
Thai-Cambodian border conflit: 200,000 thousand people displaced
27/07/2025
Thai-Cambodia border clashes continue despite Trump's ceasefire call
Asia / Pacific
26/07/2025
Voters in Taiwan reject bid to oust China-friendly MPs in closely watched poll
Asia / Pacific
26/07/2025
Thailand and Cambodia trade accusations as deadly border clashes enter third day
Asia / Pacific
26/07/2025
India: fear of mass disenfranchisement after Bihar state rushes revision of voter rolls
Asia / Pacific
26/07/2025
Taiwan holds largest ever recall vote, potentially ousting China-friendly lawmakers
Asia / Pacific
26/07/2025
Taiwan votes in high-stakes recall election that might oust China-friendly party
Asia / Pacific
26/07/2025
Death toll rises on Thai-Cambodian border on third day of fighting
Asia / Pacific
25/07/2025
Thailand and Cambodia clash: A border dispute fuelled by nationalism
Asia / Pacific
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LeMonde
an hour ago
- LeMonde
Zelensky urges allies to seek 'regime change' in Russia after latest deadly drone attack on Kyiv
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Thursday, July 31, urged his allies to bring about "regime change" in Russia, hours after a Russian drone and missile attack on Kyiv killed 16 people, including a six-year-old boy, and wounded at least 150 others, authorities said. The overnight strikes reduced part of a nine-story apartment block in Kyiv's western suburbs to rubble. The Russian army, meanwhile, claimed to have captured Chasiv Yar, a strategically important hillside town in eastern Ukraine where the two sides have been fiercely fighting for months. Moscow has stepped up its deadly aerial assaults on Ukraine in recent months, resisting US pressure to end its nearly three-and-a-half-year invasion as its forces grind forward on the battlefield. Speaking virtually to a conference marking 50 years since the signing of the Cold War-era Helsinki Accords, Zelensky said he believed Russia could be "pushed" to stop the war. "But if the world doesn't aim to change the regime in Russia, that means even after the war ends, Moscow will still try to destabilize neighboring countries," he said. 'Unimaginable scale of terror' From late Wednesday to early Thursday, Russia fired over 300 drones and eight cruise missiles at Ukraine, with Kyiv the main target, the Ukrainian Air Force said. One missile tore through a nine-story residential building in the west of the capital, tearing off its facade, authorities said. AFP journalists at the scene saw rescuers scouring through a smoldering mound of broken concrete, the belongings of residents scattered among the debris. Among the victims was a six-year-old boy who died on the way to the hospital, the head of the city's military administration, Tymur Tkachenko, posted on Telegram. Zelensky said late Thursday that over 150 people had been injured, "including 16 children and six policemen," denouncing an "unimaginable scale of terror and brutality" from the Russian strikes. Kyiv's mayor, Vitali Klitschko, said Friday had been declared a day of mourning in the capital for the victims. The Russian army said it had hit a military airfield, ammunition warehouse and drone production facilities with a combined overnight strike using weaponry and drones. The attack came just days after US President Donald Trump issued a 10-day ultimatum for Moscow to halt its invasion, now in its fourth year, or face sanctions. Trump on Thursday blasted Russia's actions in Ukraine, suggesting that new sanctions against Moscow were coming. "Russia – I think it's disgusting what they're doing. I think it's disgusting," Trump told journalists. "We're going to put sanctions," he said, before specificially referring to Putin: "I don't know that sanctions bother him."


