conflict

Poland president accuses Ukraine of not appreciating war support

conflict

Rubio says won't force deal on Ukraine as Europeans join Miami talks

  • Rubio said he may join talks in Miami, his hometown, on Saturday. 
  • US Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Friday promised not to force Ukraine into any agreement to end Russia's invasion as European allies joined fresh talks in Miami.
  • Rubio said he may join talks in Miami, his hometown, on Saturday. 
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Friday promised not to force Ukraine into any agreement to end Russia's invasion as European allies joined fresh talks in Miami.
The weekend talks come as President Vladimir Putin in an annual news conference vowed to press ahead with his military offensive in Ukraine, hailing battlefield gains nearly four years into his war.
President Donald Trump's envoys have pressed a plan in which the United States would offer security guarantees to Ukraine, but Kyiv will likely be expected to surrender some territory, a prospect resented by many Ukrainians.
But Rubio said that ultimately both sides had to agree to a deal.
"There's no peace deal unless Ukraine agrees to it," Rubio told a news conference in Washington.
"This whole narrative that we're trying to force something on Ukraine is silly," Rubio said.
"We can't force Ukraine to make a deal. We can't force Russia to make a deal. They have to want to make a deal."
Rubio said he may join talks in Miami, his hometown, on Saturday. 
Trump's global envoy Steve Witkoff and son-in-law Jared Kushner are leading the talks, which will include top Ukrainian negotiator Rustem Umerov as well as top officials from Britain, France and Germany.
Russian officials -- reportedly including Kremlin negotiator Kirill Dmitriev -- and US officials are expected to meet separately in Florida over the weekend.
Umerov said on social media that he and Andriy Gnatov, the chief of staff of Ukrainian armed forces, will report back to President Volodymyr Zelensky after the Miami talks.
"We are committed to a constructive process," Umerov wrote.
"We are acting clearly in line with the priorities defined by the president: Ukraine's security must be guaranteed reliably and in the long term."
The talks are part of a flurry of winter diplomacy in sunny Miami. Witkoff and Kushner are also holding talks on the Gaza ceasefire with officials from Egypt, Qatar and Turkey.
Trump has made ending the Ukraine and Gaza wars the centerpiece of his second-term effort to be a self-proclaimed "president of peace." 
But resolving the situation in Ukraine has, by his own admission, proved far harder than he expected.

Putin vows to press on

Russian attacks on Ukraine have not ceased during talks, with a deadly ballistic missile strike on Ukraine's strategic Black Sea coast on Friday.
"The enemy struck the port infrastructure of Odesa region -- seven dead, fifteen wounded," Odesa regional governor Oleg Kiper said on social media.
Witkoff and Kushner met Umerov in Miami earlier this month without European involvement, and traveled to Moscow to hold talks with Putin.
In November, the United States shocked Europe by unveiling a 28-point plan to settle the war that overlooked the continent's main powers and was widely seen as favoring Russia.
The plan was amended by Ukraine and Europe, but Russia had yet to react to it, with Putin saying Friday that "the ball is now fully and completely" in the court of Kyiv and its Western allies.
"Our troops are advancing along the entire line of contact," Putin told his news conference.
"I'm sure that before the end of this year we will still witness new success," he added. 
Russia has been making steady gains in the east of Ukraine after failing to quickly topple the Kyiv government and seize the country in February 2022.
Land remains the key stumbling block in the talks, and a source familiar with the negotiations told AFP earlier this week that the United States was pushing Kyiv to cede territory in the eastern Donetsk region.
Kyiv meanwhile secured a desperately needed lifeline as EU leaders struck a deal Friday to provide Ukraine a loan of 90 billion euros to plug its looming budget shortfalls.
But the European Union failed to agree on using frozen Russian assets to come up with the funds.
burs-dk-sct/sst/cc/phz

UN

UN Security Council votes to extend DR Congo mission by one year

BY GREGORY WALTON

  • Washington says the M23 is backed by Rwanda.
  • The UN Security Council voted unanimously Friday to extend the deployment of the UN's peacekeeping mission in Democratic Republic of Congo by one year as Washington called for Rwanda and M23 forces to respect a regional peace deal.
  • Washington says the M23 is backed by Rwanda.
The UN Security Council voted unanimously Friday to extend the deployment of the UN's peacekeeping mission in Democratic Republic of Congo by one year as Washington called for Rwanda and M23 forces to respect a regional peace deal.
The MONUSCO mission of 11,500 military personnel is one of the blue helmet missions endorsed by the United States which has sought to cut back on the body's spending on deployments under President Donald Trump.
The resolution extends "until December 20, 2026 the mandate of MONUSCO in the DRC" and comes in the wake of the fall of the major Congolese cities of Goma in January and Bukavu in February to the anti-government M23. 
Washington says the M23 is backed by Rwanda. On December 10 the group occupied Uvira, a DRC city of several hundred thousand people that allowed it to control the land border with Burundi and cut the DRC off from military support from its neighbor.
The US representative at Friday's meeting, Jennifer Locetta, said "negotiations to renew the MONUSCO mandate were yet again disrupted by Rwandan and M23 efforts to sabotage a viable peace process."
Earlier this month, the Congolese and Rwandan leaders signed a peace deal in Washington -- but the fall of Uvira threatened to upend that landmark agreement.
On Wednesday, the M23 said it had begun pulling out of the city and called on "mediators and other partners to ensure Uvira is protected from violence, reprisals and remilitarization."
Local and security sources reported that troops had moved towards the north of the city.
Early Thursday, M23 police and plain-clothed agents were still seen in the streets and at strategic points, according to local sources.
On Tuesday, two Burundian officials estimated that at least 85,000 people had fled the DRC in recent weeks to seek refuge in Burundi.
The UN High Commissioner for Refugees has said it expects a total of 90,000 new arrivals and published a photo showing dozens of people camping under trees, without any infrastructure to accommodate them.
gw/msp

Bolsonaro

Brazil court rejects new Bolsonaro appeal against coup conviction

  • Only one of five judges on the Supreme Court panel voted not to convict Bolsonaro.
  • A Brazilian Supreme Court judge on Friday rejected a fresh appeal by jailed former president Jair Bolsonaro against his coup conviction, declaring it inadmissible, according to a court document seen by AFP. Bolsonaro, 70, began serving a 27-year sentence in November after the country's highest court declared that he had exhausted all appeals.
  • Only one of five judges on the Supreme Court panel voted not to convict Bolsonaro.
A Brazilian Supreme Court judge on Friday rejected a fresh appeal by jailed former president Jair Bolsonaro against his coup conviction, declaring it inadmissible, according to a court document seen by AFP.
Bolsonaro, 70, began serving a 27-year sentence in November after the country's highest court declared that he had exhausted all appeals.
Nevertheless, his attorneys filed an appeal on the merits of the case three days after he was jailed.
Bolsonaro's earlier failed appeal targeted "ambiguities, omissions, and contradictions" in the trial. 
Judge Alexandre de Moraes, who oversaw the trial against Bolsonaro, said he did not recognize the fresh appeal, which requires two judges to have voted against a conviction.
Only one of five judges on the Supreme Court panel voted not to convict Bolsonaro.
Bolsonaro, a far-right firebrand who served from 2019 to 2022, was found guilty of having led a scheme to prevent President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva from taking office after Bolsonaro's failed re-election bid.
He has maintained his innocence, declaring he was a victim of political persecution.
The conservative-controlled Congress this week passed a law that could reduce Bolsonaro's sentence to just over two years.
Lula has vowed to veto the law, however Congress has the last word and can override him.
Bolsonaro's lawyers have also asked the Supreme Court to authorize his release for surgery.
On Friday, police said in a statement that an official medical exam confirmed Bolsonaro has a hernia "that requires elective surgical repair."
The exam showed that a requested nerve blocking procedure to treat violent bouts of hiccups was also "technically appropriate."
According to the statement, medical experts recommended the procedures take place "as soon as possible" due to the impact of Bolsonaro's health issues on his sleep and eating habits, and an "increased risk of complications from the hernia."
Moraes will determine whether to allow the surgery to go ahead.
Bolsonaro has a history of abdominal issues after being stabbed during his 2018 election campaign, and has required several follow-up surgeries.
His lawyers have requested he be allowed to serve his sentence under house arrest for health reasons.
Bolsonaro had been under house arrest until shortly before the official start of his jail term, when he was detained after he took a soldering iron to his ankle monitoring bracelet in what the Supreme Court saw as an escape attempt.
The former president said he was acting under medication-induced paranoia.
lg-fb/msp

shooting

US university killer's mystery motive sought after suicide

BY GREGORY WALTON, WITH THOMAS CABRAL IN LISBON AND BING GUAN IN SALEM, MASSACHUSETTS

  • Authorities say Valente, a 48-year-old Portuguese national, shot dead Brown students Ella Cook and Mukhammad Aziz Umurzokov, and wounded several others, on December 13 before heading to the home of renowned Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor Nuno Loureiro and killing him two days later.
  • Claudio Neves Valente came to the United States as an ambitious physics student at Brown University, but ended his life while hiding from police after killing two students at the Ivy League institution as well as an MIT professor.
  • Authorities say Valente, a 48-year-old Portuguese national, shot dead Brown students Ella Cook and Mukhammad Aziz Umurzokov, and wounded several others, on December 13 before heading to the home of renowned Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor Nuno Loureiro and killing him two days later.
Claudio Neves Valente came to the United States as an ambitious physics student at Brown University, but ended his life while hiding from police after killing two students at the Ivy League institution as well as an MIT professor.
Authorities say Valente, a 48-year-old Portuguese national, shot dead Brown students Ella Cook and Mukhammad Aziz Umurzokov, and wounded several others, on December 13 before heading to the home of renowned Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor Nuno Loureiro and killing him two days later.
No motive has been made public for any of the killings, which cast a long shadow on two of New England's normally genteel elite universities. It has been suggested he did not know the students.
Portuguese media outlet Expresso reported that Valente, from Torres Novas in central Portugal, attended Lisbon's IST institution at the same time as Loureiro.
They were classmates, and Valente was the top student that year. 
"Most classmates have no memory of the student Claudio Valente, other than the fact that he was the best in the class that year," IST president Rogerio Colaco told the outlet.
By contrast, Loureiro -- who taught nuclear science and engineering as well as physics -- maintained links with IST professors, he added.
Investigators struggled to produce viable leads in the days after the incidents, with President Donald Trump attacking Brown University for failing to link its security cameras to police systems.
During the protracted manhunt, dozens of names surfaced on social media and elsewhere in connection with the shooting -- almost all false and unlinked to the bloodshed.
Rhode Island officials denounced the misinformation, saying it complicated their investigation.

