Iran’s hard-line parliament approves all members of president’s Cabinet, first time since 2001

Iran’s hard-line parliament approves all members of president’s Cabinet, first time since 2001
Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian speaks during the debate on his proposed ministers at an open session of parliament, in Tehran, Iran, Wednesday, Aug. 21, 2024. Iran’s hard-line parliament on Wednesday approved all members of reformist President Masoud Pezeshkian’s Cabinet, the first time in over two decades a leader has been able to get all of his officials through the body. (AP)
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Updated 22 August 2024

Iran’s hard-line parliament approves all members of president’s Cabinet, first time since 2001

Iran’s hard-line parliament approves all members of president’s Cabinet, first time since 2001

TEHRAN: Iran’s hard-line parliament on Wednesday approved all members of reformist President Masoud Pezeshkian’s Cabinet, the first time in over two decades a leader has been able to get all of his officials through the body.
The approval marks an early win for Pezeshkian, a longtime lawmaker who found himself catapulted into the presidency after a helicopter crash in May killed his hard-line predecessor.
Getting his officials approved shows Pezeshkian picked a Cabinet of consensus with names palatable to all of the power centers within Iran’s theocracy, as opposed to going for controversial choices as well.
Underlining that point, Pezeshkian immediately posted an image online with him standing next to Iran’s judiciary chief, a Shiite cleric, and the country’s parliament speaker, a hard-liner he once faced in the election.
“Consensus for Iran,” he wrote in the caption.
Former Foreign Minister Mohamamad Javad Zarif, who campaigned for Pezeshkian in his election, later resigned as a vice president for the new leader over the Cabinet selections.
Among those in Pezeshkian’s new Cabinet is Abbas Araghchi, 61, a career diplomat who will be Iran’s new foreign minister.
Araghchi was a member of the Iranian negotiating team that reached a nuclear deal with world powers in 2015 that capped Tehran’s nuclear program in return for the lifting of sanctions.
In 2018, then-President Donald Trump pulled the US out of the deal and imposed more sanctions on Iran. Pezeshkian said during his presidential campaign that he would try to revive the nuclear deal.
The candidate who received the most support from lawmakers was the country’s new defense minister, Aziz Nasirzadeh, who received 281 votes out of 288 present lawmakers. The chamber has 290 seats.
Nasirzadeh was chief of the Iranian air force from 2018 to 2021.
Health Minister Mohammad Reza Zafarghandi received the lowest number of votes with 163.
The only female minister proposed, Housing and Road Minister Farzaneh Sadegh, a 47-year-old architect, received 231 votes. She is the first female minister in Iran in more than a decade.
The parliament also approved Pezeshkian’s proposed Intelligence Minister Ismail Khatib, as well as Justice Minister Amin Hossein Rahimi, both of whom served under the late President Ebrahim Raisi. Pezeshkian also put Raisi’s minister of industries, Abbas Aliabadi, in the post of energy minister.
Dropping proposed ministers has been a tradition in Iran’s parliament, making Pezeshkian’s success that much more striking. Former reformist President Mohammad Khatami was the only president who received vote of confidence for all of his proposed ministers in both 1997 and 2001.


Tourism deal puts one of Egypt’s last wild shores at risk

Tourism deal puts one of Egypt’s last wild shores at risk
Updated 3 min 26 sec ago

Tourism deal puts one of Egypt’s last wild shores at risk

Tourism deal puts one of Egypt’s last wild shores at risk

WADI AL GEMAL NATIONAL PARK: In Egypt’s Wadi Al-Gemal, where swimmers share a glistening bay with sea turtles, a shadowy tourism deal is threatening one of the Red Sea’s last wild shores.
Off Ras Hankorab, the endangered green turtles weave between coral gardens that marine biologists call among the most resilient to climate change in the world.
By night in nesting season, they crawl ashore under the Milky Way’s glow, undisturbed by artificial lights.
So when excavators rolled onto the sand in March, reserve staff and conservationists sounded the alarm.
Thousands signed a petition to “Save Hankorab” after discovering a contract between an unnamed government entity and an investment company to build a resort.
The environment ministry — which has jurisdiction over the park — protested, construction was halted and the machinery quietly removed.
But months later, parliamentary requests for details have gone unanswered, and insiders say the plans remain alive.
“Only certain kinds of tourism development work for a beach like this,” said Mahmoud Hanafy, a marine biology professor and scientific adviser to the Red Sea governorate.
“Noise, lights, heavy human activity — they could destroy the ecosystem.”
Hankorab sits inside Wadi Al-Gemal National Park, declared a protected area in 2003.


