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US warplane went overboard into Red Sea: Navy

A US warplane went overboard into the Red Sea as a result of a Monday accident on the USS Harry S. Truman aircraft carrier, the country’s Navy said.”The F/A-18E was actively under tow in the hangar bay when the move crew lost control of the aircraft. The aircraft and tow tractor were lost overboard,” the Navy said in a statement.”All personnel are accounted for, with one sailor sustaining a minor injury,” it said, adding that the carrier and its air wing remain mission capable and that the incident is under investigation.The F/A-18E reached initial operating capability in the early 2000s and had a unit cost of more than $67 million as of fiscal year 2021, according to a Navy fact sheet.The Truman is one of two US aircraft carriers currently operating in the Middle East, where Washington’s forces have been hammering Yemen’s Huthi rebels with strikes since mid-March in an attempt to end the threat they pose to ships in the region.

Iran minister blames ‘negligence’ for port blast that killed 70

Iran’s interior minister on Monday blamed “negligence” for a massive explosion that killed 70 people at the country’s largest commercial port, with firefighters still battling a blaze at the facility two days later.The blast occurred on Saturday at the Shahid Rajaee Port in Iran’s south, near the strategic Strait of Hormuz, a waterway through which one-fifth of global oil output passes.”Unfortunately, the death toll has reached 70, and the firefighting effort is almost in its final stages,” Mehrdad Hassanzadeh, the crisis management director of Hormozgan province where the port is located, told state TV.Officials have said more than 1,000 people were injured, with Hassanzadeh noting most had already been released from hospital after treatment.On Monday, Interior Minister Eskandar Momeni told state TV that “culprits have been identified and summoned”, and that the blast was caused by “shortcomings, including noncompliance with safety precautions and negligence”.The committee investigating the causes of the blast also made similar remarks.Momeni, who has been in the area since hours after the blast, said the “investigation is still underway”.State TV showed images of firefighters still dousing the flames Monday, and said the damage would be assessed after the fire was fully brought under control.Heavy charcoal-black smoke continued to billow over low flames at part of the site, above which a firefighting helicopter flew, pictures from the Iranian Red Crescent showed.- Smoke, then a fireball -It was not immediately clear what caused the explosion but the port’s customs office said it likely resulted from a fire that broke out at the hazardous and chemical materials storage depot. CCTV images on social media showed it began gradually, with a small fire belching orange-brown smoke among a few containers stacked outside, across from a warehouse.A small forklift truck drives past the area and men can be seen walking nearby.About one minute after the small fire and smoke become visible, a fireball erupts as vehicles pass nearby, with men running for their lives.President Masoud Pezeshkian visited hospitals treating the wounded on Sunday in the nearby city of Bandar Abbas. Since the explosion, authorities have ordered all schools and offices in the area closed, and have urged residents to avoid going outside “until further notice” and to use protective masks.The New York Times quoted a person with ties to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss security matters, as saying that what exploded was sodium perchlorate — a major ingredient in solid fuel for missiles.Defence ministry spokesman Reza Talaei-Nik later told state TV that “there has been no imported or exported cargo for military fuel or military use in the area”.Iran’s ally Russia has dispatched specialists to help battle the blazes.Authorities declared Monday a national day of mourning, while three days of mourning began Sunday in Hormozgan province.The blast occurred as Iranian and US delegations were meeting in Oman for high-level talks on Tehran’s nuclear programme.While Iranian authorities so far appear to be treating the blast as an accident, it also comes against the backdrop of years of shadow war with regional foe Israel.According to The Washington Post, Israel launched a cyberattack targeting the Shahid Rajaee Port in 2020.

