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Russian ambassador summoned to Berlin over claims Kremlin is seeking to destabilise Germany – Europe live

EU member states have agreed to introduce a €3 customs duty per item on parcels valued under €150. The move, which will apply from July next year, is designed to curb the impact of cheap goods coming in from China via online platforms such as Temu and Shein. Duty free parcels have been a huge issue in the EU, the UK and the US where Donald Trump scrapped the “de minimis” duty-free exemption for parcels valued up to $800. The European Commission said in a statement it welcomed the approval by member states. “The new duty will help protect the competitiveness of European businesses by levelling the playing field between e-commerce and traditional retail.

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Nobel peace prize laureate Narges Mohammadi arrested in Iran, say supporters

Iranian security forces have “violently” arrested the 2023 Nobel peace prize winner Narges Mohammadi at a memorial ceremony for a lawyer and human rights advocate, her supporters said. Mohammadi, who was granted temporary leave from prison in December 2024 on medical grounds, was detained along with several other activists at the ceremony for Khosro Alikordi, who was found dead in his office last week, her foundation wrote on X. Also on X, Mohammadi’s Paris-based husband, Taghi Rahmani, said she had been arrested at the ceremony in the eastern city of Mashhad along with Sepideh Gholian, a fellow prominent activist. There was no immediate comment from Iran over its detention of Mohammadi, 53. However, supporters had warned for months she was at risk of being put back into prison. It was not clear if authorities would immediately return her to prison to serve the rest of her term. Narges’s foundation said her brother Mehdi Mohammadi was present at the event and confirmed her arrest. Alikordi was found dead earlier this month in his office, with officials in Razavi Khorasan province describing his death as a heart attack. However, a tightening security crackdown coincided with his death, raising questions. Over 80 lawyers have signed a statement demanding more information. “Alikordi was a prominent figure among Iran’s community of human rights defenders,” the New York-based Center for Human Rights in Iran said on Thursday. “Over the past several years, he had been repeatedly arrested, harassed and threatened by security and judicial forces.” Footage purportedly of the ceremony showed Mohammadi at a microphone, calling out to the crowd gathered, without wearing a hijab or headscarf. She started the crowd chanting the name of Majidreza Rahnavard, a man whom authorities hanged from a crane in a public execution in 2022. Prior to her release last December Mohammadi had been imprisoned since November 2021 for convictions in relation to her campaigning against capital punishment and the obligatory hijab in Iran. She suffered multiple heart attacks while imprisoned before undergoing emergency surgery in 2022, her supporters say. Her lawyer in late 2024 revealed doctors had found a bone lesion that they feared could be cancerous, which was later removed. Mohammadi’s sentence was supposed to be suspended for three weeks but her time out of prison lengthened, possibly as activists and western powers pushed Iran to keep her free. She remained out even during the 12-day war in June between Iran and Israel. She kept up her activism with public protests and international media appearances, including demonstrating at one point in front of Tehran’s notorious Evin prison, where she had been held. An engineer by training, Mohammadi has been imprisoned 13 times and convicted five times. In total, she has been sentenced to over 30 years in prison. Associated Press and Agence France-Presse contributed to this report

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UK imposes sanctions on four RSF officers for ‘heinous’ mass killings in Sudan