The UN Development Programme (UNDP) describes it as home to “some of the last undisturbed natural beaches on the Southern Red Sea coast” — an area now caught between environmental protection and Egypt’s urgent push for investment.
Egypt, mired in its worst economic crisis in decades, is betting big on its 3,000 kilometers of coastline as a revenue source.
A $35-billion deal with the United Arab Emirates to develop Ras Al-Hekma on the Mediterranean set the tone, and similar proposals for the Red Sea have followed.
In June, President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi allocated 174,400 square kilometers (67,300 square miles) of Red Sea land to the finance ministry to help cut public debt.
The Red Sea — where tourism is the main employer — is key to Cairo’s plan to attract 30 million visitors by 2028, double today’s numbers.
Yet the UNDP warned as early as 2019 that Egyptian tourism growth had “largely been at the expense of the environment.”
Since then, luxury resorts and gated compounds have spread along hundreds of kilometers, displacing communities and damaging fragile habitats.
“The goal is to make as much money as possible from developing these reserves, which means destroying them,” said environmental lawyer Ahmed Al-Seidi.
“It also violates the legal obligations of the nature reserves law.”


At Hankorab, Hanafy says the core problem is legal.
“The company signed a contract with a government entity other than the one managing the reserve,” he said.
If true, Seidi says, the deal is “null and void.”
When construction was reported in March, MP Maha Abdel Nasser sought answers from the environment ministry and the prime minister — but got none.
At a subsequent meeting, officials could not identify the company behind the project, and no environmental impact report was produced.
Construction is still halted, “which is reassuring, at least for now,” Abdel Nasser said. “But there are no guarantees about the future.”
For now, the most visible change is a newly built gate marked “Ras Hankorab” in Latin letters.
Entry now costs 300 Egyptian pounds ($6) — five times more than before — with tickets that do not name the issuing authority.
An employee who started in March recalls that before the project there were “only a few umbrellas and unusable bathrooms.”
Today, there are new toilets, towels and sun loungers, with a cafe and restaurant promised soon.
The legal and environmental uncertainty remains, leaving Hankorab’s future — and the management of one of Egypt’s last undisturbed Red Sea beaches — unresolved.


Pakistan coach backs ‘highly competitive’ squad for tri-nation series, Asia Cup in UAE

Pakistan coach backs ‘highly competitive’ squad for tri-nation series, Asia Cup in UAE
Updated 29 min 41 sec ago

Pakistan coach backs ‘highly competitive’ squad for tri-nation series, Asia Cup in UAE

Pakistan coach backs ‘highly competitive’ squad for tri-nation series, Asia Cup in UAE
  • Pakistan picked five front line seamers, two mystery spinners and young, attacking openers for the two tournaments
  • Pakistan will play tri-nation series from Aug. 29 to Sept. 7 and eight-nation Asia Cup from Sept. 9-28 in Abu Dhabi, Dubai

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan cricket team’s white-ball Head Coach Mike Hesson has backed what he described as an “excellent balanced squad” for the upcoming tri-nation series and Asia Cup in the UAE, hoping that a blend of fresh faces and experienced cricketers in the squad will fare well in the upcoming fixtures. 

Pakistan announced a 17-member squad for an upcoming T20I tri-series and the Asia Cup, both scheduled to be held in the UAE, on Sunday. The tri-nation series is scheduled to take place from Aug. 29 to Sept. 7 at the Sharjah Cricket Stadium and will feature Pakistan, Afghanistan and the UAE. The eight-team ACC Asia Cup T20I tournament will be staged in Abu Dhabi and Dubai from Sept. 9-28. Pakistan are placed in Group ‘A’ alongside India, Oman and UAE.

