UNSC condemns Rwanda, M23 rebels for offensive in eastern DR Congo

Rwanda has been criticized by the UN Security Council for supporting an offensive by rebels in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo. It is also being asked to halt support for the M23 armed group.

The UNSC extended the UN’s peacekeeping mission, known as MONUSCO, for a year on Friday, and the resolution was unanimously approved. Rwanda has repeatedly denied involvement in a conflict that has escalated as a result of a broken peace deal that was broken, contrary to overwhelming evidence.

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The UNSC argued that M23’s seizure of the important city of Uvira “risches destabilizing the entire region, seriously endangers civilian populations, and severely limits ongoing peace efforts.”

According to US representative Jennifer Locetta, M23 must leave Uvira for at least 75 kilometers (47 miles) and return to carrying out all of its obligations under the Framework Agreement.

Less than a week after the DRC and Rwandan presidents met in Washington and pledged to reach a peace agreement, M23 captured Uvira in the South Kivu Province on December 10.

“It is a wonderful day for Africa, great day for the world, and great day for these two nations.” And they can’t stop laughing as fighting quickly tore the White House spectacle.

Feza Mariam, a Uvira resident, recently told Al Jazeera, “We don’t know anything about the political process they are talking about.”

“Peace is all we need,” he says. Anyone who can calm us down is welcome here. We as citizens don’t care about it for the rest.

The M23 organization announced on Wednesday that it was leaving the city in response to international criticism, but the DRC government maintained that the M23 forces are still present.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said his government had signed agreements it could hold people to and that commitments made under the Washington accord were still being made on Friday.

According to US officials, between 5, 000 and 7, 000 Rwandan soldiers were reportedly operating in eastern DRC as of early December, despite earlier warnings from the US that it would use the available means to combat those who violated the peace agreement.

Following the seizure of Uvira, the US had previously ordered Rwandan cabinet ministers to be held accountable.

More than 84, 000 people have fled into Burundi since early December, according to the UN refugee agency, which claims the country has reached a “critical point” as refugees arrive exhausted and traumatized. They join roughly 200 000 others who have already sought refuge in the nation.

More than 400 civilians have been killed in the city’s recent violence, according to regional officials.

Concerned about a wider regional spillover is resulted from Uvira’s seizure, which occurs directly across Lake Tanganyika from Bujumbura, Burundi’s largest city. After M23 seized the provincial capital, Bukavu, in February, the DRC government and the Wazalendo, which are DRC-allied militias, had their last significant foothold in South Kivu.

Despite the evaluations of UN experts and the international community, Rwanda has consistently denied backing M23. Despite being the commander-in-chief of the armed forces, Rwandan President Paul Kagame claimed in a February interview with CNN that he was unaware that the country’s troops were stationed in the DRC.

In February 2024, Rwanda rebuffed a US request to withdraw troops and surface-to-air missile systems, saying it had changed its self-defence posture. It also rejected this request.

Rwanda asserts that the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda, a militia made up primarily of Hutus who fled to the DRC after participating in the genocide that killed about 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus, is a factor in its security concerns.

Kigali accuses the DRC government of supporting the organization and views it as an existential threat.

Ex-Pakistan PM Imran Khan, wife sentenced to 17 years in corruption case

Russian attack on Ukraine’s Odesa kills at least 8 as peace talks lumber on

As Moscow intensifies its attacks on the strategically important Black Sea region and negotiations to end the conflict are still at a crucial stage, a Russian ballistic missile strike on port infrastructure in Ukraine’s Odesa port in the south has resulted in the deaths of at least eight people and the injuries of 27.

Critical logistics infrastructure was hit by the attack late on Friday, with some of the injured stranded on a bus at the strike’s epicenter as trucks started to burn in a car park.

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More than two million people have been without electricity, water, or heating for days in the war’s fourth punishing winter, according to Ukrainian officials, as part of a long Russian campaign against Odesa’s civilian infrastructure.

Moscow struck reservoirs in a move that Ukrainian Deputy Prime Minister Oleksii Kuleba described as being purposefully aimed at civilian logistics routes on Saturday.

As both sides battle multiple fronts, the escalation drags on in the face of US-led negotiations and numerous high-level meetings in Europe without a resolution.

Although the reports could not be independently verified, Russia claimed on Saturday that it had taken control of the villages of Svitle in the eastern Donetsk region and Vysoke in the northeastern Sumy region.

Russia’s military and energy assets have been targeted by Ukraine as a response.

