Russian and US diplomats meet in Turkiye for talks on repairing ties

Update Russian and US diplomats meet in Turkiye for talks on repairing ties
Photo from delegation meeting in Riyadh earlier this month (X/@mfa_russia)
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Updated 27 February 2025

Russian and US diplomats meet in Turkiye for talks on repairing ties

Russian and US diplomats meet in Turkiye for talks on repairing ties
  • The delegations will also include officials from the State Department and Russian Foreign Ministry

ISTANBUL: Russian and US diplomats met in Turkiye on Thursday for talks to resolve disputes over the work of their respective embassies in Washington and Moscow, a first test of their ability to reset wider relations and work toward ending the war in Ukraine.
The Kremlin last year described relations as “below zero” under the administration of Joe Biden, who backed Ukraine with aid and weapons and imposed waves of sanctions on Russia to punish it for its 2022 invasion.
But his successor, President Donald Trump, has upended that policy and moved swiftly since taking office last month to open talks with Moscow, pledging to fulfil his repeated promise to bring a quick end to the war.
The talks in Istanbul follow a phone call between Trump and President Vladimir Putin on February 12, and a high-level diplomatic meeting in six days later.
The Russian team arrived in a black Mercedes van for the start of the meeting at the gated residence of the US consul general in Istanbul. Russian state TV said the talks were expected to last five to six hours.
Ukraine and its European allies are worried that Trump’s rapid rapprochement with Moscow could lead to a deal on ending the war that sidelines them and undermines their security. Trump says he wants to end the bloodshed with an early ceasefire.
Putin this week tempered expectations of a quick deal, saying it was essential to rebuild trust between Russia and the United States before anything could be achieved.
The two countries have expelled diplomats and limited the appointment of new staff at each other’s missions in a series of tit-for-tat measures over the past decade, leaving their embassies thinly staffed.

Narrow focus
The US State Department said Thursday’s talks would cover issues such as staffing levels, visas and diplomatic banking.
“To be clear, there are no political or security issues on the agenda. Ukraine is not on the agenda,” a State Department spokesperson said on the eve of the meeting.
“The constructiveness of these talks will become apparent very quickly; either issues will get resolved or they won’t. We will know soon if Russia is really willing to engage in good faith.”
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said the outcome of the meeting “will show how quickly and effectively we can move.”
He acknowledged that Russia had “created uncomfortable conditions” for USdiplomats in Moscow, in what he said was retaliation for Washington’s treatment of their Russian counterparts.
The talks, despite their narrow focus, are an initial step in a process that could have profound implications for the whole Russia-US relationship in areas such as nuclear disarmament and economic cooperation.
Both sides have said they see potential for lucrative business ventures. Putin said this week that Moscow would be ready to invite the US to enter joint projects to tap rare earth deposits in Russia and in the parts of Ukraine that it has claimed as its own territory.
The US delegation in Istanbul was led by Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Sonata Coulter, and the Russian team by Alexander Darchiyev, head of the foreign ministry’s North America department.
Darchiyev is seen as front-runner to be Russia’s next ambassador to the US, a post that is currently vacant.


Under pressure to police comments on Kirk, colleges walk a tightrope on free speech

Updated 20 sec ago

Under pressure to police comments on Kirk, colleges walk a tightrope on free speech

