Manila’s negotiator to China takes oath as Philippines’ new top diplomat

Special President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. swears in Theresa Lazaro as Philippines’ new foreign affairs secretary at the presidential palace in Manila on July 1, 2025. (Presidential Communications Office)
President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. swears in Theresa Lazaro as Philippines’ new foreign affairs secretary at the presidential palace in Manila on July 1, 2025. (Presidential Communications Office)
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Manila’s negotiator to China takes oath as Philippines’ new top diplomat

President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. swears in Theresa Lazaro as Philippines’ new foreign affairs secretary at the presidential palace
  • Theresa Lazaro, who began her foreign service career in 1984, is the second woman to lead the Department of Foreign Affairs
  • In 2024, she led negotiations with China in an agreement aimed at reducing clashes in disputed South China Sea 

MANILA: President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. has sworn in Theresa Lazaro, a veteran diplomat who previously led Philippine negotiations with China, as the country’s new foreign affairs secretary.

Lazaro took her oath on Tuesday at the presidential palace in Manila where she was also conferred with the Order of Sikatuna, a national honor of diplomatic merit, “in recognition of her leadership and vital contributions” to Philippine foreign policy and diplomacy, Marcos’ office said in a statement.

“The president underscored Lazaro’s pivotal role in advancing Philippine interests in critical foreign policy issues, including maritime security, regional peace and stability, and multilateral cooperation under the ASEAN Political-Security Pillar,” it said. 

“The president also recognized her leadership in establishing and revitalizing diplomatic mechanisms with traditional and emerging partners.” 

Lazaro served as undersecretary for bilateral relations and Association of Southeast Asian Nations affairs under her predecessor, Enrique Manalo, who will return to his role as the Philippines’ permanent representative to the UN in New York.

Her appointment was first announced in late May, a day after Marcos asked his cabinet members to resign as he attempted to address the people’s dissatisfaction over his administration’s performance and improve the quality of public service. The president has since retained some and replaced others, including the national police chief, solicitor general and foreign secretary positions. 

Lazaro, whose career in foreign service began in 1984, had also served as the Philippine ambassador to France and Monaco, as well as Switzerland. 

She is now the second woman to lead the Philippines’ Department of Foreign Affairs after Delia Domingo Albert in 2003. 

As the foreign affairs undersecretary, Lazaro led the Philippines’ negotiations with China last year over the Ayungin Shoal, also known as the Second Thomas Shoal. 

Between 2023 and 2024, the area in the disputed South China Sea was a flashpoint where clashes often occurred between the Philippines’ navy personnel and the Chinese coast guard. 

Under Lazaro, the two countries reached a “provisional understanding” in July 2024 that has since kept Philippines’ resupply missions to the shoal peaceful. 

“The added bonus here is that incoming Secretary Lazaro’s experience being front and center in the bilateral consultative mechanisms with Beijing gives her that expertise in dealing with the Chinese. And of course, that will come in handy in future negotiations as well,” geopolitical analyst Don McLain Gill told Arab News. 

He added he did not expect her appointment to mark a shift in Philippine foreign policy, rather a continuity of the efforts that Marcos’ administration has been pursuing, with the Indo-Pacific and the Middle East regions as “priority areas.”

“The Indo-Pacific's Western Pacific and the Middle East, particularly the West Asia, North Africa sub-regions … these are very important and will continue to become very important,” he said.


3 leaders at UK hospital where a nurse was convicted of murdering babies are arrested

3 leaders at UK hospital where a nurse was convicted of murdering babies are arrested
Updated 58 min 34 sec ago

3 leaders at UK hospital where a nurse was convicted of murdering babies are arrested

3 leaders at UK hospital where a nurse was convicted of murdering babies are arrested

LONDON: Three senior leaders at the English hospital where nurse Lucy Letby was convicted of murdering babies were arrested on suspicion of manslaughter, police said Tuesday.
The people under investigation for gross negligence manslaughter were arrested when a corporate manslaughter probe was expanded following Letby’s 2023 convictions for the infant deaths at the Countess of Chester Hospital in northwestern England, said Detective Superintendent Paul Hughes of the Cheshire Constabulary.
“This focuses on senior leadership and their decision-making to determine whether any criminality has taken place concerning the response to the increased levels of fatalities,” Hughes said.
Letby, 35, is serving multiple life sentences with no chance of release after being convicted of seven counts of murder and attempting to murder seven other infants between June 2015 and June 2016 while working as a neonatal nurse at the hospital.
Letby was convicted in a sensational trial two years ago, but since then support for her has grown as a panel of medical experts disputed the evidence against her and a lawyer said she was wrongly convicted.
The three suspects were not named and were released on bail.
Hughes said the arrests don’t have an impact on Letby’s convictions.


