Kategori: NEWS

  • U.S. Louisiana Christmas parade shooting injured woman, child

    HOUSTON — A woman and a child were injured after gunshots rang out during a Christmas parade on Saturday night in downtown Baton Rouge, the capital city of the southern U.S. state of Louisiana.

    Hundreds of people were exiting the downtown area after the gunfire took place around 7:15 p.m. Saturday local time (0115 Sunday GMT), according to a report from local media outlet WAFB.

    The Baton Rouge Police Department said at least 20 rounds were fired. Investigators believe the shooting stemmed from an argument involving people hanging out on the levee who were not associated with the parade.

    A woman, an innocent bystander, was shot in the back, and a child running for safety was hit by an all-terrain vehicle, police said. Their injuries are reportedly non-life threatening.

    No arrests have been made at this time, according to local media.

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  • At least 18 killed in Israeli Gaza strikes, Palestinian medics say

    A woman mourns the death of a loved one following an Israeli strike on the UNWRA Al-Majda Wasila Governmental School housing displaced Palestinians, on Al-Jalaa Street in Gaza on Dec. 14, 2024. (AFP)

    CAIRO — At least 18 Palestinians were killed in Israeli airstrikes in Gaza on Saturday, medics said, while the Israeli military said it targeted gunmen operating from shelters and aid storages.

    At least 10 people were killed in an airstrike near the municipality building in Deir Al-Balah in the central Gaza Strip where people gathered to receive aid, medics said.

    Casualties were being carried by foot, on rickshaws and private cars from the site of the attack to the hospital, medics said. The strike killed the head of the Hamas-run administrative committee in central Gaza, a Hamas source said.

    The Israeli military was looking into the report, a spokesperson said. Earlier, Israeli aircraft struck militants and weapon caches near an aid warehouse, the military said, after gunmen had fired rockets into Israel from there.

    Meanwhile, the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza said at least 44,930 people have been killed in more than 14 months of war. The toll includes 55 deaths in the previous 24 hours, according to the ministry, which said 106,624 people have been wounded in the Gaza Strip since the war began.

    A separate strike in Gaza City on a former shelter housing displaced people targeted Hamas fighters, the military said. At least seven people were killed in that attack, Palestinian medics said, including a woman and her baby.

    It was unclear whether any of the other people killed were fighters.

    The military said it had taken precautions to reduce risk of harm to civilians.

    A separate strike in Gaza City killed a local journalist, medics said. The military was looking into the report, a spokesperson said.

    AN-AFP/REUTERS

  • Lebanon says one dead in Israeli strike in south

    BEIRUT — Lebanon’s health ministry said an Israeli drone strike in the south killed one person on Saturday, the latest deadly raid despite a more than two-week ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah.

    “An Israeli enemy drone strike… killed one person” in Marjayoun district, the health ministry said in a statement. The official National News Agency reported a car was targeted.

    AN-AFP

  • Seven Palestinians killed in Israeli strike on Gaza school, civil emergency says

    CAIRO — At least seven Palestinians were killed and 12 wounded after an Israeli strike on a former school that was sheltering displaced people in Gaza City, the civil emergency service said on Saturday.

    The Israeli military is looking into the report, a spokesperson said.

    Earlier on Saturday the Israeli military said it had targeted Hamas militants who were operating within a school compound in Gaza City and that it had taken measures to reduce harm to civilians.

    The dead include a woman and her baby, according to medics. It was unclear whether the other fatalities were Hamas fighters.

    The Palestinian Islamist group denies embedding its fighters among civilians in Gaza

    AN-REUTERS

  • Brazil’s ex-defence minister arrested in alleged coup plot probe: local media

    BRASILIA — Brazilian police on Saturday arrested former Minister of Defence of Brazil Walter Braga Netto in connection with probes into an alleged coup plot, local media said.

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  • 5 missing after boat capsizes in Yellow Sea

    DALIAN — Five people went missing after a fishing boat capsized in the northern area of the Yellow Sea at 10:30 p.m. Friday, the maritime affairs bureau of northeast China’s Liaoning Province said on Saturday.

    Ships in the nearby waters have been alerted to participate in search and rescue efforts, according to the bureau.