Under pressure to police comments on Kirk, colleges walk a tightrope on free speech
At first, Clemson University took a stand for free speech. It condemned employees’ remarks that made light of Charlie Kirk’s death on social media, but the school said it was committed to protecting the Constitution. Three days later, under pressure from conservatives in the Statehouse, it fired one of the employees. As an outcry grew and the White House took interest, it fired two more.
The swift developments at the public university in South Carolina reflect the intense pressure on college leaders nationwide to police insensitive comments about the conservative activist’s assassination, which leaves them with no easy choices.
Colleges can defy the Republican backlash and defend their employees’ speech rights, risking the kind of federal attention that has prompted billions of dollars in cuts at Harvard and other universities. Or they can bow to the pressure and risk what some scholars see as a historic erosion of campus speech rights.
A campaign among the right to punish those disparaging Kirk has cut across industries, with some conservatives calling for the firing of private sector employees, journalists and others they judge as promoting violence. But the stakes are especially high for colleges, which are already under intense scrutiny from an administration that has sought to reshape campuses it describes as “woke” and overrun by leftist thinking.
The White House coordinated a call with federal agencies Monday to discuss “funding options” at Clemson and other universities, according to a person with knowledge of the call who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the private meeting. The White House did not provide details.
The federal government’s increasing appetite to dictate what can and can’t be said on campuses — from protests over the Israel-Hamas war to commentary on Kirk’s death — violates the First Amendment, said Lara Schwartz, an American University scholar on constitutional law and campus speech. Distasteful as they may be, she said, many comments provoking outrage are clearly protected speech.
“This could very much signal the end of free expression in the United States,” Schwartz said. “People should be reading this not as like a little social media battle, but as a full-on constitutional crisis.”
Conservatives across government targeted Clemson
Over the weekend, Clemson became the epicenter in a battle between those who revered and those who reviled Kirk. Republicans at all levels rushed to support a campus GOP club that shared social media posts from campus employees mocking Kirk’s death. State lawmakers showed up on campus with signs demanding the employees’ firing.
One screenshot circulated by college Republicans showed a professor of audio technology reposted a message on X the day of the killing that said: “According to Kirk, empathy is a made-up new-age term, so keep the jokes coming. It’s what he would have wanted.”
In Congress, Republicans on the House Judiciary Committee responded to Clemson’s statement defending free speech with a two-word social media post: “Defund Clemson.” State lawmakers threatened to cut funding, including one whose post was circulated by President Donald Trump.
South Carolina Republican Rep. Nancy Mace, who’s running for governor, sent a letter to the Education Department on Monday urging it to pull all federal funding from schools and universities that fail to swiftly terminate employees “who would celebrate or justify political violence.”
Ahead of an emergency meeting by Clemson’s governing board Monday, the state’s Republican attorney general sent a letter assuring leaders the firings would be permitted under state law. Alan Wilson said fired employees can challenge the dismissals in civil cases, but Clemson or other universities would not be prosecuted under a state law that forbids firings based on political opinions.
“Fear of criminal prosecution should not deter the President of a state university, such as Clemson, from taking the appropriate corrective action against university employees for such vile and incendiary comments on a public platform,” Wilson wrote.
One employee was fired prior to the meeting, and Clemson announced Tuesday it had dismissed two others, both faculty members.
Several colleges have fired staff over Kirk comments
Conservatives calling for the firings have said glorifying and celebrating violence also incites it, crossing into speech not protected by the Constitution. Attorney General Pam Bondi vowed to go after those whose speech threatens violence in the wake of Kirk’s killing.
“For far too long, we’ve watched the radical left normalize threats, call for assassinations and cheer on political violence,” she said. “That era is over.”
Education Secretary Linda McMahon on Wednesday encouraged schools and colleges to crack down on anyone celebrating the killing. In a video statement, she said such comments are the product of universities and schools that breed “divisive ideologies.”
“I commend the institutions and leaders who have acted swiftly to condemn and hold accountable those who have crossed this ethical line,” she said.
Several colleges have fired or suspended employees over comments on Kirk, including the University of Miami, the University of Tennessee, Auburn University and the University of California, Los Angeles.
Others have warned they are investigating social media posts. Iowa’s Board of Regents, for one, empowered the state’s public universities to take immediate action, including termination. President Sherry Bates said posts made last week were “offensive, inappropriate, and above all, unacceptable.”
“We expect more from those who work at our institutions,” she said.
Some university leaders have sought find a balance, condemning callous comments while pledging commitment to First Amendment principles. In Georgia, Columbus State University’s president, Stuart Rayfield, said a professor’s post that received attention online was regrettable but faculty and students are “entitled to their own personal views under the First Amendment.”
University of Missouri leaders on Wednesday said they respect the rights of employees to speak as citizens, but they encouraged staff “to use those freedoms responsibly, especially when engaging on social media.”