Pakistan’s 17-member squad is led by young skipper Salman Ali Agha and features pacers Shaheen Shah Afridi, Haris Rauf, Salman Mirza, Mohammad Waseem Junior, Hasan Ali and all-rounder Faheem Ashraf. The squad features mystery spinners Abrar Ahmed and Sufyan Moqim, explosive openers Fakhar Zaman, Saim Ayub and Sahibzada Farhan. Former skipper Babar Azam and ODI captain Mohammad Rizwan including right-arm pacer Naseem Shah have been excluded from the squad. 

“We’ve put together what we believe is a highly competitive squad following the recent T20I series,” Hesson wrote on social media platform X on Sunday. “Excited to see some fresh faces stepping up alongside our experienced senior players.”

Hesson pointed out that the Green Shirts are backed by five front line seamers who would adapt according to conditions in the UAE, along with two attacking mystery spinners in the form of Moqim and Ahmed.

“With depth in batting, much improved fielding side along with the bowlers mentioned above we overall have an excellent balanced squad,” he concluded. 

Speaking to reporters at the news conference while announcing the squad on Sunday, Hesson admitted Azam had been asked to improve in some departments of the game. 

“Babar played nicely in the first [West Indies] ODI but missed out on the next two,” he said. “There’s no doubt Babar’s been asked to improve in some areas around taking on spin and in terms of his strike rate. Those are things he’s working really hard on.”

However, he said other players who have been selected have done “exceptionally well.”

“Sahibzada Farhan has played six games and won three Player of the Match awards,” he said. “A player like Babar has an opportunity to play in the BBL [Big Bash League] and show he’s improving in those areas in T20s. He’s too good a player not to consider.”

Azam last played a T20I for Pakistan in December 2024. In the Pakistan Super League 2025 T20 format, he scored 288 runs in ten innings for Peshawar Zalmi. It included knocks of 56, 53 and 94 but his overall strike rate was 128.57. He was part of the recent ODI series against West Indies where he had scores of 47, 0 and 9.


India, Pakistan floods: What exactly are cloudbursts?

India, Pakistan floods: What exactly are cloudbursts?
Updated 44 min 42 sec ago

India, Pakistan floods: What exactly are cloudbursts?

India, Pakistan floods: What exactly are cloudbursts?
  • As many as 300 people died in northwestern Pakistani district Buner after a cloudburst last week
  • Cloudbursts thrive in moisture, monsoons and mountains, with India and Pakistan having all three

ISLAMABAD: Cloudbursts are causing chaos in mountainous parts of India and Pakistan, with tremendous amounts of rain falling in a short period of time over a concentrated area. The intense, sudden deluges have proved fatal in both countries.

As many as 300 people died in one northwestern Pakistani district, Buner, after a cloudburst. The strength and volume of rain triggered flash flooding, landslides and mudflows. Boulders from steep slopes came crashing down with the water to flatten homes and reduce villages to rubble.

The northern Indian state of Uttarakhand had a cloudburst earlier this month. Local TV showed floodwaters surging down a mountain and crashing into Dharali, a Himalayan village. In 2013, more than 6,000 people died and 4,500 villages were affected when a similar cloudburst struck the state.

WHAT TO KNOW

They are complex and extreme weather events.

A cloudburst occurs when a large volume of rain falls in a very short period, usually more than 100 millimeters (about 4 inches) within an hour over a localized area, around 30 square kilometers (11.6 square miles).
Cloudbursts are sudden and violent, with devastating consequences and widespread destruction, and can be the equivalent of several hours of normal rainfall or longer. The event is the bursting of a cloud and the discharge of its contents at the same time, like a rain bomb.

Several factors contribute to a cloudburst, including warm, moist air rising upward, high humidity, low pressure, instability and convective cloud formation.

Moist air is forced to rise after encountering a hill or mountain. This rising air cools and condenses. Clouds that are large, dense and capable of heavy rainfall form.

Hills or mountains act like barriers and often trap these clouds, so they cannot disperse or move easily. Strong upward currents keep moisture suspended inside the clouds, delaying rainfall.

When the clouds cannot hold the accumulated moisture anymore, they burst and release it all at once.

IDEAL CONDITIONS IN INDIA, PAKISTAN

Cloudbursts thrive in moisture, monsoons and mountains. Regions of India and Pakistan have all three, making them vulnerable to these extreme weather events.

The Himalayas, Karakoram and Hindu Kush mountain ranges are home to the world’s highest and most famous peaks, spanning multiple countries including India and Pakistan.