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  • Thai police detain 2 suspects after a bomb in a border province killed 3 and injured scores

    BANGKOK — Thai police on Saturday said two suspects were in custody as authorities investigated a bombing in the north that killed at least three people and injured dozens of others.

    An explosive device was thrown into a crowd during an outdoor performance at an annual festival in Umphang town in Tak province, which borders Myanmar, on Friday just before midnight, according to the Association of the Umphang Rescue Groups.

    Local police said at least 48 people were injured and that police have not yet pressed charges against the suspects as the investigation is ongoing.

    Thanathip Sawangsang, a spokesperson for the Defense Ministry, said that local police said there was a fight between rival groups of men before the explosion and that there was no wider security threat. He said the forensic evidence showed that the explosive device was a homemade bomb.

    Tak province has a heavy military presence in its border areas, including in Umphang.
    Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra expressed her condolences to the victims and their families, and ordered security personnel and relevant agencies in the area to investigate and help those who have been affected, said government spokesperson Jirayu Houngsap.

    AN-AP

  • Ukrainian drones hit fuel storage area in central Russia, attack other areas

    Ukrainian drones attacked an infrastructure facility storing fuel in central Russia’s Oryol region, sparking a fire and smashing windows in homes, regional governor Andrei Klychkov said early on Saturday.

    Klychkov, writing on the Telegram messaging app, said a “mass attack” on an infrastructure site caused fuel to catch fire.

    Fragments from downed drones smashed windows in homes, he said.

    Video posted on Ukrainian military blogs showed a fire blazing at what was described as a fuel storage facility. Reuters could not independently verify reports from either side.

    Drone attacks were reported in other Russian regions.

    The governor of Krasnodar region, Vladimir Kondratyev, said air defenses had destroyed Ukrainian drones in several areas of the region south and east of Ukraine. One drone smashed windows in village houses, but there were no injuries.

    Air defenses destroyed seven drones over Bryansk region on Ukraine’s northern border, regional governor Alexander Bogomaz said.

    And in Russia’s Belgorod region, often targeted by Ukraine’s military on the northeastern border, governor Vyacheslav Gladkov said Ukrainian forces attacked two villages, injuring one resident and triggering a fire in a house that was quickly extinguished.

    REUTERS

  • Russia packing up military equipment at base in Syria, satellite images show

    MOSCOW — Russia appears to be packing up military equipment at a military air base in Syria, according to satellite images released by Maxar following rebels’ overthrow of President Bashar al-Assad last weekend.

    The images taken on Friday show what appear to be at least two Antonov AN-124s, one of the world’s largest cargo planes, with their nose cones open at the Hmeimim air base in Syria’s coastal Latakia province.

    “Two An-124 heavy transport aircraft are at the airfield—both with their nose cones lifted and prepared to load equipment/cargo,” Maxar said.

    “Nearby, a Ka-52 attack helicopter is being dismantled and likely prepared for transport while elements of an S-400 air defence unit are similarly preparing to depart from its previous deployment site at the air base.”

    Russia’s naval base at Tartous, Russia’s only Mediterranean repair and replenishment hub, “remains largely unchanged since our Dec. 10 imagery coverage with two frigates continuing to be observed offshore of Tartous,” Maxar said.

    Britain’s Channel 4 news reported that it had seen a convoy of more than 150 Russian military vehicles moving along a road. Channel 4 said the Russian military was moving in good order and that it appeared there had been a deal struck to allow the Russians to exit Syria in an orderly fashion.

    Russia’s defence ministry did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

    Moscow has backed Syria since the early days of the Cold War, recognising its independence in 1944 as Damascus sought to throw off French colonial rule. The West long regarded Syria as a Soviet satellite.

    The Kremlin has said its focus since Assad’s fall was to ensure the security of its military bases in Syria and of its diplomatic missions.

    REUTERS

  • Austin Tice: a clue from 2013 in search for US reporter missing in Syria

    WASHINGTON — In the early days of 2013, an American man, dressed in ragged clothing, dodged between houses in the streets of Damascus’ upscale Mazzeh neighborhood looking for a civilian to take him to safety after more than five months of captivity in the concrete cells of a local prison.

