Rabu, 19 Juni 2024

Search for missing pilgrims continues after hajj heat deaths - The Guardian

Friends and family of missing hajj pilgrims have been searching hospitals and pleading online for news, fearing the worst after hundreds died during the annual rites in Saudi Arabia.

Arab diplomats on Tuesday told Agence France-Presse at least 550 pilgrims had died this year, the majority due to heat-related illnesses after temperatures reached 51.8C (125F) in Mecca, Islam’s holiest city.

The total number of people reported dead so far is 645, according to an AFP tally of figures released by various countries. About 1.8 million people attended the pilgrimage.

The hajj is one of the five pillars of Islam and all Muslims with the means must complete it at least once. Its timing is determined by the Islamic lunar calendar, shifting forward each year in the Gregorian calendar.

For the past few years, the mainly outdoor rituals have taken place during the sweltering Saudi summer. According to a Saudi study published last month, temperatures in the area are rising 0.4C (0.72F) each decade.

Human-caused climate breakdown is making every heatwave in the world more intense and more likely to happen.

The burning sun and suffocating hot weather were relentless on Tuesday in Mecca and the sacred sites in and around the city, according to the Saudi National Centre for Metrology.

Many pilgrims, particularly elderly ones, collapsed and required medical assistance because of the heat.

Mabrouka bint Salem Shushana, of Tunisia, in her early 70s, has been missing since the climax of the pilgrimage on Saturday at Mount Arafat, her husband, Mohammed, told AFP on Wednesday.

Because she was unregistered and did not have an official hajj permit, she was unable to access air-conditioned facilities that allow pilgrims to cool off after hours of outdoor prayers, Mohammed said. “She’s an old lady. She was tired. She was feeling so hot, and she had no place to sleep. I looked for her in all the hospitals. Until now I don’t have a clue.”

He is not the only one desperate for information. Facebook and other social media networks have been flooded with pictures of the missing and requests for information.

The searchers include family and friends of Ghada Mahmoud Ahmed Dawood, an Egyptian pilgrim unaccounted for since Saturday. “I received a call from her daughter in Egypt begging me to put any post on Facebook that can help track her or find her,” said one family friend based in Saudi Arabia, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he did not want to anger Saudi authorities.

“The good news is that until now we did not find her on the list of the dead people, which gives us hope she is still alive.”

The figure of 550 dead provided by diplomats on Tuesday came from the hospital morgue in Mecca’s al-Muaisem neighbourhood, one of the biggest in the city. It included 323 Egyptians and 60 Jordanians, said the Arab diplomats who briefed AFP on the figures, one of whom noted that nearly all the Egyptians died “because of heat”.

Deaths have also been confirmed by Indonesia, Iran, Senegal, Tunisia and Iraq’s autonomous Kurdistan region, though in many cases authorities have not specified the cause.

On Wednesday, an Asian diplomat told AFP there were “around 68 dead” from India and that others were missing. “Some (died) because of natural causes and we had many old-age pilgrims. And some are due to the weather conditions, that’s what we assume,” he said.

Saudi Arabia has not provided information on deaths, though it reported more than 2,700 cases of “heat exhaustion” on Sunday alone. Last year more than 200 pilgrims were reported dead, most of them from Indonesia.

Each year, tens of thousands of pilgrims attempt to perform the hajj through irregular channels as they cannot afford the often costly official permits. This had become easier since 2019 when Saudi Arabia introduced a general tourism visa, said Umer Karim, an expert on Saudi politics at the University of Birmingham.

“Before, the only people who could have done that were residents of the kingdom, and they know the situation,” he said. “For these tourist visa guys, it’s like being on the migrant route without any idea of what to expect.”

Even pilgrims who have official permits can be vulnerable. Houria Ahmad Abdallah Sharif, a 70-year-old Egyptian pilgrim, has been missing since Saturday. After praying on Mount Arafat, she told a friend she wanted to go to a public bathroom to clean her abaya, but she never came back.