China warns Papua New Guinea over Australian defense deal

China warns Papua New Guinea over Australian defense deal
Updated 9 min 43 sec ago

China warns Papua New Guinea over Australian defense deal

China warns Papua New Guinea over Australian defense deal
  • Australia and Papua New Guinea this week agreed on the text of a deal which will see the countries commit to defending each other from armed attacks

SYDNEY: China cautioned Papua New Guinea against “undermining” its interests and sovereignty in signing a mutual defense pact with Australia widely seen as a counter to Beijing’s growing influence in the Pacific.
Australia and Papua New Guinea this week agreed on the text of a deal which will see the countries commit to defending each other from armed attacks.
Asked about the deal, a spokesperson for Beijing’s embassy in Port Moresby said China respected Papua New Guinea’s right to strike deals with other countries.
But such a deal should not be “exclusive,” nor restrict Papua New Guinea from cooperating with other countries, the spokesperson said late Thursday.
“It should also refrain from targeting any third party or undermining its legitimate rights and interests,” they warned.
China urged the country to maintain “mutually beneficial cooperation” with Beijing and “uphold independence and self-reliance.”
Beijing has committed billions of dollars to Pacific nations over the past decade, funding hospitals, sports stadiums, roads and other public works in an attempt to win their favor.
Canberra has stepped up its engagement with the region in a bid to counter China’s influence.
Australia and Papua New Guinea say the treaty will be signed after cabinet processes in both countries, following a delay this week.
The text of their deal says “any activities, agreements or arrangements with third parties would not compromise the ability of either of the Parties to implement the Treaty” – a clear nod to China.
Prime Minister James Marape said this week he would send his defense minister, Billy Joseph, to China to discuss the agreement.
To the north of former colonial power Australia, Papua New Guinea is the largest and most populous state in Melanesia.
Beijing’s economic support in the Pacific appears to be paying dividends, with Solomon Islands, Kiribati and Nauru all severing diplomatic ties with Taiwan in favor of China in recent years.


Philippines ‘ghost’ flood projects leave residents stranded

Philippines ‘ghost’ flood projects leave residents stranded
Updated 19 September 2025

Philippines ‘ghost’ flood projects leave residents stranded

Philippines ‘ghost’ flood projects leave residents stranded
  • Anger has been growing over so-called ghost infrastructure since President Ferdinand Marcos put the issue center-stage in a state of the union address after weeks of deadly flooding
  • Greenpeace estimates some $17.6 billion in funds may have been bilked from climate-related projects since 2023, much of it meant for communities at risk from rising sea levels

PLARIDEL, Philippines: The dike meant to protect the Philippine town cost taxpayers nearly $2 million, but when a minister visited this month he found little more than dirt hastily dumped along the river’s banks.
Residents of Plaridel town in Bulacan province, north of the capital Manila, could have told him what happened — contractors had only just begun a project that government officials marked “completed” more than a year earlier.
The dike is one of more than 100 flood-control projects at the center of one of the country’s biggest corruption scandals in decades.
It has already sparked leadership changes in both houses of Congress, but the real impact is among communities left without protection, many of them strung along rivers in the Bulacan region.
“We carry our children to school when the water is high,” Leo Francisco, a construction worker and father of two, told AFP in the village of Bulusan.
“Inside our house, the water is up to our thighs,” the 35-year-old said.
“On the road... sometimes knee-high, sometimes ankle-high. These are ordinary days — not typhoons.”
A flood control project intended to remedy the issue, like so many identified in recent weeks, has never been finished.
“The dike is incomplete, so the water washes in. Even in the built-up sections, the water still gets through from underneath because the pilings are shallow,” Francisco said.

This aerial photo taken on September 15, 2025 shows an unfinished dike in Plaridel, Bulacan. More than 100 flood-control projects are at the center of the country's biggest corruption scandal in decades. (AFP)

In nearby Plaridel, AFP saw a pair of masons bathing themselves near a half-built dike with exposed metal rods.
The taxpayer money paid for the dike “was clearly stolen,” Public Works Minister Vince Dizon said after visiting the site.
He called it an obvious “ghost project” and said he had fired the district’s chief engineer and two others.

‘The dike is worthless’

Anger has been growing over so-called ghost infrastructure since President Ferdinand Marcos put the issue center-stage in a state of the union address after weeks of deadly flooding.
Greenpeace estimates some $17.6 billion in funds may have been bilked from climate-related projects since 2023, much of it meant for communities that are slowly sinking due to groundwater over-extraction and rising sea levels.
Marcos himself has visited sites caught up in the scandal and slammed the poor quality of the dike in the village of Frances.
“You can crush the cement mix used with your bare hands. They short-changed the cement,” he said, pledging to hold those responsible to account.
Residents said they were pleased to see Marcos but were “waiting for him to deliver.”
“The dike is worthless. It’s full of holes,” said Nelia de los Reyes Bernal, a health worker.
Schoolchildren now wear rubber boots to class after a spike in cases of the bacterial disease leptospirosis and athlete’s foot, she said.
“Construction began last year but it has not been completed, supposedly because funds ran out,” the 51-year-old added.
“There’s no storm and yet the water is rising... We can no longer use the downstairs rooms of our houses. We’ve moved our kitchens to the second floors.”

