’s growing international isolation, which the prime minister attributed in part to Muslim minorities in the West, rather than Israel’s killing of more than 65, 000 Palestinians in Gaza. “It’s for their politics, for the immigrants and the refugees, so forgive me if I don’t get upset about a British speech.

Britain can’t wash its hands of history, claim some.

The announcement lands amid a tense military escalation, where the Israeli army recently deployed a third division into Gaza City as part of an operation dubbed” Gideon’s Chariots B”, expanding a months-long offensive in the enclave that has killed hundreds in an area where famine has also been declared.

It also came after Israel’s hard-right government made a string of threats to prevent Palestinian statehood. Bezalel Smotrich, the minister of finance, unveiled a proposal to annex 82 percent of the occupied West Bank last week as a permanent defense for a two-state solution.

Meanwhile, Netanyahu signed a controversial settlement expansion agreement this month, reiterating his long-held rejection of a Palestinian state and declaring that” there will be no Palestinian state, this place belongs to us”.

Britain “set the tone” First, it promised the Arabs’ freedom if they opposed the Ottomans, and then secretly carved up the area in Sykes-Picot’s [treaty]. It told Jews one thing in the Balfour Declaration and told Arabs another, “Achimeir said, in criticism of the UK’s policy in the aftermath of World War I.

According to Daniel Darby, a 51-year-old anti-Zionist from Pardes Hanna, north of Tel Aviv, London’s recognition of a Palestinian state is “an empty, symbolic gesture that will not change anything for the people in the occupied West Bank and for the people who are currently suffering horrific genocide in Gaza.”

By providing reconnaissance, intelligence, and all kinds of military support to Israel, Darby claimed that the UK, along with other European imperialistic forces, is now even more fully responsible for the horrific acts taking place in occupied Palestine.

He added that recognition alone is meaningless without real consequences.

The UK must take immediate action, including a complete weapons embargo and full sanctions against the state of Israel, to clear its past and fulfill its obligations.

What’s driving the violence in Sudan – and what could bring peace?

A new US political initiative has been criticized by the country’s Khartoum government.

According to the UN, a mosque bombing in Sudan is the most recent atrocity to occur during a conflict that has caused the worst humanitarian crisis in history.

In the meantime, Khartoum approves of a new US-led political initiative.

What is going on in the conflict, and what are the prospects for peace?

Presenter: Tom McRae

Guests:

Amgad Fareid Eltayeb, the executive director of Fikra for Studies and Development,

Sudanese political analyst Kholood Khair

Brazilians protest bill that could grant ex-President Bolsonaro amnesty

Thousands of Brazilians have protested the National Congress’ plans to increase the immunity of lawmakers and support an amnesty that could include far-right former president Jair Bolsonaro, who was ordered to serve 27 years and three months in prison on charges of attempted military coup.

The conservative-majority Congress was accused of putting its own interests before social and economic issues by protesters in rallies in more than a dozen cities. Caetano Veloso, Chico Buarque, and Gilberto Gil, who defied censorship during the 1960s military dictatorship, reunited for a protest concert in Rio de Janeiro’s Copacabana neighborhood.

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A 34-year-old environmentalist who was present at the protest in Brasilia, Brazil, expressed her outrage at the political establishment. We are protesting the existence of a law that protects them in the form of corrupt politicians and criminals, she told the AFP.

Following the passage of a constitutional amendment that would make it more difficult to detain or launch criminal charges against lawmakers, calls for demonstrations grew. Legislators who cast a secret ballot must approve one of their own charges or arrests in accordance with the so-called “Shielding Bill.”

The lower house voted to quickly pass a bill supported by right-wing opposition lawmakers that could amnestize Bolsonaro, his closest allies, and hundreds of supporters who had been found guilty of involvement in the uprising in January 2023.

Both Senate bills are in a battleground. The amnesty bill was vetoed by President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

Numerous of Bolsonaro’s supporters had gathered to defend him ahead of his Supreme Court trial on September 11. The former president, who has denied any wrongdoing, is the first person to be found guilty of trying to overturn a vote in Latin America’s largest economy.

Polls indicate that the nation is still deeply divided on his future. In a recent Datafolha poll, 50% of the 2,005 respondents said Bolsonaro should be imprisoned, whereas 43% disagreed and 7% declined to respond.

After being found guilty on five charges, including leading a “criminal organization” to conspire to overthrow Lula, Bolsonaro is currently house-assisted and faces up to 40 years in prison. A detailed “Green and Yellow Dagger” operational plan with an assassination plan was discovered.

US children among five killed in Israeli drone strike on southern Lebanon

Lebanon’s health ministry claims that despite a US-brokered truce that was in effect in November, an Israeli drone strike has killed five people, including three children, in the southern Lebanese town of Bint Jbeil.

The strike injured two other people and struck a motorcycle, according to the state-run National News Agency (NNA) on Sunday.

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Nabih Berri, the speaker of the parliament in Lebanon, claimed that their father and the three children, Celine, Hadi, and Aseel, were citizens of the United States. The attack injured the mother of the children.

Israel acknowledged that there had also been fatalities for civilians in the strike, but it claimed that one Hezbollah member had been killed.

Israel frequently attacks what it claims are Hezbollah positions in southern Lebanon, claiming to be preventing the Lebanese organization’s military resurgence following its conflict with Israel, which resulted in the deaths of most of its senior leaders, including Hassan Nasrallah, its long-time leader.

“New massacre”

Is the Israeli entity in danger of becoming a Lebanese child? NNA reported that Berri inquired. Or does this person’s behavior actually pose a threat to international peace and security by killing without deterrence or accountability?

Nawaf Salam, the prime minister of Lebanon, claimed that Israel had committed “a new massacre.”

According to Salam, who previously served as the head of the International Court of Justice, “What happened is a blatant crime against civilians and a message of intimidation targeting our people returning to their villages in the south.”

Israel’s repeated violations of international law and international resolutions must be condemned by the international community in the most vehement terms.

After more than a year of conflict, Israel’s war on Gaza sparked another claim by Labour Minister Mohamad Haidar that the country had purposefully targeted the Lebanese population.

Because the south’s people’s will prevail over the criminal machine, Haidar claimed, “This plan will not succeed.”

The Shia Muslim organization has been under constant pressure from the US and Saudi Arabia, along with Hezbollah’s allies in Lebanon. Hezbollah will begin being executed, according to Lebanon’s army, which earlier this month presented a plan to the government’s cabinet.