Minggu, 24 Maret 2024

Senegal election: Voters choose new president after political crisis - BBC

Voters queuing in Ndiaganiao, Senegal - 24 March 2024

People in Senegal have been voting for a new president in a delayed election after weeks of political unrest.

Long queues of voters were witnessed across the country as they flocked to choose from 17 presidential candidates.

After he voted, outgoing President Macky Sall warned candidates against making premature claims of victory.

The election had been due to take place last month but Mr Sall postponed it, triggering deadly opposition protests and a democratic crisis.

Seven million people were eligible to vote in the mainly Muslim West African nation, which had until then been praised as a bastion of democracy in the region.

Polling stations are now closing after a largely calm day of voting as most people are returning home to prepare to break their fast, which happens at sunset during the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan.

Among those in the running for Senegal's top job is the governing BBY coalition's candidate, former Prime Minister Amadou Ba, 62. After casting his ballot in the capital, Dakar, he said he was "very confident" of a first-round election victory.

His main challenger, Bassirou Diomaye Faye, expressed similar confidence after voting, along with his two wives, in his hometown of Ndiaganiao, which is about 100km (62 miles) from Dakar.

Mbissine, a voter in Ndiaganiao
BBC/Khadidiatou Cissé
This election is the election of the youth. If I had one advice for other young people, it would be to come and vote. That’s the only way we can help ourselves"
Mbissine, 25
Voter in Ndiaganiao
1px transparent line

The 44-year-old was released from jail just 10 days ago, after being detained since April 2023 on charges of insurrection, which he said were politically motivated.

His ally, opposition leader Ousmane Sonko, was also freed from prison following an amnesty intended to calm tensions. He voted in his southern stronghold of Ziguinchor, saying they expected a "dazzling victory".

Diégane Gueye, 84, voter in Senegal
BBC/Khadidiatou Cissé
I came to vote because today is an important day for our nation. There is a lot at stake and that’s why we should care"
Diégane Gueye, 84
Voter in Ndiaganiao
1px transparent line

Popular with young people, he is not allowed to stand because of a series of charges he says are trumped up. He and his now-disbanded Pastef party are backing Mr Faye.

A 25-year-old voter in Ndiaganiao, who only gave her first name, Mbissine, told the BBC: "This election is the election of the youth. If I had one [piece of] advice for other young people, it would be to come and vote. That's the only way we can help ourselves."

At the same polling station, 84-year-old Diégane Gueye, who walked with the assistance of a cane, said: "I came to vote because today is an important day for our nation. There is a lot at stake and that's why we should care."

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There have been complaints from a polling centre in the town of Keur Massar, about 20km north-east of Dakar, because some people were not been able to vote as they had old ID cards, even though their names were on the voters' roll. The new cards note that Keur Massa is now its own voting district and not part of Pikine as it was until 2021.

A BBC team in Keur Massar says the military police have been deployed as tension has risen outside the polling station at a school in the town. The electoral commission has now said it will try to resolve the situation.

On Friday, former President Abdoulaye Wade and his PDS party threw their support behind Mr Faye, after his own son, Karim Wade, was forced to withdraw over his dual French-Senegalese citizenship.

For the first time in more than a decade, a female candidate is in the race. Anta Babacar Ngom, 40, leads the ARC party.

Results are expected within days and a second round is likely, because of the large number of contestants. A candidate needs more than 50% of the vote to be declared the winner.

The world will be watching to see if the election process goes some way to restoring Senegal's now-bruised reputation.

Speaking to the BBC earlier this week, President Sall said that he had "no apology to make" for postponing the election, which was originally due to be held on 25 February.

"I have done nothing wrong," he said, adding that the decision to delay the vote was not taken unilaterally, but was because of electoral concerns raised by members of parliament.

"All the actions that have been taken have been within the framework of the law and regulations."

More on Senegal's 2024 election:

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2024-03-24 18:30:20Z
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Senegal election: Voters choose new president after political crisis - BBC

A man walks past a Senegalese flag in the run-up to the election.AFP

After weeks of political unrest, people in Senegal are voting for a new president.

Seventeen candidates are on the ballot, each hoping to replace President Macky Sall who is barred from running again after reaching the two-term limit.

The election had been due to take place last month but Mr Sall postponed it, triggering deadly opposition protests and a democratic crisis.

Senegal had until then been praised as a bastion of democracy in West Africa.

Seven million people are eligible to vote in Sunday's election.

Among those in the running for Senegal's top job is the governing BBY coalition's candidate, former Prime Minister Amadou Ba, 62.

His strongest challenger is seen as Bassirou Diomaye Faye, 44, who was released from jail just last week, after being detained since April 2023 on charges of insurrection, which he said were politically motivated.

Popular firebrand Ousmane Sonko, who was also imprisoned until last week on what he said were trumped-up charges, is not allowed to stand. He and his now-disbanded Pastef party are backing his close ally, Mr Faye.

On Friday, former President Abdoulaye Wade and his PDS party threw their support behind Mr Faye, after his own son Karim Wade was forced to withdraw over his dual French-Senegalese citizenship.

For the first time in over a decade, a female candidate is in the race. Anta Babacar Ngom, 40, leads the ARC party.

Results are expected within days and a second round is likely, because of the large number of contestants. A candidate needs more than 50% of the vote to be declared the winner.

Anta Babacar Ngom.
Getty Images

The eyes of the world will be watching to see if the election process goes some way to restoring Senegal's now-bruised reputation.