UN food, refugee agencies warn of huge cuts after funding losses

The UN’s food and refugee agencies have warned of dire cuts to their services as funding plummets, especially from key donor the United States under President Donald Trump.The UN World Food Programme (WFP) will cut staff by 25 to 30 percent as contributions to the global aid agency have dropped, according to an internal email seen Monday by AFP.The head of the UN refugee agency (UNHCR) warned Monday that reduced contributions could force a one-third reduction in its activities, despite worldwide conflicts that continue to strain its resources.Trump has moved to slash US contributions to the UN and its agencies since returning to the White House, causing funding chaos as Washington was previously the largest contributor to many budgets.So far his administration has scrapped 83 percent of humanitarian programs funded by the US Agency for International Development (USAID).The agency had an annual budget of $42.8 billion, representing 42 percent of total global humanitarian aid, including major contributions to UN agencies.Other countries have also cut funding to UN agencies this year, but the United States’ contributions dwarfed most others in the humanitarian aid sector. – ‘Less with less’ -The WFP is the world’s largest humanitarian organization, charged with preventing famine and serious hunger globally, playing a vital role in getting food to crises like the war in Sudan and disaster zones.”WFP must reduce its worldwide workforce by 25-30 percent, which could impact up to 6,000 roles,” the email said.”This structural shift — necessary to preserve resources in support of vital operations — will impact all geographies, divisions and levels in the organization.”Before the cuts, WFP, which was founded in 1961, had 23,000 staff and a presence in 120 countries, according to its website.”The scale of the workforce reductions needed is difficult news to say and even more difficult to hear. Yet it is the necessary and responsible decision given our tenuous funding outlook,” said the memo.At UNHCR, High Commissioner Filippo Grandi told the Security Council that funding cuts “may conclude with the retrenchment of my organization to up to one-third of its capacity.”The United States has traditionally been UNHCR’s top donor, making up more than 40 percent of total contributions received, amounting to approximately $2 billion per year, he noted.But for 2025, the UNHCR has so far received around $350 million from Washington and is trying to convince the US administration to release an additional $700 million, which has been frozen.”I cannot emphasize more how dramatic the situation is in this very moment,” Grandi said.”If this trend continues, we will not be able to do more with less. But as I have said many times, we will do less with less. We are already doing less with less,” he added.UNHCR employs more than 18,000 staff across 136 countries, with approximately 90 percent of those employees working in the field, according to its website.Many UN agencies and departments are already feeling the impact of drastic cuts in donor contributions, forcing them to scale back vital operations for millions of people around the world.The United States has defended its aid cuts, calling on other countries to do more.”Every member state needs to better share the burden of humanitarian response to conflict,” said acting US ambassador to the UN Dorothy Shea. “The United States has disproportionately shouldered this burden for decades.”

Yemen’s Huthi rebel media says 68 killed in US strikes on migrant centre

Huthi rebel-controlled media in Yemen said Monday that US strikes hit a migrant detention centre in the movement’s stronghold of Saada, killing at least 68 people.The US military has hammered the Iran-backed Huthis with near-daily strikes since March 15 in an operation dubbed “Rough Rider”, seeking to end their attacks on vessels in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden.The Huthis began launching strikes targeting Israeli and Western vessels in the Red Sea, in what they describe as solidarity with the Palestinians, shortly after Hamas conducted the worst-ever attack on Israel in October 2023.On Sunday, the US said it had hit more than 800 targets in Yemen since mid-March, killing hundreds including Huthi leaders.Hours later, Huthi media said the latest barrage by US forces had hit a migrant detention centre.”The civil defence has announced that 68 African migrants were killed and 47 others wounded in the US attack targeting a centre for illegal migrants in the city of Saada,” the Huthis’ Al-Masirah TV said.AFP could not independently confirm the toll or Al-Masirah’s claim that the strikes had hit a migrant centre.AFP has contacted the US military for comment.According to a statement cited by Al-Masirah from the Huthi administration’s interior ministry, the centre housed “115 migrants, all from Africa”.The broadcaster showed footage of bodies stuck under the rubble and of rescuers working to help the casualties.Each year, tens of thousands of migrants brave the Red Sea route from the Horn of Africa, seeking to escape conflict, natural disasters and poor economic prospects by sailing towards the oil-rich Gulf.Many hope for employment as labourers or domestic workers in Saudi Arabia and other Gulf Arab countries, though they face a perilous journey through war-torn Yemen.The UN migration agency, the IOM, said it was closely monitoring the situation following the latest strike but said the facility in question was not managed by their personnel.”It is imperative that all efforts are made to avoid harm to civilians and to protect those most vulnerable in these challenging circumstances,” the agency said in a statement.- ‘We will continue’ -The Huthi attacks since late 2023 have forced many shipping companies into a costly detour around the tip of southern Africa, instead of passing through the Suez Canal — a vital route that normally carries about 12 percent of global trade.In a statement that provided its most detailed accounting of the operation so far, the US military command responsible for the Middle East said it had “struck over 800 targets” in Yemen, killing “hundreds of Huthi fighters and numerous Huthi leaders”.”The strikes have destroyed multiple command-and-control facilities, air defence systems, advanced weapons manufacturing facilities, and advanced weapons storage locations,” CENTCOM said.Despite the strikes, the Huthis, who control large swaths of the country, have continued to claim attacks against both US vessels and Israel.In a statement on Monday, the Huthis said they had responded to the latest “attacks and massacres against civilians” by targeting the USS Harry S. Truman aircraft carrier with “several cruise missiles, ballistic missiles and drones”.The rebels also claimed their latest “military operation” against Israel — the third in as many days — saying they had sent a drone towards “the occupied region of Ashkelon”, on Israel’s southern coast.Iran, which backs the Huthis, condemned the US strikes on Monday, with foreign ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei calling attacks “on civilian targets, vital infrastructure and people’s homes in various parts of Yemen… a war crime”.The United States first began conducting strikes against the Huthis under former president Joe Biden’s administration, but they have intensified under his successor Donald Trump.CENTCOM said that “our operations have degraded the pace and effectiveness of their attacks” which are only possible “with the backing of the Iranian regime”.”We will continue to ratchet up the pressure until the objective is met, which remains the restoration of freedom of navigation and American deterrence in the region,” it added.