The frequency of cloudbursts in these two South Asian nations has been steadily rising due to a warming atmosphere, because a warmer air mass can hold more moisture, creating conditions for sudden and intense downpours.

The South Asian region has traditionally had two monsoon seasons. One typically lasts from June to September, with rains moving southwest to northeast. The other, from roughly October to December, moves in the opposite direction.

But with more planet-warming gases in the air, the rain now only loosely follows this pattern.

This is because the warmer air can hold more moisture from the Arabian Sea and Indian Ocean, and that rain then tends to get dumped all at once. It means the monsoon is punctuated with intense flooding and dry spells, rather than sustained rain throughout.

The combination of moisture, mountains and monsoons force these moisture-laden winds upward, triggering sudden condensation and cloudbursts.

HARD TO PREDICT

It’s difficult to predict cloudbursts because of their size, duration, suddenness and complex atmospheric mechanisms.

Asfandyar Khan Khattak, a Pakistani official from the northwest province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, said there was “no forecasting system anywhere in the world” that could predict the exact time and location of a cloudburst.

The Pakistani government said that while an early warning system was in place in Buner district, where hundreds of people died after a cloudburst, the downpour was so sudden and intense that it struck before residents could be alerted.

Community organization SOST, which is also the name of a border village in Pakistan’s northern Gilgit-Baltistan region, says precautions are possible.

It advises people to avoid building homes right next to rivers and valleys, to postpone any travel to hilly areas if heavy rain is forecast, to keep an emergency kit ready, and to avoid traveling on mountainous roads during heavy rain or at night.

It recommends afforestation to reduce surface runoff and enhance water absorption, and regular clearing and widening of riverbanks and drainage channels.

CLIMATE CHANGE FUELS FREQUENCY

Experts say cloudbursts have increased in recent years, partly due to climate change, while damage from associated storms has also increased due to unplanned development in mountain areas.

Climate change has directly amplified the triggers of cloudbursts in Pakistan, especially. Every 1°C rise allows the air to hold about 7 percent more moisture, increasing the potential for heavy rainfall in short bursts.

The warming of the Indian Ocean and Arabian Sea pushes more moisture into the atmosphere. Melting glaciers and snow alter local weather patterns, making rainfall events more erratic and extreme. Environmental degradation, in the form of deforestation and wetland loss, reduces the land’s ability to absorb water, magnifying flash floods.

Climate change has been a central driver in the destruction seen in Pakistan’s northern areas.

“Rising global temperatures have supercharged the hydrologic cycle, leading to more intense and erratic rainfall,” said Khalid Khan, a former special secretary for climate change in Pakistan and chairman of climate initiative PlanetPulse.

“In our northern regions, warming accelerates glacier melt, adds excessive moisture to the atmosphere, and destabilizes mountain slopes. In short, climate change is making rare events more frequent, and frequent events more destructive.”


Three-member panel to probe Pakistani journalist Khawar Hussain’s death in Sindh’s Sanghar

Three-member panel to probe Pakistani journalist Khawar Hussain’s death in Sindh’s Sanghar
Updated 58 min 55 sec ago

Three-member panel to probe Pakistani journalist Khawar Hussain’s death in Sindh’s Sanghar

Three-member panel to probe Pakistani journalist Khawar Hussain’s death in Sindh’s Sanghar
  • Hussain’s body was found inside his vehicle parked outside a restaurant in Sanghar on Saturday
  • The untimely death has shocked the media fraternity and prompted calls for credible investigation

KARACHI: Authorities in Pakistan’s Sindh province have set up a three-member committee to probe journalist Khawar Hussain’s death in the Sanghar district under mysterious circumstances, police said on Sunday.

Hussain’s body was recovered from his hometown of Sanghar outside a local restaurant on Hyderabad Road on Saturday night, according to police officials. The journalist sustained a gunshot wound to his head.

Police said the death appeared to be a suicide after they found a pistol clutched in Hussain’s hand at the site of the incident, local media reported. But the claim was widely rejected by Hussain’s friends and associates on social media.

Sindh Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah ordered a probe into the death, after which DIG Crime and Investigation Wing Amir Farooqi notified a three-member investigation committee on Sunday evening.