Speaking to the BBC earlier this week, President Sall said that he had "no apology to make" for postponing the election, which was originally due to be held on 25 February.

"I have done nothing wrong," he said, adding that the decision to delay the vote was not taken unilaterally, but was due to electoral concerns raised by members of parliament.

"All the actions that have been taken have been within the framework of the law and regulations."

More on Senegal's 2024 election:

Related Topics

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2024-03-24 00:06:54Z
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Moscow concert attack: Putin says four gunmen arrested as death toll rises to 133 - The Independent

Police respond to reports of mass shooting at Moscow concert hall

Russian president Vladimir Putin’s claim on Saturday that the four men who attacked a concert near Moscow were heading towards Ukraine when they were detained, has been criticised as “absurd”.

Putin, addressing the nation following the attack that has left at least 133 people dead, he vowed that anyone who ordered the assault will be “justly and inevitably punished.”

Referring to the men now detained by Russian security forces, he said: “They tried to hide and moved towards Ukraine, where, according to preliminary data, a window was prepared for them from the Ukrainian side to cross the state border.”

Mykhaylo Podolyak, an aide to Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky earlier denied Russian security service suggestions that Ukraine was involved in the attack, calling the claims “absurd”.

Russia‘s state Investigative Committee said 133 people had been killed, including children.

ISIS has claimed responsibility for the attack, the deadliest in Russia since the Beslan school siege in 2004 when terrorists killed 334 people.

1711269478

Isis claims responsibility as 133 people killed at Moscow concert hall

Matt Mathers and Joe Middleton report:

Tara Cobham24 March 2024 08:37
1711267141

Russian missile went 2km into Polish airspace, Polish army says

A Russian missile went about 2km into Polish airspace early on Sunday morning before returning to Ukraine, a Polish army spokesperson said.

“One of these (Russian) rockets at 0423 crossed into our airspace, moving at a speed of almost 800km per hour,” Jacek Goryszewski told reporters. “It went around 2km over the border.”

The spokesperson added that Polish airspace is now safe and that there are no further missile attacks on Ukraine happening as of now.

Arpan Rai24 March 2024 07:59
1711266462

Russia violates Poland’s airspace during cruise missile attack on western Ukraine

Russia violated Poland’s airspace with a cruise missile on Sunday as it launched a major air attack on western Ukraine, according to the Polish armed forces.

Russia launched air raids on or around several major Ukrainian cities, including Lviv near the Polish border and the capital Kyiv, just hours after Vladimir Putin vowed to take revenge for the Isis terror attack on a Moscow concert hall.

The Russian president promised that anyone involved in the assault will be “justly and inevitably punished”.

Arpan Rai24 March 2024 07:47
1711265779

Russia flies flags at half-mast in mourning of victims of concert hall attack

Russia has lowered flags to half-mast for a day of mourning for the 133 people gunned down at a rock concert on Friday, an attack claimed by the Isis militant group.

Vladimir Putin had declared a national day of mourning after pledging to track down and punish all those behind the attack, the deadliest in Russia for two decades.

“I express my deep, sincere condolences to all those who lost their loved ones,” the Russian president said in an address to the nation yesterday, his first public comments on the attack.

“The whole country and our entire people are grieving with you.”

Even though Isis claimed responsibility for the attack on Friday and again yesterday, Mr Putin has not publicly mentioned the militant group in connection with the attackers, who he said had been trying to escape to Ukraine.

He asserted that some on “the Ukrainian side” had made preparations to spirit the attackers across the border, without providing evidence to back his claims.

Arpan Rai24 March 2024 07:36
1711264528

Watch: Russian emergency services wade through rubble at site of Moscow attack

Aftermath from the Moscow massacre that left at least 143 people dead has seen emergency services wading through rubble to make what remains of the building as safe as possible.

11 people have been detained after the Isis claim responsibility for the attack, which took place at Crocus City Hall on Friday (22 March).

At least four men began shooting at patrons as they waited for a rock band to start, before allegedly letting off petrol bombs, causing the building to go up in smoke.

Watch the video here:

Russian emergency crew wade through rubble at site of Moscow attack that killed 143

Aftermath from the Moscow massacre that left at least 143 people dead has seen emergency services wading through rubble to make what remains of the building as safe as possible. 11 people have been detained after ISIS claim responsibility for the attack, which took place at Crocus City Hall on Friday (22 March). At least four men began shooting at patrons as they waited for a rock band to start, before allegedly letting off petrol bombs, causing the building to go up in smoke.

Arpan Rai24 March 2024 07:15
1711263600

Survivor says gunmen were ‘shooting directly into the crowd'

Videos posted online showed gunmen in the venue shooting civilians at point-blank range. Russian news reports cited authorities and witnesses as saying the attackers threw explosive devices that started the fire, which eventually consumed the building and caused its roof to collapse. Dave Primov, who survived the attack, told the AP that the gunmen were “shooting directly into the crowd” in the front rows. He described the chaos in the hall as concertgoers raced to escape: “People began to panic, started to run and collided with each other. Some fell down and others trampled on them.” After he and others crawled out of the hall into nearby utility rooms, he said he heard pops from small explosives and smelled burning as the attackers set the building ablaze. By the time they got out of the massive building 25 minutes later, it was engulfed in flames. “Had it been just a little longer, we could simply get stuck there in the fire,” Primov said.

Holly Evans24 March 2024 07:00
1711263409

Russia fires over 50 missiles, drones on Ukraine in overnight assault

Russia launched 57 missiles and drones on Ukraine in the early hours of today, including attacking Kyiv and the western Ukrainian region of Lviv, officials said, with Poland’s armed forces saying one of Russia’s cruise missiles briefly violated Polish airspace.