Syria group says military chief arrested in UAE

Syrian armed group Jaish al-Islam said its leader was arrested upon arrival at Dubai airport several days ago as supporters gathered in Damascus to demand his release.Since 2015, Issam Buwaydani has been head of Jaish al-Islam, a group that fought against the now-ousted ruler Bashar al-Assad and once controlled the Eastern Ghouta area near Damascus.After Syria’s new authorities announced the dissolution of armed groups following Assad’s December overthrow, Jaish al-Islam was integrated into the new Syrian forces and Buwaydani became a defence ministry official. Two sources close to Buwaydani told AFP that he had been arrested Thursday at Dubai airport as he was leaving the United Arab Emirates.Requesting anonymity because the matter is sensitive, they said he had entered the UAE on a Turkish passport.”We do not know the reasons for his arrest,” one of the sources said, adding that Buwaydani was on a private visit to the Gulf country.”The Syrian government has been in contact with the Emirates” but has not received a response, the source added.Jaish al-Islam’s chief military spokesman Hamza Bayraqdar on messaging app Telegram appealed for “the immediate and unconditional release” of Buwaydani, calling him “one of the symbols of the Syrian revolution”.The UAE has not confirmed Buwaydani’s arrest.Earlier this month the Emirates welcomed Syria’s interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa for his first official visit to the country.Sharaa’s Islamist group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) led the coalition that ousted Assad on December 8.Several dozen people gathered in Damascus’ Umayyad Square on Monday to demand Buwaydani’s release, urging their government to intervene in the matter.”I am demonstrating here to send a message to the UAE and to the new Syrian government, and specifically to the foreign minister, to demand the release of the heroic leader Issam Buwaydani,” Abu Khaled Nassif, one of the protesters, told AFP.Buwaydani took over Jaish al-Islam after the killing of its founder, Zahran Alloush, in 2015.Activists have blamed Jaish al-Islam for the December 2013 kidnapping of four human rights activists including Syrian lawyer and journalist Razan Zeitouneh.The group, which withdrew to northwest Syria after Assad’s forces retook the Ghouta area, has denied the allegations.Since Assad’s overthrow, Buwaydani has appeared next to Sharaa on several occasions.Former Jaish al-Islam member Majdi Nema goes on trial in France this week for alleged involvement in war crimes in Syria between 2013 and 2016.