“We’ve searched for her from door to door and we have not found her,” said the friend, who also spoke on condition of anonymity. They added: “We know many who are still searching for their family members and relatives and they are not finding them, or if they are finding them they are finding them dead.”

Agence France-Presse contributed to this report

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Nasrallah says ‘no place’ in Israel would be safe in war, threatens to target Cyprus - The Times of Israel

The head of Lebanon’s Hezbollah terror group said Wednesday that nowhere in Israel would be safe if a full-fledged war breaks out between the two foes, while also threatening Cyprus and other parts of the Mediterranean.

Speaking at a ceremony commemorating slain Hezbollah senior commander Taleb Abdullah, who was killed in an Israeli airstrike in southern Lebanon last week alongside three other operatives, Nasrallah commented on the escalating conflict with the Jewish state, and said the Shiite terror group does not want “total war” but is only acting in support of Hamas.

Hezbollah has been attacking northern Israel since October 8, leading to Israeli reprisals and an escalating conflict Israel has increasingly warned could spark open war.

Were Israel to launch a large-scale offensive against the Lebanese terror group, it must prepare for attacks from the ground, the air and the sea, and the “situation in the Mediterranean will change completely,” Nasrallah vowed.

“No place” in Israel would be spared from the group’s weapons in case of a full-blown war, Nasrallah warned, saying Hezbollah will fight with “no rules” and “no ceilings” and adding: “The enemy knows well that we have prepared ourselves for the worst… and that no place… will be spared from our rockets.”

Israel “knows that what also awaits it in the Mediterranean is very big,” Nasrallah added, without elaborating, possibly insinuating the group could attack its offshore gas rigs.

The Israeli warship, Hanit, which was attacked by Hezbollah during the 2006 Lebanon War, allegedly by a C-802 anti-ship missile that was manufactured by Iran. (photo credit: Tsahi Ben-Ami/Flash90)

The Israeli warship, Hanit, which was attacked by Hezbollah during the 2006 Lebanon War, allegedly by a C-802 anti-ship missile that was manufactured by Iran. (photo credit: Tsahi Ben-Ami/Flash90)

Nasrallah also threatened Cyprus for the first time, saying it had been allowing Israel to use its airports and bases for military exercises and that Hezbollah could consider it “a part of the war” and strike it were it to allow the IDF to use logistical infrastructure in the country to attack Lebanon.

“Opening Cypriot airports and bases to the Israeli enemy to target Lebanon would mean that the Cypriot government is part of the war, and the resistance will deal with it as part of the war,” he said.

Cyprus is not known to offer any land or base facilities to the Israeli military, but has in the past allowed Israel to use its airspace to occasionally conduct air drills, though never during conflict.

There are two British bases in Cyprus, which was a colony until 1960. They have been used for operations in Syria and more recently, Yemen, and the Cypriot government has no say in the matter. According to Hebrew media reports, British Royal Air Force fighter jets and refueling aircraft took off from bases in Cyprus to help thwart a massive drone and missile attack launched by Iran against Israel in mid-April.

Following Nasrallah’s speech, Cypriot President Nikos Christodoulides said his country “is in no way involved” in any military operations in the region or elsewhere, adding that that the terror leader’s remarks “don’t in any way reflect what’s being attempted, which is to present a picture that Cyprus is involved in military operations.”

Christodoulides said Cyprus was “part of the solution, not part of the problem” and was recognized throughout the Arab world and internationally through such initiatives, such as the Cyprus-Gaza maritime corridor delivering humanitarian aid by ship to the Strip.

He also said there were avenues of communication with both Lebanon and Iran “through diplomatic means.”

Flaunting technological advances

Following Hezbollah’s publication on Tuesday of footage allegedly filmed from one of its reconnaissance drones flying over northern Israel, Nasrallah claimed that the terror group has hours of such footage and of information about sensitive military targets inside Israel, including some that are located far from the northern border.