The UK has placed sanctions on four senior commanders of Sudan’s paramilitary Rapid Support Forces suspected of involvement in “heinous” violence against civilians in the city of El Fasher, but decided not to take any action against their key military and diplomatic backer, the United Arab Emirates, or their chief commander. British officials suggested they preferred to use their leverage with the UAE and the RSF commander, Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, known as Hemedti, privately, but admitted there was little sign of a ceasefire in Sudan’s near three-year civil war. They also expressed fears that the war may spread to South Sudan and Eritrea. There were also concerns among diplomats that rivalries between the UAE and Saudi Arabia, on display in the south of Yemen, could lead to a deepening of the conflict in Sudan. The UK estimates there are as many as 26 possible arms supply routes into Sudan with 10 countries of origin. Saudi Arabia and Egypt have broadly supported the army, while the RSF has been backed by the UAE, a position the Gulf state denies despite evidence compiled by the UN, independent experts and reporters. In south Yemen, the UAE is backing a separatist movement, the Southern Transitional Council, which is opposed by Saudi Arabia. The war between the army and the RSF, which erupted in April 2023, has caused what the UN has described as the world’s worst humanitarian crisis. Communities in the Darfur region are facing famine and malnutrition after an 18-month RSF siege around El Fasher, which fell to the group on 26 October. Those targeted with sanctions include Abdul Rahim Hamdan Dagalo, the RSF’s deputy leader and brother of Hemedti, as well as three other commanders, all of whom now face asset freezes and travel bans. Officials indicated the threshold of evidence needed to place sanctions had been met partly because some of the commanders posted videos glorifying the killings on social media. The four individuals under UK sanctions faced the same punishment by the EU last week, and the measures underline the extent to which sanctions are as much a statement of diplomatic leverage and disapproval as an objective assessment of those most responsible for the conflict. The other RSF leaders placed under sanctions are: Gedo Hamdan Ahmed, the RSF’s commander for North Darfur; Al-Fateh Abdullah Idris, brigadier general of the RSF; and Tijani Ibrahim Moussa Mohamed, an RSF field commander. The UK hinted strongly that it may take further action against the RSF in the near future, but this may depend on how the RSF seeks to use its current military advantage. In a statement, the UK Foreign Office said the individuals were “suspected of atrocities including mass killings, sexual violence and deliberate attacks on civilians in El Fasher, Sudan”. Although there is no official figure for how many people were killed after the RSF’s seizure of El Fasher, British MPs have been briefed that at least 60,000 may have been murdered. The Foreign Office said an extra £20m in funding would empower aid organisations to reach 150,000 people with essentials such as food, medical care and emergency shelter, as well as to keep hospitals running and reconnect families. UK aid commitments to Sudan this year have risen to £146m. The foreign secretary, Yvette Cooper, said: “The atrocities taking place in Sudan are so horrific they scar the conscience of the world. The overwhelming evidence of heinous crimes – mass executions, starvation and the systematic and calculated use of rape as a weapon of war – cannot and will not go unpunished. The UK will not look away, and we will always stand with the people of Sudan.” The UK is resisting efforts to join the group of four countries – the US, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Egypt – that are leading efforts to find a diplomatic solution, fearing to do so would lead to pressure to join diplomatically one side or the other in the conflict. The sanctions were welcomed by the UK’s Darfur diaspora – thousands of whom have had family members killed by the RSF during the conflict – but there was also disappointment that the UAE had escaped censure. Abdallah Abu Garda, the chair of the UK-based Darfur Diaspora Association, which has more than 30,000 members, said: “The UK’s sanctions on senior RSF commanders are a vital step toward justice. But ending atrocity crimes in Sudan and the genocide in Darfur requires more. All supply lines that fuel these atrocities, including those enabled by the UAE, must be cut. “True justice demands that every party, whether a direct perpetrator or an external sponsor, faces real consequences.” The UN Human Rights Council last week adopted a UK-led resolution condemning the atrocities and securing international consensus to mandate an urgent inquiry into atrocities in El Fasher.

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Friday briefing: How the Free Birth Society’s ​philosophy ​contributed to a ​preventable ​death