Iran minister blames ‘negligence’ for port blast that killed 65

Iran’s interior minister on Monday blamed “negligence” for a massive explosion that killed 65 people at the country’s largest commercial port, with firefighters still battling a blaze at the facility two days later.The blast occurred on Saturday at the Shahid Rajaee Port in Iran’s south, near the strategic Strait of Hormuz, a waterway through which one-fifth of global oil output passes.”The death toll has reached 65 in this horrific incident,” Mohammad Ashouri, governor of the southern Hormozgan province where the port is located, told state television, adding that the fire has not been fully extinguished yet.Officials have said more than 1,000 people were injured. The province’s crisis management director, Mehrdad Hassanzadeh, said most had already been released after treatment.On Monday, Interior Minister Eskandar Momeni told state TV that “culprits have been identified and summoned”, and that the blast was caused by “shortcomings, including noncompliance with safety precautions and negligence”.Momeni, who has been in the area since hours after the blast, stated that the “investigation is still underway”.Iran’s state TV showed images of firefighters still dousing the flames Monday, and said the damage would be assessed after the fire was fully brought under control.Heavy charcoal-black smoke continued to billow over low flames at part of the site, above which a firefighting helicopter flew, pictures from the Iranian Red Crescent showed.Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has ordered a probe into the incident. – Smoke, then a fireball -It was not immediately clear what caused the explosion but the port’s customs office said it likely resulted from a fire that broke out at the hazardous and chemical materials storage depot. CCTV images on social media showed it began gradually, with a small fire belching orange-brown smoke among a few containers stacked outside, across from a warehouse.A small forklift truck drives past the area and men can be seen walking nearby.About one minute after the small fire and smoke become visible, a fireball erupts as vehicles pass nearby, with men running for their lives.President Masoud Pezeshkian visited hospitals treating the wounded on Sunday in the nearby city of Bandar Abbas. Since the explosion, authorities have ordered all schools and offices in the area closed, and have urged residents to avoid going outside “until further notice” and to use protective masks.The New York Times quoted a person with ties to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss security matters, as saying that what exploded was sodium perchlorate — a major ingredient in solid fuel for missiles.Defence ministry spokesman Reza Talaei-Nik later told state TV that “there has been no imported or exported cargo for military fuel or military use in the area”.Iran’s ally Russia has dispatched specialists to help battle the blazes.Authorities have declared Monday a national day of mourning, while three days of mourning began Sunday in Hormozgan province.The blast occurred as Iranian and US delegations were meeting in Oman for high-level talks on Tehran’s nuclear programme.While Iranian authorities so far appear to be treating the blast as an accident, it also comes against the backdrop of years of shadow war with regional foe Israel.According to The Washington Post, Israel launched a cyberattack targeting the Shahid Rajaee Port in 2020.

Conclave starts May 7, cardinals say new pope must tackle abuse

Catholic cardinals agreed on Monday to begin a conclave on May 7 to elect a new pope, and highlighted clerical sexual abuse as one of the key challenges facing Pope Francis’s successor.Cardinals under the age of 80 will meet in the Sistine Chapel to choose a new leader for the world’s 1.4 billion Catholics, in a mystery-shrouded ritual dating back to the Middle Ages.The date was decided at a meeting of cardinals of all ages early on Monday, two days after the funeral of Francis, who died on April 21 aged 88.The cardinals, known as “Princes of the Church”, outlined Catholicism’s most pressing challenges, including “evangelisation, the relationship with other faiths (and) the issue of abuse”, the Vatican said.”There was talk of the qualities that the new pontiff must possess to respond effectively to these challenges,” it added.The Church’s 252 cardinals were recalled to Rome after the Argentine pontiff’s death, although only 135 are eligible to vote in the conclave.They hail from all corners of the globe, and many of them do not know each other.But they already had four meetings last week, so-called “general congregations”, where they began to become better acquainted.- ‘Fraternal’ atmosphere -Cardinal Gualtiero Bassetti, 83, a former head of the Italian bishops’ conference, said there was a “beautiful fraternal atmosphere”.”Of course, there may be some difficulties because the voters have never been so numerous and not everyone knows each other,” he told Italy’s Corriere della Sera newspaper.On Monday, the Vatican closed the Sistine Chapel, where voting will take place under Michelangelo’s 16th-century ceiling frescoes, to begin preparations.So far there are few clues as to who the cardinals might choose.”I believe that if Francis has been the pope of surprises, this conclave will be too, as it is not at all predictable,” Spanish Cardinal Jose Cobo told El Pais in an interview published on Sunday.Francis was laid to rest on Saturday, a ceremony that drew 400,000 people, including royalty, world leaders and ordinary pilgrims.On Sunday, about 70,000 mourners filed past his marble tomb in the Santa Maria Maggiore Basilica in Rome, after the “pope of the poor” opted to be buried outside the Vatican’s walls.- ‘Sacred obligation’ -With conflicts and diplomatic crises raging around the world, Italian Cardinal Pietro Parolin is for many the favourite to succeed Francis.Parolin was secretary of state under Francis — the pope’s number two.British bookmakers William Hill put Parolin slightly ahead of Filipino Luis Antonio Tagle, the Metropolitan Archbishop emeritus of Manila, followed by Ghana’s Cardinal Peter Turkson.Next in their odds come Matteo Zuppi, the Archbishop of Bologna; Guinea’s Cardinal Robert Sarah; and Pierbattista Pizzaballa, the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem.Francis’s successor will inherit a series of measures he introduced to combat clerical sexual abuse.But victims’ associations say he did not do enough, and the scandals show no sign of abating.Anne Barrett Doyle from BishopAccountability.org told AFP the abuse archive “applaud(s) the acknowledgment by the cardinals that ending the abuse crisis must be a priority”.”The Church worldwide, through its parishes, schools, hospitals and orphanages, cares for tens of millions of children. The next pope’s most sacred obligation must be to protect them”, she said.The challenge is significant. In many African and Asian countries, the subject remains taboo.Even in Europe, Italy has yet to launch an independent investigation into abuse allegations.- ‘Unity’ -While Francis’s efforts to create a more compassionate Church earned him widespread affection and respect, some of his reforms angered the Church’s conservative wing, particularly in the United States and Africa.Roberto Regoli, a professor of Church history and culture at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome, told AFP the cardinals would be looking “to find someone who knows how to forge greater unity”.”We are in a period in which Catholicism is experiencing various polarisations, so I don’t imagine it will be a very, very quick conclave,” he said.Bassetti, who is too old to participate, said that he thought it “will not be long”.Some 80 percent of the cardinal electors were appointed by Francis — although that is no guarantee they will pick a successor in his mould.Most are relatively young, and for many it is their first conclave.- ‘Courageous leader’ -The vote is highly secretive and follows strict rules and ceremonial procedures.The process could take several days or potentially longer.There are four votes per day — two each in the morning and afternoon — until one candidate secures a two-thirds majority.Fewer than half of those eligible to vote are European.”The future pope must have a universal heart (and) love all the continents. We must not look at colour, at origin, but at what is proposed,” Cardinal Dieudonne Nzapalainga from the Central African Republic told the Italian newspaper Il Messaggero.”We need a courageous leader, a bold one, capable of speaking forcefully, of holding the helm of the Church steady even in storms… offering stability in an era of great uncertainty.”Italian pensioner Emilia Greco said she hoped “all the doors that Pope Francis opened — to hope, to those marginalised, to the poor… can be kept open and expanded, (to create) a truly inclusive Church”.