Ukraine’s air force destroyed 18 out of 29 Russia-launched missiles and 25 out of 28 attack drones, it said on the Telegram messaging app.

Several explosions rocked Kyiv early today, with Ukraine’s air defence forces destroying about a dozen of Russia-launched missiles over the capital and its vicinity, Serhiy Popko, head of Kyiv’s military administration, said on Telegram.

He added that there was only minor damage from the attack.

Arpan Rai24 March 2024 06:56
1711262138

Moscow terror attack: How deadly shooting, fire and car chase unfolded

As the clamour and noise grew louder for the artists to take to the stage at Crocus City Hall, a sprawling shopping mall and music venue, a devastating act of violence was carried out that left more than 130 people dead and dozens more injured.

It is the deadliest attack in Russia since the 2004 Beslan school siege, when terrorists killed 334 people.

Joe Middleton reports:

Arpan Rai24 March 2024 06:35
1711261889

The Moscow attack shows the threat from Isis is as high as ever – the West must beware

Strong indications that Islamist extremists were planning to carry out an attack – “a spectacular” one in terms of its lethal ambition – had been around for a while. And there was a certain grim inevitability to the massacre of more than 140 people, which took place yesterday in Moscow.

Despite relations between Nato and Russia reaching the lowest point since the coldest of times during the Cold War, channels of communication on matters of terrorism have remained active between the Kremlin and a number of Western states.

It is believed that the US, and then the UK, were receiving information at the start of the year that Isis was planning an attack in Russia in the near future, and warnings were passed on to Moscow by the Americans.

Arpan Rai24 March 2024 06:31
1711261574

Russia violates Poland's air space in attack on Ukraine, Poland's armed forces say

Russia violated Poland’s airspace in the early hours today using a cruise missile launched at targets in western Ukraine, Poland’s armed forces said.

“On 24 March at 4.23 am (0323 GMT), there was a violation of Polish airspace by one of the cruise missiles launched overnight by long-range aviation of the Russian Federation,” the armed forces said on the social media platform X.

“The object entered Polish space near the town of Oserdow (Lublin Voivodeship) and stayed there for 39 seconds. During the entire flight, it was observed by military radar systems.”

Lviv city in western Ukraine came under heavy Russian air attack this morning, with Moscow reported to have fired several cruise missiles.

Arpan Rai24 March 2024 06:26

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Sabtu, 23 Maret 2024

Israel-Gaza war: UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres in new ceasefire call - BBC

Antonio Guterres visits the Rafah border crossing between Egypt and the Gaza StripReuters

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres has made a renewed call for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza.

"It is time to silence the guns," he said, speaking from the Egyptian side of the Rafah crossing with the enclave.

He also called on Israel to give "total, unfettered" access to humanitarian goods throughout Gaza.

A UN-backed food security assessment this week said 1.1 million people in Gaza were struggling with catastrophic hunger and starvation.

It added that a man-made famine in the north was imminent between now and May.

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Mr Guterres, who said he had come to Rafah "to spotlight the pain of Palestinians in Gaza", was speaking a day after Russia and China blocked a US draft resolution put to the UN which called for a ceasefire tied to the release of hostages held in Gaza.

"It's time to truly flood Gaza with life-saving aid. The choice is clear: either surge or starvation. Blocked relief trucks on the Egyptian side of border are a moral outrage," said Mr Guterres, who also called for the release of Israeli hostages.

"I want Palestinians in Gaza to know: You are not alone. People around the world are outraged by the horrors we are all witnessing in real time. Palestinians in Gaza remain stuck in a non-stop nightmare," he added.

Picture shows the vehicle line up near the Rafah border crossing between Egypt and the Gaza Strip
Reuters

Speaking to BBC Middle East correspondent Hugo Bachega, Mr Guterres again urged Israel to lift the obstacles to the delivery of aid.

"It's obvious that these obstacles are part of the way this war is being conducted in relation to Gaza," he added.

Israel's Foreign Minister Israel Katz hit back at Guterres on X (formerly Twitter), saying the UN chief "blamed Israel for the humanitarian situation in Gaza" without condemning Hamas fighters who "plunder" aid.

The Rafah crossing is one of the main points of entry for aid into Gaza, where long queues of trucks with aid are waiting for Israeli approval to cross.

Western countries and aid groups have criticised Israel over its inspection process, blamed for slowing down the entry of much-needed help.

The war in Gaza began when Hamas gunmen attacked southern Israel on 7 October, killing about 1,200 people and seizing 253 hostages, according to Israeli officials.

More than 32,000 Palestinians have been killed in Israel's retaliatory air strikes and its continuing ground offensive, the Hamas-run health ministry says.

Earlier, Mr Guterres met UN humanitarian aid workers in el-Arish, the Egyptian city closest to Gaza, where much of the international relief for the enclave is delivered and stockpiled. He later visited a hospital where injured Palestinians are being treated.

His trip comes as Israel plans to launch a ground operation in Rafah. More than half of Gaza's 2.3 million Palestinians are sheltering in the southern city, where Israel says Hamas leaders are hiding and Hamas battalions still operate.

Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has defied international criticism of the planned offensive, saying "no international pressure will stop Israel" from achieving all of its war aims.