Good morning. Last month, we brought you the story behind the Guardian’s year-long investigation into the US-based Free Birth Society, a multi-million dollar business whose philosophy has been linked to traumatic births and even baby deaths around the world. The society promotes a version of free birth (or unassisted birth) with no medical support that is seen as extreme, even among advocates of the practice. Unlike home births, which have a midwife in attendance, free birth involves delivering without medical help. The group influences women via podcasts, social media and online schools and, the Guardian found, advises mothers to steer clear of doctors and midwives, is anti-ultrasound, which it falsely claims harms babies, and downplays serious medical conditions. For today’s newsletter, we revisit the story to focus on one young woman’s experience with the society, told as part of a new six-episode podcast series, The Birth Keepers, which came out on Thursday, and is presented by Sirin Kale and Lucy Osborne. Lorren Holliday, a former actor, moved from Los Angeles with her husband, Chris, to a cactus-strewn desert in the middle of Joshua Tree national park, to be with nature and to live “wild and free”. The young couple wanted kids, and she became pregnant quickly. Then she discovered and joined the Facebook group of Emilee Saldaya, the founder of FBS, and became captivated by the society’s podcasts. It was a discovery that led to tragedy. After the headlines, more on what the Guardian podcast series reveals, and what happened to Lorren. A warning: what follows is distressing and graphic in its description of what Lorren experienced. Five big stories UK news | The US is engaging in “extreme rightwing tropes” reminiscent of the 1930s, British MPs warned ministers on Thursday, after the release of Donald Trump’s national security strategy. Health | The NHS is facing its “worst-case scenario” for flu cases this month across England after the number of people in hospital with the illness increased by 55% in a week. Iran | A child bride who was due to be executed this month in Iran over the death of her husband has had her life spared by his parents, who were paid the equivalent of £70,000 in exchange for their forgiveness. UK politics | Downing Street has vowed to force the Lords to vote on the employment rights bill again next week, after Conservative and cross-bench peers blocked it on Wednesday night. Topic | The US wants Ukraine to withdraw its troops from the Donbas region, and Washington would then create a “free economic zone” in the parts where Kyiv has held off the Russian invasion – but “they don’t know” under whose control it would be, Volodymyr Zelenskyy has said. In depth: ‘Am I about to lose everything right now?’ “My goal for my life was to be basically wild and free roam the land, barefooted, you know, in the sand,” Lorren tells Sirin and Lucy in the podcast. After she became pregnant, Lorren’s initial plan was a hospital birth, but her first meeting with a doctor put her off. A home birth midwife she liked cost $5,000, but the couple had just begun a new business and money was tight. She began scrolling online for information on natural birth and then her algorithm served up the Free Birth Society. “I just got hooked,” she tells Sirin and Lucy. She began listening to FBS podcasts on “amazing, successful” birth stories, sometimes as many as seven a day. She joined the Facebook group and became friendly with Emilee Saldaya, whom she says she “trusted, very much”. “I felt like she proved herself since she had led all these other women to these great victories in their births,” she said. Chris was also on board: “I loved the concept,” he said. Many things in Lorren’s story, the Guardian found, were similar to other stories of women they talked to, linked to FBS: women discovering their content through social media algorithms, the addictive nature of the podcast with its positive free birthing stories, a bad experience with the mainstream medical industry. All of the women, the Guardian found, felt strongly they were doing this for their babies. “They tell you not to do the OBGYN stuff,” said Lorren. “I quit doing that. No more doctors. No blood work or visits or ultrasounds, nothing.” When her due date came, in October 2018, Lorren was confident her birth would play out like the stories she had heard. But she was blindsided by how excruciatingly painful it was. And she began to feel something wasn’t right. *** ‘There’s no way out’ By day two, Lorren felt like her labour wasn’t progressing and decided to message Saldaya directly on Facebook. She told her that the pain was “unbearable” and that she had been throwing up. “The pain is not unbearable,” Saldaya replied. “This is birth, You make a choice to move though one sensation at time or you make a choice to go to the hospital. There’s no way out.” She told Lorren that “you’ll have to die a thousand deaths and let go of everything you think you can’t do”. Days after her contractions began, Lorren started seeing what she thought might be meconium, which can be a sign that a baby is in distress and can sometimes be dangerous if it gets into a baby’s lungs. She messaged Saldaya again, with details of fluids and a picture of stains. An exchange of texts followed, with Saldaya saying the fluid looks like normal, adding: “All looks well and healthy. Ride those waves sister your baby is coming, all is well.” While Lorren was in her trailer messaging Saldaya, she also turned to the FBS Facebook group to ask if this seemed normal. “I was just getting nothing but, ‘you’re doing good, you’re just at the beginning’,” she recalls. *** ‘Please go to the hospital’ Renee LaPonte, a midwife from Massachusetts, was also in the group and had grown concerned with Lorren’s prolonged labour. LaPonte told the Guardian: “I remember saying, that’s not OK, and people saying, that’s a variation of normal. That’s not a variation of normal. She needs help. And I remember typing, ‘Please go to the hospital’. But as quickly as I would type it, it would get taken down. There were several of us doing that.” The posts were being deleted by FBS group admins, because they were against the groups rules. There was no “assistance” talk, meaning you could never recommend someone go to the doctors, call a midwife or home birth group, LaPonte said. Lorren says she can’t remember ever seeing messages urging her to go to hospital. *** ‘A scratch on the soul that just would never leave’ Six days into her labour, Lorren sent Saldaya a picture of a luminous green stain. “That’s [meconium]”, she messaged back. The next morning, Saldaya asked if Lorren knew any midwives who could come over, adding: “How far are you from hospital, do you feel concerned?” When Lorren replied that she was 30 minutes from hospital and there were no midwives around, Saldaya warned her what to expect if she goes to hospital. “Some people fudge the date when their waters open,” she said, adding that if they have been open for 24 hours, they will perform a c-section. Lorren, who could still feel the baby, told Saldaya she was going in. “I was like, all right, we’re going to have the baby today. Let’s go to the hospital. We’re done.” But, after being admitted, Lorren and Chris were told there was no heartbeat. “I remember looking over at my husband. And he just went: ‘It’s OK, it’ll be OK’, and we had to stay strong until she was born.” What followed was “an excruciatingly painful” procedure, involving seven doctors, to deliver the baby. Her daughter’s arm and shoulder were lodged on the right side of Lorren’s pelvis, so much so that they had to use a vacuum and forceps. She found out later that the doctors told Chris there was a chance she could die, too. “So many thoughts are going through my head,” Chris recalls in the Guardian podcast. “Of just, am I about to lose everything right now? And it’s one of those moments in life that just kind of create that little scratch on the soul that just would never leave.” Lorren and Chris’s baby was stillborn, weighing 8 pounds 13 ounces. They had already chosen a name, and called her Journey Moon. *** ‘A preventable death’ After being shown the messages between Lorren and Saldaya, one professor of midwifery told the Guardian there were “huge warning signs that the baby was in distress”. Another expert said: “This was not a tragedy, but a preventable death.” And an experienced home birth midwife told us that “this outcome was overwhelmingly avoidable”. Emilee