    The man, journalist Austin Tice, was taken captive during a reporting trip to Syria in August 2012. A former Marine, he had managed to slip out of his cell, one current and three former U.S. officials and a person with knowledge of the event told Reuters. All were granted anonymity to speak freely about sensitive U.S. intelligence.

    Tice’s 2013 escape, reported here for the first time, was the first public sighting of the American after he disappeared, the officials said.

    Tice is now the focus of a massive manhunt following the ouster of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad this week after 13 years of civil war. Rebels, led by the militant group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, have since released thousands of people from prisons in Damascus where Assad held political opponents, ordinary civilians and foreigners.

    The American has not yet been found. There are no credible hints of his whereabouts but also no clear evidence that he is dead, a U.S. official said.

    U.S. officials say that Tice’s 2013 escape from prison, where he was believed to have been held by a pro-government militia, is the strongest evidence the U.S. government has to suggest that forces loyal to Assad held Tice.

    This has over the years allowed American officials to pressure the Assad government directly about the matter.

    The White House declined to comment for this story. The CIA, Office of the Director for National Intelligence and the FBI did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

    When Tice escaped, he was spotted by people living in the Mazzeh neighborhood, wandering the street. He entered the house of a well-known Syrian family, the name of which is being withheld for security reasons, a person familiar with the escape said.

    Tice was recaptured soon after his escape, one current and one former U.S. official said.

    U.S. officials believe it is likely that Tice was taken after his escape by forces who answered directly to Assad. One person with knowledge of the escape said Tice was potentially passed back and forth between several different government intelligence agencies in the following years.

    The administration of former President Barack Obama received another tip in 2016 that Tice had been taken to a hospital in Damascus to receive care for an unknown illness, in what would be his second known sighting, a U.S. official and a person familiar with the tip said. But current U.S. officials are not as confident in that report as they are in his 2013 escape.

    Over the years, Tice’s family – which has led the charge in trying to find him – has spoken publicly of their frustration with the U.S. government, saying it has not prioritized Tice’s release. They are now gathered in Washington in the hope they can soon celebrate his freedom.

    The family declined a request for comment.

    “We believe he’s alive. We think we can get him back, but we have no direct evidence of that yet,” U.S. president Joe Biden said last Sunday, fueling optimism about Tice’s fate.

    Over the last 12 years, U.S. agencies, including the FBI, the State Department and the CIA, have gathered thousands of tips about Tice. Most are nearly impossible to verify.

    HARROWING VIDEO

    Tice, who worked as a freelance reporter for the Washington Post and McClatchy, was one of the first U.S. journalists to make it into Syria after the outbreak of the civil war.

    In August 2012, during fighting in Aleppo, he was taken captive.

    Weeks later, a YouTube video was published showing Tice blindfolded, hands tied behind his back. He was led up a hill by armed men in what appeared to be Afghan garb and shouting “God is great” in an apparent bid to blame Islamist rebels for his capture although the video only gained attention when it was posted on a Facebook page associated with Assad supporters.

    Tice can be heard reciting a prayer, in Arabic, before saying in English: “Oh Jesus, oh Jesus.”

    There are varying accounts of what happened to Tice in 2012, including who initially took him and where he was moved. Other journalists were taken captive around the same time.

    But as time passed and other reporters were freed, details about Tice remained scarce. The Obama administration had obtained intelligence that he was either in the hands of an extremist rebel faction or the Syrian government, two of the former officials said. But it had no way of verifying the information.

    Over the past decade, some U.S. officials and press advocates have lost faith in the assessment that Tice is alive in part because there has been no new, credible evidence to confirm his status.

    Others have maintained a sense of optimism, including some in the incoming Trump administration.

    In 2019, Trump administration officials, including Kash Patel, then a U.S. presidential aide and counterterrorism adviser, and Roger Carstens, special envoy for hostage affairs, traveled to Damascus to meet with Syrian officials about Tice.

    Current and former U.S. officials said the Syrian government refused to offer proof of life and demanded the U.S. reverse its Syria policy and withdraw U.S. troops from the country in return for opening negotiations about Tice. The Biden administration has maintained contact with the Syrian government since then, but Assad’s officials were unwilling to negotiate until the U.S. agreed to their demands.

    On Dec. 6, Austin Tice’s mother Deborah and her family told a press conference that a U.S. government-vetted source had recently confirmed that Tice was alive and was being treated well.