A still image of Haifa Bay from footage of northern Israel claimed by Hezbollah to have been captured with a drone on an unspecified date and published on June 18, 2024. (Screenshot, X, used in accordance with Clause 27a of the Copyright Law)

Among such targets are military bases and headquarters located deep inside Israeli territory, some of which have been camouflaged but were uncovered by Hezbollah’s drones, Nasrallah claimed.

On Wednesday,  IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Herzi Halevi downplayed the publication of the drone footage, saying the IDF is “preparing and building solutions to deal with such capabilities,” and possesses “infinitely more powerful capabilities” that Hezbollah is not aware of.

In his speech, Nasrallah claimed that Israeli military leaders have known since October 8 that some of the sensitive targets inside Israeli territory would be targeted.

Among such targets, Nasrallah mentioned the Mount Meron air traffic control base, which in his words represented an “aspirational target” in the 2006 Second Lebanon War, and today is fully within reach of Hezbollah’s projectiles.

File: An IDF base on Mount Meron (IDF)

He further alleged that the terror group has developed and keeps manufacturing new missiles and drones, and that its human and military resources are greater than they have ever been.

Due to Hezbollah’s continuous attacks, the IDF had been forced to divert resources from Gaza, Nasrallah said, noting that Israel has suffered huge economic losses as a result of the evacuation of towns on the northern border and the halt of agricultural and industrial activities in the area.

Despite the military and economic damage, Israeli leaders are not willing to admit the magnitude of the damage, Nasrallah added, in order not to put pressure on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, whose priority remains the war against Hamas in Gaza.

The terror leader also mocked Israel for claiming to possess the strongest army in the region, noting that the IDF has not yet been able to completely dismantle Hamas forces in Rafah despite a ground operation that has lasted several weeks.

Troops of the IDF’s Givati Brigade operate in the Yabna camp of southern Gaza’s Rafah, June 18, 2024. (Emanuel Fabian/Times of Israel)

“We will continue to support Gaza and we are ready for anything. We are not afraid. Our demand is clear: A complete and permanent ceasefire in Gaza,” Nasrallah said, arguing that the ceasefire agreement recently presented by US President Joe Biden to Hamas does not stipulate that the halt in fighting should be permanent.

“However, every day, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu comes out and says that a ceasefire is impossible,” Nasrallah claimed. Taking a swipe at Netanyahu’s far-right coalition partners Itamar Ben Gvir and Betzalel Smotrich, he predicted that they will “drag the enemy into the abyss.”

After his speech, he addresses the families of fallen Hezbollah operatives and Lebanese citizens displaced from the country’s south, saying that the terror group has been conducting the “largest battle since 1948” against Israel.

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Putin takes Kim Jong-un for a drive in Russian luxury car – video - The Guardian

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2024-06-19 16:27:00Z
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Hundreds of Hajj pilgrims die as temperatures touch 51C in Saudi Arabia - The Independent

Hundreds of people have died during this year’s Hajj pilgrimage in Saudi Arabia, with temperatures as high as 51C recorded this week.

Saudi Arabia has not commented on the death toll during the pilgrimage – a ritual that every able Muslim is required to undertake once in their life – nor offered any cause of death for those who have died. However, hundreds of people lined up at the emergency complex in the neighbourhood of al-Muaisem in Mecca, trying to get information about their missing family members.

One list circulating online suggested that at least 550 people died during the five-day Hajj. One medic, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss information not released publicly by the government, said that the names listed appeared to be genuine. That medic and another official, who also spoke on condition of anonymity, said they believed there were at least 600 bodies at the facility. The list of names did not specify cause of death.

At least 323 of those who died were Egyptians, most of them succumbing to heat-related illnesses, according to two Arab diplomats tasked with coordinating their countries’ responses. “All of [the Egyptians] died because of heat” except for one who sustained fatal injuries during a minor crowd crush, one of the diplomats said. One hundred and forty-four Indonesian citizens died during Hajj, according to data the Indonesian health ministry shared on Tuesday. The data did not specify whether any of the deaths were due to heat stroke.