Saldaya and her business partner Yolanda Norris-Clark were both approached for comment. Neither provided a substantive response. In reply to one email, Saldaya said: “Some of these allegations are false or defamatory”. In May, FBS issued a disclaimer, saying its content was not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any medical condition related to pregnancy or birth. After the Guardian published its investigation last month, Saldaya published a statement on Instagram, branding the report propaganda and suggesting it contained lies. She has previously criticised other media coverage for unfairly depicting her a “cult leader” and says she wants women to have the option to choose free birth. Saldaya has always denied involvement in Journey Moon’s death. “The story wound up that I was her virtual midwife,” she has told students, “which is not true. We had never worked together. I didn’t know this woman at all.” The Guardian Investigates: The Birth Keepers is our six-part podcast series on how two influencers made millions radicalising pregnant women around the world – and the tragedies that followed. The entire series can be listened to now. What else we’ve been reading This piece on gay male and non-binary popstars hitting a glass ceiling is an incredibly interesting and thoroughly depressing read. Poppy Noor, newsletters team I’ve not played Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 with its “Belle Époque” setting, but this behind the scenes interview with the French team behind the game has me intrigued to give it a whirl. Martin If you’re in need of a hope injection I very much recommend Lucy Knight’s piece on the Sunderland charity that’s been improving lives (and fighting far-right hate) one house, park and shop at a time. Poppy For i-D magazine, Pedro Pinho has this look at the style and personalities of people attending the BATEKOO Festival in São Paulo, a showcase of Brazil’s Black queer counterculture. Martin Labour is talking big on its commitments to reduce the welfare bill – while quietly gutting the programmes needed to keep deindustrialised regions out of poverty. Larry Elliott on this topic is a must read. Poppy Sport Netball | Receiving her first centre pass at London’s Copper Box Arena will be an unforgettable moment for England captain Nat Metcalf on her return to action. Darts | Luke Littler won on opening night 3-0 over Darius Labanauskas on the opening night of the PDC world darts championship at Alexandra Palace. Football | Youri Tielemans struck within eight minutes of coming on to earn a 2-1 win for Aston Villa in Basel in the Europa League, their eighth victory in succession. Igor Jesus’s late goal sealed Nottingham Forest a 2-1 win in Utrecht and boosted their hopes of a top-eight finish. Something for the weekend Our critics’ roundup of the best things to watch, read, play and listen to right now Exhibition Hyakkō: 100+ Makers from Japan | ★★★☆☆ On show at London’s Japan House is the work of more than 100 pairs of eyes and hands, constituting an overwhelming profusion of human creativity, corralled into an exhibition of laconic simplicity. About 2,000 objects – bowls, trays, cups, metalwork, glassware and some perplexing bamboo cocoons – are grouped according to their makers on long, softly lit display tables. At first glance, you might think you have stumbled into an especially refined John Lewis homeware department, but then you notice the delicate black and red lacquer work, the gleaming gold on the inside of a perfectly shaped sake cup, the intricacy of the bamboo and some eccentrically shaped vessels, like alien seedpods, that look like ceramics but turn out be a kind of petrified leather. Catherine Shoard TV Man Vs Baby, Rowan Atkinson’s festival slapstick | ★★☆☆☆ Trevor Bingley is not Mr Bean, but the two have a few things in common. For a start, they are both self-destructively single-minded when it comes to overcoming trivial annoyances. In Netflix’s 2022 series Man vs Bee, Bingley ended up building a fake explosive-laced hive to destroy the insect who refused to vacate the swish home he was house-sitting; for Bean, life consists almost exclusively of finding absurd solutions to minor problems. Both are pitiable figures: Bean because he’s a walking disaster zone; Bingley because he’s lonely and broke, having lost numerous jobs due to general ineptitude. In Man vs Baby, Bingley is back, struggling to make ends meet in a chocolate-box village in the home counties. It’s Christmas and he has just been let go as a primary school caretaker. His final job is to assist with the nativity (the opportunity to shamelessly channel Love Actually is not wasted). There, he discovers a baby on the doorstep; this must be the local child starring as Jesus in the play! Except, worryingly, it’s not. Rachel Aroesti Film Ella McCay | ★★☆☆☆ This new comedy drama written and directed by James L Brooks, feels like a relic, and not just because it’s set, seemingly arbitrarily, in 2008. Broadly appealing, well cast, neither strictly comic nor melodramatic, concerning ordinary people in non-IP circumstances, it’s the type of mid-budget adult film that used to appear regularly in cinemas in the 90s and aughts, before the streaming wars devoured the market. Even its lead promotional image, turned into a life-size cardboard cut-out at the theatre – Emma Mackey’s titular Ella in a sensible trenchcoat, balancing on one foot as she fixes a broken block heel – recalls a bygone era of films like Confessions of a Shopaholic, Miss Congeniality or Little Miss Sunshine, that would now go straight to streaming. Adrian Horton Theatre Museum of Austerity at the Young Vic | ★★★★☆ Here is an excoriating production that examines what austerity meant for those targeted by it. They include some of the most vulnerable members of society – people who were abused, destitute, disabled, mentally ill and jobless (what was it that Pearl Buck said about the test of a civilisation?). The show is based on the lives of people who were denied welfare benefits and died. Directed by Sacha Wares, it is an installation that combines promenade theatre with holograms. Wearing a mixed-reality (MR) headset, you enter a room where eight static figures emerge, played by actors. They lie on gurneys, bare mattresses, park benches, pavements and soiled duvets, and make for a woeful army of “invisibles” who have, for this time, come into our line of vision. Arifa Akbar The front pages “UK facing worst winter flu crisis within a fortnight as cases surge” warns the Guardian and the i paper says “‘Super flu’ hits UK, with cases highest in young children”. The Times runs with “Streeting: strikes may force NHS to collapse”. The Express catches both strains: “Stop ‘reckless’ strikes as NHS fights super flu”. The Telegraph has “Britain ‘must not rely on US for defence’” – its interview is with Al Carns, a defence minister. Looks like the Mail was at the briefing too: “Minister: Britain’s on a war footing”. “World cup of greed” – the Mirror says high ticket prices are a “new low for shameful Fifa”. The Metro leads with the Bristol Museum robbery: “Raiders of the lost archive”. Top story in the Financial Times is “China leads resistance to US carve-out on OECD global minimum tax regime”. Today in Focus Is the far right hijacking Christianity? Are US-style Christian politics finally taking root in the UK? With Lamorna Ash Cartoon of the day | Ben Jennings The Upside A bit of good news to remind you that the world’s not all bad Until last year, residents of Bor, South Sudan, filled up their jerrycans with dirty water from the nearest stretch of the White Nile. Now, a new water treatment plant has transformed the town in what is being seen as a beacon of climate crisis adaptation. In 2020, the White Nile broke its banks and submerged the town in floods that had not been seen there for 60 years. Experts say extreme flooding due to climate breakdown has displaced just under 380,00 South Sudanese people. The town has now recovered, with the $5.4m (£4m) project bringing in jobs for locals and connecting 704 households, seven schools and a hospital to the network. Locals say clean water has been life-changing: “Before, we have been suffering. But now we can get water anytime.” Sign up here for a weekly roundup of The Upside, sent to you every Sunday Bored at work? And finally, the Guardian’s puzzles are here to keep you entertained throughout the day. Until tomorrow. Quick crossword Cryptic crossword Wordiply