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2024-03-23 18:20:19Z
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Moscow concert hall attack: Putin tells Russians Ukraine linked to attack which killed 133, claims denied by Kyiv officials – live updates - The Guardian

Tass reports the Russian Investigative Committee has announced that the death toll from Friday’s shooting and arson terror attack at the Crocus City Hall has risen to 133.

41 people have been identified and named as killed by the ministry of health. 107 people are in hospital.

A claim of responsibility by Islamic State for a massacre of Russian concertgoers near Moscow appears to be plausible and fits with a pattern of previous marauding attacks by Islamist militants, security analysts said on Saturday, Reuters reports.

One leading expert said, however, it was unusual and striking that the assailants had formed and executed an escape plan instead of pursuing their rampage to the point of being gunned down.

Adam Dolnik, a Czech security expert who has studied past Islamist attacks in India, Kenya, Russia and elsewhere, said the Islamic State claim appeared credible, although “that will not stop the Russians from leveraging this for their foreign policy agenda vis-a-vis Ukraine and the West”.

Dolnik said in a telephone interview that attacks by marauding gunmen were a typical modus operandi in recent years for IS and al Qaeda.

He noted Islamic State has a record of previous attacks against Russia, including the bombing of a 2015 flight from the Egyptian resort of Sharm el-Sheikh to St Petersburg and a 2022 attack on the Russian embassy in Kabul. Earlier this month, Russia’s FSB said it foiled an attack on a Moscow synagogue by ISIS-K, an affiliate of the group.

If you line up all these things together, then I think it’s completely conceivable that this would be an IS attack,” he said.

The one element that was unusual was that the perpetrators had made their escape, he said.

The United States strongly condemns the attack by armed men near Moscow on Friday that killed at least 143 people and injured many dozens more, the US secretary of state Antony Blinken said on Saturday, Reuters reports:

We send our deepest condolences to the families and loved ones of those killed and all affected by this heinous crime. We condemn terrorism in all its forms and stand in solidarity with the people of Russia in grieving the loss of life from this horrific event.

Blinken is currently in the Middle East trying, so far without success, to help broker some form of a ceasefire in Israel’s military offensive in Gaza and the release of hostages still held by Hamas in the Palestinian territory it controls.

In videos and eyewitness accounts, a picture of terror and confusion emerges as the men burst into the concert hall firing automatic weapons, shooting at point-blank range into prone bodies, then stalked through Crocus City Hall on Moscow’s outskirts for nearly an hour as panicked concertgoers scrambled through the bowels of the building to find a way out.

“I saw a tall man in camouflage,” Alexander, a witness in the concert hall, told Russian state media. “They didn’t say anything. They just started shooting at the people in front of them.”

Astonishingly, many people in the hall pulled out their mobile phones and caught footage of the gunmen methodically firing into the crowds, as well as the panicked reactions of others fleeing for the exits. “Put your phone away and crawl!” one man can be heard screaming in footage posted online, as the gunmen fire into the crowds below the balcony. Some on the lower levels had to crawl out past the dead and wounded.

Yulia Kharitonova and her boyfriend were late to the concert by Piknik, a Russian rock band formed in Leningrad in the 1970s. As they rushed into the hall just after 8pm, the gunmen opened fire.

“It turns out they were right behind us,” she told the Astra Telegram channel. “We came in … and there were not many people there. [The attackers] shot and ran to where there were more people. I was shot in the shoulder, my boyfriend was hit in the arms and legs.

“A woman with a bullet through her temple fell right next to me,” she continued. “A cheerful woman was selling tickets at the entrance, and then we ran away, and she was lying with these tickets with a bullet in her head. I still have this picture in front of my eyes. We ran over the bodies through the same doors [we came in through], we already heard sirens, the police and ambulances were coming.”

The Guardian is about to publish a report gathered from eyewitnesses to the attack, claimed by Islamic State, on a concert on the outskirts of Moscow on Friday night that killed 133 people.

Here’s an extract:

The girl lies in a hospital bed, staring straight toward the ceiling. The left side of her face is swollen, her left arm wrapped in gauze.

In a preternaturally calm voice, she speaks on camera of how the gunmen in the Crocus City concert hall spotted her and a small group of people as they fled the carnage of the worst terror attack on Russian soil in decades.

“They saw us,” she told RT, a Russian state-funded news agency. “One of them ran back and started shooting at people. I fell to the floor and pretended to be dead. I was bleeding,” she said, pointing at her temple.

The gunmen opened fire into some of the bodies as they lay on the ground, she said.

“The girl lying next to me was killed.”

The gunmen then set fire to the hall, apparently hoping to kill all those left inside.

“Then the flames flared up. They closed the front door, but they probably couldn’t close the lock,” said the woman, who did not give her name. “I was lying under the door, breathing air. After some time, I crawled out, three minutes passed, maybe four. I looked around, crawled to the exit. I realised that there was no one there and went outside.”

The group that has claimed responsibility for the attack on the concert hall in Russia on Friday night, Islamic State Khorasan Province (ISKP), also claimed it carried out the attack on a crowd in Kerman in southern Iran in January.

That occurred during the marking of the anniversary of the killing of Qassem Suleimani, the Iranian senior Revolutionary Guards commander, during the administration of US president Donald Trump.

At least 84 people died in that attack when two blasts ripped through the crowd near Suleimani’s tomb four years after he was killed by a US drone strike in Baghdad. Suleimani had been a staunch enemy of IS, which resents the damage he did to its cause in Iraq and Syria.