“The committee will do preliminary investigation and ascertain facts from all angles,” read a notification issued from Farooqi’s office.

“The complete report into the incident may be finalized in two days.”

The probe panel is headed by Azad Khan, additional inspector general of the Sindh counter-terrorism department (CTD), with DIG Karachi West Irfan Baloch and Sanghar SSP Abid Baloch as members.

Hussain was a Karachi-based correspondent for Dawn News. The news of his death drew condemnations from the Karachi Press Club and senior members of the Sindh government.

“Sindh Chief Minister Syed Murad Ali Shah has taken notice of the unnatural death of senior journalist Khawar Hussain in Sanghar,” a statement from Shah’s office said on Saturday.

“The chief minister has sought a report from the inspector general of police. The real cause of death must be determined through investigation.”

On Sunday, DIG Faisal Bashir Memon told Arab News the pistol clutched in Hussain’s hand at the time of his death belongs to the journalist who had been keeping it for personal safety.

“He parked his car and went to the restroom twice. According to the CCTV footage, he was alone. Khawar asked the hotel manager about the restroom, then returned to his car and sat inside. He stepped out of the car again and asked the watchman about the restroom. He went toward the restroom once more and then came back and sat in the car again,” Memon told Arab News.

“The CCTV camera was installed on the other side of the driver’s seat, and no one else was seen in the footage. The hotel manager later told the watchman to check if Khawar wanted to order something as he had been sitting [inside his car there] for quite a while. When the watchman went to the car, Khawar’s body was found inside with a gunshot wound.”
Police were awaiting the post-mortem report and the journalist’s call data record (CDR) as they intended to probe the death from both murder and suicide angles, according to DIG Memon.
As per a report released by the Pakistan-based media and development sector watchdog Freedom Network last year, 184 incidents of violence against journalists took place in Sindh between 2018 and 2023. These included the killings of 10 journalists in the province.


Russia agrees on security guarantees to Kyiv but Moscow also needs them, Russian diplomat says

Russia agrees on security guarantees to Kyiv but Moscow also needs them, Russian diplomat says
Updated 18 August 2025

Russia agrees on security guarantees to Kyiv but Moscow also needs them, Russian diplomat says

Russia agrees on security guarantees to Kyiv but Moscow also needs them, Russian diplomat says
  • Russia’s envoy Mikhail Ulyanov's statement confirmed Trump envoy Steve Witkoff earlier statement that Putin agreed at his summit with Trump that US and its European allies could offer Ukraine a security guarantee resembling NATO’s collective defense manda

NEW YORK: Russia agrees that any future peace agreement on Ukraine must provide security guarantees to Kyiv but Moscow also needs credible security assurances, Mikhail Ulyanov, Russia’s envoy to international organizations in Vienna, said early on Monday.

“Many leaders of #EU states emphasize that a future peace agreement should provide reliable security assurances or guarantees for Ukraine,” Ulyanov said on X.

“Russia agrees with that. But it has equal right to expect that Moscow will also get efficient security guarantees,” he added.

Ulyanov's statement confirmed Trump envoy Steve Witkoff's earlier statement that Putin agreed at his summit with President Donald Trump that the United States and its European allies could offer Ukraine a security guarantee resembling NATO’s collective defense mandate as part of an eventual deal to end the war.

Witkoff, who took part in the talks Friday at a military base in Alaska, said it “was the first time we had ever heard the Russians agree to that” and called it “game-changing.”
“We were able to win the following concession: that the United States could offer Article 5-like protection, which is one of the real reasons why Ukraine wants to be in NATO,” Witkoff told CNN’s “State of the Union.”
Witkoff offered few details on how such an arrangement would work. But it appeared to be a major shift for Putin and could serve as a workaround to his deep-seated objection to Ukraine’s potential NATO membership, a step that Kyiv has long sought.
It was expected to be a key topic Monday as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and major European leaders meet with Trump at the White House to discuss ending the 3 1/2-year conflict.