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Ukraine war briefing: ‘Terrorist’ attack kills serviceman in Kyiv and injures four

Two improvised bombs exploded in Kyiv on Thursday killing a serviceman and wounding four others, including two police officers, in a “terrorist” attack, prosecutors said. “The first explosion occurred while two national guard servicemen were patrolling the area, as a result one of them died,” the Kyiv city prosecutor’s office said, adding that the second bomb was detonated when police and medics were responding to the first. Ukrainian drones hit two chemical plants in Russia’s Novgorod and Smolensk regions, the commander of drone forces said on Thursday. Maj Robert “Magyar” Brovdi said the factories were producing components for explosives used by Russian troops fighting in Ukraine. Other sources including the dissident Russian social media channel Astra reported the strikes and posted pictures. The Kyiv Independent described the PJSC Acron plant at Veliky Novgorod city as one of the largest such facilities in Russia. The Ukrainian army’s eastern command on Thursday denied Russian claims to have taken control of Siversk. It is located about 30km (18 miles) east of Kramatorsk and Sloviansk, the last two major cities still under Ukrainian control in the Donbas. The area “remains under the control of the armed forces of Ukraine” said the army. “The enemy is trying to infiltrate Siversk in small groups, taking advantage of unfavourable weather conditions but most of these units are being destroyed on the approaches.” The Institute for the Study of War said on Thursday that Ukrainian forces had recently advanced near Pokrovsk; while Russian forces recently advanced in northern Kharkiv oblast and the Kostyantynivka-Druzhkivka tactical area and near Oleksandrivka. Nato’s secretary general, Mark Rutte, has warned allies “we are Russia’s next target” in a speech in Berlin in which he said “too many don’t feel the urgency, too many believe that time is on our side” and painted a vision of European war with Russia within next five years. The estimated €210bn of Russian central bank assets in the EU will stay frozen for the foreseeable future under a plan to be put before EU finance ministers for formal approval on Friday. A majority of ambassadors from EU member states on Thursday approved the plan to use exceptional powers under article 122 of the EU treaty to fast-track the measure. Hungary’s Kremlin-friendly government has hit out at the decision. The freeze will no longer require a twice-yearly vote that Hungary could veto. It helps pave the way for an loan to Ukraine, funded by the frozen Russian assets, that the Europeans are scrambling to finalise. Kim Jong-un hailed North Korean troops’ fighting in the Ukraine war, state media said on Friday. It came at the end of a three-day meeting of the dictatorship’s central committee. The soldiers, Kim said, had “demonstrated to the world the prestige of our army and state as the ever-victorious army and genuine protector of international justice”. At least 600 of them have been killed and thousands more wounded, according to South Korean estimates. The US wants Ukraine to withdraw its troops where they still hold the Donbas region and Washington would then turn it into a “free economic zone” run by “they don’t know [who]”, Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on Thursday. The idea was that Ukrainian troops would withdraw but Russian troops would not advance into the territory, said the Ukrainian president. As Shaun Walker writes from Kyiv, Zelenskyy continued: “If one side’s troops have to retreat and the other side stays where they are, then what will hold back these other troops, the Russians? Or what will stop them disguising themselves as civilians and taking over this free economic zone? This is all very serious. It’s not a fact that Ukraine would agree to it, but if you are talking about a compromise then it has to be a fair compromise.” If Ukraine did agree to such a scheme, only “the Ukrainian people” could ratify it via elections or a referendum. Zelensky pushed back against the idea of a unilateral Ukrainian withdrawal in the Donetsk region without the Russians doing likewise. “Why doesn’t the other side of the war pull back the same distance in the other direction?” he said, adding there were “a great many questions” still unresolved. “We have two key points of disagreement: the territories of Donetsk and everything related to them, and the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant. These are the two topics we continue to discuss.” Donald Trump on Thursday said the US would send a representative to participate in talks in Europe on Ukraine this weekend if there is a good chance of making progress on a ceasefire.