Reddit tip-off

As media reported the name of a military veteran initially detained and released, social media filled with his image -- and a torrent of erroneous posts sharing photos of another man with the same name.
Colonel Darnell Weaver, superintendent of the Rhode Island State Police, said "the endless barrage of misinformation, disinformation, rumors, leaks and clickbait were not helpful in this investigation."
But it was a tip from an often murky, irreverent corner of the internet  -- Reddit -- that was the breakthrough for detectives.
Officers were directed to a post on the social media forum site that told investigators to probe a grey Nissan SUV. 
A tipster called "John" by investigators then came forward and described to officers an encounter with a suspicious man at Brown prior to the slayings.
The information was crucial for the investigation and allowed officers to link the Brown campus shootings and the MIT professor's murder.
In their briefing announcing the conclusion of the case, officials revealed that Valente had taken elaborate steps to conceal his identity including using false license plates and a cell phone investigators struggled to trace.
The hunt for the Brown gunman dragged into a sixth day until officers found Valente's body in a self-storage facility in Salem, Massachusetts. He had an apparently self-inflicted gunshot wound.
But questions continued to swirl around the episode.
Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Neronha told the Thursday briefing "in terms of why Brown? I think that's a mystery."
gw/bgs

court

French court rejects Shein suspension

  • The state's request that Shein "at a minimum" maintain the suspension of its marketplace, which hosts products sold by third-party vendors, was not granted. 
  • A French court on Friday rejected the state's request to suspend Shein's site in France as "disproportionate" after the Asian e-commerce giant removed illicit products sold on its platform.
  • The state's request that Shein "at a minimum" maintain the suspension of its marketplace, which hosts products sold by third-party vendors, was not granted. 
A French court on Friday rejected the state's request to suspend Shein's site in France as "disproportionate" after the Asian e-commerce giant removed illicit products sold on its platform.
The French government said it would appeal the ruling.
French authorities had requested the ultra-fast-fashion giant's site be blocked for three months after weapons, banned medications and childlike sex dolls were found on the platform.
The authorities asked that the platform only be reopened if it applied strict new measures to prevent a repeat of the offences.
The Paris judicial court acknowledged a "serious harm to public order", but found their sale of the items in question had been "sporadic" and noted that Shein had removed the products.
The court nevertheless issued an "injunction" to Shein not to resume selling "sexual products that could constitute pornographic content, without implementing age-verification measures". 
The state's request that Shein "at a minimum" maintain the suspension of its marketplace, which hosts products sold by third-party vendors, was not granted. 
"Only certain products on the marketplace were identified, in these proceedings, as manifestly illegal and harmful, while the 'fr.Shein.com' platform offers several hundred thousand items for sale," said the court ruling.
Despite the court's decision, Shein's marketplace is not expected to fully reopen right away, but gradually, its lawyers said.
The company has acknowledged difficulties in implementing an effective age filter for pornographic products.
As a result, the adults-only sexual category would remain closed for the time being, as is the case worldwide since the uproar over the sale of childlike sex dolls on the platform broke out in France in November.
In a statement to AFP, the French government said that it would appeal the court decision.
"Convinced of the systemic risk of the model linked to Shein, and at the request of the prime minister, the government will appeal this decision in the coming days," said the statement.
A number of other e-commerce giants have also faced pressure on the European stage in recent months. 
Brussels in November requested formal information from Shein, which could lead to probes and even fines. But that does not in itself suggest the law has been broken, nor is it a move towards punishment.
Earlier in December, EU finance ministers agreed to impose a three-euro ($3.5) duty on low-value imports into the bloc from July 2026 to help tackle a flood of small parcels ordered via sites such as Shein. 
European retailers argue they face unfair competition from overseas platforms, which they claim do not always comply with the European Union's stringent rules on products.
ole/sw-as/cc

shooting

US halts green card lottery after MIT professor, Brown University killings

  • The US green card lottery grants up to 55,000 permanent resident visas annually to people "from countries with low rates of immigration to the United States," according to the State Department.
  • The Trump administration will suspend a green card lottery that allowed a man believed to be behind both a mass shooting at Brown University and the killing of an MIT professor into the United States.
  • The US green card lottery grants up to 55,000 permanent resident visas annually to people "from countries with low rates of immigration to the United States," according to the State Department.
The Trump administration will suspend a green card lottery that allowed a man believed to be behind both a mass shooting at Brown University and the killing of an MIT professor into the United States.
Investigators said late Thursday that Claudio Neves Valente, a 48-year-old Portuguese man was the gunman who burst into a building at the Ivy League school and opening fire on students, killing two and wounding nine at the weekend. 
He also killed a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), with whom he had previously studied, two days later, according to police.
Homeland Security secretary Kristi Noem wrote on social media on Thursday that Neves Valente entered the United States through the diversity lottery immigrant visa program in 2017 and was granted a green card.
The US green card lottery grants up to 55,000 permanent resident visas annually to people "from countries with low rates of immigration to the United States," according to the State Department.
Noem described Neves Valente, who police said Thursday was found dead by suicide after a days-long manhunt, was a "heinous individual" who "should never have been allowed in our country."
"At President Trump's direction, I am immediately directing USCIS (United States Citizenship and Immigration Services) to pause the DV1 program to ensure no more Americans are harmed by this disastrous program," Noem said.
In 2017, during Donald Trump's first term, the Republican leader vowed a battery of tough measures to curb immigration, including terminating the green card lottery, after a deadly terror attack in New York. 
Noem pointed to this incident in her post Thursday.
US attorney Leah Foley said at a press briefing on Thursday that Neves Valente studied at Brown University "on an F1 (student) visa around 2000 to 2021" and that "he eventually obtained legal permanent resident status," but did not go into further detail.
Foley added that Neves Valente had also attended the "same academic program...  in Portugal between 1995 and 2000" as the MIT professor, Nuno Loureiro, who was shot down in his home in Brookline, in the greater Boston metro area.
There is no immediate indication of a motive in the shootings that rattled the elite New England campuses.
Neves Valente's body was found at a storage unit in New Hampshire along with two guns. He killed himself, Providence Police Chief Oscar Perez said Thursday and is believed to have acted alone.
Portugal's Foreign Minister Paulo Rangel said "it is with great dismay we learned the chief suspect, who was found dead is a Portuguese citizen."
Portuguese police said there were cooperating with US investigators.
The two student victims from Brown were Ella Cook, vice president of the university's Republican Party association, and Mukhammad Aziz Umurzokov, originally from Uzbekistan.
Six of the wounded were still in hospital in stable condition, and three have been released, university president Christina Paxson said in a statement Thursday.
For days, officials voiced their mounting frustration with the manhunt. The case finally blew open thanks to a trail of financial data and video surveillance footage gathered at both crime scenes.

'Hiding his tracks'

"The groundwork that started in the city of Providence... led us to that connection," Perez said. 
In Boston, Foley said Neves Valente had been "sophisticated in hiding his tracks."
He switched the license plates on his rental vehicle at one point and was using a phone that investigators had difficulty tracking.
The US has suffered more than 300 incidents in which more than four or more people were shot this year. 
Attempts to restrict access to firearms still face political deadlock.
bur-gw/bgs

justice

Epstein files due as US confronts long-delayed reckoning

  • "So today, several hundred thousand and then over the next couple of weeks, I expect several hundred thousand more.
  • The US Justice Department will release several hundred thousand documents Friday from the investigation into convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, a top official said, with more files in the politically explosive case to be published over coming weeks.
  • "So today, several hundred thousand and then over the next couple of weeks, I expect several hundred thousand more.
The US Justice Department will release several hundred thousand documents Friday from the investigation into convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, a top official said, with more files in the politically explosive case to be published over coming weeks.
Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, in an interview with "Fox and Friends," also said that no new charges were imminent in a scandal that continues to convulse America.
Prosecutors have the latitude to withhold material related to active investigations and Blanche said the documents will also be painstakingly redacted to protect the identities of Epstein's hundreds of victims.
Epstein, a wealthy financier with ties to global elites, died in his New York jail cell in 2019 while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges.
His death -- ruled a suicide -- fueled conspiracy theories and demands for accountability in a case that sits at the crossroads of immense wealth, political influence and perceived impunity.
President Donald Trump, once a close friend of Epstein, fought for months to prevent the release of the Epstein files held by the Justice Department.
However, on November 19 he caved to pressure from Congress, including from his Republican Party, and signed a law compelling publication of the materials within 30 days.
Friday is the deadline for the release of the long-awaited records.
"I expect that we're going to release several hundred thousand documents today," Blanche said. "So today, several hundred thousand and then over the next couple of weeks, I expect several hundred thousand more.
"As of today, there's no new charges coming, but we are investigating," he added.