ISKP was also behind another suicide bomb attack at Kabul airport, Afghanistan, in August 2021, killing 170 Afghans and 13 US troops, in the process of carrying out the retreat from the country ordered by the US president, Joe Biden, a few months earlier. Its focus may have been Russia on Friday, but less than three years ago it was US forces.

Last year, leaks from US intelligence showed that ISKP, based in Afghanistan, was conducting “aspirational plotting” in the US, Europe and Asia, with targets such as the last World Cup in Qatar. Whatever the west’s wider relationship with Moscow, counter-terror investigators know it is time to be particularly vigilant.

It was a warning that proved grimly prophetic. Just over two weeks ago, as Russia’s presidential election was reaching its final stages, the US embassy in Moscow said it was “monitoring reports that extremists have imminent plans to target large gatherings in Moscow, to include concerts” over the ensuing 48 hours.

The unusually clear public alert was repeated by the UK, which reiterated its longstanding advice, warning British citizens against going to Russia. As a close ally in the Five Eyes intelligence alliance, Britain will have seen whatever raw intelligence the US warning was based on, most likely intercepted communications.

No attack came within that timeframe, but it is now tragically clear the respite was only temporary. Friday night’s terrorist attack by a group of gunmen on crowds attending a pop concert on the outskirts of Moscow has left at least 133 dead and 140 wounded, responsibility for which was claimed by Islamic State.

Whether more details underpinning the warning were passed from the US to their Russian counterparts is unclear, given the two countries are engaged in a proxy war in Ukraine, nor is it certain the alert would have been well-received. But it is an uncomfortable reminder that large-scale terror attacks have not gone away.

Full report here.

The Five Eyes is a longstanding intelligence-sharing coalition of the US, UK, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.

Russia’s claim that Ukraine is involved in the Friday attack on the outskirts of Moscow “lacks credibility”.

An online information agency close to the Islamic State, the Amaq agency, has published a photograph of what it claims are the four attackers in the Crocus City Hall terrorist assault, according to The Insider, a news outlet based in Riga, Latvia, that covers Russian news and keeps a gimlet eye on Russian propaganda and fake news.

The Insider team said they examined images of two suspects and compared their outfits to the picture put out by Amaq, and reports the following, which we’ve used Google Translate to interpret:

As The Insider was able to notice, the color, cut and print on the clothes of two of them coincides with the clothes of those detained on suspicion of committing a terrorist attack. Earlier, the head of the FSB, Alexander Bortnikov, reported to Putin about the detention of 11 people, including all four terrorists allegedly directly involved in the terrorist attack at Crocus. Telegram channels published a photo of one of the detained suspects. According to preliminary data, we are talking about 19-year-old native of Dushanbe Muhammadsobir Fayzov. During his arrest, he was wounded in the eye and is now undergoing surgery.

State Duma deputy Alexander Khinshtein reported earlier that the Renault car in which the suspects were driving was discovered at night near the village of Khatsun, Karachevsky district, Bryansk region. The car did not stop at the request of law enforcement officers and tried to escape. Margarita Simonyan [editor-in-chief of the state-controlled broadcast channel RT and described by Newsweek as a “Kremlin propagandist”] published an interrogation of one of the detainees. The man’s clothing also matches that of one of the militants in the photograph published by the Amaq agency.

As a reminder of some Russia-related news from Friday and its ties to the latest developments in Israel’s military offensive in Gaza, here are a few points and a link to the other liveblog the Guardian is running on its site at the moment.

The surprise US resolution introduced at the United Nations Security Council in New York on Friday morning, urging a ceasefire in Gaza linked to a hostage deal, was vetoed by Russia, as well as China, meaning that with veto powers, the resolution was not adopted.

This extended the five-month impasse in the international body over the Israel-Gaza war, which has killed more than 32,000 Palestinians. Read a full news report here from my Washington colleague Julian Borger and analysis from my London colleague Patrick Wintour.

On Saturday, the UN secretary general António Guterres said the world had seen enough of the horrors in Gaza and appealed for a ceasefire to allow in more aid.

He spoke at the crossing on the Egyptian side of Rafah, where most of Gaza’s population has sought refuge, but Israel has vowed to send in ground troops against Hamas militants, despite the fears of Guterres and other global leaders.

“Palestinians in Gaza – children, women, men – remain stuck in a non-stop nightmare,” Guterres said. “I carry the voices of the vast majority of the world who have seen enough”.

Our global team is following news developments out of Gaza and the Middle East and you can read that as it happens here.

The Guardian has compiled a new, short video summarising the news of the terrorist attack on the outskirts of Moscow on Friday night.

It’s carefully edited but, to warn readers, still contains the sound of shots from high-powered guns the attackers are believed to have carried, and shows the terrible blaze and aftermath inside the concert hall, which was brought under control by around midnight local time.

The Islamic State (IS) jihadist group said on Saturday that four of its militants carried out an attack on a concert hall in a Moscow suburb that Russian authorities said killed at least 133 people and used firebombs amongst its weapons, the Agence-France Presse (AFP) reports. IS said on one of its Telegram channels:

The attack was carried out by four IS fighters armed with machine guns, a pistol, knives and firebombs.

The militant group said its fighters killed “dozens of Christians” as part of its “raging war” with countries it said were fighting Islam.

The jihadists had already said on Friday night they carried out the attack, and claimed their fighters had “returned to base safely”.

This contradicts the assertions of Vladimir Putin. The Kremlin, which has not reacted to the militant group’s claim, said 11 people had been arrested “including four terrorists” involved in the attack.

Russia is fighting IS in Syria and the jihadist group has also had a presence in the Muslim-majority Russian republics of Ingushetia, Dagestan and Chechnya.