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Dozens killed in hospital strike in Myanmar’s western Rakhine state

Dozens have been killed in a military strike on a hospital in Myanmar’s western Rakhine state, according to an aid worker, a rebel group, a witness and local media reports, as the junta wages a withering offensive ahead of elections beginning this month. “The situation is very terrible,” said on-site aid worker Wai Hun Aung. “As for now, we can confirm there are 31 deaths and we think there will be more deaths. Also there are 68 wounded and will be more and more.” The hospital in Rakhine’s Mrauk U township was struck late on Wednesday by bombs dropped by a military aircraft, said Khine Thu Kha, a spokesperson for the Arakan Army, which is battling the ruling junta along parts of the coastal state. “The Mrauk U General Hospital was completely destroyed,” Khine Thu Kha told Reuters news agency. “The high number of casualties occurred because the hospital took a direct hit.” A junta spokesperson did not respond to calls for comment. UN human rights chief Volker Turk said such attacks may amount to a war crime and called for an investigation. A spokesperson for the US state department called the reports “disturbing” and said the military government should cease violence against civilians. Local media reports said dozens had been killed in the hospital strike, with photographs from the scene showing the shattered remains of the health facility, and shrouded bodies visible on the ground outside the facility after the attack. The Guardian could not immediately verify the images. Soon after he heard the sound of explosions on Wednesday night, a 23-year-old resident of Mrauk U said he rushed to the scene. “When I arrived, the hospital was on fire,” he told Reuters, asking not to be named because of security concerns. “I saw many bodies lying around and many injured people.” The 300-bed hospital was overflowing with patients at the time of the strike, said aid worker Wai Hun Aung, as most healthcare services across swathes of Rakhine state have been suspended amid the ongoing fighting. The junta has increased airstrikes year-on-year since the start of Myanmar’s civil war, conflict monitors say, after seizing power in a 2021 coup that ended a decade-long democratic experiment. The military has set polls starting 28 December – touting the vote as an off-ramp to fighting – but rebels have vowed to block it from territory they control, which the junta is battling to claw back. Rakhine state is controlled almost in its entirety by the Arakan Army (AA) – an ethnic minority separatist force active long before the military staged a coup toppling the civilian government of democratic leader Aung San Suu Kyi. The AA has emerged as one of the most powerful opposition groups in the civil war ravaging Myanmar, alongside other ethnic minority fighters and pro-democracy partisans who took up arms after the coup. Scattered rebels initially struggled to make headway before a trio of groups led a joint offensive starting in 2023, back-footing the military and prompting it to bolster its ranks with conscripted troops. The AA was a key participant in the so-called “Three Brotherhood Alliance” but its two other factions this year agreed to Chinese-brokered truces, leaving it as the last one standing. While the military-run election has been widely criticised by monitors including the United Nations, Beijing has emerged as a key backer saying it should “restore social stability” to its neighbour. The AA has proven a powerful adversary for the junta and now controls all but three of Rakhine’s 17 townships, according to conflict monitors. But the group’s ambitions are largely limited to their Rakhine homeland, hemmed in by the coast of the Bay of Bengal and jungle-clad mountains to the north. The group has also been accused of atrocities including against the mostly Muslim Rohingya ethnic minority from the region. With Agence France-Presse and Reuters

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Trump expands Venezuela sanctions as Maduro decries new ‘era of piracy’

