Zelensky says Kyiv test fired first Ukraine-made ballistic missile

Zelensky says Kyiv test fired first Ukraine-made ballistic missile
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Tuesday that his military had recently carried out the first successful test of a domestically-produced ballistic missile. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 27 August 2024

Zelensky says Kyiv test fired first Ukraine-made ballistic missile

Zelensky says Kyiv test fired first Ukraine-made ballistic missile
  • ‘There has been a positive test of the first Ukrainian ballistic missile’

KYIV: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Tuesday that his military had recently carried out the first successful test of a domestically-produced ballistic missile.
“There has been a positive test of the first Ukrainian ballistic missile. I congratulate our defense industry on this. I can’t share any more details about this missile,” he said at a press conference in the Ukrainian capital.


Bangladesh runs out of resources for Rohingya as global support plunges

Bangladesh runs out of resources for Rohingya as global support plunges
Updated 54 min 57 sec ago

Bangladesh runs out of resources for Rohingya as global support plunges

Bangladesh runs out of resources for Rohingya as global support plunges
  • UN’s response plan for Rohingya crisis is only 36% funded for 2025-26
  • Bangladesh looks for alternative strategies to stop violence in Myanmar, expert says

DHAKA: Bangladesh is unable to allocate additional resources for the growing number of Rohingya refugees, the country’s leader said on Monday, as he called on the international community to deliver on UN commitments to address the crisis.

The chief of Bangladesh’s interim government, Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus, was addressing a two-day conference in Cox’s Bazar, held by the Bangladeshi government ahead of a high-level meeting at the UN General Assembly in September.

It comes eight years after hundreds of thousands of Rohingya were forced to flee a military crackdown in Myanmar and take shelter in neighboring Bangladesh.

Today, more than 1.3 million Rohingya are cramped inside 33 camps in the Cox’s Bazar district on the country’s southeast coast, making it the world’s largest refugee settlement.

While the number of refugees arriving from Myanmar has increased by some 150,000 since last year, international aid is dwindling. The latest Joint Response Plan for the Rohingya Humanitarian Crisis in Bangladesh has only 36 percent funding from the requested 2025-26 amount of nearly $935 million.

Bangladesh, which is already grappling with domestic challenges, does not “foresee any scope whatsoever for further mobilization of resources from domestic sources” to sustain the refugees, Yunus said.

“During the last eight years, people of Bangladesh, in particular the host community here in Cox’s Bazaar, have been making tremendous sacrifices. The impacts on our economy, resources, environment and ecosystem, society and governance have been huge,” he told attendees.

“(The) Rohingya issue and its sustainable resolution must be kept alive on the global agenda, as they need our support until they return home.”

Despite multiple attempts from Bangladeshi authorities, a UN-backed repatriation and resettlement process has failed to take off for the past few years.

Efforts have been stalled by armed conflict in Myanmar since the military junta seized power in 2021, and the number of refuges has been steadily increasing. In 2024, it grew sharply as fighting escalated in Rakhine state between junta troops and the Arakan Army, a powerful local ethnic militia.

Yunus called on the international community to draft a practical roadmap to end the violence, enable the Rohingya’s return to Rakhine, and hold perpetrators of violence and ethnic cleansing accountable.

“We urge upon all to calibrate their relationship with Myanmar and Arakan Army, and all parties to the conflict, in order to promote an early resolution of the protracted crisis,” he said.

“We urge all of the international community to add dynamism to the ongoing international accountability processes at the International Court of Justice, International Criminal Court and elsewhere.”

As the UN conference on Rohingya nears, with another scheduled to take place in Doha in December, the meeting in Cox’s Bazaar — where donors will also visit the Rohingya camps — is seen as an attempt to find a new strategy to address the crisis. Regional efforts are also being encouraged, with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations earlier this month vowing to send a peace mission to Myanmar — its member state.

“We’ve seen during the last few months, especially during the interim government, that they have been trying to see if there could be some alternative ways of advocacy or getting Myanmar to accept certain positions through the ASEAN,” Asif Munier, a rights and migration expert, told Arab News.