The group has carried out attacks in Russia but has never before said it was behind such a major atrocity.

The four suspected gunmen detained after a deadly attack on a concert hall near Moscow are all foreign citizens, Russia’s interior ministry said on Saturday, Reuters reports.

Russia said it had arrested all four gunmen suspected of carrying out the shooting massacre, and the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, pledged to track down and punish those behind the attack.

There is still little detail on this, so do stay tuned.

The Russian interior ministry is issuing a statement saying that the attackers in the Moscow concert hall tragedy are “not Russian citizens”.

This latest line is just emerging and we’ll have more for you in a moment.

The Reuters news agency is releasing details.

US intelligence gathered intelligence just this month that ISPK, a branch of the Islamic State group based in Afghanistan, was eyeing Russia for a terrorist attack, the New York Times has reported, citing unnamed US officials.

The outlet goes on to explain that IS has been relatively quiet until recently but has been stepping up efforts to launch attacks on anti-Islamist targets in Europe and beyond. Some plots had been thwarted, leaving experts to believe that IS had diminished scope, until now.

Referring to the ISPK as ISIS-K, the New York Times quotes an analyst who said that IS has been critical of Vladimir Putin and Russian propaganda.

Colin Clarke, a counterterrorism analyst at the Soufan Group, a security consulting firm based in New York, told the New York Times:

ISIS-K has been fixated on Russia for the past two years [and] accuses the Kremlin of having Muslim blood in its hands, referencing Moscow’s interventions in Afghanistan, Chechnya and Syria.

The US team has now taken this blog from our colleagues in London and we’ll keep you up to date with the news from Russia as it develops and reaches us.

  • Vladimir Putin has told the Russian people that Ukraine is linked to the Crocus City Hall terror attack on Friday night that killed at least 133 people. In a video address lasting five-and-a-half minutes, the newly relected Russian president said Russian security forces believed they had apprehended all four direct participants in the attack, who were caught heading for Ukraine, which was preparing to receive them over the border. Kyiv has rubbished the claims. 11 people have been detained in total.

  • Islamic State has claimed it carried out the attack, something which Putin did not mention in his address. He described it as a “bloody, barbaric terrorist act”, Putin said the victims were “dozens of peaceful, innocent people - our compatriots, including children, teenagers, and women”. He said the Russian Federation would “identify and punish everyone who prepared the terrorist attack”.

  • Ukraine has denied any link to the attack. Presidential advisor Mykhailo Podolyak said attempts to connect the two were “absolutely untenable”. He said “Ukraine has not the slightest connection to this incident. Ukraine has a full-scale war with Russia and will solve the problem of Russia’s aggression on the battlefield”. Neither Putin nor the FSB publicly presented any proof of a link with Ukraine.

  • 107 people remain in hospital after the attack, including three children, one of whom is described as being in critical condition. After a drive to receive blood donations in Moscow, deputy prime minister Tatyana Golikova said “there is enough medicine, blood, and dressing materials”. Moscow authorities have said they will pay compensation to those affected, and arrange funerals for those killed.

  • Putin has declared Sunday 24 March a day of national mourning. People have been laying flowers and toys as a tribute to the victims at the site of the attack, and alos outside Russian embassies all around the world.

  • Images from inside the venue show that the auditorium has been completely gutted by fire and the roof has collapsed. Russian authorities say people died both from gunshot wounds and the effects of the fire.

  • The terrorist attack has been widely condemned around the world. Notwithstanding tensions caused by Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Britain’s foreign secretary, Ursula von der Leyen, Emmanuel Macron and Nato have been among those condemning the attack and offering condolences. Putin spoke to the leaders of Belarus and Uzbekistan by phone. Turkey’s Recep Tayyip Erdoğan also offered his support, saying terrorism is “the common enemy of humanity”

Tass reports the Russian Investigative Committee has announced that the death toll from Friday’s shooting and arson terror attack at the Crocus City Hall has risen to 133.

41 people have been identified and named as killed by the ministry of health. 107 people are in hospital.

The Russian Embassy in the UK has posted a thank you message to those who have left flowers in London as a tribute to the victims of yesterday’s attack.

RIA has published a short video clip of a medical press conference talking about the condition of those in hospital. In it, deputy prime minister Tatyana Golikova announced:

At this point in time, there are 107 patients in medical institutions. Of these, three are children, one child is in critical condition, two children are in serious condition.

Among the adults, 15 are in extremely serious condition, 42 are in serious condition. We actively interact with all medical institutions.

We provide and continue to provide the necessary medical care to everyone. Once again I want to emphasise that there is enough medicine, blood, and dressing materials.

Russian authorities have issued some more pictures from inside the Crocus City Hall as investigations and a clean-up operation continue.

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‘Imagine if just one dam is hit’: Russian-Ukrainian energy war heats up - Al Jazeera English

Olena Rozumovska is at the end of her rope.

Her two-bedroom apartment in an Soviet-era concrete building has no electricity or water supply, and the central heating is off after Russian drones and missiles struck Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second largest city, on Friday.

“It’s unbearable, impossible. I want to howl with despair,” the 33-year-old, whose husband, Mykhailo, is fighting against Russian forces in southeastern Ukraine, told Al Jazeera over the phone.

The outdoor temperatures in Kharkiv barely rose above freezing on Friday, a cold drizzle was falling, and her apartment building “is losing warmth”, she said.