'Cover up'

Democratic Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer condemned the partial release, saying "the Trump administration had 30 days to release ALL the Epstein files, not just some."
"People want the truth and continue to demand the immediate release of all the Epstein files," Schumer said in a statement. "This is nothing more than a cover up to protect Donald Trump from his ugly past."
For Trump, the moment carries enormous personal and political sensitivity.
Trump and his allies have repeatedly claimed that prominent Democrats and Hollywood figures were protected from accountability, framing the Epstein scandal as proof that money and influence can subvert the justice system.
But the president himself once counted Epstein among his social companions, moving in the same Palm Beach and New York milieus in the 1990s and appearing together at parties for years.
The president severed ties with Epstein years before the 2019 arrest and is not accused of wrongdoing in the case.
After returning to office, and acquiring the unilateral authority to publish the files, Trump dismissed the years-long push for transparency that he had once encouraged as a "Democrat hoax."
He fought Congress over its drive to get the records out in public, but relented and signed the Epstein files act once a sweeping bipartisan consensus made opposition untenable.
For the public and for survivors, the release of the files marks the clearest opportunity yet to shed light on the scandal.
The newly released records could clarify how Epstein operated, who assisted him and whether prominent individuals benefited from institutional restraint.
The law requires the unsealing of extensive internal correspondence, investigative files and court documents that have previously remained sealed or inaccessible.
They may reveal new associates and clarify why prosecutors stalled for years, but expectations of a "client list" are likely misplaced, with the Justice Department saying no such roster exists.
Trump recently ordered investigations into Democrats linked to Epstein, prompting speculation that those inquiries could be cited as justification for withholding records.
Epstein amassed powerful allies, maintained luxury properties where abuse allegedly occurred and secured a hugely contentious 2008 plea deal in a separate case that critics say may have protected unnamed coconspirators.
Epstein's former girlfriend Ghislaine Maxwell is the only person to have been charged in connection with his activities. The former British socialite is serving a 20-year prison sentence for offenses including sex trafficking a minor.
ft-cl/md

Global Edition

Three killed in Taipei metro attacks, suspect dead

  • According to the Taipei City Fire Department, a total of four people were confirmed dead including the suspect, a 27-year-old man.
  • Attacks at metro stations in Taipei on Friday involving smoke bombs and stabbings killed at least three people, the Taiwanese city's fire department said, adding that the suspect was also dead.
  • According to the Taipei City Fire Department, a total of four people were confirmed dead including the suspect, a 27-year-old man.
Attacks at metro stations in Taipei on Friday involving smoke bombs and stabbings killed at least three people, the Taiwanese city's fire department said, adding that the suspect was also dead.
Taiwan's Premier Cho Jung-tai said the attacks at Taipei Main Station and Zhongshan station were "a deliberate act", although the motive was not immediately clear.
Cho said in a statement that the suspect wore a mask and threw "five or six gasoline bombs or smoke grenades" at Taipei Main Station.
According to the Taipei City Fire Department, a total of four people were confirmed dead including the suspect, a 27-year-old man.
Five other people were injured, the fire department said.
The city's mayor said the suspect had apparently jumped off a building, and that he was wanted for evading military service.
One of the victims was killed while trying to stop the attack at the Main Station, Mayor Chiang Wan-an told reporters.
"Unfortunately, he was attacked and passed away... we are all deeply saddened," he said.
A witness of the attack at the Main Station told local network EBC News that he had seen a "man rush up and try and subdue" the attacker, who was "wearing a gas mask and a bulletproof vest".
"At first I thought it was a drill, then I saw a person holding a knife and throwing smoke grenades," said the witness, who did not give his name.
The mayor said that "we understand that the suspect committed suicide by jumping from a building to evade arrest, and has been confirmed dead."
- High alert - 
A second witness told EBC News that "someone ran out wearing a gas mask and started throwing canisters that released gas."
"I quickly ran away. He kept throwing them behind me. I didn't count how many (canisters) but there was a constant banging and clanging sound," added the witness, who also did not give his name.
"I didn't hear any explosions, but a lot of gas kept spraying out."
Cho, the island's premier, earlier said three people suffered cardiac arrest as a result of the attacks, and several people had "injuries from stab wounds and blunt force trauma to various parts of their bodies".
Authorities said they were ramping up security across the island in response to the attacks.
"All important locations... including railway stations, highways, subway stations and airports are maintaining a high level of alert and vigilance,"  Cho told reporters.
Images released by Taiwan's Central News Agency show a canister on the ground at the Main Station, with officers examining potential evidence at the scene.
A video posted on social media shows a thick cloud of white smoke covering an underground section of a metro station, with some people standing at a distance. 
President Lai Ching-te said Taiwanese authorities will "quickly clarify the details of the case. There will be no leniency and we will do everything in our power to ensure the safety of our citizens."
Violent crime is rare Taiwan, though an attack in 2014 horrified the normally peaceful island when a man went on a stabbing spree on Taipei's metro, killing four people. He was executed for the killings in 2016. 
aw-ami/bgs

attack

Seven Colombian soldiers killed in guerrilla attack: army

  • The army updated the casualty toll to reporters later Friday, with seven dead and 30 wounded.
  • Colombia's ELN guerrilla group attacked a military base near Venezuela with drones and explosives, killing seven soldiers and wounding 30, the army said Friday.
  • The army updated the casualty toll to reporters later Friday, with seven dead and 30 wounded.
Colombia's ELN guerrilla group attacked a military base near Venezuela with drones and explosives, killing seven soldiers and wounding 30, the army said Friday.
Founded in 1964 and inspired by the Cuban revolution, the ELN is the oldest surviving guerrilla group in the Americas, and controls key drug-producing regions of Colombia. Efforts to negotiate a peace settlement have repeatedly stalled. 
The Thursday night attack on the rural military outpost in Aguachica, near the border with Venezuela, was the second deadly clash with security forces in a week. Two police officers were killed Tuesday in Cali.
"I categorically reject the ELN's terrorist action using drones and launching of explosive devices against a Military Base," Defense Minister Pedro Sanchez wrote on X early Friday, adding that the group "must be completely dismantled."
He reported the deaths of six soldiers. The army updated the casualty toll to reporters later Friday, with seven dead and 30 wounded.
Videos circulating on social media showed wounded soldiers being brought into a local medical center on stretchers and in wheelchairs, and a fire reportedly caused by explosions at the military outpost.
After taking power in 2022, President Gustavo Petro, himself a former guerrilla, attempted to engage well-armed cocaine-producing groups in talks, rather than conduct open warfare. But negotiations faltered.
In October, the United States imposed sanctions on Petro for his alleged reluctance to target the cartels.
Washington, conducting a campaign against alleged narco-trafficking off the coast of Venezuela, has warned Petro that he could "be next" over his country's mass cocaine production.
Colombia is the world's top cocaine producer, according to the UN.
The ELN, which is present in over a fifth of Colombia's 1,100-plus municipalities, vowed last week to fight for Colombia's "defense" in the face of US "threats of imperialist intervention."
bur-lga/lb/msp/md

Argentina

Mercosur meets in Brazil, EU eyes January 12 trade deal

BY JUAN SEBASTIAN SERRANO

  • Several diplomats in Brussels told AFP the EU was working towards a signature on January 12 in Paraguay, which is set to take over leadership of Mercosur from Brazil in 2026.
  • Representatives of the South American Mercosur bloc met in Brazil Friday, as EU diplomatic sources said a long-delayed trade deal may now be signed on January 12.
  • Several diplomats in Brussels told AFP the EU was working towards a signature on January 12 in Paraguay, which is set to take over leadership of Mercosur from Brazil in 2026.
Representatives of the South American Mercosur bloc met in Brazil Friday, as EU diplomatic sources said a long-delayed trade deal may now be signed on January 12.
Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay had hoped they would on Saturday finally seal a deal with the EU to create the world's largest free trade zone.
However, the deal, which has been under negotiation for more than 25 years, met with fierce opposition from farmers, notably in France and Italy, and has now been postponed to January.
Several diplomats in Brussels told AFP the EU was working towards a signature on January 12 in Paraguay, which is set to take over leadership of Mercosur from Brazil in 2026.
European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen said she was confident there would be a "sufficient majority" among the EU's 27 countries to approve the deal next month.
The trade deal would help the 27-nation European Union export more vehicles, machinery, wines and spirits to Latin America.
In return, it would facilitate the entry into Europe of South American meat, sugar, rice, honey and soybeans.
Some EU nations, like Germany, Spain and the Nordic countries, are excited about a pact that could help boost exports at a time of global trade tensions.