Donald Trump has exerted more pressure on Venezuela’s president Nicolás Maduro, expanding sanctions and issuing fresh threats to strike land targets in Venezuela, as the South American dictator accused the US president of ushering in a new “era of criminal naval piracy” in the Caribbean. Late on Thursday, the US imposed curbs on three nephews of Maduro’s wife, Cilia Flores, as well as six crude oil supertankers and the shipping companies linked to them. The treasury department alleged the vessels “engaged in deceptive and unsafe shipping practices and continue to provide financial resources that fuel Maduro’s corrupt narco-terrorist regime”. The targeted vessels recently loaded crude oil in Venezuela, according to state oil company PDVSA’s internal shipping documents. Four of the tankers are Panama-flagged, with the other two flagged by the Cook Islands and Hong Kong. In comments on Thursday night, Trump also repeated his threat to soon begin strikes on suspected narcotics shipments making their way via land from Venezuela to the US. The comments come after the US seized a “dark fleet” tanker named the Skipper off the coast of Venezuela, sparking concerns among some US lawmakers that Trump is “sleepwalking us into a war with Venezuela”. On Thursday, Maduro responded to the seizure, saying at a presidential event: “They kidnapped the crew, stole the ship and have inaugurated a new era, the era of criminal naval piracy in the Caribbean.” He added that “Venezuela will secure all ships to guarantee the free trade of its oil around the world.” White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said the US would take the Skipper to a US port. “The vessel will go to a US port, and the United States does intend to seize the oil,” Leavitt said during a briefing. “However, there is a legal process for the seizure of that oil, and that legal process will be followed.” Trump earlier told reporters that the US planned to “keep” the oil on board the tanker. Asked whether she viewed the seizure as an escalation of US pressure against Maduro, Leavitt said: “I think the president considers the seizure of the oil tanker as effectuating the administration’s sanctions policies.” “Prolonged war is definitely not something this president is interested in,” she added. Reuters on Thursday citing anonymous sources said that the US is preparing to seize more oil tankers off the coast of Venezuela. Asked whether the US would do so, Leavitt said: “We’re not going to stand by and watch sanctioned vessels sail the seas with black market oil, the proceeds of which will fuel narcoterrorism of rogue and illegitimate regimes around the world.” The Russian president, Vladimir Putin, called Maduro on Thursday after the rare seizure to “reaffirm” Russia’s support for the current Venezuelan government, despite calls from the Trump administration, other countries in the region and Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado for him to step down. A Kremlin readout of the call said Putin called Maduro to express “solidarity” with the Venezuelan people and to continue to build economic and energy cooperation, which includes offshore oil ventures in the Caribbean Sea. Senior Democratic lawmakers and at least one Republican have condemned the seizure of the oil tanker, with one saying Trump was “sleepwalking us into a war with Venezuela”. Maduro has reacted defiantly to US pressure and his government called the oil tanker seizure “blatant theft” and “an act of international piracy”, adding it would “defend its sovereignty, natural resources and national dignity with absolute determination”. But neighbouring countries have said Maduro’s exit could help pave a way to the end of the crisis. In a radio interview on Thursday, Colombia’s foreign affairs minister, Rosa Villavicencio, indicated her government would be willing to offer Maduro a place to live or “protection” if needed. “Colombia would have no reason to say no,” Villavicencio said, although she believed he would be more likely to go somewhere further away. It was the first time a senior Colombian official had said Maduro could receive asylum in the country, although Villavicencio had previously discussed the potential for a transitional government. That followed a public statement by Colombia’s leftwing president, Gustavo Petro, on Wednesday: “It is time for a general amnesty and a transitional government with the inclusion of all and everyone,” Petro said, adding that he opposed an “invasion by foreigners” of Venezuela, pushing back against direct action by the US. Celso Amorim, a top adviser to Brazil’s leftwing president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, earlier this week told the Guardian that “asylum is a Latin American institution [for] people of both right and left” but added that he did not want to speculate, “so as not to appear to be encouraging” the idea. Speaking in Oslo on Thursday after being awarded the Nobel peace prize, Machado repeated her call for Maduro to step down and predicted he would soon have no choice but to leave Venezuela. “He’s going out,” she insisted, although so far the autocrat has shown no sign of being willing to relinquish power after nearly 13 years as president. At a rally on Wednesday, Maduro urged his supporters to be ready to “to smash the teeth of the North American empire if necessary”. In an apparent bid to project nonchalance, he also danced to the sound of the Bobby McFerrin song Don’t Worry Be Happy. Ricardo Hausmann, a former Venezuelan minister and opposition supporter, said he believed dramatically increasingly US military pressure on Maduro was the only way to force him out. “If you know [you’re going to] confront some kinetic threats by a credible military force, then suddenly going into exile sounds that much more attractive,” Hausmann said. “That’s why my preference would be to clearly use the military threat to convince Maduro to go.” “If staying in power means that you may get missiles thrown at you, like [Iranian general Qasem] Soleimani, then you might want to consider seriously whether you want to stay in power,” Hausmann added. Maduro was democratically elected in 2013, inheriting the Bolivarian revolution from his mentor, Hugo Chávez, but has led the country in an increasingly authoritarian direction. The former union leader is widely believed to have stolen last year’s presidential election, with an independent analysis of election data gathered by the opposition suggesting Maduro suffered a landslide defeat to Machado’s ally, the retired diplomat Edmundo González. Even longstanding allies of the Chavista movement, such the leftist presidents of Brazil and Colombia, have refused to recognise Maduro’s claim to have beaten González, who ran in Machado’s place after she was banned from taking part. While the US seizure of the Guyana-flagged Skipper was quickly seen as an escalation of pressure on Venezuela, it also coincided with a number of attacks on other “dark fleet” ships around the world that carry oil between sanctioned countries in violation of global maritime regulations. Maritime data collected by Windward, a maritime AI data company, and shared with the Guardian indicated that the ship had regularly “spoofed” its location and made multiple trips to Venezuela and Iran, which is also under US sanctions, and had transported oil to China. “The US seizure of Skipper off the coast of Venezuela sends a powerful message that dark fleet tankers are now a legitimate military target,” the company wrote in an analysis. There are 30 sanctioned tankers operating in Venezuelan waters, the company said, including seven that are falsely flagged and operating off the coastline. “Despite flouting global maritime regulations that underpin global trade, hundreds of these tankers have operated around the world unchallenged – until now,” it said. The Trump administration framed Wednesday’s seizure as a law enforcement action, noting that the US Coast Guard led the operation and directing the US attorney general, Pam Bondi, to announce the seizure. “For multiple years, the oil tanker has been sanctioned by the United States due to its involvement in an illicit oil shipping network supporting foreign terrorist organisations,” she said. “This seizure, completed off the coast of Venezuela, was conducted safely and securely – and our investigation alongside the Department of Homeland Security to prevent the transport of sanctioned oil continues.”

