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Monday 20 March 2023

Will Xi-Putin summit deliver a breakthrough on Ukraine war?

 Xi’s trip to Russia comes after China called for a truce, dialogue in Ukraine and brokered a rapprochement between Saudi Arabia and Iran.



Chinese President Xi Jinping is on his way to Moscow, on a “voyage of friendship”, “cooperation” and “peace”, weeks after Beijing unveiled a 12-point position paper calling for a ceasefire in the Russia-Ukraine war and days after it mediated a surprise rapprochement between longtime Middle East foes, Saudi Arabia and Iran.


Xi’s three-day visit, which begins on Monday, will feature one-on-one talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin, a man the Chinese leader has described as his “best friend” and who is now wanted by the International Criminal Court on war crimes accusations.

The summit in Moscow will be the 40th meeting between the two men.

The visit by Xi – who was recently reappointed as China’s leader for an unprecedented third term and who is seeking a greater role for Beijing on the world stage – has raised hopes in some quarters of a breakthrough in ending the war in Ukraine. The conflict, now in its second year, has claimed tens of thousands of lives, forced millions from their homes, and caused widespread economic pain, with inflation soaring across the globe and supplies of grain, fertiliser and energy in short supply.

The hopes have been kindled not only by Beijing’s mediation in the Saudi-Iran détente and its proposal for a truce and dialogue between Moscow and Kyiv but also by media reports that Xi intends to follow on his summit with Putin with a virtual meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

If it takes place, the conversation between Xi and Zelenskyy will be their first since Russian tanks rolled across Ukraine’s border in February of last year.

Despite the surge in China’s global diplomacy, most observers say Xi’s state visit is more about cementing the “no limits” partnership that he announced with Putin last year than about brokering peace in Ukraine. That’s because, for starters, neither of the warring parties appears ready or willing to end the fighting.

“Unless and until Russia and Ukraine have exhausted their will to continue fighting and are looking for off-ramps for this conflict, it is not possible to end it,” said Bonnie Glaser, director of the Asia Program at the German Marshall Fund of the United States. “And I don’t think that China wants to get in the middle of it.”

China’s 12-point paper on Ukraine, Glaser said, was a summary of its positions and not a “peace plan”, especially as it did not outline any specific area where Beijing was willing to play a more active role.

Indeed, the paper – unveiled on the anniversary of the war – reflects China’s ambiguous stance on the conflict. While the document supports Ukraine’s sovereignty and calls for the war’s swift resolution, it lays blames for the crisis on what it calls a “Cold War mentality”, that is NATO’s expansion eastwards and the West’s disregard for Russia’s security concerns. It also condemns the West’s “unilateral sanctions” against Russia, despite Beijing mostly having adhered to the measures over the past year.

“The paper contains a whole paragraph on the need for humanitarian assistance, but where is China providing this aid? So, it’s not a peace plan and China is not playing the role of peacemaker,” Glaser said.

She went on to add that the Saudi-Iran agreement – which ended seven years of estrangement and challenged the US’s longstanding role as the main power broker in the Middle East – did not mean that China was now going to emerge as a major mediator for global disputes.

“The lesson of the Saudi-Iran deal is that China is very well attuned to opportunity,” she said. “It became increasingly clear that Saudi Arabia and Iran were looking for a way to begun to improve their relationship. And China seized that opportunity to help bring that across the finish line.”

And for the Russia-Ukraine war, that “moment has not yet arrived”, she added.

Still, the conflict is likely to feature high on Xi’s agenda.

Writing in the Russian newspaper Rossiiskaya Gazeta, a daily published by the Russian government, Xi on Monday called for a “rational way” out of the Ukraine conflict and said China’s position paper “serves as a constructive factor in neutralising the consequences of the crisis and promoting a political settlement”.

Despite the deep scepticism in the West about China’s ability to be an honest broker in the Russia-Ukraine conflict, it appears in a better position than most countries to play mediator.

China is Russia’s most important ally, after all.

And while it has adhered to Western sanctions and refrained from coming to Moscow’s military aid, it has kept up normal trade ties, replacing Germany as the largest importer of Russian oil last year. Bilateral trade in non-sanctioned sectors has also ballooned, reaching a record-breaking $190bn last year.

The two neighbours – who share a long border – have also kept up the pace of their joint military exercises, holding large-scale naval drills in the East China Sea in late December. They also held joint drills with South Africa in February and Iran earlier this month.