Angry farmers delay pact

The proposed deal has provoked anxiety among farmers in Paris and Rome who fear they will be undercut by a flow of cheaper goods from agricultural giant Brazil and its neighbors.
Thousands of farmers protested the deal outside a Brussels meeting of EU leaders on Thursday, rolling around 1,000 honking tractors into the city.
Protesters lit fires and hurled potatoes and other objects at the police who responded with tear gas and water cannon. 
The demands for more robust protections forced the European Commission to announce a postponement of Saturday's planned signing ceremony.
Lula on Wednesday warned the EU to sign the deal now or forget it while he was in power.
However, he said Thursday that Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni had asked him for "patience" and indicated Rome would eventually be ready to sign.
After the Brussels summit, French President Emmanuel Macron said it was "too soon" to say if Paris would back the deal next month, saying fundamental changes to the text were needed.
A Brazilian government source said the trade pact already contained safeguards for EU farmers, but "we see that the internal political situation in France is delicate," the source added.
On Friday, dozens of French farmers protested in front of President Emmanuel Macron's seaside residence, spreading manure nearby to demonstrate the Mercosur trade deal and other grievances.

Germany upbeat

Despite the delay, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz is "very happy, because the question is no longer if (the deal will be signed) but when", government spokesman Sebastian Hille told reporters in Berlin.
He said the German government expected the process to be completed "in the next two to three weeks."
The Mercosur meeting starts Friday with ministerial talks in southern Brazil's Foz de Iguacu -- home to one of the world's largest waterfall systems on the border with Argentina.
On Saturday, Brazil's President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva will meet his Uruguayan counterpart Yamandu Orsi, Paraguay's Santiago Pena, and Argentina's libertarian firebrand President Javier Milei.
Milei sparked controversy this week with a viral Instagram post showing a map of South America depicting Brazil as a massive slum, while Argentina and Chile -- which just elected a far-right leader -- are shown as futuristic.
jss/fb/sms

conflict

Poland president accuses Ukraine of not appreciating war support

  • Nawrocki has previously demanded better cooperation concerning the massacres of around 100,000 Poles in the Volhynia region by Ukrainian nationalists between 1943 and 1945.
  • Poland's nationalist President Karol Nawrocki told his Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelensky on Friday that Ukrainians failed to appreciate his country's help for them as they fight off Russia's invasion.
  • Nawrocki has previously demanded better cooperation concerning the massacres of around 100,000 Poles in the Volhynia region by Ukrainian nationalists between 1943 and 1945.
Poland's nationalist President Karol Nawrocki told his Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelensky on Friday that Ukrainians failed to appreciate his country's help for them as they fight off Russia's invasion.
The accusation, made during a joint press conference, recalled a dramatic confrontation between Zelensky and US President Donald Trump at the White House in February, when US Vice President JD Vance accused the Ukrainian leader of lacking respect and being ungrateful for US support.
Poland has taken in more than a million refugees from Ukraine since Russian President Vladimir Putin launched a full-scale assault on the country in February 2022, and is among Kyiv's main arms suppliers.
It is also the principal route for Western military and humanitarian support to its neighbour.
"Poles feel... that our effort, our multifaceted assistance to Ukraine since the beginning of the full-scale invasion has not been duly appreciated or understood," Nawrocki said at a press conference during a visit to Warsaw by Zelensky.
"That is what I conveyed during a firm, honest, but very cordial and courteous conversation with President Zelensky."
Zelensky responded by insisting that "Ukraine has always been grateful to Poland and will remain so."
He said Ukraine was "defending Europe" against Russia at a very high human cost.
"Russia wants discord, wants to destroy such a strong alliance -- the alliance of two nations, through many generations of Ukraine and Poland. We will not let them do it."
Nawrocki has previously demanded better cooperation concerning the massacres of around 100,000 Poles in the Volhynia region by Ukrainian nationalists between 1943 and 1945.
Nawrocki says the massacres constituted genocide and has accused Kyiv of refusing to acknowledge responsibility.
Warsaw also accuses it of dragging its feet on exhumations of the victims.
On Thursday, Zelensky expressed goodwill over those issues.
"The Polish side wants to speed up this process, the Ukrainian side is ready to take a step toward it. These are not just words, these are concrete measures," he said.
Nawrocki voiced "optimism" over Zelensky's comments.
In a message on X after the meeting, he hailed "a new beginning" in relations with Ukraine.
"Bad news for Putin," he said.
bo/gab/dth/rlp/jhb

conflict

Moscow intent on pressing on in Ukraine: Putin

  • - 'Our troops advancing' - Putin said that Russia's recent advances in Ukraine should force Kyiv to agree to a deal -- that original version of which included Ukraine ceding land to Moscow.
  • Russia's Vladimir Putin on Friday said the ball was in the court of the West and Kyiv in talks to end the war in Ukraine, while hailing Moscow's recent battlefield gains and threatening more.
  • - 'Our troops advancing' - Putin said that Russia's recent advances in Ukraine should force Kyiv to agree to a deal -- that original version of which included Ukraine ceding land to Moscow.
Russia's Vladimir Putin on Friday said the ball was in the court of the West and Kyiv in talks to end the war in Ukraine, while hailing Moscow's recent battlefield gains and threatening more.
Speaking during his annual end-of-year news conference -- a staple of his 25-year rule -- Putin told Russians that Moscow was intent on pressing on in Ukraine, striking a confident tone.
The 73-year-old repeatedly says that Moscow will seize the rest of Ukrainian land he has proclaimed as Russian by force if talks fail.
Putin said Friday he did not feel personally responsible for the tens of thousands of people killed since Moscow launched its offensive, which has become Europe's worst conflict since World War II.
"We did not start this war," he said, repeating a frequent narrative pushed by Moscow throughout the conflict.
"We do not consider ourselves responsible for the loss of life."
Putin ordered the all-out assault in Ukraine in February 2022, sending troops and tanks towards Kyiv.
He also denied dragging out settlement talks and turning down proposals -- claiming Moscow had agreed to "some compromises" -- without elaborating.
"The ball is now fully and completely on the side of our Western opponents... first of all the head of the Kyiv regime and their European sponsors," Putin said. 
The United States, Ukraine and Europeans have been refining a proposal first put forward by Washington last month that many saw as heeding most of Moscow's core demands for how the conflict should end.

'Our troops advancing'

Putin said that Russia's recent advances in Ukraine should force Kyiv to agree to a deal -- that original version of which included Ukraine ceding land to Moscow.
Russia and Washington are also pushing Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to hold a presidential election, with Putin saying Russia could halt long-range strikes on voting day.
Listing a string of cities and towns in eastern Ukraine now eyed by the Russian army, the Kremlin chief said he was certain Moscow would soon capture more settlements.
"Our troops are advancing along the entire line of contact," Putin said. 
"I'm sure that before the end of this year we will still witness new success," he added.
The Russian army made its biggest advance in Ukraine in a year in November, AFP analysis of data from the US-based Institute for the Study of War showed.
Speaking at the same time from an event in Cairo, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov condemned a European proposal to send a multinational force to police any potential peace deal in Ukraine as a "brazen" threat to Russia.
And Putin also warned of "severe" consequences if the EU used Russia's frozen assets to fund Ukraine's recovery and defence, after Brussels failed to approve a plan to tap the funds. 
In another message to the West, Putin said that Russia would not attack other countries -- as long as it was treated "with respect" -- without clarifying what he meant.
As he spoke, Zelensky said on a visit to Warsaw that Russia would come for Poland if Ukraine fell.

Downplays economy woes

The four-and-a-half-hour long televised event -- a mix of questions from the press and call-ins from Russia's 12 time zones -- is a fixture of the Russian political calendar, generating frenzied media coverage in the weeks leading up to it.
The Kremlin said almost three million people had sent questions to Putin and security was heavy in Moscow during the event.
Putin mused on everything from geopolitics to regional development issues to his views on love and family life, at times pledging to intervene to fix the problems of citizens caught up in local bureaucracy.
He downplayed the economic costs of the war for Moscow, even as the Central Bank trimmed interest rates amid slowing growth. 
Russia has lived under massive Western sanctions for almost four years, while ramped up military spending has strained the public finances and caused prices to surge.  
bur/jj

conflict

EU agrees 90-bn-euro loan for Ukraine, without Russian assets

BY MAX DELANY

  • The number one option on the table had been to tap around 200 billion euros of Russian central bank assets frozen in the EU to generate a loan for Kyiv.
  • EU leaders struck a deal Friday to provide Ukraine a loan of 90 billion euros to plug its looming budget shortfalls -- but failed to agree on using frozen Russian assets to come up with the funds.
  • The number one option on the table had been to tap around 200 billion euros of Russian central bank assets frozen in the EU to generate a loan for Kyiv.
EU leaders struck a deal Friday to provide Ukraine a loan of 90 billion euros to plug its looming budget shortfalls -- but failed to agree on using frozen Russian assets to come up with the funds.
The middle-of-the-night agreement reached at summit talks in Brussels offers Kyiv a desperately needed lifeline as US President Donald Trump pushes for a quick deal to end Russia's nearly four-year war.
"Today's decision will provide Ukraine with the necessary means to defend itself and to support the Ukrainian people," European Council head Antonio Costa, who chaired the summit, said.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky wrote on X that the deal "is significant support that truly strengthens our resilience," adding: "It is important that Russian assets remain immobilized and that Ukraine has received a financial security guarantee for the coming years."
In a post on Telegram, the Kremlin's top economic negotiator Kirill Dmitriev welcomed the failure to "illegitimately use Russian assets to finance Ukraine," adding that "for the time being, the law and common sense have won a victory."
After scrambling around for a solution, EU leaders settled on a loan for the next two years backed by the bloc's common budget.
The number one option on the table had been to tap around 200 billion euros of Russian central bank assets frozen in the EU to generate a loan for Kyiv.
But that scheme fell by the wayside after Belgium, where the bulk of the assets are held, demanded guarantees on sharing liability -- something that proved too much for other countries.
Briefing reporters as the summit wrapped up, Prime Minister Bart De Wever said he believed "rationality has prevailed".
"This whole business was so risky, so dangerous, and raised so many questions -- it was like a sinking ship, like the Titanic. The die are cast now -- and everyone is relieved."
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz had pushed hard for the asset plan -- but still said the final decision on the loan "sends a clear signal" to Russian President Vladimir Putin.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said Ukraine would only need to pay back the loan once Moscow coughs up for the damages it has wrought.
Using joint debt requires a unanimous decision by the EU's 27 countries, and sceptics Hungary, Slovakia and Czech Republic were given an exemption from the commitment to avoid a blockage.