Early in the morning, she jumped out of bed on hearing the thud of a powerful explosion. More than a dozen heavy, blood-curdling blasts followed as she hid in the frigid basement with her two children, Bohdan, who is seven, and four-year-old Roxana.

The children were “hysterical” because they had to leave their Siamese cat behind. Their pet, named Monya, wouldn’t come out from under the sofa.

What roiled her and millions of Ukrainians was the scope of the bombardment, which became the largest strike on their nation’s energy infrastructure since the war began in 2022.

“The aim is not just to destroy but to try yet again, like last year, to cause a massive disruption of the energy infrastructure,” Energy Minister Herman Halushchenko wrote on Facebook.

In the winter of 2022-2023, Moscow switched to massive shelling that targeted energy infrastructure and civilian sites after realising that its blitzkrieg to take over all of Ukraine had failed.

Friday’s attacks with about 60 drones and 90 missiles killed at least two people, wounded scores, struck Ukraine’s largest dam and severed the power supply to the Russia-occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant, officials said.

INTERACTIVE-WHO CONTROLS WHAT IN UKRAINE-1710927971
(Al Jazeera)

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy rebuked the West for months-long delays in military aid.

“Russian missiles have no delays, unlike aid packages for Ukraine. [Iranian-made] ‘Shahed’ drones have no indecision, unlike some politicians. It is critical to understand the cost of delays and postponed decisions,” he posted on X, formerly known as Twitter.

Energoatom, Ukraine’s main nuclear agency, said the Zaporizhzhia plant was “on the verge of blackout” because the strike knocked offline the main power line.

Russia seized the plant in March 2022, but failed to redirect its electricity flow to energy-starved Crimea.

The plant’s reactors have been shut down but need a constant power supply to keep them cool and prevent the melting of uranium fuel rods.

Within hours, the severed line was reconnected, a source at Energoatom told Al Jazeera.

“This is the main power line. There’s also a reserve one, and if only the latter is left, there’s a risk of blackout,” the source said.

Friday’s attack was the second in two days – a change of tactics as Moscow “is looking for maximally effective ways to reach its goals,” defence spokeswoman Natalya Humenyuk said.

“We’re looking for effective means to counter them – and they’re looking for the ways to pressure [and] terrorise,” she said in televised remarks.

“One can hardly remember two attacks for two days in a row. But such an attack was expected after the [presidential] election in Russia”, which was held on March 15-17, she said.

Some analysts disagreed with her assessment.

There is no change of tactics, and the Russian attacks are “business as usual,” Nikolay Mitrokhin at Bremen University in Germany told Al Jazeera.

They are revenge for a string of successful Ukrainian strikes inside Russia, he said.

In recent weeks, pro-Ukrainian battalions of Russian nationalists repeatedly attacked the western Russian regions of Belgorod and Kursk on Ukraine’s border.

They were backed by devastating Ukrainian drone and missile strikes on Belgorod.

On Wednesday, new, advanced Ukrainian drones reached a key airfield in Russia’s Volga region that has been used by strategic bombers to launch missiles on Ukraine.

Moscow said its forces shot down the drones, but Mitrokhin said the attack was “apparently successful”.

More drone and missile attacks destroyed or damaged Russia’s energy infrastructure in recent months.

Since January, Ukraine struck at least nine oil refineries in western Russia – along with depots, terminals and storage facilities – reducing Moscow’s oil-processing capacity by 7 percent, according to a calculation by the Reuters news agency.

On March 13, one of the attacks set afire a refinery in the western city of Ryazan, prompting the shutdown of two refining units. The mammoth refinery produces almost 6 percent of Russia’s refined crude.

A day earlier, another Ukrainian strike halved the capacity of another refinery near the city of Nizhny Novgorod that sits more than 1,000km (621 miles) east of the Ukrainian border.

The attacks dealt a blow to Moscow’s main source of export revenues that fund the war in Ukraine despite crippling sanctions imposed by the West.

Washington urged Kyiv to stop the attacks on the refineries because they may escalate the conflict, the Financial Times reported on Friday.

This week’s double attacks by Moscow’s troops may also pave the way for Russia’s summer ground offensive.

“This could be seen as a new operation that is going to become a prelude to Russia’s summer offensive,” Kyiv-based analyst Aleksey Kushch told Al Jazeera.

Another observer warned that the most serious and worrying strike on Friday was the one that targeted the dam of the twin Dniprovska hydropower stations, Ukraine’s largest.

“Sooner or later, strikes such as these had to take place,” Kyiv-based analyst Ihar Tyshkevich told Al Jazeera.

He said melting snow and ice in the upper reaches of the Dnipro River have already triggered a spring flood that will reach its maximum level within a month.

“Now, imagine if just one dam is hit,” he said.

Russian missiles struck the power station in December 2022 and February 2023. Friday’s attack damaged both power stations and started a large fire.

“However, there’s no danger of the dam being destroyed,” Ihor Sirota, head of the Ukrhydroenergo agency, which runs the stations, told Radio Liberty.

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Isis claims responsibility for Moscow attack as 60 shot dead at concert hall - The Independent

Eleven people suspected of being involved in a deadly attack on concertgoers near Moscow have been detained, Russia’s security service said on Saturday.

At least 93 people were killed and 145 wounded on Friday when gunmen opened fire with automatic weapons at the Crocus City Hall near the Russian capital. Isis claimed responsibility for the attack.

Russia’s FSB told president Vladimir Putin that 11 people had been detained following Friday’s attack, including four who were directly involved, Interfax cited the Kremlin as saying.

Further work was underway to identify more accomplices.