Each year, the Hajj draws hundreds of thousands of pilgrims from low-income nations, “many of whom have had little, if any, pre-Hajj healthcare”, an article in the April edition of the Journal of Infection and Public Health said.

Temperatures hit 51.8C at the Grand Mosque in Mecca on Monday, the Saudi national meteorology centre said. On Tuesday, the mercury reached 47C. Onlookers saw some people faint while trying to perform the symbolic stoning of the devil. Others, including many Egyptians, lost track of their loved ones in the heat and the crowds.

Pilgrims cast stones at pillars in the symbolic stoning of the devil (AP)

More than 1.83 million Muslims have performed the Hajj in 2024, including more than 1.6 million pilgrims from 22 countries and around 222,000 Saudi citizens and residents, according to the Saudi Hajj authorities.

On Wednesday, at the medical complex in Mecca, an Egyptian man collapsed to the ground when he heard the name of his mother listed among the dead. He cried for some time before grabbing his mobile phone and calling a travel agent, shouting: “He left her to die!” as the crowd tried to calm him.

Security appeared to be tight at the complex, with an official reading out names of the dead and their nationalities. They included people from Algeria, Egypt and India. Those who said they were relatives of the dead were allowed inside to identify their loved ones.

It was not possible to independently confirm cause of death at the complex. Saudi officials did not respond to questions seeking more information.

More than 1.83 million Muslims have performed the Hajj in 2024 (AP)

The kingdom’s ruling al-Saud family maintains a major influence in the Muslim world through its oil wealth and its management of Islam’s holiest sites. Like Saudi monarchs before him, King Salman has taken the title of the custodian of the two holy mosques, referring to the Grand Mosque in Mecca – home to the cube-shaped Kaaba, which Muslims pray towards five times a day – and the Prophet’s Mosque in the nearby city of Medina.

Saudi Arabia has spent billions of dollars on crowd control and safety measures for those attending the annual five-day pilgrimage, but the sheer number of participants makes ensuring their safety difficult.

The climate crisis could make the risk even greater. A 2019 study by experts at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology found that even if the world succeeds in mitigating the worst effects of climate change, the Hajj would be held in temperatures exceeding an “extreme danger threshold” from 2047 to 2052, and from 2079 to 2086.

Islam follows a lunar calendar, so the Hajj falls around 11 days earlier each year. In 2030, the Hajj will occur in April, and over the next several years it will fall in the winter, when temperatures are milder.

A 2015 stampede in Mina during the Hajj killed more than 2,400 pilgrims, the deadliest incident ever to strike the pilgrimage. Saudi Arabia has never acknowledged the full toll of the stampede. A separate crane collapse at Mecca’s Grand Mosque, which preceded the Mina disaster, killed 111 people.

The second-deadliest incident at Hajj was a stampede in 1990 that killed 1,426 people.

Associated Press

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Putin in Pyongyang live: Russia and North Korea claim strategic pact is ‘peaceful and defensive’ - The Guardian

Vladimir Putin and Kim Jong-un have signed a comprehensive agreement pact between Russia and North Korea, which Kim described as “peaceful and defensive” and which Putin said did not rule out “the provision of mutual assistance in the event of aggression against one of the parties to this agreement.”

Speaking after lengthy talks, Putin said the pair discussed world affairs and the global agenda a lot, and that Moscow and Pyongyang stood together against the politically motivated sanctions regimes of others.

Kim described Putin as “the dearest friend of the Korean people”, saying that “At this moment, when the whole world is paying close attention to Pyongyang, where the friendship mission from Russia has arrived, I stand with Russian comrades – our most honest friends and comrades.”

The two leaders hold a press conference.

The Kremlin’s website indicated that the agreementalso included “cooperation in the field of healthcare, medical education and science”. Putin said that North Korea had a right to defend itself, and that “The Russian Federation does not rule out military-technical cooperation with the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea in accordance with the document signed today.”

Putin also laid a wreath at a monument to soldiers of the Sovier Union who lost their lives liberating the Korea peninsula from Japanese occupation. It is the Russian president’s first visit to North Korea for over two decades, and he will later head to Vietnam.