'It's moral'

The EU estimates Ukraine needs an extra 135 billion euros ($159 billion) to stay afloat over the next two years, with the cash crunch set to start in April.
Zelensky told EU leaders at the start of the summit on Thursday that using Russian assets was the right way to go.
"Russian assets must be used to defend against Russian aggression and rebuild what was destroyed by Russian attacks. It's moral. It's fair. It's legal," Zelensky said.
While Kyiv may be left disappointed that the EU did not take the leap with the assets, securing financing another way was still a relief.
Zelensky told the leaders that Kyiv needed a decision by the end of the year, and that putting his country on firmer footing could give it more leverage in talks to end the war.

Ukraine, US talks

Alongside the EU's discussions, Washington has pushed its own effort to forge a deal to end the war.
Washington has so far largely sidelined Europe from the negotiations -- but French President Emmanuel Macron said it was time for the continent to start talking to Moscow itself.
"I believe that it's in our interest as Europeans and Ukrainians to find the right framework to re-engage this discussion," he said, adding that Europeans should find the means to do so "in coming weeks." 
Zelensky announced Ukrainian and US delegations would hold new talks on Friday and Saturday in the United States.
He said he wanted Washington to give more details on the guarantees it could offer to protect Ukraine from another invasion.
"What will the United States of America do if Russia comes again with aggression?" he asked. "What will these security guarantees do? How will they work?"
Trump nonetheless kept the pressure on Kyiv, saying again he hopes Ukraine "moves quickly" to agree a deal.
del/ec/abs/yad/lb

migration

'We are ghosts': Britain's migrant night workers

BY AKSHATA KAPOOR

  • "I almost became like a ghost," he said, speaking at the sprawling night market.
  • "We are ghosts on the night shift," says Leandro Cristovao from Angola, who has worked the graveyard shift at a south London market for seven years.
  • "I almost became like a ghost," he said, speaking at the sprawling night market.
"We are ghosts on the night shift," says Leandro Cristovao from Angola, who has worked the graveyard shift at a south London market for seven years.
In the last decade, Britain's nine-million-strong nighttime workforce has become increasingly reliant on migrants like Cristovao, as the number of UK-born workers doing night work shrinks.
"You have a lot of night work carried out by migrant night workers in -- somewhat unfairly named -- low-skilled sectors," explained Julius-Cezar Macarie, a sociology professor at University College Cork.
"Their work is very, very essential, because they maintain this ... 24-hour society," said Macarie, whose "Nightwork Footprint" project researches the invisibility of the shift.
Amid the raging debate in the UK about the number of migrants and irregular immigrants, those not born in the UK are twice as likely to work overnight as those born in the country, according to official data from 2022.
In the health and care sector, over a third of night workers are migrants.
As the government clamps down on overseas workers, migrants spoke to AFP about working in the shadows.

The office cleaner

As the sun rose on a chilly morning in central London, Roxana Panozo Alba walked against the tide of suited-up bankers whose offices she spent the night cleaning.
The 46-year-old and her team -- most of whom are migrants -- clean toilets, kitchens, conference rooms and over 500 desks from 10:00 pm to 7:00 am.
She says she gets paid the London Living Wage (£13.85, $18.47) per hour.
Alba, originally from Bolivia and a Spanish citizen through marriage, moved to the UK with her husband because "there was no work left in Spain".
She has worked nights for eight years to be with her kids -- aged six and 15 -- in the day, and because she does not speak English, limiting opportunities.
"Working at night is not good, it damages your health," said Alba.
"You have to sleep (in the day), but you can't. The slightest noise and you can't get to sleep."

The care workers

Omatule Ameh, 39, is an overnight support worker for children with learning disabilities in rural southeast England. He moved there from Nigeria in 2023 on a care worker visa.
During the day, Ameh looks after his own eight-year-old and 18-month-old while his wife works at the care home. Sometimes, he gets only three hours of sleep.
"You find that emotionally, mentally, it's taking a gradual toll on you," said Ameh, who earns minimum wage, around £12.20 an hour.
Judith Munyonga, 44, from Zimbabwe works from 7:00 pm to 7:00 am four days a week, caring for patients with spinal cord injuries in Hertfordshire, north of London.
The former teacher monitors her patients while they sleep, often sitting besides them in darkness.
"I'll try to play music in one of my headphones to keep myself awake. When it's dark, I tell you, it's not easy," said Munyonga.
Both carers feel the government's move to end the social care visa route and rising anti-immigration rhetoric are "worrying".
Last month, the government announced it would triple the time before some "low-qualified" care workers can apply for residency from five to 15 years.
"It's like changing the rules in the middle of a game," Ameh lamented.
The Labour government has also ended the provision allowing care workers to bring their families to the UK -- the path through which Munyonga brought her husband and children.
"It's sad," said Munyonga. "You are here to care for some family, (for them) to live a normal life. And yours is out there."
Ameh is taking management courses and wants to "move up the ladder".

The chef

Sandeep wipes grease from the counter of a 24-hour London cafe before clocking off at 7:00 am, after a 12-hour shift.
The 21-year-old Nepali has worked as a chef there for two years, first when he was a student, and now as a graduate, after he struggled to find a tech job.
"It's really hard to get a job at the moment," said the computer science graduate, adding he had "no option" but to work nights.
He moved to the UK from Nepal in 2023 because "there's nothing back there for youngsters like us."
But if he cannot find a job that pays more than his current minimum-wage work, he will have to return to Nepal in a year when his visa expires, as the government hikes the minimum salary requirement for foreign work visas.
"They gave me the hope ... now what's the point of telling me to go back to your country?" said Sandeep, who did not want to share his full name.
"Everyone here is an immigrant," he added, gesturing towards the Nepalese team which dishes up traditional British fare through the night.
"If we couldn't do it, I think the boss has to shut down the place for night shift."

The warehouse manager

Cristovao, 36, packages wholesale produce which reaches UK restaurants, schools and hotels in the early morning hours.
When he first started, he would have "nightmares" and jolt awake during the day, thinking he was late for work.
"I almost became like a ghost," he said, speaking at the sprawling night market.
His boss Martin Dykes said the business, Nature's Choice, took a hit after Brexit, adding he is "worried" about new visa restrictions as local night workers are harder to find.
"My friends in the business, we wouldn't (be able to) do it. Restaurants wouldn't survive," said Dykes.
"But we are here," Cristovao said defiantly.
"While they are sleeping, we are here," he said, pointing to the residential skyscrapers behind him, where the lights are switched off.
aks/jkb/rh/abs

conflict

NGOs fear 'catastrophic impact' of new Israel registration rules

BY CéLIA LEBUR AND CHLOE ROUVEYROLLES-BAZIRE IN JERUSALEM

  • They are being given 60 days to withdraw all their international staff from the Gaza Strip, the occupied West Bank and Israel, and will no longer be able to deliver any aid.
  • New rules in Israel for registering non-governmental organisations, under which more than a dozen groups have already been rejected, could have a catastrophic impact on aid work in Gaza and the West Bank, relief workers warn.
  • They are being given 60 days to withdraw all their international staff from the Gaza Strip, the occupied West Bank and Israel, and will no longer be able to deliver any aid.
New rules in Israel for registering non-governmental organisations, under which more than a dozen groups have already been rejected, could have a catastrophic impact on aid work in Gaza and the West Bank, relief workers warn.
The NGOs have until December 31 to register under the new framework, which Israel says aims not to impede aid distribution but to prevent "hostile actors or supporters of terrorism" operating in the Palestinian territories.
The controversy comes with Gaza, which lacks running water and electricity, still battling a humanitarian crisis even after the US-brokered October ceasefire in the war between Israel and Hamas, sparked by the Palestinian militant group's October 7, 2023 attack on Israel.
Israel's Ministry of Diaspora Affairs and Combating Antisemitism told AFP that, as of November 2025, approximately 100 registration requests had been submitted and "only 14 organisation requests have been rejected ... The remainder have been approved or are currently under review."
Requests are rejected for "organisations involved in terrorism, antisemitism, delegitimisation of Israel, Holocaust denial, denial of the crimes of October 7," it said.