Earlier, lawmaker Alexander Khinshtein cited "preliminary information" to say that two people suspected of carrying out the attack were detained after a car chase.

Mr Khinshtein said the attackers were in a Renault vehicle that was spotted by police in Bryansk region, about 340 km (210 miles) southwest of Moscow on Friday night, but disobeyed instructions to stop.

“During the pursuit, shots were fired and the car overturned. One terrorist was detained on the spot, the rest fled into the forest. As a result of the search, a second suspect was found and detained at approximately 3:50 a.m. The search for the others continues,” the lawmaker said.

Three children were among those killed in the attack, the RIA news agency cited the regional healthcare ministry as saying on Saturday.

Mr Khinshtein said a pistol, a magazine for an assault rifle and passports from Tajikistan were found in the car.

Several gunmen dressed in camouflage sprayed bullets at a crowd waiting to see a rock gig at the Crocus City Hall.

Video from the scene showed the gunmen firing indiscriminately at screaming people as they tried to flee.

Explosions were also heard from the venue, whose roof collapsed following a fire outbreak, with pictures showing flames and thick black smoke billowing into the sky.

“Suddenly there were bangs behind us – shots. A burst of firing – I do not know what,” one witness, who asked not to be identified by name, told Reuters. “A stampede began. Everyone ran to the escalator,” the witness said. “Everyone was screaming; everyone was running.”

Russian authorities said they managed to evacuate 100 people hiding in the basement.

Gunmen in the Crocus City Hall

The country’s national guard said it was hunting for the attackers, whose identity was yet to be verified.

Isis later claimed responsibility for the attack on its Telegram channel. A statement from the group read: “Islamic State fighters attacked a large gathering of Christians in the city of Krasnogorsk on the outskirts of the Russian capital, Moscow, killing and wounding hundreds and causing great destruction to the place before they withdrew to their bases safely.”

It was not immediately clear exactly how many attackers were involved and what happened to them. Reports said that at least four people were involved.

Russia changed the course of the Syrian civil war by intervening in 2015, supporting President Bashar al-Assad against the opposition and Isis. The group has claimed deadly attacks across the Middle East, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iran, Europe, the Philippines and Sri Lanka.

Russian politicians and security services referred to the incident as a terrorist attack while it appeared to still be ongoing and launched an investigation.

The attack targeted the large music venue on Moscow’s western edge, according to Russia’s Federal Security Service, the main domestic security and counterterrorism agency, which provided the figures on the dead and wounded.

Fire at concert hall believed to have been caused by explosives detonated by attackers

The assailants threw explosives, triggering the massive blaze at the hall, which can accommodate 6,000, according to Russian news outlets.

Video from outside showed the building on fire, with a huge cloud of smoke rising through the night sky.

The street was lit up by the blinking blue lights of dozens of firetrucks, ambulances and other emergency vehicles, as several helicopters buzzed overhead to dump water on the blaze.

The attack took place as crowds gathered for a performance by the famous Russian rock band Picnic.

Russian news reports said concertgoers were being evacuated, but that an unknown number could have been trapped by the blaze.

The prosecutor’s office said several men in combat fatigues entered the concert hall and fired on concertgoers.

Repeated volleys of gunfire could be heard in videos posted by Russian media and on Telegram channels.

A law enforcement officer stands guard near the burning Crocus City Hall

One showed two men with rifles moving through the venue. Another showed a man inside the auditorium as gunshots rang out incessantly in the background.

Other videos showed up to four attackers, armed with assault rifles and wearing caps, who were screaming at people.

Guards at the concert hall didn’t have guns, and some could have been killed at the start of the attack, Russian media reported.

Some Russian news outlets suggested that the assailants fled before special forces and riot police arrived.

As the blaze continued to rage late into the night, statements of outrage, shock and support to those affected streamed in from around the world.

Some commentators on Russian social media questioned how authorities, who relentlessly surveil and pressure Kremlin critics, failed to identify the threat and prevent the attack.

Russian authorities said security has been tightened at Moscow’s airports, railway stations and the capital’s sprawling subway system.

Smoke rises from the building as emergency services try to contain the blaze

The Kremlin didn’t immediately blame anyone for the attack, but some Russian lawmakers were quick to accuse Ukraine of being behind it and called for ramping up strikes.

Hours before the attack, the Russian military launched a sweeping barrage on Ukraine’s power system, crippling the country’s biggest hydroelectric plant and other energy facilities and leaving more than a million people without electricity.

Dmitry Medvedev, deputy head of Russia’s Security Council, said that if Kyiv’s involvement in the attack on the concert hall is proven, all those involved “must be tracked down and killed without mercy, including officials of the state that committed such outrage”.

Mykhailo Podolyak, an adviser to Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy, denied Ukraine’s involvement in the concert hall attack.

“Ukraine has never resorted to the use of terrorist methods,” he posted on X. “Everything in this war will be decided only on the battlefield.”

Two weeks ago, the US embassy in Russia warned that “extremists” had imminent plans for an attack in Moscow. The embassy issued its warning several hours after the FSB said it had foiled an attack on a Moscow synagogue by an Isis cell.

John Kirby, spokesperson for the White House National Security Council, said that he couldn’t yet speak about all the details but that “the images are just horrible. And just hard to watch.”

“Our thoughts are going to be with the victims of this terrible, terrible shooting attack,” Mr Kirby said.

“There are some moms and dads and brothers and sisters and sons and daughters who haven’t gotten the news yet. This is going to be a tough day.”

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