A military patrol ship patrolling close to the platform and Ukrainian drones struck the Filanovsky oil rig belonging to Russian energy giant Lukoil on Friday night in the Caspian Sea.

Although the rig had been hit at least twice in December, the attack marked the first officially recognized Ukrainian attack on Caspian drilling infrastructure.

A Russian Kilo-class submarine was attacked by Ukrainian forces at the Novorossiysk Naval Base in the Black Sea between December 14 and 15, according to a report from the British Defence Intelligence Agency.

Miami exchanges

The attacks take place as American and European officials discuss ending the nearly four-year conflict in Miami over the weekend, with Russian and Ukrainian teams also present.

Kirill Dmitriev, the Russian envoy to Miami, announced his arrival on Saturday.

Despite calling the conflict “not our war,” US Secretary of State Marco Rubio asserted that Washington would not impose any sanctions on Ukraine.

Rustem Umerov, a negotiator for Ukraine, and other UK, French, and German officials are in conversation with Trump envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner. Russian officials are holding separate meetings with American officials, including Kremlin-key negotiator Dmitriev.

The main impediment is still the use of territorial concessions, with reports suggesting that Washington is compelled to renounce eastern Donetsk in favor of ceding areas.

Vladimir Putin, the president of Russia, pledged to continue conducting military operations and to anticipate new successes before the end of the year by no means of compromise at his annual choreographed news conference on Friday.

Putin’s remarks come just after he ordered troops to enter the neighboring nation, the latest in a string of frequently repeated maximalist Russian positions.

One of the most contentious issues in the negotiations to end the war so far is the question of territory gained, lost, or to be ceded.

Putin has resisted giving Ukraine all of its territory to the regions that Moscow and his forces seized and annexed in 2014.

Additionally, he wants Ukrainian troops to leave eastern Ukraine, which the Russian military has yet to do in the eastern Donetsk region, where fighting continues to be attritional, conditions that Kyiv has explicitly rejected.

Russia has a significant influence over the eastern and Black Sea coastal regions of Ukraine, and the fighting continues as the talks progress.

Putin said on Friday that Russian forces had “fully seized strategic initiative” and that they would gain more before the year was over, and that they had confidence in the state of the battlefield.

However, this week’s shaky narrative centers on Moscow’s claim that it will win in the face of undisputed facts.

After isolating Russian forces inside its northern city of Kupiansk, Ukraine gradually relinquished control of almost all of its territory, defying Russian claims that they had seized it.

Russian forces were unable to dislod Ukrainian defenders from Pokrovsk, a city in eastern Donetsk, to support Moscow’s claims of total control.

On Friday, European leaders agreed to offer a 90 billion euros ($105bn) loan to cover Ukraine’s military and economic needs for the following two years.

MSF urges Israel to let critical aid into Gaza as children freeze to death

Doctors Without Borders, known by its moniker MSF, has issued a warning that the Gaza Strip’s children and babies are dying from harsh winter weather. It also requests that Israel ease its aid embargo as the military continues to waggle its genocidal war.

According to MSF, the death of a 29-day-old premature baby, Said Asad Abedin, who was born in Khan Younis, was brought on by severe hypothermia.

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The Ministry of Health in Gaza reported on Thursday that there were 13 fatalities due to extreme weather. Mohammed Khalil Abu al-Khair, a second baby born two weeks ago, froze to death in a shelter or clothing malfunction earlier this week.

In a video update, Ahmed al-Farra, the head of Nasser Medical Complex’s maternity and paediatric division, said that “hypothermia is very dangerous” for babies. We will see more and more deaths, according to al-Farra, if nothing is done to help these families in the tents, the warming, the mobile homes, the caravans, or the tents, he said.

According to MSF, children are “losing their lives because they lack the most fundamental necessities for survival,” according to Nasser Hospital’s nursing team manager Bilal Abu Saada. “Babies are coming to the hospital cold with near-death vital signs.”

In addition to the rising death rate, MSF reported that its staff expects to see high rates of respiratory infections, which are a particular threat for children under five.

“Sortens of thousands of Palestinians continue to struggle in flooded and decommissioned makeshift tents as Gaza is battered by heavy rains and storms,” the organization continued. “MSF urges Israeli authorities to urgently permit a sizable increase in aid flow into the Strip.”

Israeli attacks continue without a hitch.

Meanwhile, according to the Palestinian news agency Wafa, Israeli forces shot and destroyed buildings on Saturday morning in areas east of Gaza City, and more gunfire was reported east of Khan Younis.