France 24
6 hours ago
- France 24
President says Lebanon determined to disarm Hezbollah
Hezbollah and Israel fought a two-month war last year that left the militant group badly weakened, though it retains part of its arsenal. Israel has kept up its air strikes on Hezbollah targets despite a November ceasefire, and has threatened to continue them until the group has been disarmed. In a speech on Thursday, Aoun said Beirut was demanding "the extension of the Lebanese state's authority over all its territory, the removal of weapons from all armed groups including Hezbollah and their handover to the Lebanese army". He added it was every politician's duty "to seize this historic opportunity and push without hesitation towards affirming the army and security forces' monopoly on weapons over all Lebanese territory... in order to regain the world's confidence". Under the November ceasefire, Hezbollah was to withdraw its fighters north of the Litani river, about 30 kilometres (20 miles) from the Israeli border. Israel was meant to withdraw all its troops from Lebanon, but has kept them in five areas it deems strategic. The truce was based on a two-decade-old UN Security Council resolution that said only the Lebanese military and UN peacekeepers should possess weapons in the country's south, and that all non-state groups should be disarmed. However, that resolution went unfulfilled for years, with Hezbollah's arsenal before the latest war seen as far superior to the army's, and the group wielding extensive political influence. Aoun took over the presidency in January ending a two-year vacancy -- his election by lawmakers made possible in part by the shifting balance of power in the wake of the conflict. On Wednesday, Hezbollah chief Naim Qassem said that "anyone calling today for the surrender of weapons, whether internally or externally, on the Arab or the international stage, is serving the Israeli project". He accused US envoy Tom Barrack, who has visited Lebanon several times in recent months, of using "intimidation and threats" in his talks with senior officials with the aim of "aiding Israel". Collapse or stability Israel has carried out near daily strikes in Lebanon in recent months, targeting what it says are Hezbollah militants and infrastructure, but the group has refrained from striking back. Israel launched several strikes on Hezbollah strongholds in the south and east on Thursday, targeting what it said were sites used by Hezbollah to manufacture and store missiles. Defence Minister Israel Katz said the targets included "Hezbollah's biggest precision missile manufacturing site", and the military said it had hit "infrastructure that was used for producing and storing strategic weapons" in south Lebanon and the Bekaa Valley. In his speech, Aoun said Lebanon was at "a crucial stage that does not tolerate any sort of provocation from any side". "For the thousandth time, I assure you that my concern in having a (state) weapons monopoly comes from my concern to defend Lebanon's sovereignty and borders, to liberate the occupied Lebanese territories and build a state that welcomes all its citizens," he said, addressing Hezbollah's supporters as an "essential pillar" of society. Lebanon has proposed modifications to "ideas" submitted by the United States on Hezbollah's disarmament, Aoun added, and a plan would be discussed at a cabinet meeting next week to "establish a timetable for implementation". Aoun also demanded the withdrawal of Israeli troops, the release of Lebanese prisoners and "an immediate cessation of Israeli hostilities". "Today, we must choose between collapse and stability," he said. Hezbollah is the only group that held on to its weapons after Lebanon's 1975-1990 civil war, doing so in the name of "resistance" against Israel, which occupied south Lebanon until 2000. Lebanon has also committed to disarming Palestinian militant groups that control the country's refugee camps.


Euronews
6 hours ago
- Euronews
Trump announces 90-day negotiating period on trade with Mexico
The United States will enter a 90-day negotiating period with Mexico over trade as 25% tariff rates stay in place, part of the rush of trade activity on Thursday before President Donald Trump plans to impose a broad set of global levies starting on Friday. Trump posted on his Truth Social platform that his phone conversation with Mexican leader Claudia Sheinbaum was "very successful in that, more and more, we are getting to know and understand each other." The Republican president had threatened tariffs of 30% on goods from Mexico in a July letter, something that Sheinbaum said Mexico can now stave off for the next three months. "We avoided the tariff increase announced for tomorrow and we got 90 days to build a long-term agreement through dialogue," Sheinbaum wrote on X. The leaders' morning call came at a moment of pressure and uncertainty for the world economy. Nations are scrambling to finalise the outlines of a trade framework with Trump in order to avoid him imposing higher tariff rates that could upend economies and governments. Trump reached a deal with South Korea on Wednesday and earlier with the European Union, Japan, Indonesia and the Philippines. His commerce secretary, Howard Lutnick, said on Fox News' "Hannity" programme that there were agreements with Cambodia and Thailand after they had agreed to a ceasefire to their border conflict. Among those uncertain about their trade status are Switzerland and Norway. Norwegian Finance Minister Jens Stoltenberg said it was "completely uncertain" whether a deal would be completed before Trump's deadline. But even the public announcement of a deal can offer scant reassurance for an American trading partner. EU officials are waiting to complete a crucial document outlining how the framework to tax imported autos and other goods from the 27-member state bloc would operate. Trump had announced a deal on Sunday while he was in Scotland. "The US has made these commitments. Now it's up to the US to implement them. The ball is in their court," EU commission spokesman Olof Gill said. The document would not be legally binding. Trump said as part of the agreement with Mexico that goods imported into the US would continue to face a 25% tariff that he has ostensibly linked to fentanyl trafficking. He said autos would face a 25% tariff, while copper, aluminium and steel would be taxed at 50% during the negotiating period. He said Mexico would end its "Non Tariff Trade Barriers," but he didn't provide specifics. Some goods continue to be protected from tariffs by the 2020 US-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), which Trump negotiated during his first term. But Trump appeared to have soured on that deal, which is up for renegotiation next year. One of his first significant moves as president was to tariff goods from both Mexico and Canada earlier this year. US Census Bureau figures show that the US ran a $171.5 billion (€149 billion) trade imbalance with Mexico last year. That means the US bought more goods from Mexico than it sold to the country. The imbalance with Mexico has grown in the aftermath of the USMCA as it was only $63.3 billion (€55 billion) in 2016, the year before Trump started his first term in office. Besides addressing fentanyl trafficking, Trump has made it a goal to close the trade gap.