“We know that it would be very difficult to get a common understanding at the UN Security Council to vote against Myanmar authorities. But if there could be other efforts to provide some sort of justice — that’s something that also should come up.”


Norway proposes maintaining Ukraine aid at $8.4bn in 2026

Norway proposes maintaining Ukraine aid at $8.4bn in 2026
Updated 13 min 7 sec ago

Norway proposes maintaining Ukraine aid at $8.4bn in 2026

Norway proposes maintaining Ukraine aid at $8.4bn in 2026
  • The proposal must be ratified by the Norwegian parliament
  • Norway was the second largest European provider of military aid to Ukraine in May and June

OSLO: The Norwegian government aims to maintain its aid to Ukraine at 85 billion kroner ($8.4 billion) in 2026, the same level as this year, the office of Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Store said Monday.
The proposal, made as Store visited Kyiv, must be ratified by parliament and if passed would take to 275 billion kroner ($27.1 billion) the total civilian and military aid which Norway will send the country for the 2023-2030 period.
“The government intends to maintain Norway’s extraordinary support to Ukraine next year and is proposing an allocation of a total of 85 billion kroner in military and civilian support,” said Store in a statement.
“This is a critical time in Ukraine’s fight to defend itself. As talks on a ceasefire and peace take place, the war rages on in Ukraine.
“It is important in the current situation to reaffirm our continued strong support for Ukraine: political, financial and military,” said Store, who was to meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Monday.
The aid package proposed by the minority Labor government must be included in 2026 budget proposals due for presentation in October.
Norway is to hold parliamentary elections – expected to see a close battle between left and right – on September 8.
Oslo’s support for Ukraine is almost universal among the Norwegian public, with the country sharing a border with Russia.
According to German research institute Kiel Institute, Norway was the second largest European provider of military aid to Ukraine in May and June, behind Germany.
On Sunday, Oslo announced it would allocate some seven billion kroner to strengthening Ukraine’s air defenses, including the joint purchase with Germany of two Patriot air and missile defense systems.


Polish president proposes restricting state benefits for Ukrainians

Polish president proposes restricting state benefits for Ukrainians
Updated 25 August 2025

Polish president proposes restricting state benefits for Ukrainians

Polish president proposes restricting state benefits for Ukrainians
  • President Karol Nawrocki, a conservative nationalist inspired by US President Donald Trump, promised during his election campaign this year to put “Poles first” and to limit the rights of foreigners in Poland
  • Official data shows some 1.5 million Ukrainian citizens currently reside in Poland

WARSAW: Poland’s president unveiled plans on Monday to limit Ukrainians’ access to child benefits and health care, while also proposing a ban on the glorification of a 20th-century Ukrainian nationalist leader, in a sign of a hardening stance toward refugees.
Poland has been one of Ukraine’s staunchest backers since Russia invaded in 2022, but some Poles have grown weary of large numbers of refugees, while tensions between Warsaw and Kyiv over World War Two Volhynia massacres have at times come to the surface. Official data shows some 1.5 million Ukrainian citizens currently reside in Poland.
President Karol Nawrocki, a conservative nationalist inspired by US President Donald Trump, promised during his election campaign this year to put “Poles first” and to limit the rights of foreigners in Poland.
“I did not change my opinion and I intend to fulfil my obligations and I believe that (family) benefit should only be granted to those Ukrainians who make the effort to work in Poland, the same with health care,” he told journalists.
Ukraine’s Foreign Ministry did not immediately reply to a request for comment.
Ukrainian refugees are currently eligible to receive the monthly family benefit of 800 zlotys ($219) per child if their children attend Polish schools. Other EU countries such as Germany have also proposed cutting benefits recently.
In Poland, the president can propose bills and veto government legislation. The government, currently led by Prime Minister Donald Tusk, a pro-EU centrist opposed to Nawrocki, can similarly block the president’s proposals, creating deadlock.