China’s leverage over Russia, as well as its desire to be perceived as a responsible third force in global politics, could push Xi, some analysts said, to press Putin for “mini-steps” in the direction of a truce and dialogue in Ukraine.

“China wants to be perceived as a responsible great power,” said Moritz Rudolf, fellow and research scholar in law at the Paul Tsai China Center of the Yale Law School. “It is remarkable that China is presenting its own position at all, when it’s actually about a war in Europe. This is a true new quality of the China’s engagement at the international level and I think it is here to stay.”

Rudolf said although China’s position paper lacked substance, Beijing has positioned itself as the “only country that is potentially able to, or at least, be one of the countries that will need to be part of a peaceful solution” in Ukraine. This, he said, is in line with China’s ambitions to reshape a global order that it perceives as skewed unfairly to the West and one where the US and its allies set the rules to their advantage.

Whether Xi is seeking an active role in the Ukraine crisis will probably become clearer after his Moscow trip, Rudolf said.

If the Chinese leader were to visit other European capitals after his trip to Russia – as reported by the Wall Street Journal – and if he were to speak to Zelenskyy soon after his summit with Putin, it would show if Xi was indeed trying to play a serious role, he added.

With expectations of a breakthrough on Ukraine low, Xi and Putin’s discussions of substance will probably focus on expanding and deepening their economic and military ties.

“All in all, it is an important visit signifying the importance of Russia-China strategic partnership for each other,” said Anna Kireeva, associate professor in the Department of Asian and African Studies at Moscow’s MGIMO University.

“New economic agreements can be expected, especially in energy … Russia urgently needs to find alternative destinations for its exports, and China is more than willing to buy Russian energy resources and raw materials at discounted prices,” she said.

This could translate into a deal on a new pipeline, Power-of-Siberia 2, to deliver gas to China via Mongolia, she said.

Xi and Putin will also use their summit to signal the stability of the relations between their two countries, despite the turbulence in world politics, thereby presenting a united front against the US and increasing Moscow’s global standing, Kireeva said.

“As long as Moscow and Beijing retain their strategic partnership, it means they cannot be fully geopolitically encircled,” she added.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA

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New York Community Bank to buy failed Signature Bank

 The 40 branches of Signature Bank will become Flagstar Bank, starting Monday, the FDIC said late on Sunday.



New York Community Bank has agreed to buy a significant chunk of the failed Signature Bank in a $2.7bn deal, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp says.


The 40 branches of Signature Bank will become Flagstar Bank, starting Monday, the FDIC said in a late Sunday announcement. Flagstar is one of New York Community Bank’s subsidiaries. The deal will include the purchase of $38.4bn in Signature Bank’s assets, a little more than a third of Signature’s total when the bank failed a week ago.

The FDIC said $60bn in Signature Bank’s loans will remain in receivership and are expected to be sold off in time.

The Sunday announcement addresses one of the two failed banks the FDIC is holding under receivership.

The statement did not refer to the other, Silicon Valley Bank (SVB), a much larger bank that regulators took over two days before Signature.

Signature had $110.36bn in assets, whereas SVB had $209 bn.

Signature, based in New York, was a large commercial lender in the tri-state area, but had in recent years gotten into cryptocurrencies as a potential growth business.

After SVB failed, depositors became nervous about Signature Bank’s health due to its high amount of uninsured deposits as well as its exposure to crypto and other tech-focused lendings. By the time it was closed by regulators, Signature was the third largest bank failure in US history.

The FDIC says it expects Signature Bank’s failure to cost the deposit insurance fund $2.5bn, but that figure may change as the regulator sells off assets. The deposit insurance fund is paid for by assessments on banks and taxpayers do not bear the direct cost when a bank fails.

SOURCE: NEWS AGENCIES

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Nepal PM wins confidence vote in parliament

 The vote was called after Pushpa Kamal Dahal’s old coalition allies pulled out of the government over the choice of a new president.



Nepal’s Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal has won a vote of confidence in parliament after securing the support of the opposition centrist Nepali Congress party and other smaller groups, which are now expected to join his new cabinet.


His old coalition allies pulled out of the government last month after he chose an opposition candidate to become the next president. Prime ministers have to face confidence votes after any ally withdraws support.

Dahal – a former chief Maoist rebel commander who still goes by the nom de guerre Prachanda, meaning “fierce” – is expected to unveil a coalition this week with the Nepali Congress party and nine other smaller groups including his Maoist Centre party.