Interior minister blames ‘negligence’ for Iran port blast that killed 46

Iran’s minister of interior on Monday blamed “negligence” for a massive explosion that killed 46 people at the country’s largest commercial port, with firefighters still battling a blaze at the facility two days later.  The blast took place on Saturday at the Shahid Rajaee Port in Iran’s south near the strategic Strait of Hormuz, a waterway through which one-fifth of global oil output passes. “The death toll in the Shahid Rajaee Port fire has reached 46,” the official IRNA news agency reported, quoting Mehrdad Hassanzadeh, the crisis management director for Hormozgan province. Officials have said more than 1,000 people were injured, with Hassanzadeh noting most had since been released after treatment.Only “120 wounded are still in hospital”, Interior Minister Eskandar Momeni, who is in the area, told state TV on Monday.He added that “culprits have been identified and summoned”, and that the blast was caused by “shortcomings, including noncompliance with safety precautions and negligence”.Iran’s state TV showed images of firefighters still dousing the flames Monday, and said the damage would be assessed after the fire was fully brought under control. Heavy charcoal-black smoke continued to billow over low flames at part of the site, above which a firefighting helicopter flew, pictures from the Iranian Red Crescent showed.Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has ordered a probe into the incident. – Smoke, then a fireball -It was not immediately clear what caused the explosion but the port’s customs office said it likely resulted from a fire that broke out at the hazardous and chemical materials storage depot. CCTV images on social media showed it began gradually, with a small fire belching orange-brown smoke among a few containers stacked outside, across from a warehouse.A small forklift truck drives past the area and men can be seen walking nearby.About one minute after the small fire and smoke become visible, a fireball erupts as vehicles pass nearby, with men running for their lives.President Masoud Pezeshkian visited hospitals treating the wounded on Sunday in the nearby city of Bandar Abbas. Since the explosion, authorities have ordered all schools and offices in the area closed, and have urged residents to avoid going outside “until further notice” and to use protective masks.The New York Times quoted a person with ties to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss security matters, as saying that what exploded was sodium perchlorate — a major ingredient in solid fuel for missiles.Defence ministry spokesman Reza Talaei-Nik later told state TV that “there has been no imported or exported cargo for military fuel or military use in the area”.Iran’s ally Russia has dispatched specialists to help battle the blazes.Authorities have declared Monday a national day of mourning, while three days of mourning began Sunday in Hormozgan province, where the port is located.The blast occurred as Iranian and US delegations were meeting in Oman for high-level talks on Tehran’s nuclear programme, with both sides reporting progress.While Iranian authorities so far appear to be treating the blast as an accident, it also comes against the backdrop of years of shadow war with regional foe Israel.According to The Washington Post, Israel launched a cyberattack targeting the Shahid Rajaee Port in 2020