'Very problematic'

The amount of aid entering Gaza remains inadequate. While the October 10 ceasefire agreement stipulated the entry of 600 trucks per day, only 100 to 300 are carrying humanitarian aid, according to NGOs and the United Nations.
The NGOs barred under the new rules include Save the Children, one of the best known and oldest in Gaza, where it helps 120,000 children, and the American Friends Service Committee (AFSC).
They are being given 60 days to withdraw all their international staff from the Gaza Strip, the occupied West Bank and Israel, and will no longer be able to deliver any aid.
The forum that brings together UN agencies and NGOs working in the area on Thursday issued a statement urging Israel to "lift all impediments", including the new registration process, that "risk the collapse of the humanitarian response".
The Humanitarian Country Team of the Occupied Palestinian Territory (HCT) warned that dozens of NGOs face deregistration and that, while some had been registered, "these NGOs represent only a fraction of the response in Gaza and are nowhere near the number required just to meet immediate and basic needs."
"The deregistration of NGOs in Gaza will have a catastrophic impact on access to essential and basic services," it said.
NGOs contacted by AFP, several of whom declined to be quoted on the record due to the sensitivity of the issue, say they complied with most of Israel's requirements to provide a complete dossier.
Some, however, refused to cross what they described as a "red line" of providing information about their Palestinian staff. 
"After speaking about genocide, denouncing the conditions under which the war was being waged and the restrictions imposed on the entry of aid, we tick all the boxes" to fail the registration, predicted the head of one NGO.
"Once again, bureaucratic pressure is being used for political control, with catastrophic consequences," said the relief worker. 
Rights groups and NGOs including Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have accused Israel of carrying out a genocide against Palestinians in Gaza, a term vehemently rejected by the Israeli government.
"If NGOs are considered to be harmful for passing on testimonies from populations, carrying out operational work and saying what is happening and this leads to a ban on working, then this is very problematic," said Jean-Francois Corty, president of French NGO Medecins du Monde.

'Every little criticism'

The most contentious requirement for the NGOs is to prove they do not work for the "delegitimisation" of Israel, a term that appears related to calling into question Israel's right to exist but which aid workers say is dangerously vague. 
"Israel sees every little criticism as a reason to deny their registration... We don't even know what delegitimisation actually means," said Yotam Ben-Hillel, an Israeli lawyer who is assisting several NGOs with the process and has filed legal appeals.
He said the applications of some NGOs had already been turned down on these grounds.
"So every organisation that operates in Gaza and the West Bank and sees what happens and reports on that could be declared as illegal now, because they just report on what they see," he told AFP.
With the December 31 deadline looming in just over a fortnight, concerns focus on what will happen in early 2026 if the NGOs that are selected lack the capacity and expertise of organisations with a long-standing presence. 
Several humanitarian actors told AFP they had "never heard of" some of the accredited NGOs, which currently have no presence in Gaza but were reportedly included in Trump's plan for Gaza. 
"The United States is starting from scratch, and with the new registration procedure, some NGOs will leave," said a European diplomatic source in the region, asking not to be named. "They might wake up on January 1 and realise there is no-one to replace them."
crb-cl-sjw/ah/dc

RSF

Sudan's El-Fasher under the RSF, destroyed and 'full of bodies'

BY MENNA FAROUK WITH AFP TEAMS IN PORT SUDAN, TAWILA AND PARIS

  • Asked by a neighbour to check on his family, she entered their house and found "two bodies inside".
  • When Sudanese nurse Asmaa returned to the Darfur city of El-Fasher, she found only bodies where her neighbours once lived and no sign of the family she had come to save.
  • Asked by a neighbour to check on his family, she entered their house and found "two bodies inside".
When Sudanese nurse Asmaa returned to the Darfur city of El-Fasher, she found only bodies where her neighbours once lived and no sign of the family she had come to save.
The Rapid Support Forces, battling Sudan's military since April 2023, seized the army's last stronghold in Darfur on October 26 in a bloody offensive marked by executions, atrocities, pillaging and rape.
Since then, an RSF-imposed communications blackout has sealed El-Fasher off from the outside world. Little has been known since RSF fighters posted images eight weeks ago showing mass killings that shocked the world.
AFP managed to speak to two residents inside the city via satellite internet, collected accounts from two aid groups that gained rare access, and analysed satellite imagery to piece together an image of El-Fasher under the RSF.
More than 106,000 people have fled El-Fasher since the takeover, while between 70,000 and 100,000 remain trapped, according to the World Food Programme.
Asmaa fled the city on the Sunday it fell to the RSF, but was detained with 11 others near the South Darfur capital Nyala and released only after paying a $3,000 ransom.
Instead of escaping for good, she went back to El-Fasher, and has spent five weeks searching for her brothers, brother-in-law and several cousins, amid reports of thousands still detained in the city.
"I do not know if they are detained or dead. I just keep looking in shelters, schools, everywhere," she told AFP.
What she has found instead is a city "terrifying and full of bodies".
Her own home has been "completely destroyed".
Asked by a neighbour to check on his family, she entered their house and found "two bodies inside". She recognised them as his cousins, and ran in terror.
"They were still fresh," she said.
Near her home, she saw deep burial pits she says were used to "erase evidence of killings".
Satellite imagery analysed by AFP corroborates her account, revealing an increasing number of what look like graves in a 3,600-square-metre area near UNICEF headquarters.
Grave-shaped earth disturbances in the area controlled by the RSF since early October, have continued to increase from September.

'Completely empty'

What little is known about conditions in El-Fasher is "beyond horrific", the WFP said, citing accounts of burned bodies, abandoned markets and roads littered with mines.
A Red Crescent volunteer, speaking to AFP anonymously from the city, said his team entered El-Fasher on December 4 and buried "bodies scattered" across streets and buildings, with new corpses reported daily.
Satellite analysis from late November by Yale University's Humanitarian Research Lab (HRL) revealed "piles of objects consistent with human bodies", being moved around, buried and burned, with RSF forces present, its director Nathaniel Raymond told AFP.
In areas once bustling with activity, streets are now empty.
An analysis of recent satellite images by AFP shows no visible activity at four main markets across the city in mid-December, areas that were busy before the war began.
Ismail, who returned to El-Fasher from the nearby town of Garni five weeks after the takeover, described a deserted neighbourhood, his home partially damaged and stripped bare.
"The area is completely empty. When I go out to get something, I fear for my family," Ismail told AFP, using a pseudonym for his safety.
For 18 months under siege, civilians in El-Fasher eked out a meagre existence on animal feed and cowhide. The UN confirmed famine last month, and the city has received virtually no aid.
One of the few groups granted access, Malam Darfur Peace and Development Organisation, told AFP it delivered food and blankets on December 2 but found a severe shortage of water, food and medicine.

Trapped inside

Doctors without Borders (MSF) teams in the refugee town of Tawila, 70 kilometres west, say they have received numerous fresh reports of kidnappings inside El-Fasher and along escape routes.
"The RSF wants to keep people inside," MSF emergency coordinator Myriam Laaroussi told AFP, adding that many attempting to leave recently were forced back.
Those who make it recount families paying ransoms, men tortured or shot, parents killed and children left unaccompanied, she said.
The RSF has dismissed accusations as "fabricated narratives", claimed it was investigating and sought to broadcast a different image of El-Fasher under their rule.
In videos, they boast "reconstruction" campaigns, a new police station and inspections of the city's water plant, while urging residents to resume "normal" life.
The conflict in Sudan has killed tens of thousands of people, displaced millions more and unleashed a new litany of horrors on the people of Darfur, long-scarred by the atrocities committed in the early 2000s by the RSF's predecessor, the Janjaweed.
bur-maf/sof/bha/dc

diplomacy

Iraq negotiates new coalition under US pressure

BY ROBA EL HUSSEINI

  • Now, after November's election, Washington has demanded the eventual government must exclude Iran-backed armed groups and instead move to dismantle them, Iraqi officials and diplomats told AFP. A State Department spokesperson, speaking on condition of anonymity, said: "Iraqi leaders well know what is and is not compatible with a strong US-Iraq partnership".
  • More than a month after Iraq's parliamentary elections, the country's top leaders remain locked in talks to form a government while facing pressure from Washington to exclude Tehran-backed armed groups.
  • Now, after November's election, Washington has demanded the eventual government must exclude Iran-backed armed groups and instead move to dismantle them, Iraqi officials and diplomats told AFP. A State Department spokesperson, speaking on condition of anonymity, said: "Iraqi leaders well know what is and is not compatible with a strong US-Iraq partnership".
More than a month after Iraq's parliamentary elections, the country's top leaders remain locked in talks to form a government while facing pressure from Washington to exclude Tehran-backed armed groups.
Amid seismic changes in the Middle East, where new alliances are forming and old powers waning, Iraqi leaders face a daunting task: navigating relations with US-blacklisted pro-Iranian factions.

What does the US want?