“BIG PROGRESS ON RUSSIA,” Trump said Sunday on social media. “STAY TUNED!”
On Sunday night, however, Trump seemed to put the onus on Zelensky to agree to concessions.
“President Zelensky of Ukraine can end the war with Russia almost immediately, if he wants to, or he can continue to fight,” he wrote. “Remember how it started. No getting back Obama given Crimea (12 years ago, without a shot being fired!), and NO GOING INTO NATO BY UKRAINE. Some things never change!!!“
Hammering out a plan for security guarantees
Article 5, the heart of the 32-member transatlantic military alliance, says an armed attack against a member nation is considered an attack against them all.
What needed to be hammered out at this week’s talks were the contours of any security guarantees, said Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who also participated in the summit. Ukraine and European allies have pushed the US to provide that backstop in any peace agreement to deter future attacks by Moscow.
“How that’s constructed, what we call it, how it’s built, what guarantees are built into it that are enforceable, that’s what we’ll be talking about over the next few days with our partners,” Rubio said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”
It was unclear, however, whether Trump had fully committed to such a guarantee. Rubio said it would be “a huge concession.”
The comments shed new light on what was discussed in Alaska. Before Sunday, US officials had offered few details even as both Trump and Putin said their meeting was a success.
Witkoff also said Russia had agreed to enact a law that it would not “go after any other European countries and violate their sovereignty.”
“The Russians agreed on enshrining legislatively language that would prevent them from — or that they would attest to not attempting to take any more land from Ukraine after a peace deal, where they would attest to not violating any European borders,” he said on “Fox News Sunday.”
Europe welcomes US openness to security guarantees
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, speaking in Brussels alongside Zelensky, applauded the news from the White House as a European coalition looks to set up a force to police any future peace in Ukraine.
“We welcome President Trump’s willingness to contribute to Article 5-like security guarantees for Ukraine and the ‘coalition of the willing’ — including the European Union — is ready to do its share,” she said.
Zelensky thanked the US for signaling that it was willing to support such guarantees but said much remained unclear.
“There are no details how it will work, and what America’s role will be, Europe’s role will be and what the EU can do — and this is our main task: We need security to work in practice like Article 5 of NATO,” he said.
French President Emmanuel Macron said the substance of security guarantees to secure any peace arrangement will be more important than whether they are given an Article 5-type label.
At the White House meeting, Macron said European leaders will ask the US to back their plans to beef up Ukraine’s armed forces with more training and equipment and deploy an allied force away from the front lines.
“We’ll show this to our American colleagues, and we’ll tell them, ‘Right, we’re ready to do this and that, what are you prepared to do?’” Macron said. “That’s the security guarantee.”
Defending Trump’s shift from ceasefire to peace deal
Witkoff and Rubio defended Trump’s decision to abandon a push for a ceasefire, arguing that the Republican president had pivoted toward a full peace agreement because so much progress had been made at the summit.
“We covered almost all the other issues necessary for a peace deal,” Witkoff said, without elaborating. “We began to see some moderation in the way they’re thinking about getting to a final peace deal.”
Rubio, appearing on several TV news shows Sunday, said it would have been impossible to reach any truce Friday because Ukraine was not there.
“Now, ultimately, if there isn’t a peace agreement, if there isn’t an end of this war, the president’s been clear, there are going to be consequences,” Rubio said on ABC’s “This Week.” “But we’re trying to avoid that.”
Rubio, who is also Trump’s national security adviser, also voiced caution on the progress made.
“We’re still a long ways off,” he said. “We’re not at the precipice of a peace agreement. We’re not at the edge of one. But I do think progress was made toward one.”
Land swaps are on the table
Among the issues expected to dominate Monday’s meeting: What concessions Zelensky might accept on territory.
In talks with European allies after the summit, Trump said Putin reiterated that he wants the Donetsk and Luhansk regions that make up the Donbas, European officials said. It was unclear among those briefed whether Trump sees that as acceptable.
Witkoff said the Russians have made clear they want territory as determined by legal boundaries instead of the front lines where territory has been seized.
“There is an important discussion to be had with regard to Donetsk and what would happen there. And that discussion is going to specifically be detailed on Monday,” he said.
Zelensky has rejected Putin’s demands that Ukraine give up the Donbas region, which Russia has failed to take completely, as a condition for peace.
In Brussels, the Ukrainian leader said any talks involving land must be based on current front lines, suggesting he will not abandon land that Russia has not taken.
“The contact line is the best line for talking, and the Europeans support this,” he said. “The constitution of Ukraine makes it impossible, impossible to give up territory or trade land.”