HISTORICAL STRAINS
Nawrocki also proposed on Monday tightening the criminal code to ban the promotion of Stepan Bandera, a Ukrainian nationalist leader who fought both Nazi and Soviet forces during World War Two, and his insurgent army.
“I believe this bill should clearly address Bandera and equate the Bandera symbol in the criminal code with symbols corresponding to German National Socialism, commonly known as Nazism, and Soviet communism,” Nawrocki said.
Many Ukrainians regard Bandera and his militia as heroes for the resistance they mounted against the Soviet Union and as symbols of Kyiv’s painful struggle for independence from Moscow.
But he is remembered by many in Poland as a symbol of anti-Polish violence. Bandera is associated with the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA), which Warsaw says carried out mass killings of Polish civilians in 1943-44, especially in Volhynia.
Thousands of Ukrainians also died in reprisal killings.
Publicly promoting Nazi, fascist or communist ideas is subject to up to 3 years of prison under the Polish criminal code.


Suspects blame technical faults for Baltic Sea cable breaches

Suspects blame technical faults for Baltic Sea cable breaches
Updated 25 August 2025

Suspects blame technical faults for Baltic Sea cable breaches

Suspects blame technical faults for Baltic Sea cable breaches
  • NATO allies with forces stationed around the Baltic Sea went on high alert after the December 25 incident
  • Prosecutors say the Eagle S tanker deliberately dragged its 11,000kg anchor along the seabed

HELSINKI: The captain of an oil tanker and two officers accused of severing five undersea power and telecoms cables in the Baltic Sea last December, blamed technical faults for the damage as their trial began in Helsinki on Monday.

NATO allies with forces stationed around the Baltic Sea went on high alert after the December 25 incident, one of a string of suspicious cable and gas pipeline outages in the region since Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022.

Prosecutors say the Eagle S tanker deliberately dragged its 11,000 kg (24,250 lb) anchor along the seabed to sever the Estlink 2 power cable linking Finland and Estonia and four Internet cables as the vessel sailed from a Russian port via the Gulf of Finland.

Finnish security forces intercepted the Cook Islands-registered ship and boarded it from helicopters after ordering it to move into Finnish territorial waters.

The tanker’s Georgian captain, Davit Vadatchkoria, and its Georgian first and Indian second officers pleaded not guilty, saying the vessel’s anchor had dropped due to technical faults in the securing of the anchor winch.

State prosecutor Heidi Nummela said that, while investigators did not find proof that the anchor’s fastening had been manipulated, the failure of all three available backstops was at minimum a sign of gross negligence on the crew’s part.

Finnish prosecutors are seeking 2.5 years in prison for aggravated criminal mischief and aggravated interference with telecommunications for the defendants who deny all charges and reject the cable owners’ claims for damages that amount to tens of millions of euros.

They also questioned the court’s jurisdiction in the matter, given the cable cuts occurred in international waters.

“This was a normal marine accident, not any sabotage,” second officer Santosh Kumar Chuarasia told reporters during a break.

He said that the anchor dropped due to bad weather and mechanical malfunction and that he trusted the court to rule in the defendants’ favor.

Vadatchkoria declined comment, while his lawyer Tommi Heinonen told the court the incident was “a marine accident.” On December 25, the Eagle S sailed on for three hours at a reduced speed after severing the first power cable at 12:26 p.m. (1026 GMT), prosecutors told the court.

When contacted by Finnish marine authorities at 3:20 p.m. and asked whether its anchor was up and secured, its crew replied in the affirmative, which was not true, prosecutors said.

Defense lawyers said the defendants had no reason to believe the anchor had sunk to the seabed as the tanker’s mechanical engineer, who is not on trial, had told them the drop in speed was caused by “an engine problem.” Prosecutors said the tanker sailed on and cut four more cables between 6 p.m. and 7 p.m. that day, which they said showed clear criminal intent.

Last week, a Ukrainian was arrested over the 2022 attacks on the Nord Stream gas pipelines in the Baltic Sea.

Both Moscow and the West have described the explosions, which largely severed Russian gas supplies to Europe, as sabotage.