The US has held significant sway over Iraqi politics since leading the 2003 invasion that ousted long-time ruler Saddam Hussein.
But another spectre also haunts Iraq's halls of power: Washington's arch-foe, Iran.
Iraq has long been caught between the two, with successive governments negotiating a delicate balance.
Now, after November's election, Washington has demanded the eventual government must exclude Iran-backed armed groups and instead move to dismantle them, Iraqi officials and diplomats told AFP.
A State Department spokesperson, speaking on condition of anonymity, said: "Iraqi leaders well know what is and is not compatible with a strong US-Iraq partnership".
Washington, the spokesperson said, "will continue to speak plainly to the urgency of dismantling Iran-backed militias".
But some of these groups have increased their presence in the new chamber and have joined the Coordination Framework, an alliance of Shiite parties with varying ties to Iran and which holds the majority.
For weeks, the Coordination Framework has been embroiled in talks to nominate the next prime minister. 
"The US has put conditions that armed factions should not be part of the new government," a senior Iraqi official said. The factions must disarm and "sever ties with Iran's Revolutionary Guard," he added.
In recent tweets, the US special envoy to Iraq, Mark Savaya said that Iraqi leaders are at a "crossroads".
Their decision "will send a clear and unmistakable signal to the United States... that Iraq is ready to claim its rightful place as a stable and respected nation in the new Middle East.
"The alternative is equally clear: economic deterioration, political confusion, and international isolation," Savaya said.

Which armed groups?

The US has blacklisted as "terrorist organisations" several armed groups from within the Hashed al-Shaabi, a former paramilitary alliance now integrated into the armed forces.
They are also part of the Iran-backed so-called "axis of resistance" and have called for the withdrawal of US troops -- deployed in Iraq as part of an anti-jihadist coalition -- and launched attacks against them.
Most of these groups hold seats in parliament and have seen their political and financial clout increase.
The Asaib Ahl al-Haq faction, led by Qais al-Khazali, who is a key figure in the Coordination Framework, won 27 seats in the latest election, making it harder to exclude it from the government.
A potential compromise is to deny it a key portfolio, as in the current government.
"The US has turned a blind eye before, so they might after all engage with the government as a whole but not with ministries held by armed groups," a former Iraqi official said.
Other blacklisted groups are: 
+ Kataeb Hezbollah, one of the most powerful armed groups, supports a parliamentary bloc (six seats).
+ Kataeb Sayyid al-Shuhada, Kataeb Imam Ali and Harakat Ansar Allah al-Awfiya.
+ The al-Nujaba movement is the only group that has steered clear of elections.

What is at stake?

Iraq has its economic growth to worry about.
After decades of turmoil, it has only begun to regain a sense of normalcy in recent years. 
Washington has already imposed sanctions on several Iraqi entities and banks, accusing them of helping Tehran evade sanctions.
But Iraqi leaders hope for greater foreign investments and support partnerships with US companies.
The most striking endorsement came from Khazali, an opponent of the US military presence who now argues that it would be in Baghdad's interest for major US companies to invest.
Since the Israel's war with Hamas in Gaza began in October 2023, Iraq has remained relatively unscathed by the turmoil engulfing the Middle East.
Iraqi armed groups did launch attacks on US troops and largely unsuccessful ones on Israel. Washington responded with heavy strikes, and the attacks have long-since halted.
Iraq remained the only close regional ally of Iran to stay out of Israel's crosshairs.
So far, the US has acted as a buffer, helping to prevent an Israeli attack, but Iraqis have been warned of  strikes against the armed groups, multiple sources said.
But as the presence of American forces dwindles, fears are growing.
rh-ak/dc

yakuza

Upstart gangsters shake Japan's yakuza

BY TOMOHIRO OSAKI

  • Kuzuoka came up through these more loosely knit gangs of young delinquents bound not by hierarchy but by camaraderie. 
  • When Takanori Kuzuoka began climbing the criminal career ladder, he didn't fancy joining Japan's old-school yakuza, with their tattoos, rigid hierarchy and codes of honour. 
  • Kuzuoka came up through these more loosely knit gangs of young delinquents bound not by hierarchy but by camaraderie. 
When Takanori Kuzuoka began climbing the criminal career ladder, he didn't fancy joining Japan's old-school yakuza, with their tattoos, rigid hierarchy and codes of honour. 
Instead he was drawn to the newer, tech-savvy "tokuryu" underworld, where shadowy criminal kingpins use social media and encrypted messages to recruit often naive foot soldiers to do their dirty work.
This new brand of Japanese organised crime has grown fast by creating its own criminal gig economy -- with bosses insulated from arrest by disposable minions.
Kuzuoka gave AFP an extraordinary insight into the tokuryu mindset in a five-month exchange of handwritten letters from his prison cell.
While the yakuza used to pride themselves on not preying on the poor and weak, the tokuryu have no such scruples.
They make much of their millions from conning Japan's ageing population, while the yakuza --  whose multi-billion-dollar empire is shrinking after years of strict anti-mafia laws -- have traditionally scorned such fraud as dishonourable.
Despite their disdain for the new kids on the block, a high-ranking gangster allied to a major yakuza clan privately admitted to AFP that they were "losing their allure for young people".
"Fewer recruits are signing up," with millennials and Generation Zers not prepared to start at the bottom and work their way up, he said, in an interview that took months to set up.
They "come to us fantasising about the glitz and glamour of our world and quickly find the reality is not what they imagined," he said. 
They "don't like being shackled" by its rules and rituals so "they're increasingly choosing tokuryu instead", he added.

'Ridiculously gullible' recruits

"I never understood what on earth can be the benefit of being a yakuza these days," Kuzuoka told AFP after we tracked him down to a jail in northern Japan after sending letters to more than 30 prisons across the country.
In neat handwriting, the 28-year-old wrote back, recounting how he had graduated to organised crime from teen "bosozoku" biker gangs, before becoming a "multi-tasking" recruiter, coordinator and perpetrator of a slew of tokuryu operations.
At times he said he worked closely with the shadowy ringleaders, whose identities were hidden even from him.  
"Every single day countless people took the bait on fishy adverts I posted" on X for "high-paying" jobs, he said.
The expendable amateurs he worked alongside included a sex worker, a gambling addict and a boy band member, all of whom had signed up for "yami baito" -- black market part-time jobs.
"I couldn't help but feel how ridiculously gullible they were," he said.
With their ruthlessness, elusive leadership and online recruitment, the tokuryu resemble a new wave of organised crime networks that have been terrorising Sweden and the Chinese-led crime syndicates running industrial-scale scams from Myanmar and Cambodia.
The core tokuryu crimes of scams and organised fraud cost Japan 72.2 billion yen ($474 million) between January and July, outstripping the record losses for the whole of last year.
Tokyo police -- who called them their "biggest public order priority" -- set up a 100-officer taskforce in October to "destroy" the groups.
Tokuryu, which means "anonymous and fluid", hire recruits into "project teams" to commit specific crimes, according to retired anti-mob detective Yuichi Sakurai.
These low-level operatives split and merge with "amoeba-like" fluidity that means "arrests rarely lead to the leadership", Sakurai told AFP.
While tokuryu are involved in robberies and violence, scams are their bread and butter, particularly the "It's me!" con.
This involves fraudsters ringing up elderly people pretending to be their children or grandchildren, begging for money because they messed up and would bring shame on the family. 
They are also masters of highly sophisticated costume cons, where they dress up to impersonate police officers, bank officials and civil servants to swindle victims -- some of them fed their lines from afar via Bluetooth earphones. 
But things can also get very ugly, as Kuzuoka admitted. Armed with scissors, he led a gang of robbers that attacked a mother, binding her two terrified children with tape as he forced her to hand over 30 million yen ($191,000) in cash.

Yakuza 'code of chivalry'

All of which disgusts the yakuza who -- though not shy about using violence, cutting off members' fingers as punishment -- claim to have limits.
"I fought a lot and killed someone, but I never bullied the weak," one former yakuza from the central city of Gifu told AFP. 
He spent 15 years behind bars for murdering a rival gangster but called scamming vulnerable old people "unthinkable".
"It's a great deviation from our traditional code of chivalry," said the ex-mobster, now in his 70s.
"Help the weak, fight the strong," was the mantra which he said he lived by. 
Yakuza have long occupied a particular place in Japanese society. Technically not illegal, each group even has its own official headquarters.
Having thrived in the bedlam of post-war Japan, they ruled the underworld through drug rings, illicit gambling dens and the sex trade, and also made forays into legitimate business such as real estate, entertainment and waste management.
Yakuza also saw themselves as having a social role, operating as shadow enforcers in grey areas where police and the judicial system were absent. 
A caste apart, marked out by their full-body tattoos, punch perms and flashy suits, they are a staple of popular culture from manga to TV series.
"Everywhere yakuza went, people would bow down to them. I was awestruck," ex-gangster Yoshiro Nishino, who joined as a teenage outcast, told AFP.
Initiation rituals like the exchange of sake cups with his group's patriarch created pseudo-familial bonds "stronger than actual blood, making me feel I was accepted," Nishino said.
From expensive cars to Louis Vuitton bags, the mobsters dazzled the young Nishino. 
Yakuza are "all about vanity", said the 47-year-old, who now runs a home for ex-offenders near Tokyo.  
"I was often told, 'You're finished as yakuza if you can't put on a show of pride.'"
Anti-gang laws in 1992 essentially allowed the mobs to exist openly in exchange for more surveillance over their activities.
But crackdowns followed as tolerance waned, culminating in 2011 laws that sought to "exclude" the mobsters from a raft of basic services.
This left them unable to legally open bank accounts, rent housing, obtain credit cards or even get cellphone contracts.
Last year their numbers hit a record low of 18,800, down nearly 80 percent from 1992.