‘Both guilty’

In Plaridel, 81-year-old Elizabeth Abanilla said she had not followed hearings on the scandal because she doesn’t own a television, but felt contractors were not the only ones to blame.
“It’s the fault of those who gave them money,” she said.
“They should not have handed it over before the job is completed. Both of them are guilty.”
The Philippines has a long history of scandals involving public funds, and high-ranking politicians have typically escaped serious jail time even if convicted of graft.
Thousands are expected to turn out for a protest in the capital on Sunday demanding justice — including prison for those found guilty of involvement in the bogus infrastructure projects.
But for construction worker Francisco, who says the floods are killing his livelihood, that kind of outcome is barely worth dreaming about.
“For me, what’s important is that they return the money,” he said.
“It’s up to God what is to be done with them.”
 


Gaza, Palestinian future to dominate UN gathering

Gaza, Palestinian future to dominate UN gathering
Updated 19 September 2025

Gaza, Palestinian future to dominate UN gathering

Gaza, Palestinian future to dominate UN gathering

UNITED NATIONS: More than 140 world leaders will descend on New York next week for the annual United Nations General Assembly summit, which will be dominated this year by the future of the Palestinians and Gaza.
One world leader who will miss the gathering is Mahmud Abbas, the Palestinian president who Washington denied US visas to attend, along with his officials.
Two years after the beginning of the Israeli offensive in the Gaza Strip, triggered by the unprecedented Hamas attack on October 7, 2023, the humanitarian catastrophe ravaging the small Palestinian territory will dominate debates at the high-level event.
Kicking off Monday, and France will co-chair meetings on the future of the Israeli and Palestinian two-state solution, which aims to see both sides existing alongside one another in peace.
After the overwhelming adoption last week by the General Assembly of a text supporting a future Palestinian state — albeit without Hamas — this meeting is expected to see the formal recognition of a Palestinian state by several countries, notably France.
International Crisis Group analyst Richard Gowan called it a “symbolic” gesture that could have real significance “if the countries that recognize Palestine follow up with further steps to try and put pressure on Israel to end its campaign in Gaza.”
Gowan warned of Israeli reprisals and a risk of “escalation” by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who will address the General Assembly and has firmly said there will be no Palestinian state on his watch.
The United States, Israel’s main ally, has opposed recognition and vowed to deny visas to the Palestinian delegation, including Abbas.
The Assembly will then vote Friday to authorize the Palestinian president to speak via video link.
All eyes will be on US President Donald Trump when Abbas speaks at the gathering, which brings much of Manhattan to a standstill every year as motorcades and heavily-armed security escorts sweep up First Avenue.
Since his return to the White House, Trump has initiated massive cuts to US foreign aid, hammering UN agencies as humanitarian needs grow.
Engulfed by deep financial crisis and raging wars, the UN quietly celebrated its 80th anniversary while fending off criticism of its efficacy.

‘Existential threat’ 

“The multilateral system... is under an existential threat,” said Federico Borello, Interim Executive Director at Human Rights Watch.
“Norms are being weakened when powerful states, that include permanent members of the Security Council, either commit or are complicit in serious violations of international humanitarian law, as is happening in Gaza, in Ukraine and elsewhere.”
“People are demanding answers and action, actions that match the gravity of the challenges our world faces, actions that meet the expectations of all those on the outside looking in,” UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said while calling for action on Gaza, Ukraine, Sudan and climate change.
Syria’s President Ahmed Al-Sharaa will be a prominent new addition to the group of nearly 140 world leaders, which also includes Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, Brazil’s Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian.
All eyes will be on Sharaa nearly a year after his forces overthrew Bashar Assad, as he now confronts the challenges of rebuilding after years of civil war.
Iran’s nuclear program will also be high on the agenda as sanctions against Tehran lifted ten years ago could be reinstated at the end of September, following a process triggered in late August by Paris, London, and Berlin.
Guterres and President Lula will also organize a climate summit on Wednesday where some states may announce new goals to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, just weeks ahead of COP30 in Brazil.