He got 172 votes in his favour on Monday and 89 against in the 275-seat parliament, Speaker Devraj Ghimire said.

”I promise to work firmly for social justice, good governance and prosperity, turning the trust you have given into energy,” Dahal wrote on Twitter after the result.

The 68-year-old became prime minister in December for the third time, heading a coalition with the liberal Communist Unified Marxist-Leninist (UML) party and royalists.

The allies left amid differences over his support for Ram Chandra Paudel, a nominee of the Nepali Congress party, for president.

Paudel was elected on March 9 as the third president of the republic of 30 million people nestled between China and India.

Nepal has had 11 governments since it abolished its 239-year-old monarchy in 2008 and became a republic. The president is a largely ceremonial head of state.

Analysts said Dahal could face challenges forming his new cabinet. “It could be difficult for the prime minister to distribute ministerial positions and satisfy the ambitious allies,” Bipin Adhikari, a constitutional expert, told Reuters news agency.

Dahal is already in the middle of another crisis. The Supreme Court is hearing a petition demanding his arrest and an investigation into his leadership during a decade-long civil war that killed thousands of people before it ended in 2006.

In a public gathering three years ago, Dahal said he was ready to take responsibility for 5,000 deaths during the civil war, blaming the then state forces for the remaining fatalities.

SOURCE: NEWS AGENCIES

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Dozens arrested in South Africa protests

 South African police say 87 people have been arrested across the country in connection with opposition protests.



Police Minister Bheki Cele said on Monday that most of the arrests were made in Gauteng province.

“Most were found making fires, blocking roads and trying to prevent people from going to work. They were not peaceful,” he said.

Mr Cele said over 24,000 tyres have been confiscated by police in different towns.

He said police are working with the military to maintain calm.

Opposition minority party the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) is leading the so-called national shutdown. It kicked off protests well before Sunday midnight, local media report.

EFF is calling for the resignation of President Cyril Ramaphosa and an end to the energy crisis in the country.

Source: BBC

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What does the US owe Iraq for the military’s toxic burn pits?

 Twenty years after the war, many Iraqis are suffering the consequences of burn pits the US used to dispose of waste.


In Iraq, some scars of the US-led invasion remain hidden, even as the war’s 20th anniversary is marked this week. The US military for years disposed of waste in burn pits on wide swathes of land that were constantly smoking. Some were the size of a football field. In them were plastics, electronics, and military and medical waste.


The environmental impacts of the invasion, including those burn pits, continue to plague Iraqis to this day. After years of lobbying, the US government approved legislation to address the health impacts on US soldiers, but there has been no discussion of compensation for Iraqi civilians.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA

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Angola disputes fencing world championship in Bulgaria

 Luanda – Angola men’s and women’s Junior and cadet national fencing teams are to compete in the Fencing World Championship to take place in Bulgaria on April 3 to 12.



This will be the second participation of the national team in the competition, after their first presence in 2022, in Dubai, with the fencers Maysa Guerreiro, who ranked 196th, Florinda Álvaro (207th), Rafael Guerreiro (235th) and Daniel Chipongue (260th), among 310 competitors. 

 

The team led by the South African Sello Maduma integrates Rafael Guerreiro (João Gomes Fencing Academy of Portugal), Daniel Tchipongue, Anastácio Tchiquete (Vila Clotilde, Luanda) and Venâncio da Conceição (CIMAG FC of Cabinda). 

 

The women’s list includes Florinda Álvaro (Military College of Portugal), Maria Messamessa (Petro do Huambo), Ana Dovala (Ferrovia do Huambo), Ana da Silva and Maysa Guerreira (Villa Clotilde).

 

Speaking to ANGOP the administrative secretary of the Angolan Fencing Federation, Ana Stela, said the group will carry out a pre-competition stage on March 28-31 in Portugal to afterwards leave for the competition.

Head of State designates judges for Supreme Court vacancies

 Luanda – President João Lourenço on Monday designated eight judges to integrate the Supreme Court.



The said justices, also known as counsellor-judges, are Anabela Couto de Castro Valente, António Fernando Neto da Costa, Artur Domingos Gunza, Inácio Paixão, Maria Guiomar Vieira Dias Gamboa Craveiro, Paciência Graça Diaquiesse Dondeiro Simão, Pedro Nazaré Pascoal e Raúl Carlos de Freitas Rodrigues.

