Two explosions heard in Kabul: AFP journalists

Two explosions heard in Kabul: AFP journalists
Two explosions were heard in central Kabul on Wednesday evening, AFP journalists said, with Afghanistan on edge after border clashes with Pakistan over the past week. (X/@chashmNews_)
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Updated 40 sec ago

Two explosions heard in Kabul: AFP journalists

Two explosions heard in Kabul: AFP journalists
  • Mujahid said an oil tanker and a generator had exploded, sparking fires in the Afghan capital
  • Plumes of black smoke could be seen rising into the sky

KABUL: Two explosions were heard in central Kabul on Wednesday evening, AFP journalists said, with Afghanistan on edge after border clashes with Pakistan over the past week.
Taliban government spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said an oil tanker and a generator had exploded, sparking fires in the Afghan capital.
Ambulances were moving through the streets, AFP correspondents saw, while Taliban security forces also cordoned off the city center.
Plumes of black smoke could be seen rising into the sky and the ground was littered with shattered glass from buildings damaged by the explosions, AFP journalists said.
Violence between Afghanistan and neighboring Pakistan has flared since two explosions in Kabul last Thursday, and others outside the capital, which Taliban authorities blamed on Islamabad.
Those explosions triggered a series of border clashes in which dozens of soldiers and civilians were killed, according to officials on both sides of the frontier.
Islamabad has long accused Afghanistan of harboring militant groups led by the Pakistani Taliban Tehreek-e-Taliban (TTP) on its soil, a claim Kabul denies.


Russia says it hopes bloodshed will be avoided in Madagascar

Updated 8 sec ago

Russia says it hopes bloodshed will be avoided in Madagascar

Russia says it hopes bloodshed will be avoided in Madagascar
“We are following the development of the situation in Madagascar with anxiety,” Zakharova said
“We call for restraint and for the prevention of bloodshed“

MOSCOW: Russia said on Wednesday that it was closely watching events in Madagascar and hoped that bloodshed would be avoided after the military took power following weeks of youth-led protests.
Demonstrations first erupted in Madagascar on September 25 over water and power shortages and quickly escalated into an uprising over broader grievances, including corruption, bad governance and a lack of basic services.
Col. Michael Randrianirina declared on Tuesday that he had taken power and that a military committee would rule the country for a period of up to two years alongside a transitional government before organizing new elections.
“We are following the development of the situation in Madagascar with anxiety,” Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova told reporters in Moscow. “We believe that what is happening is an internal matter of this country.”
“We call for restraint and for the prevention of bloodshed,” Zakharova said, adding that Moscow hoped the Madagascar’s “return to the path of democratic development” will happen as soon as possible.
Russia in recent years has been increasing its influence in Africa, partly through the Wagner mercenary group which has operated in Central African Republic, Madagascar, Libya, Mozambique and Mali.
According to the New York Times and the BBC, the Wagner group was active in Madagascar during the 2018 presidential election.

UK sanctions Russia’s Lukoil and Rosneft, targets shadow fleet

UK sanctions Russia’s Lukoil and Rosneft, targets shadow fleet
Updated 18 min 33 sec ago

UK sanctions Russia’s Lukoil and Rosneft, targets shadow fleet

UK sanctions Russia’s Lukoil and Rosneft, targets shadow fleet
  • “We are introducing targeted sanctions against the two biggest oil companies in Russia,” Reeves said
  • The new sanctions target 51 ships within the shadow fleet

LONDON: Britain on Wednesday targeted Russia’s two largest oil companies, Lukoil and Rosneft, and 51 shadow fleet tankers in what it described as a fresh bid to tighten energy sanctions and choke off Kremlin revenues.
“We are introducing targeted sanctions against the two biggest oil companies in Russia, Lukoil and Rosneft,” finance minister Rachel Reeves told reporters while on a trip in the United States.
“At the same time, we are ramping up pressure on companies in third countries, including India and China, that continue to facilitate getting Russia oil onto global markets.”
She said there was “no place for Russia on global markets” and that Britain would take all necessary steps to stop Moscow from funding its war in Ukraine.
The new sanctions target 51 ships within the shadow fleet, as well as individuals and entities across sectors including energy and defense.
The shadow fleet has increasingly been the target of sanctions from Britain, the United States and the European Union since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
It is a network of older tankers that officials say are used to avoid sanctions on Russian oil.
Russia’s embassy in London did not immediately respond to a request for comment.