    “He is being cared for, and he is well,” Deborah Tice said.

    But in the hours after the conference, U.S. officials working on Tice’s case said they did not have any new information and that they were caught off guard by his mother’s statements.

    This week, Carstens traveled to Beirut to coordinate the search for Tice. Other officials are also in the region, including Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Barbara Leaf, the head of the State Department’s Near East bureau.

    “We’re determined to find him and bring him home to his family and loved ones,” Blinken told reporters Thursday.

    Almost a week after Assad’s ouster, some U.S. officials fear that Tice could have been killed during a recent round of Israeli airstrikes. Officials are also concerned that if Tice was being held underground in a cell, he may have run out of breathable air as Assad’s forces shut off the electricity in many of the prisons in Damascus before the president fled.

    This week, reports emerged that an American man had been seen in Damascus, raising hopes that Tice had been freed.
    But it wasn’t Tice.

    On Thursday, news broke that Missouri resident Travis Timmerman had been found after having been freed from prison by the rebels. Timmerman said he had traveled into Syria for a spiritual mission earlier this year and was arrested for entering the country illegally.

    REUTERS

  • US flies freed American Travis Timmerman out of Syria, official says

    WASHINGTON — American citizen Travis Timmerman has been flown out of Syria, where he was imprisoned before being released by rebels this week, U.S. officials said on Friday.

    The official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that Timmerman had been transferred to Jordan and was currently with State Department officials.

    A second official said that Timmerman had been handed to U.S. troops at Tanf garrison, which is near the intersection of the borders of Syria, Iraq and Jordan, and was flown out from there.

    Timmerman went missing in June, according to his parents. He was freed from prison earlier in the week after Syrian rebel groups ousted the country’s longtime President Bashar al-Assad.

    The White House on Thursday said that the United States had no prior indication that the American was in Syria.

    Assad fled to Russia after a 13-year civil war and more than five decades of his family’s autocratic rule, during which Syria ran one of the most oppressive police states in the Middle East.

    Following his ouster, Syrians flocked to the infamous prisons where the Assad regime is estimated to have held tens of thousands of detainees.

    Austin Tice, another U.S. citizen who was abducted in Syria over a decade ago, has still not been found.

    Tice, a former U.S. Marine and freelance journalist, was 31 when he was kidnapped in August 2012 while reporting in Damascus.

    REUTERS

  • 42 killed in landmine explosion, paramilitary attacks in C. Sudan: volunteer group

    KHARTOUM — In central Sudan, at least 42 civilians were killed in a landmine explosion in Sinnar State on Friday and two attacks by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) in Gezira State over the past two days, local volunteer groups reported Friday.

    The Al-Suki Emergency Room, a volunteer group in Al-Suki city in Sennar State, said in a statement that “13 people from the Al-Suki area were killed and many others injured when a landmine exploded in their pickup truck in the Jebel Moya area.”

    The victims were on a trip to search for cars and equipment that had been stolen from Al-Suki to Jebel Moya, it added.

    On Oct. 5, the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) said it had retaken the strategic Jebel Moya area in Sinnar, a crossroads linking Gezira, White Nile, and Sinnar states. The recapture of Jebel Moya enabled the SAF to besiege the RSF fighters in Sinnar and cut off their supply lines.

    Meanwhile, 29 civilians were killed on Wednesday and Thursday in RSF attacks on several villages in Gezira State, volunteer groups said.

    “The RSF militia attacked the village of Wad Hussein Al-Halaween in Al-Housh area south of Gezira State yesterday (Thursday),” the Gezira Conference, a local non-governmental group monitoring violations in central Sudan, said in a statement.

    “The militia bombarded the village before storming it and killing five citizens, including two who were run over by a vehicle while they were tied up,” the group said.

    The Gezira Conference, as well as another local volunteer group Nidaa Al-Wasat Platform, both reported that armed RSF forces riding motorcycles and combat vehicles also attacked several villages in the Al-Huda Administration of Al-Managil locality in Gezira on Wednesday, killing 24 civilians and injuring about 30 others.

    The RSF has not commented on these incidents.

    Sudan has been gripped by a devastating conflict between the SAF and the RSF since mid-April 2023.