A state reception has begun in Pyongyang in North Korea as leader Kim Jong-un continues to welcome Russian president Vladimir Putin. The pair earlier signed a new mutual cooperation treaty between their two nations.

The dinner reception is, Tass reports, expected to feature the two leaders giving toasts, and follows a gala concert.

Vladimir Putin and Kim Jong-un attend a gala concert in Pyongyang, 19 June.

Russian presidential assistant Yuri Ushakov informed the media that after the dinner, the visit is practically over. The two leaders will visit the Church of the Life-Giving Trinity, an Eastern Orthodox built in Pyongyang in the early 2000s. Putin will then depart for Hanoi for a visit to Vietnam.

Earlier, Putin gave Kim a luxury Russian car as a gift, and the pair drove away from the signing ceremony and press briefing with Putin behind the wheel.

Putin and Kim in the luxury Russian car.

Pictures issued from the visit show that Kim also took a turn driving the car.

Another picture from the visit shows Kim driving the car with Putin in the passenger seat.

Vladimir Putin and Kim Jong-un posed with the new cooperation agreement they signed between their nations.

Vladimir Putin and Kim Jong-un pose for the cameras in Pyongyang.

Justin McCurry reports for the Guardian from Tokyo

The inclusion of a mutual defence clause in their comprehensive strategic partnership, finalised on Wednesday after hours of talks in the North Korean capital Pyongyang, will add to alarm in the West over growing economic and military ties between North Korea and Russia.

It wasn’t immediately clear what form that support might take, and no details of the agreement were initially made public. Vladimir Putin later described the pact as “defensive”, citing North Korea’s right to defend itself, according to Tass. He added that Russia would not rule out developing military-technical cooperation with North Korea.

Speaking after a signing ceremony, Kim Jong-un called the deal the “strongest ever treaty” signed between the two countries, elevating their relationship to the level of an alliance. The pact would lead to closer political, economic and military cooperation, he was quoted as saying.

He hailed the agreement as a “significant and historic moment”, adding, “I have no doubt it will become a driving force accelerating the creation of a new multipolar world.”

In Washington, the US secretary of state, Antony Blinken, had earlier said Putin’s visit highlighted Russia’s attempts, “in desperation, to develop and to strengthen relations with countries that can provide it with what it needs to continue the war of aggression that it started against Ukraine”.

Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov has confirmed the agreement signed between Russia and North Korea contains a mutual defence clause, telling Russian media:

In accordance with article four of the treaty, there is an agreement to provide assistance to each other in the event of aggression against any contracting country.

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov has said accusations that Russia and North Korea are building an anti-western alliance are completely incorrect.

Russian state-owned media Tass reports Peskov told newspaper Izvestia:

Virtually everything they [the West] do is, in one way or another, directed against us. And we, on the contrary, are building relationships, especially with our neighbours. Not against anyone, but for the benefit of ourselves. For the benefit of the interests of the peoples of our two countries. Russian-Korean cooperation is not directed against any third countries.

The west has accused North Korea of supplying armaments to Russia in order to bolster its supplies since the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

Vladimir Putin and Kim Jong-un have signed a comprehensive agreement pact between Russia and North Korea, which Kim described as “peaceful and defensive” and which Putin said did not rule out “the provision of mutual assistance in the event of aggression against one of the parties to this agreement.”

Speaking after lengthy talks, Putin said the pair discussed world affairs and the global agenda a lot, and that Moscow and Pyongyang stood together against the politically motivated sanctions regimes of others.

Kim described Putin as “the dearest friend of the Korean people”, saying that “At this moment, when the whole world is paying close attention to Pyongyang, where the friendship mission from Russia has arrived, I stand with Russian comrades – our most honest friends and comrades.”

The two leaders hold a press conference.

The Kremlin’s website indicated that the agreementalso included “cooperation in the field of healthcare, medical education and science”. Putin said that North Korea had a right to defend itself, and that “The Russian Federation does not rule out military-technical cooperation with the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea in accordance with the document signed today.”