Russia rejects compensation to Georgia over 2008 war

Russia rejects compensation to Georgia over 2008 war
Updated 26 min 20 sec ago

Russia rejects compensation to Georgia over 2008 war

Russia rejects compensation to Georgia over 2008 war
  • ECHR upheld Georgia’s complaints, ordering Moscow to pay just over $292m in compensation
  • “We will not comply with the ruling,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said

MOSCOW: Russia will not comply with a European court ruling ordering it to pay Georgia almost $300 million for violations it has allegedly committed since their 2008 war, the Kremlin said Wednesday.
Russia invaded Georgia in 2008 after Tbilisi launched a surprise offensive against pro-Moscow separatist forces that it said were shelling Georgian villages.
Since then, it has occupied areas of northern and western Georgia comprising almost one-fifth of the country and installed puppet governments that have prevented the return of ethnic Georgian citizens, according to Tbilisi.
It has also blocked the teaching of Georgian in schools, Georgia says.
On Tuesday, the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) upheld Georgia’s complaints, ordering Moscow to pay just over 253 million euros ($292 million) in compensation.
“We will not comply with the ruling,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.
Moscow quit the Council of Europe, of which the ECHR is part, following its 2022 offensive on Ukraine but the court says it remains liable for violations committed before then.
Moscow has repeatedly ignored ECHR rulings, including while it was still a member of the Council of Europe.
Georgia formally cut diplomatic relations with Russia in the wake of their 2008 war, but has taken informal steps to improve ties in recent years — a process that Georgia’s opposition has heavily criticized.
When asked on Wednesday whether the non-payment of the fine would affect the diplomatic thaw, Peskov said it was a “separate matter.”
Moscow recognizes the breakaway Georgian regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia as independent, while most of the world recognizes them as Georgian territory.


Rift Valley fever outbreak kills 20 in Senegal

Rift Valley fever outbreak kills 20 in Senegal
Updated 33 min 34 sec ago

Rift Valley fever outbreak kills 20 in Senegal

Rift Valley fever outbreak kills 20 in Senegal
  • The viral disease has hit the northern Saint Louis region particularly hard, with 159 of 171 recorded cases
  • Since the beginning of the outbreak, Senegal has recorded “128 recoveries“

DAKAR: A total of 20 people have died in Senegal in a Rift Valley fever outbreak which began in late September, the west African country’s health ministry said.
The viral disease, which mainly affects animals but also humans, has hit the northern Saint Louis region particularly hard, with 159 of 171 recorded cases occurring in the area, according to a statement Tuesday by the Ministry of Health and Public Hygiene.
The ministry said the first laboratory confirmation of Rift Valley fever in the country occurred on September 20.
Since the beginning of the outbreak, Senegal has recorded “20 deaths and 128 recoveries,” it said in the statement.
Authorities have not released figures on the number of livestock killed by Rift Valley fever.
The most common symptoms of the disease include flu-like fever, muscle and joint pain, and headache in people, while in livestock, fever and bleeding are common.


Six priests detained in Armenia as investigation into church figures widens

Six priests detained in Armenia as investigation into church figures widens
Updated 15 October 2025

Six priests detained in Armenia as investigation into church figures widens

Six priests detained in Armenia as investigation into church figures widens
  • Five priests belonging to the Aragatsotn diocese of the Apostolic Church in western Armenia as well as its most senior figure, Bishop Mkrtich Proshyan, were brought into custody

TBILISI: Six Armenian clergymen were detained on Wednesday, their lawyer said, amid a widening crackdown that has seen some religious figures accused of plotting coups in the South Caucasus country.
Five priests belonging to the Aragatsotn diocese of the Apostolic Church in western Armenia as well as its most senior figure, Bishop Mkrtich Proshyan, were brought into custody following searches of their homes, lawyer Ara Zograbyan wrote on Facebook. A number of civilians were also arrested, he said.
Armenian authorities have not yet published statements on the detentions. The Investigative Committee, the judiciary’s main investigative arm, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The arrests of the six come after another pastor at a church in the same region gave an interview last month on public television alleging that the Apostolic Church had forced its members to participate in anti-government rallies in 2021 against Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.
An Armenian non-profit group, the Union of Informed Citizens, subsequently filed a request to state prosecutors to investigate the claim by the pastor, Father Ter Aram.
A senior council of the Apostolic Church condemned Wednesday’s arrests as showcasing the government’s “systemic pressure on the Armenian Church,” according to a statement cited by Armenian media.
The confrontation between the government and the Church comes as Pashinyan faces parliamentary elections next June and is under domestic pressure to conclude a peace agreement with Azerbaijan to end decades of conflict between the South Caucasus neighbors.
The crackdown on the clergy began this summer with the arrests of several prominent clerics on charges of attempts to incite violent coups.
One of them, Archbishop Mikael Ajapahyan, was sentenced to two years in prison earlier this month following what the Apostolic Church called a politically-motivated trial.
Archbishop Bagrat Galstanyan, another jailed cleric who is awaiting trial, led street protests against Pashinyan last year over what he cast as territorial concessions made to Azerbaijan following wars in 2020 and 2023.
Some senior clerics have previously called for Pashinyan to step down over Armenia’s military defeats against Azerbaijan.