Azerbaijani men arrested by Russian police were beaten to death, Baku says

Azerbaijani men arrested by Russian police were beaten to death, Baku says
Updated 01 July 2025

Azerbaijani men arrested by Russian police were beaten to death, Baku says

Azerbaijani men arrested by Russian police were beaten to death, Baku says
  • Azerbaijan and Russia have traded barbs since the men’s deaths, with Baku accusing Russian police of carrying out extrajudicial killings “on ethnic grounds”

BAKU: Post-mortems conducted in Baku on two Azerbaijani men who died last week after they were arrested by Russian police show that they were beaten to death, a state forensic examiner said on Tuesday.
The deaths of the men, brothers named Ziyaddin and Huseyn Safarov, have raised diplomatic tensions between Moscow and Baku and led to the tit-for-tat arrests of Russian state media journalists working in Azerbaijan.
Azerbaijan’s ambassador to Russia was summoned to the foreign ministry in Moscow on Tuesday to receive an official protest against Baku’s “unfriendly actions” and the “illegal detention” of the journalists.
The rift between Russia and Azerbaijan has widened after investigators in Yekaterinburg, a Russian industrial city, conducted scores of raids last week targeting ethnic Azerbaijanis whom they suspected of complicity in historic unsolved crimes, including serial killings.
The Safarov brothers died during the raids, in which six people were arrested. Russian investigators initially said Ziyaddin had died of heart failure and did not give a cause for death for Huseyn.
The bodies of the men arrived in Baku on Monday evening for forensic examination.
Adalat Hasanov, head of forensic examination at Azerbaijan’s health ministry, said fresh post-mortems showed the brothers both died of “post-traumatic shock” due to severe beatings.
Russian examiners’ assertion that Ziyaddin, who was born in 1970, died of heart failure, is a “blatant falsehood,” Hasanov told reporters.
“During the follow-up examination, we discovered multiple fractures on Ziyaddin’s body resulting from beatings. All of his ribs were broken, and a haemorrhage was found on his head, also caused by blunt force trauma,” he said.
The other brother, Huseyn, born in 1966, also died as a result of beatings, Hasanov said. He said all of the deceased internal organs had been removed during the previous autopsy in Russia, “which may indicate an attempt to conceal the true cause of death.”
Azerbaijan and Russia have traded barbs since the men’s deaths, with Baku accusing Russian police of carrying out extrajudicial killings “on ethnic grounds,” an allegation Moscow has rejected. Russian investigators said all the six men arrested held Russian passports.
On Monday, police in Baku arrested two journalists working for Sputnik Azerbaijan, the local affiliate of Russian state outlet Rossiya Segodnya, and said it would investigate the agency for illegal funding.


Israel’s Netanyahu says he is expected to meet Trump next week

Israel’s Netanyahu says he is expected to meet Trump next week
Updated 57 min 21 sec ago

Israel’s Netanyahu says he is expected to meet Trump next week

Israel’s Netanyahu says he is expected to meet Trump next week
  • Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says he's going to Washington next week to meet with Trump

JERUSALEM: Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Tuesday he expects to travel to the United States next week for meetings with President Donald Trump, after a “great victory” in a 12-day war with Iran last month.
Netanyahu said in a statement ahead of a cabinet meeting that the visit will also include talks with other top officials, such as Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, Trump’s Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff, and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick.
“We still have a few things to finalize in order to reach a trade agreement in addition to other matters,” he said, referring to Trump’s tariff plans. “I’ll also have meetings with congressional and Senate leaders and some security meetings.”
Trump last month announced a ceasefire ending the hostilities between Israel and Iran.
The US president said last week that his administration would send letters to a number of countries notifying them of their higher tariff rates
before July 9, when the duties are scheduled to revert from a temporary 10 percent level to a range of between 11 percent and 50 percent announced on April 2 and subsequently suspended.
The US initially set a 17 percent tariff on Israeli goods sold in the United States. 