Putin also laid a wreath at a monument to soldiers of the Sovier Union who lost their lives liberating the Korea peninsula from Japanese occupation. It is the Russian president’s first visit to North Korea for over two decades, and he will later head to Vietnam.

Reuters reports that in his speech after the meeting with Vladimir Putin, North Korea’s leader Kim Jong-un has said the relationship between their two nations was raised to an alliance, with a pact that is peaceful and defensive, and the countries would expand mutual cooperation in politics, the economy and militarily.

North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has described Vladimir Putin as “the dearest friend of the Korean people” in comments after the two leaders met. It was Putin’s first visit to North Korean for over two decades, although the North Korean leader made a rare foreign trip to see Putin in Russia last year.

Russian state-media Tass reports that Kim said:

At this moment, when the whole world is paying close attention to Pyongyang, where the friendship mission from Russia has arrived, I stand with Russian comrades – our most honest friends and comrades, in this ceremonial hall.

Tass reports Kim said the two nations had signed a “most powerful agreement” which had been made possible by the “outstanding foresight” of “the dearest friend of the Korean people”, Putin.

Russian president Vladimir Putin has said that Russia and North Korea stand against politically motivated sanctions regimes. He said that talks with Kim Jong-un discussed world affairs and the global agenda a lot, and that the agreement the two countries have signed is of a defensive and peaceful nature. He said that North Korea has a right to defend itself.

The Kremlin’s website has indicated that the agreement signed by Russian and North Korea includes “cooperation in the field of healthcare, medical education and science”.

Vladimir Putin is speaking after his meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un in Pyongyang.

Russian state-owned media Tass reports he has said:

The comprehensive partnership agreement signed today also provides for the provision of mutual assistance in the event of aggression against one of the parties to this agreement.

Putin has also said

The Russian Federation does not rule out military-technical cooperation with the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea in accordance with the document signed today.

Tass is posting updates from the press briefing in Russian on its Telegram channel as it takes place.

Here is some video from this morning’s greetings between Kim Jong-un and Vladimir Putin.

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2024-06-19 12:05:00Z
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Putin in Pyongyang live: Russia and North Korea claim strategic pact is ‘peaceful and defensive’ - The Guardian

Vladimir Putin and Kim Jong-un have signed a comprehensive agreement pact between Russia and North Korea, which Kim described as “peaceful and defensive” and which Putin said did not rule out “the provision of mutual assistance in the event of aggression against one of the parties to this agreement.”

Speaking after lengthy talks, Putin said the pair discussed world affairs and the global agenda a lot, and that Moscow and Pyongyang stood together against the politically motivated sanctions regimes of others.

Kim described Putin as “the dearest friend of the Korean people”, saying that “At this moment, when the whole world is paying close attention to Pyongyang, where the friendship mission from Russia has arrived, I stand with Russian comrades – our most honest friends and comrades.”

The two leaders hold a press conference.

The Kremlin’s website indicated that the agreementalso included “cooperation in the field of healthcare, medical education and science”. Putin said that North Korea had a right to defend itself, and that “The Russian Federation does not rule out military-technical cooperation with the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea in accordance with the document signed today.”

Putin also laid a wreath at a monument to soldiers of the Sovier Union who lost their lives liberating the Korea peninsula from Japanese occupation. It is the Russian president’s first visit to North Korea for over two decades, and he will later head to Vietnam.

Vladimir Putin and Kim Jong-un posed with the new cooperation agreement they signed between their nations.

Vladimir Putin and Kim Jong-un pose for the cameras in Pyongyang.

Justin McCurry reports for the Guardian from Tokyo

The inclusion of a mutual defence clause in their comprehensive strategic partnership, finalised on Wednesday after hours of talks in the North Korean capital Pyongyang, will add to alarm in the West over growing economic and military ties between North Korea and Russia.