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Papua New Guinea grapples with HIV epidemic as it battles stigma and US aid cuts

After battling illness for years, Nancy Karipa tested positive for HIV in 1999. She had just given birth to her first child. “It was a crossroads moment for me, with the fear of denial, but I chose action,” Karipa, who is now in her 50s, said at an Aids awareness event in Papua New Guinea’s capital Port Moresby in December. She and the baby received treatment, and her child remains healthy. Karipa, from East Sepik in northern PNG, is unusual in sharing her story. The stigma around the disease is high in the Pacific nation, but speaking out has never been more important. This year PNG declared HIV a “national crisis”. UNAids, the UN agency that fights HIV/Aids globally, says the epidemic in PNG is among the fastest growing in the Asia-Pacific region, along with Fiji and the Philippines. New infections have doubled since 2010 and it is estimated that only 59% of people living with the virus know they are HIV positive. The rise of infections in women and children is particularly alarming, UNAids says. “The transmission of [the virus from] mother to child is very high in Papua New Guinea, one of the highest globally,” says Manoela Manova, UNAids country director for PNG. Changes to funding for HIV support and prevention have hit PNG hard. The suspension of US foreign aid by the Trump administration this year has affected hundreds of clinics. Sharp global reductions in funding for UNAids is also worrying health providers, and calls for the PNG government to do more are growing. Manova says HIV awareness has declined over time and now, “it’s like the feeling that the epidemic does not exist”. “That’s the perception in both the public and in the political class.” The crisis in the country of about 10 million people is compounded by a combination of factors, including inadequate testing and lack of awareness. UNAids says PNG recorded an estimated 11,000 new cases in 2024, with nearly half of all new infections among children and people aged under 25. An estimated 2,700 infants were infected with HIV in PNG in 2024. In most cases, mothers were unaware of their HIV status and didn’t receive the necessary antiretroviral therapy (ART) which could have prevented transmission to their child. “A lot of people do not know their status and that’s the first step to addressing the epidemic [and] to be put on treatment,” Manova says. US aid freeze hits clinics The government declared HIV a national crisis in June and put in place an emergency response plan including more testing, treatment and support. Deputy secretary of health, Ken Wai, says while the government is responsible for drug supplies, other support services and community outreach has depended heavily on US aid. In January, the Trump administration cut foreign aid, which was distributed through the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), although Wai says some funding has been restored to specific programs. “USAID finances an organisation called FHI360; they help us with data recording, and one laboratory coordinator assists at the central public health laboratory,” Wai says. Chair of the national Aids council, Wep Kanawi, says the government must do more to address the crisis. The council works to prevent HIV transmission and provide treatment across the country. Kanawi says the government does not receive direct funding from USAID for HIV medicines, but PNG does seek funding from global not-for-profit organisations which receive contributions from USAID. That then supports some HIV programs in PNG, including paying staff salaries, he says. Kanawi says more than 200 clinics run by the government or churches that provide HIV services have lost funding after the US suspended foreign aid earlier this year, without providing further details about the services the clinics provide. Kanawi wants the government to do more, and says about K45-K50m (US$10m) annually is needed to deal with the epidemic. “Many of our centres are operating but scaling down on their operations,” Kanawi says. Kaugere Clinic in Port Moresby, which provides HIV and other health services, is one of the centres affected by the funding freeze. Rose Marai, a social worker at the clinic, says when aid was suspended by the Trump administration, salaries at the clinic were withheld because there was no funding. “There was no second plan given to us and we were told to close down the clinic, which had affected the communities,” Marai says. “I used to receive K1,000 (US$235) to run a day awareness program in communities but since the stop of funding I now receive K240 monthly. “I started doing voluntary counselling of referral patients who were already tested positive, STI and gender-based violence couples.” The US embassy in PNG did not respond to questions about USAID or US funding. In a statement, it said the US is “committed to our partnership with Papua New Guinea”. “US foreign assistance to PNG, managed through the Department of State and other US agencies, includes robust programs in security cooperation, disaster preparedness, and health.” At the same time, UNAids has this year seen what it describes as a “historic funding crisis” because of cuts in the US foreign aid budget and reductions from other donor countries. A December report from UNAids said abrupt funding reductions and persistent funding shortfalls “are having profound, lasting effects on the health” of millions of people, although it noted funding for some HIV programs has restarted. UNAids in PNG say the country has so far been shielded from the hit as Australia stepped in with additional funding. In October, the Australian government said it would “increase its annual HIV development funding to almost A$10m this financial year”. Manova says additional funding from Australia will help maintain the UNAids office in PNG “for another two years”. Still, concerns are rising in PNG that the epidemic highlights the fragility of the health sector and the heavy reliance on foreign aid, amid a surge in infections. Foreign minister Justin Tkatchenko says the country needs a “fallback position”. “The longterm strategy is doing it ourselves. We can’t continually rely on other donor partners to help us,” he says. Rebecca Bush contributed to this report