Rise of 'hangure'

The gap has been filled over the past decade by the "hangure", or "quasi-yakuza".
Kuzuoka came up through these more loosely knit gangs of young delinquents bound not by hierarchy but by camaraderie. 
As hangure, "you can easily pass off as an ordinary citizen", he said. 
Unlike yakuza, you can "openly go into legitimate businesses like running martial arts contests, beauty salons or fashion brands," he said. 
Much of the tokuryu is led by hangure, the authorities believe. 
While the leaders have a certain loyalty to each other, lower-ranking troops hired online are "total strangers to each other", Kuzuoka told AFP.
"Their relationships can easily unravel, leading to betrayals such as abandoning each other or shifting blame."  
But for all their outward contempt for the younger arrivistes, money is driving some yakuza to align with tokuryu groups, police believe.
"We have confirmed some of the proceeds from tokuryu crimes are going to yakuza organisations," Tokyo police told AFP, adding that the old mafia remains "a serious threat to public safety".

'We're needed'

Former detective Sakurai said that while yakuza may not actively plot fraud or theft, some take a cut of hangure profits. 
"'No way in hell you will make money behind our backs,' yakuza warn them," he said.
In return they offer the muscle to "shield" tokuryu leaders from trouble, Sakurai added.
But Yukio Yamanouchi, a former lawyer for Yamaguchi-gumi, by far the largest yakuza clan with 6,900 members and associates, told AFP that the links may go deeper.
"I believe that some rank-and-file (yakuza) have indeed resorted to scams because they are genuinely struggling to make ends meet. That's how scarce the business opportunities are for them," he added.
This despite the clan's leadership repeatedly warning members not to get involved in fraud, the lawyer said.
"Making money by deceiving people is not what yakuza are supposed to do," the senior yakuza told AFP.
Whatever challenges they face, he is confident the yakuza will survive, providing protection from other criminal forces and what he calls the "gangs of Southeast Asian thieves" blamed for much petty crime in Japan.
"We're needed in society," he insisted. "There is no way we will go extinct."
Serving nine years for the violent robbery he committed in Tokyo in 2022, Kuzuoka has had a lot of time to reflect on what he did "in cold blood" and on the troubled childhood that led him there.
Life in the underworld "distorted me", he said, allowing him to be "almost emotionless". But "I see now what a cruel, demonic and inhumane thing we did", he wrote.  
"I will carry my sins for the rest of my life."
tmo/stu/ane/fg/jj/abs

conflict

Border casinos caught in Thailand-Cambodia crossfire

BY SALLY JENSEN

  • If casinos in Cambodia were hiding fraud operations behind their doors, "then we will regard it as a scamming centre that we need to take care of", he said.
  • Thailand has struck multiple casinos linked to cyberscamming in neighbouring Cambodia during an almost two-week-long border conflict, with the prime minister saying he would "take care" of fronts for fraud operations.
  • If casinos in Cambodia were hiding fraud operations behind their doors, "then we will regard it as a scamming centre that we need to take care of", he said.
Thailand has struck multiple casinos linked to cyberscamming in neighbouring Cambodia during an almost two-week-long border conflict, with the prime minister saying he would "take care" of fronts for fraud operations.
Across Southeast Asia, criminal gangs have used casinos, hotels and fortified compounds to carry out sophisticated cyberscams, according to the UN Office on Drugs and Crime, often relying on trafficked people. 
Cambodia hosts dozens of the scam centres with an estimated 100,000 people -- many victims of human trafficking -- perpetrating online scams in a multibillion-dollar industry.
At least four casinos on Cambodia's border with Thailand -- two which monitors have identified as scam hubs -- have been struck this month in a military conflict between the neighbours that has killed dozens and displaced more than half a million.
UN human rights chief Volker Turk said Thursday that trafficked foreign nationals forced to carry out scams in Cambodia were "now exposed to further risk by the fighting", and called for their evacuation.
But efforts to make peace with Cambodia rested on Phnom Penh's commitment to "destroy scamming attempts", Thailand's Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul told reporters at an international anti-scam conference in Bangkok on Wednesday.
If casinos in Cambodia were hiding fraud operations behind their doors, "then we will regard it as a scamming centre that we need to take care of", he said.
Rights abuses in Cambodia's scam centres are happening on a "mass scale", and the government's poor response suggested its complicity, said a June report by Amnesty International.
But Ros Phirun, secretary general of Cambodia's Commercial Gambling Management Commission, told AFP that authorities were taking "serious action" to crack down on scams, and called Thailand's action on the border casinos "totally illegal".

Casinos targeted

Thailand last week said it attacked three casinos across the border  which the Thai army claimed were being used as Cambodian weapons storage facilities and firing positions.
"Every scam centre and casino we attacked, we had clear intelligence that it was used as a military base," deputy Thai army spokesman Richa Suksuwanon told reporters on Thursday.
But some casinos caught in the crossfire reportedly housed civilians.
A UN statement on Thursday cited a survivor of a strike in Oddar Meanchay province who told the Human Rights Office that one civilian was killed and two others wounded.
The O'Smach resort and casino -- identified by Amnesty International as a scam compound -- was built by Cambodian conglomerate L.Y.P Group headed by Cambodian senator Ly Yong Phat.
He was sanctioned by Washington last year over his firm's alleged role in "serious human rights abuses related to the treatment of trafficked workers subjected to forced labor in online scam centers".
Last month, Thailand issued an arrest warrant for the tycoon for his alleged involvement in transnational crimes, and seized $300 million in assets from other Cambodian businessmen.
O'Smach and other casino sites Thailand targeted had potentially thousands of victims of human trafficking inside, according to Jacob Sims, a visiting fellow at Harvard University's Asia Center.
"Bombing scam compounds is not a reasonable approach to combatting the scam industry," he told AFP, adding that Thailand's asset seizures were more effective.
But, "the existence of the scam compounds -- and the world's mounting frustration at Cambodia for hosting a globally predatory industry -- offers Thailand a useful pretext for extraterritorial aggression that would otherwise likely be condemned".
burs-sjc/sco/tym/fox

Bondi

Australia announces gun buyback as swimmers mourn Bondi shooting victims

BY GLENDA KWEK

  • Many hundreds returned to the ocean off Bondi Beach on Friday in another gesture to honour the dead. 
  • Australia will use a sweeping buyback scheme to "get guns off our streets", Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said Friday as hundreds plunged into the ocean to honour Bondi Beach shooting victims.
  • Many hundreds returned to the ocean off Bondi Beach on Friday in another gesture to honour the dead. 
Australia will use a sweeping buyback scheme to "get guns off our streets", Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said Friday as hundreds plunged into the ocean to honour Bondi Beach shooting victims.
Sajid Akram and his son Naveed are accused of opening fire on a Jewish festival at the famed surf beach on Sunday, killing 15 people in one of Australia's deadliest mass shootings.
Albanese vowed to toughen laws that allowed 50-year-old Sajid to own six high-powered rifles.
"There is no reason someone living in the suburbs of Sydney needed this many guns," he said.
Australia would pay gun owners to surrender "surplus, newly banned and illegal firearms".
It would be the largest gun buyback since 1996, when Australia cracked down on firearms in the wake of a shooting that killed 35 people at Port Arthur.
Australia will remember those slain at Bondi with a national day of reflection, the prime minister said.
Albanese urged Australians to light candles at 6:47 pm (0747 GMT) on Sunday, December 21 -- "exactly one week since the attack unfolded".

High alert

Sydney remains on high alert almost a week on from the shootings.
Armed police released seven men from custody Friday, a day after detaining them on a tip they may have been plotting a "violent act" at Bondi Beach.
Police said there was no established link with the alleged Bondi gunmen and "no immediate safety risk to the community".
Many hundreds returned to the ocean off Bondi Beach on Friday in another gesture to honour the dead. 
Swimmers and surfers paddled into a circle as they bobbed in the gentle morning swell, splashing water and roaring with emotion.
"They slaughtered innocent victims, and today I'm swimming out there and being part of my community again to bring back the light," security consultant Jason Carr told AFP.
"We're still burying bodies. But I just felt it was important," the 53-year-old said.
"I'm not going to let someone so evil, someone so dark, stop me from doing what I do and what I enjoy doing."
Carole Schlessinger, a 58-year-old chief executive of a children's charity, said there was a "beautiful energy" at the ocean gathering.
"To be together is such an important way of trying to deal with what's going on," she told AFP.
"It was really lovely to be part of it. I personally am feeling very numb. I'm feeling super angry. I'm feeling furious."

Heroes

Meanwhile, a married couple who were shot and killed as they tried to stop the gunmen were laid to rest at a Jewish funeral home.
Bondi locals Boris and Sofia Gurman were among the first killed as they tried to wrestle Sajid to the ground.
"The final moments of their lives they faced with courage, selflessness and love," rabbi Yehoram Ulman told mourners. 
"They were, in every sense of the word, heroes."
Father Sajid was killed in a gunfight with police, but his 24-year-old son Naveed survived.
The unemployed bricklayer has been charged with 15 counts of murder, an act of terrorism, and dozens of other serious crimes.
Authorities believe the pair drew inspiration from the Islamic State group.
Australian police are investigating whether the pair met with Islamist extremists during a visit to the Philippines weeks before the shooting.
djw-sft/fox