    The deadly conflict has resulted in more than 28,700 deaths and displaced over 14 million people, either inside or outside Sudan, according to latest estimates by international organizations.

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  • Israeli fighter jets strike military sites in Syria’s Damascus, Sweida

    DAMASCUS — Israeli fighter jets carried out fresh airstrikes late on Friday, targeting at least six military positions in the countryside of Damascus and Sweida provinces in southern Syria, according to a war monitor.

    Loud explosions rocked southern Sweida as Israeli jets hovered overhead. The strikes hit areas around Tel al-Qalib and near the village of Al-Kafr, where Syrian military barracks are positioned along the Sweida road, said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

    Columns of smoke were seen rising from the barracks following the bombings, the Britain-based watchdog group added.

    Meanwhile, in rural Damascus, Israeli missiles reportedly struck locations associated with Syria’s electronic warfare operations, including Branch 295 and the 1st Regiment under the Electronic Warfare Directorate, as well as fuel depots near the town of Najha, said the observatory.

    In addition, residents in the southern Daraa province reported Israeli warplanes flying over the Yarmouk Basin in the western countryside, heading east.

    These attacks mark the latest in a series of Israeli air raids that have targeted military sites belonging to the dissolved Syrian army following a political upheaval in Syria, during which militant groups overthrew former Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s government on Dec. 8.

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  • Italy reaffirms support of two-state solution for Palestine-Israel

    ROME — Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni reaffirmed Italy’s commitment to humanitarian aid in Gaza and the two-state solution during her meeting with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas here Friday.

    According to a statement released by Meloni’s government, during their discussions, Meloni underscored Italy’s strong support for mediators working toward ending hostilities in Gaza and securing the release of hostages held by Hamas.

    Meloni reiterated Italy’s dedication to a durable political solution based on a two-state framework, “Israel and Palestine can co-exist side by side in peace, with security for both,” said the statement.

    She also emphasized Italy’s readiness to play a leading role in stabilizing and rebuilding Gaza while supporting the reform and strengthening of Palestinian institutions.

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  • Israeli undercover forces kill Palestinian man in S. West Bank

    JERUSALEM — Undercover forces from the Israel Border Police and the Israel Defense Forces killed a Palestinian in the southern West Bank, the Israel Police said Friday in a statement.

    The man killed was wanted for involvement in “terrorist” activities, according to the statement.

    He was shot dead after the forces perceived a threat during an operation directed by the Israel Security Agency to apprehend wanted Palestinians in the town of Beit Awa, near the city of Hebron, it said.

    Another suspect was arrested during the operation and taken in for investigation, it added.

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  • Death toll from cholera outbreak in South Sudan hits 60

    JUBA — The South Sudanese government has ramped up efforts to prevent the spread of cholera following the deaths of at least 60 people since the outbreak in late October, a government official said on Friday.

    Minister of Information, Communication Technology and Postal Services Michael Makuei Lueth said that 60 deaths have been reported so far, along with 6,000 cases recorded nationwide.

    Makuei told journalists in Juba, the capital of South Sudan, that efforts are underway to procure more vaccines after the first batch, sufficient to treat 150,000 people, was dispatched to northern Renk County in Upper Nile State.

    The first cholera case was reported on Oct. 28 at the Renk transit center for refugees and returnees fleeing conflict in neighboring Sudan.

    Makuei said that most of the cholera cases have been reported among refugees in Renk County, Rubkona County in Unity State, and Aweil town in Northern Bahr El Ghazal State, as well as recently in Juba.

    Minister of Health Yolanda Awel Deng recently announced that an additional one million vaccine doses are needed to target vulnerable populations across the country.

    According to the World Health Organization (WHO), refugees, returnees and residents are the most affected by the outbreak, particularly children under the age of five and the elderly.

    The WHO said that contributing factors include limited access to clean water, poor sanitation, open defecation, and overcrowding in transit centers and camps.

    South Sudan requires 32 million U.S. dollars to sustain the first three months of the emergency response to the cholera outbreak, the WHO reported. The funds will be used to strengthen current operations, deploy response teams to newly identified hotspots, maintain essential health services, and procure and distribute additional emergency supplies.