At least six people were killed when Israel attacked a shelter for Palestinian refugees on Friday. The Israeli military allegedly fired on “suspects” of the law.

Body parts and frightened civilians attempting to rescue injured people from danger were seen in the scene’s graphic videos.

The occupied West Bank town of az-Zawiya was also attacked by military vehicles as well, according to the organization. There, the forces severely injured and severely injured a number of residents and stormed homes, according to the organization.

“His tiny cries are still audible to me.”

More than 53, 000 tents that have been displaced Palestinians’ temporary shelters have been flooded or blown away in recent weeks due to heavy rain, high winds, and freezing temperatures.

The destruction of significant amounts of infrastructure and buildings causes flooding and sewage overflows. Despite the risk of collapse, scattered families have sought refuge in the shells of partially collapsed buildings, with 13 of them caving in across Gaza last week.

Children and babies have been found to be fatally affected by the winter weather and Israel’s blocking of essential aid and mobile homes for shelter.

Eman Abu al-Khair, a 34-year-old displaced Palestinian living in al-Mawasi west of Khan Younis, discovered her sleeping baby Mohammed as “cold as ice,” his hands and feet frozen, and “his face stiff and yellowish,” she told Al Jazeera.

Due to the severe rain, it was impossible for her and her husband to travel by foot to the hospital.

Mohammed was taken into intensive care in Khan Younis after being rushed by an animal-drawn cart to Red Crescent Hospital in Khan Younis at dawn, with a blue face and convulsions. He passed away shortly after.

Eman said, “I can still hear his tiny cries in my ears.” I go to sleep and leave, unable to accept that his crying and awakening me at night will never occur again.

She continued, “No medical issues were reported for Mohammed.” His tiny body was unable to withstand the tents’ extreme cold.

Despite being requested to stop by a number of UN agencies, international organizations, and other countries since the October 10 ceasefire ended, Israel has continued to obstruct the flow of humanitarian aid into the Gaza Strip.

Despite the fact that an estimated 55, 000 families have seen their belongings and shelters damaged or destroyed in the storm, Israel has said it has prevented tents and blankets from reaching Palestinians.

According to the UN, there have also been scores of damages to thousands of kid-friendly locations, affecting about 30 000 children.

Aid is entering Gaza in a “trickle,” according to Natasha Hall, a senior advocate for Refugees International, in part because of its opaque list of “controlled dual-use items,” which included tents, tools, bandages, and other necessities.

Iran executes man accused of spying for Israel’s Mossad: State media

As Tehran continues its widening crackdown on alleged collaborators following the 12-day Israel-USA-Iran war earlier this year, judicial authorities announced that Iran had executed a man who had been convicted of spying for Israel’s Mossad intelligence agency.

According to Mizan, the judiciary’s official news agency, Aghil Keshavarz was put to death on Saturday morning when the Supreme Court upheld his espionage conviction.

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After being photographed by military patrols in the northwest city of Urmia, the 27-year-old architecture student was taken into custody earlier this year.

Since the June conflict, there have been at least 10 executions for espionage in the wake of this execution, which is an addition to the growing number already executed for espionage.

Iran executed a man it claimed was “one of the most significant spies for Israel in Iran” in September.

Tehran made espionage automatically a crime against alleged spies for Israel and the US in October, enforcing stricter sanctions against it, including the confiscation of assets and the death penalty.

In accordance with the Mizan report, Keshavarz is accused of carrying out more than 200 missions for Israeli intelligence services in Tehran, Isfahan, Urmia, and Shahroud.

Among the allegedly accomplished tasks were photographing target sites, conducting opinion surveys, and monitoring traffic patterns at specific locations.

Authorities claimed that after finishing his assignments, he received payment in cryptocurrency from both Israel’s Mossad and military officials through encrypted messaging platforms.

According to the judiciary, Keshavarz “knowingly cooperated” with Israeli forces in an effort to harm Iran’s Islamic Republic.

Similar espionage convictions have previously been disputed by the Oslo-based Iran Human Rights organization, claiming that suspects are frequently tortured into making false confessions.

Israel launched 12 days of airstrikes against Iran’s top generals, nuclear scientists, and civilians in residential areas, which Iran retaliated with missile and drone firebombs and rockets in response. During the conflict, US airs extensively on Iranian nuclear sites on Israel’s behalf. At least 1,100 people were killed by Israeli attacks on Iran, according to Amnesty International.