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Trump has threatened to impose an additional 10-percent tariff on countries that align with the 'anti-American policies' of the BRICS economic alliance, named for its initial members Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa.
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Al Jazeera
23 minutes ago
- Al Jazeera
Israeli defence minister calls for confining all Palestinians in Rafah
Israeli defence minister calls for confining all Palestinians in Rafah NewsFeed Al Jazeera's Nour Odeh outlines a plan shared by Israel's defence minister to forcibly transfer 600,000 Palestinians from Gaza into a tent city built on ruins, framing it as 'voluntary migration'. Video Duration 02 minutes 25 seconds 02:25 Video Duration 02 minutes 12 seconds 02:12 Video Duration 02 minutes 17 seconds 02:17 Video Duration 02 minutes 02 seconds 02:02 Video Duration 01 minutes 06 seconds 01:06 Video Duration 01 minutes 07 seconds 01:07 Video Duration 01 minutes 30 seconds 01:30


Al Jazeera
33 minutes ago
- Al Jazeera
Three killed in suspected attack by Yemen's Houthis on Red Sea vessel
A suspected attack by Yemen's Houthi group on a Liberian-flagged cargo ship in the Red Sea has killed three sailors and wounded two others, a European Union naval force says. The attack on the Greek-owned Eternity C late on Monday follows the Houthis claiming they attacked another vessel on Sunday in the Red Sea, a vital maritime trade route. While the Houthis have not yet claimed the attack, the US Embassy in Yemen and the EU force blamed them for it. 'The Houthis are once again showing blatant disregard for human life, undermining freedom of navigation in the Red Sea,' the embassy, which has operated out of Saudi Arabia for nearly a decade due to Yemen's wider war, said on Tuesday. 'The intentional murder of innocent mariners shows us all the Houthis' true colors and will only further the Houthis' isolation.' The Houthis say that are targeting Israel-linked ships as part of a campaign to pressure the Israeli military to end its assault on Gaza, which rights groups have described as a genocide. After Sunday's attack on a vessel called Magic Seas, the Houthis said ships owned by companies with ties to Israel are a 'legitimate target'. 'Our operations will continue to target the depth of the Israeli entity in occupied Palestine, as well as to prevent Israeli navigation in the Red and Arabian Seas and to disrupt the Umm al-Rashrash [Eilat] port, until the aggression against Gaza stops and the blockade is lifted,' the group said in a statement. The twin assaults mark a revival of attacks on ships in the Red Sea and potentially signal the start of a new armed campaign threatening the waterway, which had begun to see more traffic in recent weeks. The EU, Israel's largest trade partner, had condemned Sunday's attack. 'It is the first such attack against a commercial vessel in 2025, a serious escalation endangering maritime security in a vital waterway for the region and the world,' the bloc said in a statement. 'These attacks directly threaten regional peace and stability, global commerce and freedom of navigation as a global public good. They can negatively impact the already dire humanitarian situation in Yemen. These attacks must stop.' The two Houthi attacks and a round of Israeli air strikes early on Monday targeting three Yemeni ports raised fears of a renewed campaign against shipping that could again draw in US and Western forces. The administration of US President Donald Trump launched an intense bombing campaign in Yemen earlier this year, but Washington and the Houthis reached a ceasefire in May, with the Yemeni group agreeing to halt attacks against US ships. The escalation comes as a possible ceasefire between Israel and Hamas hangs in the balance, and as Iran weighs whether to restart negotiations over its nuclear programme following its war with Israel in June. Between November 2023 and January 2025, the Houthis targeted more than 100 merchant vessels with missiles and drones, sinking two of them and killing four sailors. Their campaign has greatly reduced the flow of trade through the Red Sea corridor, which typically sees $1 trillion of goods move through it annually. Shipping through the Red Sea, while still lower than normal, has increased in recent weeks.


Al Jazeera
2 hours ago
- Al Jazeera
Iran rejects Trump's claims it asked for relaunch of nuclear talks
Iran says it has not requested talks with the United States over its nuclear programme, as claimed by US President Donald Trump. 'No request for a meeting has been made on our side to the American side,' Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei said on Tuesday in comments carried by the country's Tasnim news agency. The clarification came a day after Trump, during a dinner in the White House with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, said Iran was actively seeking negotiations on a new nuclear deal following the 12-day war with Israel last month, which the US also joined. 'We have scheduled Iran talks. They want to talk,' Trump told reporters. 'They want to work something out. They are very different now than they were two weeks ago.' Trump's Middle East envoy, Steve Witkoff – also present during the dinner – had even said the meeting could take place in the next week or so. Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi wrote in an opinion piece published in the Financial Times newspaper on Tuesday that Tehran remains interested in diplomacy but 'we have good reason to have doubts about further dialogue'. Sanctions relief On June 13, Israel launched an unprecedented bombing campaign on Iran that targeted military and nuclear sites as well as residential areas, killing senior military commanders and nuclear scientists. Iranian authorities say the Israeli strikes killed at least 1,060 people. Israel says retaliatory drone and missile fire by Iran killed at least 28 people. The US joined the war, bombing Iranian nuclear sites at Fordow, Isfahan and Natanz, just days before a planned meeting between Tehran and Washington, DC on reviving the nuclear talks. Trump then went on to announce a ceasefire between Israel and Iran. The negotiations, aimed at limiting Iran's nuclear programme in exchange for sanctions relief, would replace the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) – a deal signed with the US, China, Russia, France, Germany, the United Kingdom and the European Union – which Trump ditched during his first term in office. Floating the prospect of more talks on Monday, Trump also dangled the prospect of lifting punitive US sanctions on Iran, imposed after the US withdrawal from JCPOA, with further restrictions piled on this year. This month, the US issued a new wave of sanctions against Iranian oil exports, the first penalties against Tehran's energy sector since the US-backed ceasefire ended the war between Israel and Iran. 'I would love to be able to, at the right time, take those sanctions off,' said Trump. Towards the end of last month, Trump said he was working on 'the possible removal of sanctions', but dropped his efforts after Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei claimed 'victory' in the Iran-Israel war. Tehran's denial regarding talks with the US came after Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian told US journalist Tucker Carlson that Iran had 'no problem' resuming talks so long as trust could be rebuilt between the two sides. The interview, aired on Monday, provoked a backlash in Iran, with the critics accusing Pezeshkian of being 'too soft' in the wake of last month's attacks on the country. 'Have you forgotten that these same Americans, together with the Zionists, used the negotiations to buy time and prepare for the attack?' said an editorial in the hardline Kayhan newspaper. The conservative Javan daily also took aim at Pezeshkian, saying his remarks appeared 'a little too soft'. In contrast, the reformist Ham Mihan newspaper praised Pezeshkian's 'positive approach'.