Beyond the ‘bling’, China aims for deterrence in military show

Beyond the ‘bling’, China aims for deterrence in military show
Updated 25 August 2025

Beyond the ‘bling’, China aims for deterrence in military show

Beyond the ‘bling’, China aims for deterrence in military show
  • The parade comes amid protracted military tensions across East Asia as China increases deployments around Taiwan and the disputed South China Sea and the US and its allies prepare potentially to respond to a regional conflict

HONG KONG: As China stages its largest-ever military parade through Beijing next week, it will be highlighting not just advancements in arms hardware, but also the vital technology required to protect, control and command the weapons it would use in any future conflict.
Among the more eye-catching aircraft, hypersonic missiles and undersea drones, will be equipment such as battlefield sensors on tanks, advanced early warning and targeting radars and air defense lasers — all part of an effort that some analysts describe as transparency designed to intimidate and deter potential rivals. But beyond the unprecedented scale and choreographed display of military might, question marks remain about how effectively China’s armed forces — untested since a bloody border conflict with Vietnam in 1979 — could knit it all together in a future conflict.
Singapore-based security scholar Drew Thompson said while the People’s Liberation Army may unveil advanced weapons and systems to protect and command them, China’s key potential adversaries may not be deterred by the “bling” of a parade.
“It is performative but it doesn’t speak to capability, and we still don’t know how effectively China could tie it all together and operate in a conflict scenario,” said Thompson, a senior fellow at Singapore’s S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS).
The parade comes amid protracted military tensions across East Asia as China increases deployments around Taiwan and the disputed South China Sea and the US and its allies prepare potentially to respond to a regional conflict.
China claims Taiwan as its territory and has never renounced the use of force to seize it. Taiwan’s President Lai Ching-te and his government strongly object to China’s sovereignty claims, saying it is up to the island’s people to decide their future.
While the military leaderships of the US and its allies like Japan as well as Taiwan may not be deterred, others might be intimidated, Thompson said.
To that end, China might be signalling to India, Russia and smaller regional nations as well as “American libertarian isolationists.”
“As you’re watching the parade, it is easy to get distracted....it is not about the bling, but the effect the bling has on the view of the observer — that is China is too big to fight and US interests aren’t worth the risk or the consequences of a fight with China.”
The Chinese defense ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

VICTORY DAY PARADE
Regional military attaches and security analysts have already been scrutinizing on-line footage of the rehearsals of what Beijing has called a “Victory Day” parade, marking the end of World War Two after Japan’s formal surrender.
The war is also often described by Chinese officials and in state media as the “War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression” and the “World Anti-Fascist War.”
“(The weapons and equipment) will fully demonstrate our military’s robust ability to adapt to technological advancements, evolving warfare patterns, and win future wars,” parade deputy director Wu Zeke told a press conference last week.
If Beijing is to win those wars, it will have to fully integrate a network of military satellites and cyber and electronic warfare capabilities, now considered second only to the United States, and use them to effectively dominate its near seas.
To that end, an early warning plane capable of operating from China’s aircraft carriers, the KJ-600, has been displayed — a vital piece in finishing the complex jigsaw of carrier operations.
China’s jet fighters will also be closely watched, particularly following Pakistan’s use of Chinese-built J-10C fighters against Indian aircraft during clashes in May.
Pakistan has claimed that it shot down six Indian aircraft during the clashes, including a French-made Rafale fighter. India has acknowledged some losses but denied losing six aircraft and,
earlier this month, said it had shot down six Pakistani planes. A suite of new YJ-17, YJ-19 and YJ-20 cruise missiles will also be shown. They could be deployed from bombers and ships, some with hypersonic warheads — potentially complicating operations by US and allied ships across East Asia.
And a new medium-sized tank, the ZTZ-201, has appeared in rehearsals bristling with what analysts believe are advanced sensors and battle management systems.
An entirely new weapon on show is also vexing analysts with its sudden appearance — a torpedo-shaped sea drone too large to be fired from ordinary submarines. Ben Lewis, founder of open source data platform PLATracker, said its emergence suggested China had been closely tracking the US’s own underwater drone program.
While it is unclear how close it is to operational, “if they can produce a lot of these kinds of weapons cheaply, things could get very ugly, very fast in a Taiwan scenario,” Lewis said. Collin Koh, a senior fellow at the RSIS’ Institute of Defense and Strategic Studies in Singapore, said while the sea drone effort had been underway for some time, he was surprised that it had reached the point where the PLA was ready to show it off.
“(It) seems to be imply that the system is either already in service or soon to do so,” he said.