Taiwan running out of time for satellite communications, says space chief

Taiwan running out of time for satellite communications, says space chief
Updated 19 September 2025

Taiwan running out of time for satellite communications, says space chief

Taiwan running out of time for satellite communications, says space chief
  • Taiwanese authorities have already seen what happens when subsea cables are disconnected

HSINCHU, Taiwan: Taiwan’s space chief Wu Jong-shinn says the “clock is ticking” for the democratic island to launch its own satellites to secure Internet and phone services during a potential conflict with China.
The island faces the constant threat of an invasion by Beijing, which claims the island is part of its territory and in recent years has intensified military pressure.
Taiwan needs 150 of its own low Earth orbit  satellites for “basic communication resilience” in case the subsea telecoms cables connecting the island with the rest of the world are damaged or cut, Wu told AFP in an interview.
It currently has none.
“We need to build up our own technology. But as you know... the clock is ticking,” said Wu, director general of Taiwan Space Agency.
“We need to speed up.”
Taiwanese authorities have already seen what happens when subsea cables are disconnected.
In February 2023, two telecoms lines serving Taiwan’s outlying Matsu archipelago were severed, disrupting communications for weeks.
Taiwan plans to launch the first of six LEO satellites 600 kilometers  above the planet in 2027 as part of its Beyond 5G LEO Satellite program.
US officials have previously cited 2027 as a possible timeline for a Chinese invasion of Taiwan.
In the meantime, Taiwan’s Chunghwa Telecom is striking deals with satellite companies around the world to provide back-up telecommunications for the island in case of a war or natural disaster.
Starlink dominates the satellite communications sector, with 8,000 satellites lofted into orbit by Elon Musk’s comparatively cheap, reusable SpaceX rockets.
But Musk’s business ties with China and his previous comments that Taiwan should become part of China have angered the island.
Taiwan instead has signed a multi-million dollar deal with European company Eutelsat, the world’s second-largest operator of LEO satellites.
Eutelsat has more than 600 satellites, following its 2023 merger with British firm OneWeb.
“We’re developing our own technology, but it takes a while, but we can leverage the commercial resources to get us to have this communication resilience,” Wu said.
But Wu said Eutelsat’s satellites were not enough and other providers were needed.
Taiwan has also partnered with US company Astranis and SES of Luxembourg, and is in talks with Amazon’s Kuiper and Canada’s Telesat.
Eutelsat’s satellite system was reportedly used in a Taiwan disaster for the first time in 2024 when a deadly 7.4-magnitude earthquake struck the east coast and knocked out communications.

‘We can’t rely on one side’

Taiwan is light years behind the the US and Chinese space programs.
The rival superpowers have plowed billions of dollars sending people into orbit and launching thousands of satellites.
Taiwan currently has seven meteorological satellites and one optical remote sensing satellite in orbit, and hopes to have “more than 20” by around 2031, Wu said.
It plans to launch a second optical remote sensing satellite in November from the Vandenberg Space Force Base in California on a SpaceX rocket.
Wu said Taiwan would have its own rockets and launch site in the next decade.
When it comes to communication satellites, however, some question the economic sense of countries developing their own networks when commercial options are available.
“If you want this to work, you need a large number of them in low Earth orbit for that continuous coverage,” Brad Tucker, an astrophysicist and cosmologist at the Australian National University, told AFP.
“You have to be committed to this long-term operation but also then you need to maintain it. Starlink works because they are de-orbiting their satellites every three years, putting up a new one.”
But Taiwanese expert Cathy Fang said it would be “dangerous” for Taiwan to rely only on foreign satellite operators for phone and Internet signal during a war.
Taiwan has learned lessons from Ukraine where Starlink has been a vital communications tool for Ukrainian forces fighting Moscow’s troops.
Musk has admitted blocking a Ukraine attack on Russian warships by turning off Internet access to the system.
“We can’t just rely on one side,” Fang, a policy analyst at the government-backed Research Institute for Democracy, Society and Emerging Technology, told AFP.
“We need to cultivate our industry.”