Georgia jails another opposition figure in crackdown on dissent

Georgia jails another opposition figure in crackdown on dissent
Updated 01 July 2025

Georgia jails another opposition figure in crackdown on dissent

Georgia jails another opposition figure in crackdown on dissent
  • Protestors accuse the ruling party of veering toward authoritarian rule and steering the country closer to Moscow

TBILISI: Georgia on Tuesday jailed prominent opposition figure Nika Gvaramia for eight months, the latest in a wave of arrests targeting politicians, activists, and journalists critical of the ruling party.
The EU candidate nation has been gripped by political unrest since the disputed parliamentary elections last October, when the ruling Georgian Dream party declared victory, sparking mass protests.
Demonstrators accuse the ruling party, which shelved EU membership talks, of veering toward authoritarian rule and steering the country closer to Moscow — accusations the government rejects.
On Tuesday, a Tbilisi court sentenced Gvaramia — the co-leader of the key opposition Akhali party — to eight months in prison and barred him from holding public office for two years, his lawyer Dito Sadzaglishvili told AFP.
“The verdict is unlawful and part of the government’s attempt to crush all dissent in Georgia,” he said.
Gvaramia was sentenced for refusing to cooperate with a parliamentary commission investigating alleged abuses under imprisoned former president Mikheil Saakashvili.
Nearly all of Georgia’s opposition leaders have been jailed this month on similar charges.
Saakashvili, a pro-Western reformer, is currently serving a 12-and-a-half-year prison term on charges widely denounced by rights groups as politically driven.
Opposition figures have rejected the commission’s legitimacy, accusing the ruling Georgian Dream party of using it as a tool to suppress dissent.
Amnesty International said last week that the “disputed” commission “has been instrumentalized to target former public officials for their principled opposition.”
Ahead of last year’s elections, Georgian Dream announced plans to outlaw all major opposition parties.
Brussels has said Georgia’s democratic backsliding derails it from its longstanding EU membership bid enshrined in the country’s constitution and supported — according to opinion polls — by some 80 percent of the population.
The United States and several European countries have imposed sanctions on some Georgian Dream officials.


Online memorial for children dead in Hiroshima, Nagasaki

Online memorial for children dead in Hiroshima, Nagasaki
Updated 01 July 2025

Online memorial for children dead in Hiroshima, Nagasaki

Online memorial for children dead in Hiroshima, Nagasaki
  • The United States dropped an atomic bomb on each Japanese city on August 6 and 9, 1945
  • Out of around 210,000 victims, around 38,000 were children

TOKYO: A Nobel Prize-winning anti-nuclear group launched an online memorial Tuesday for the 38,000 children who died in the US atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, ahead of the 80th anniversary next month.
It features more than 400 profiles with details of the children’s lives, “their agonizing deaths and the grief of surviving family members,” said the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) in a statement.
“By sharing their heart-wrenching stories, we hope to honor their memories and spur action for the total abolition of nuclear weapons — an increasingly urgent task given rising global tensions,” it said.
The United States dropped an atomic bomb on each Japanese city on August 6 and 9, 1945 — the only times nuclear weapons have been used in warfare. Japan surrendered days later.
Around 140,000 people died in Hiroshima and around 74,000 others in Nagasaki, including many who survived the explosions but died later from radiation exposure.
Out of around 210,000 victims, around 38,000 were children, said the ICAN, citing Hiroshima and Nagasaki officials.
Washington has never apologized for the bombings.
Clicking a crane icon, visitors to the online platform can read the children’s profiles, with photos of 132 children out of 426, ranging in age from infants to teenagers.
Among them is Tadako Tameno, who died in agony aged 13 in the arms of her mother two days after the Hiroshima atomic bombing.
Six children in the Mizumachi family were killed in the Nagasaki atomic bombing. Only one girl, Sachiko, 14, survived.
The initiative comes after US President Donald Trump last week likened Washington’s strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities to the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombs.
“Actually, if you look at Hiroshima, if you look at Nagasaki, you know that ended a war too,” Trump said in The Hague.
This prompted anger from survivors and a small demonstration in Hiroshima. The city’s assembly passed a motion condemning remarks that justify the use of atomic bombs.
Israel’s ambassador to Japan, Gilad Cohen, will attend this year’s ceremony in Nagasaki, local media reported.
Cohen, together with the envoys of several Western nations including the United States, boycotted last year’s event after comments by the city’s mayor about Gaza.
Russia’s ambassador will attend the Nagasaki ceremony, the first time its representative has been invited since the invasion of Ukraine in 2022, NHK reported.
However, Nikolay Nozdrev will not attend the 80th anniversary event in Hiroshima three days earlier on August 6, the broadcaster said, citing the Russian embassy.
ICAN won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2017. Last year, it was awarded to Nihon Hidankyo, a grassroots movement of Hiroshima and Nagasaki survivors.
Data from the Japanese health ministry released Tuesday meanwhile showed that the number of survivors from the bombings had fallen below 100,000 for the first time.
The number stood at 99,130 as of March 2025, with the average age at 86.13 years, according to the ministry.