    XINHUA

  • 7 killed in fire in India’s Tamil Nadu

    NEW DELHI — At least seven people, including a toddler, were killed after a fire broke out at a private hospital in the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu, police said Friday.

    The fire broke out Thursday night in the hospital in Trichy Road in Dindigul district, about 430 km west of Chennai, the capital city of Tamil Nadu.

    “Last night a fire broke out in the reception area of City Hospital, an orthopaedic care hospital and immediately engulfed the whole building. In the blaze, seven people, including a child, were killed due to suffocation,” a police officer said. “The fire possibly triggered by a short circuit spread to all four floors.”

    Police said six people who were stuck inside a lift were rescued.

    “They have suffered suffocation but were taken to hospital where they became stable after the treatment,” the officer said.

    It took several hours for firefighters to douse the flame and bring it under control.

    Chances of fire in Indian buildings are usually high as people often ignore safety standards.

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  • Zimbabwe on high alert for Tropical Cyclone Chido

    HARARE — Zimbabwe’s Meteorological Services Department (MSD) on Friday announced that the country is on high alert for the potential impacts of Tropical Cyclone Chido, which is currently affecting the northeastern parts of Madagascar and is expected to bring rainfall to some areas of Zimbabwe starting Sunday.

    Despite posing a significant threat to areas along its path, the cyclone is projected to have a reduced impact upon reaching southern Africa, including Zimbabwe, MSD Head of Forecasting James Ngoma said during a press conference in Harare, the capital of Zimbabwe.

    “The spin speed will decrease from 200 km/h to 50 km/h. The trajectory will also change once it reaches the Comoros. It could shift south, north or west,” he said.

    Ngoma noted that rainfall is expected to begin Sunday in the provinces of Matabeleland North, Matabeleland South, Masvingo, Midlands and Harare, with widespread rainfall across the country anticipated by Monday.

    As a precautionary measure, the Department of Civil Protection is advising residents in low-lying areas to prepare for potential evacuations if necessary.

    In 2019, Tropical Cyclone Idai caused widespread destruction in Zimbabwe, with floods sweeping away scores of people and severely damaging infrastructure.

    XINHUA

  • 43 terrorists killed in military operations in Pakistan

    ISLAMABAD — The Pakistani military said on Friday evening that 43 terrorists have been killed in separate military operations in different parts of the country.

    The Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), the media wing of the Pakistani military, said that the terrorists were killed by security forces in the northwest Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province and southwest Balochistan province.

    Since Dec. 9, a total of 18 terrorists have been killed in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and 25 terrorists eliminated in Balochistan, it said.

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  • Kyiv ready to supply food to Syria as Russia supplies suspended

    People walk with food in plastic bags, after rebels seized the capital and ousted Syria’s Bashar Assad, in Damascus on Thursday. (Reuters)

    KYIV — Ukraine, a global producer and exporter of grain and oilseeds, is ready to supply food to Syria following the fall of Bashar Assad, Ukrainian Agriculture Minister Vitaliy Koval told Reuters on Friday.

    Russian and Syrian sources said earlier that Russian wheat supplies to Syria had been suspended over uncertainty about the new government and payment delays.

    Syria imported food from Russia during the Assad era and it is unclear how relations between Damascus and Moscow will take shape under the new government.

    “Where it is difficult, we have to be there with our food. We are open to supplying our food and if Syria needs food — then we are there,” Koval told Reuters.

    Ukraine’s exports were buffeted by Russia’s February 2022 invasion, which severely reduced shipments via the Black Sea.

    Ukraine has since broken a de facto sea blockade and revived exports from its southern ports of Odesa.

    Kyiv traditionally exports wheat and corn to Middle Eastern countries, but not to Syria.

    Traders say that only about 6,000 metric tons of Ukrainian corn reached the Syrian market in the 2023/24 season, out of a total corn export volume of 29.4 million tons.

    However, small parcels of Ukrainian-origin grain may have reached Syria from neighboring countries, but not been captured by those statistics, analysts said.

    Since the fall of Assad, a close Russian ally, Kyiv has voiced a desire to restore relations with Syria.

    Foreign Minister Andriy Sybiha said Kyiv was ready “to pave the way for the restoration of relations in the future and reaffirm our support for the Syrian people.”

    AN-REUTERS

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