It wasn’t immediately clear what form that support might take, and no details of the agreement were initially made public. Vladimir Putin later described the pact as “defensive”, citing North Korea’s right to defend itself, according to Tass. He added that Russia would not rule out developing military-technical cooperation with North Korea.

Speaking after a signing ceremony, Kim Jong-un called the deal the “strongest ever treaty” signed between the two countries, elevating their relationship to the level of an alliance. The pact would lead to closer political, economic and military cooperation, he was quoted as saying.

He hailed the agreement as a “significant and historic moment”, adding, “I have no doubt it will become a driving force accelerating the creation of a new multipolar world.”

In Washington, the US secretary of state, Antony Blinken, had earlier said Putin’s visit highlighted Russia’s attempts, “in desperation, to develop and to strengthen relations with countries that can provide it with what it needs to continue the war of aggression that it started against Ukraine”.

Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov has confirmed the agreement signed between Russia and North Korea contains a mutual defence clause, telling Russian media:

In accordance with article four of the treaty, there is an agreement to provide assistance to each other in the event of aggression against any contracting country.

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov has said accusations that Russia and North Korea are building an anti-western alliance are completely incorrect.

Russian state-owned media Tass reports Peskov told newspaper Izvestia:

Virtually everything they [the West] do is, in one way or another, directed against us. And we, on the contrary, are building relationships, especially with our neighbours. Not against anyone, but for the benefit of ourselves. For the benefit of the interests of the peoples of our two countries. Russian-Korean cooperation is not directed against any third countries.

The west has accused North Korea of supplying armaments to Russia in order to bolster its supplies since the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

Vladimir Putin and Kim Jong-un have signed a comprehensive agreement pact between Russia and North Korea, which Kim described as “peaceful and defensive” and which Putin said did not rule out “the provision of mutual assistance in the event of aggression against one of the parties to this agreement.”

Speaking after lengthy talks, Putin said the pair discussed world affairs and the global agenda a lot, and that Moscow and Pyongyang stood together against the politically motivated sanctions regimes of others.

Kim described Putin as “the dearest friend of the Korean people”, saying that “At this moment, when the whole world is paying close attention to Pyongyang, where the friendship mission from Russia has arrived, I stand with Russian comrades – our most honest friends and comrades.”

The two leaders hold a press conference.

The Kremlin’s website indicated that the agreementalso included “cooperation in the field of healthcare, medical education and science”. Putin said that North Korea had a right to defend itself, and that “The Russian Federation does not rule out military-technical cooperation with the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea in accordance with the document signed today.”

Putin also laid a wreath at a monument to soldiers of the Sovier Union who lost their lives liberating the Korea peninsula from Japanese occupation. It is the Russian president’s first visit to North Korea for over two decades, and he will later head to Vietnam.

Reuters reports that in his speech after the meeting with Vladimir Putin, North Korea’s leader Kim Jong-un has said the relationship between their two nations was raised to an alliance, with a pact that is peaceful and defensive, and the countries would expand mutual cooperation in politics, the economy and militarily.

North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has described Vladimir Putin as “the dearest friend of the Korean people” in comments after the two leaders met. It was Putin’s first visit to North Korean for over two decades, although the North Korean leader made a rare foreign trip to see Putin in Russia last year.

Russian state-media Tass reports that Kim said:

At this moment, when the whole world is paying close attention to Pyongyang, where the friendship mission from Russia has arrived, I stand with Russian comrades – our most honest friends and comrades, in this ceremonial hall.

Tass reports Kim said the two nations had signed a “most powerful agreement” which had been made possible by the “outstanding foresight” of “the dearest friend of the Korean people”, Putin.

Russian president Vladimir Putin has said that Russia and North Korea stand against politically motivated sanctions regimes. He said that talks with Kim Jong-un discussed world affairs and the global agenda a lot, and that the agreement the two countries have signed is of a defensive and peaceful nature. He said that North Korea has a right to defend itself.

The Kremlin’s website has indicated that the agreement signed by Russian and North Korea includes “cooperation in the field of healthcare, medical education and science”.