 

According to a note from the President’s Press Office, this presidential move happens in sequence of a proposal made by the Higher Council of the Judicial Magistracy, aimed at filling vacancies in the organ.

 

Meanwhile, in a different Decree, President João Lourenço dismissed António Fernando Neto da Costa from the position of Deputy Secretary of the Cabinet Council, having appointed, in his stead, José Maria Varela Gomes Borges.

 

The Head of State also relieved from his duties Francisco João de Carvalho Neto from the position of Presidential Secretary for Judicial and Juridical Matters.

 

João Lourenço also appointed Edilson Paulo Agostinho to the post of Presidential Secretary for Judicial and Juridical Matters.

Parliament Speaker calls for discipline of FAA personnel in DRC

 Luanda - The Parliament Speaker, Carolina Cerqueira, asked the Angolan Armed Forces (FAA) for discipline and a high sense of mission, guided by the defence of fundamental rights and safety of civilian populations.



In a message on the occasion of the approval of the request made by the President of the Republic to send a military contingent of peace operations in the eastern region of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Carolina Cerqueira called for the protection and preservation of the rights of children, girls and women victims of the conflict, who daily are the target of inhuman abuse and heinous sexual crimes. 

 

"We praise the readiness of the FAA contingent, 25% of which is made up of women, which strongly demonstrates the involvement of Angolan women in the peacekeeping process and the defence of fundamental rights, as recommended by the United Nations", she said. 

 

Carolina Cerqueira also said that the current situation of the conflict and the continued crimes against defenceless civilian populations - which have already caused more than 10 million victims, according to a report recently presented at the 146th Assembly of the Inter-Parliamentary Union held in the Kingdom of Bahrain - requires a solidarity reaction from neighbouring states. 

 

"Angola could not be indifferent to the urgent need for the demilitarization of the M23 forces for the reestablishment of effective peace and security in eastern DRC, Central Africa and the African continent in general", she said. 

 

This intervention, according to the official, represents, more than ever, a necessary path for the preservation of peace and stability of the peoples of the region, in order not to postpone the purposes of a better future for the African continent. 

 

The request for authorization from the President of the Republic, as Commander in Chief of the Angolan Armed Forces (FAA), on sending a military contingent of the Component of Support Operations and Peacekeeping in the eastern DRC, aims to ensure the process of cantonment of the military forces of M23, in eastern DRC.  

 

The objective of the Angolan mission will be to adopt the joint general plan for the resolution of the crisis in eastern DRC, accelerate the effective implementation of the Luanda roadmap, in coordination with the Nairobi process, for the promotion of security in Eastern DRC and the normalization of political and diplomatic relations with the Republic of Rwanda.  

 

The Angolan contingent, which according to the work commissions should remain in that country for 12 months, will consist of a battalion of FAA and their components, as well as financial means valued at 11.2 billion kwanzas, which should be reallocated within the budget of the Defence and Security sector.

Health Ministry wants to increase oral health specialists

 Luanda – The secretary of State for Public Health, Carlos Pinto de Sousa, on Monday in Luanda reaffirmed the compromise to increase the number of oral health technicians, coupled with their adequate distribution in the various centres.



The Angolan Order of Physicians controls just over 1,100 dentists countrywide.

 

The secretary of State for Public Health, who was speaking at the World Oral Health Day commemoration act, marked on 20th March, said that the shortcomings in this specialty area in the country cause many of the oral problem cases to remain untreated, so the authorities are coming up with more efficient measures.

 

The efforts, he explained, are geared towards the structuring of a basic programme of oral health, with a view to integrating oral health care into primary health care.

 

Mr Sousa went on to inform that the 2012-2025 National Health Development Plan comprises actions such as the equipping  and placing of specialists in the primary, secondary and tertiary  care networks, as well as the unveiling of one dental prosthesis centre in every province, plus steeping up awareness campaigns in the communities on oral hygiene and nutrition.

 

To the secretary of State, a good oral health contributes significantly to a general good condition, well-being and quality of life.

 

Deficient oral health, he said, causes millions of people to have extreme pains, thus increasing the financial weight on society and affecting severely the quality of life of the population.

 

In view of this, he disclosed, in 2016 the states approved the 2016-2025 Regional Oral Health Strategy.

 

Oral health problems are among the most common non-transmissible and preventable diseases in the world.  

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