Vladimir Putin is speaking after his meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un in Pyongyang.

Russian state-owned media Tass reports he has said:

The comprehensive partnership agreement signed today also provides for the provision of mutual assistance in the event of aggression against one of the parties to this agreement.

Putin has also said

The Russian Federation does not rule out military-technical cooperation with the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea in accordance with the document signed today.

Tass is posting updates from the press briefing in Russian on its Telegram channel as it takes place.

Here is some video from this morning’s greetings between Kim Jong-un and Vladimir Putin.

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2024-06-19 10:52:00Z
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At least 550 die in pilgrimage to Mecca amid scorching heat - The Telegraph

At least 550 visitors have died during the annual Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca amid scorching heat.

Three hundred and twenty-three of the dead were Egyptians, most of whom perished due to heat-related illness, Arab diplomats said.

Stampedes, tent fires and other accidents have caused hundreds of deaths during haj to Saudi Arabia in the past 30 years. The pilgrimage began on Friday.

Saudi state TV said temperatures rose on Monday as high as 125.2F (51.8C) in the shade at the Grand Mosque in Mecca.

A 2024 study by the Journal of Travel and Medicine found that rising global temperatures may outpace strategies to deal with the heat. A 2019 study by Geophysical Research Letters said that as temperatures rise in arid Saudi Arabia due to climate change, pilgrims performing haj will face “extreme danger”.

Muslim pilgrims perform the farewell circumambulation or 'tawaf', circling seven times around the Kaaba, Islam's holiest shrine
Muslim pilgrims perform the farewell circumambulation or 'tawaf', circling seven times around the Kaaba Credit: AFP

Thirty-five Tunisian citizens have died during the haj, Tunisian news agency Tunis Afrique Presse said on Tuesday.

Many of those deaths were due to extreme heat, family members said on social media, as other families continued to search for missing relatives in Saudi hospitals.

The Jordanian foreign ministry said it had issued 41 burial permits for Jordanian pilgrims on Tuesday. Earlier, the ministry said at least six Jordanian citizens died of heat stroke during the haj.

Eleven Iranians have died and 24 were hospitalised during the pilgrimage, Iranian state news outlet IRINN said on Tuesday without giving the causes of death.

Three Senegalese citizens also died during haj, Agence de Presse Sénégalaise, said on Monday.

144 Indonesian citizens died during the pilgrimage, Indonesian health ministry data showed on Tuesday. The data did not specify if any of the deaths were due to heat stroke.

Pilgrims pray around the Kaaba at the Grand Mosque in the holy city of Mecca at the end of the annual haj
Pilgrims pray around the Kaaba at the Grand Mosque in the holy city of Mecca at the end of the annual haj Credit: AFP
The third day of Eid al-Adha in Mecca, Saudi Arabia
The third day of Eid al-Adha in Mecca, Saudi Arabia Credit: Lokman Akkaya/Getty Images

The haj is an annual pilgrimage that millions of Muslims make to Mecca to perform religious rites as taught by the Prophet Mohammad to his followers 14 centuries ago.

A Saudi health official, speaking to Reuters on Monday, before many of the reports of deaths were issued, said that authorities had not noticed any unusual fatalities among Muslim pilgrims amid the extremely high temperatures.

The ministry had so far treated more than 2,700 pilgrims who suffered from heat-related illness, he added.

“Haj is a difficult task, so you have to exert efforts and perform the rituals even in the conditions of heat and crowding,” an Egyptian pilgrim told Reuters on Sunday.

Pilgrims used umbrellas to protect themselves from the sun, as Saudi authorities warned pilgrims to stay hydrated and avoid being outdoors during the hottest hours between 11 am and 3pm local time.

Haj, one of the largest mass gatherings in the world, is a once-in-a-lifetime duty for able-bodied Muslims who can afford it. It will end on Wednesday.

More than 1.8 million pilgrims were expected to take part this year, according to the Saudi General Authority for Statistics.

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2024-06-19 09:36:00Z
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