Foreign News
Iran, Israel Differ on Resolving Conflict with Diplomacy at UN
Iran and Israel on Tuesday at the UN Security Council, sharply disagreed over employing diplomacy to resolve Iran’s nuclear programme that led to a 13-day violent conflict between them.Iran had said diplomacy could and must resolve differences between it and Israel on the one hand, and the world on the other hand, over its nuclear programme.
However, Israel differed, warning that diplomacy with Iran had failed. Iran’s Ambassador to the UN, Amir Iravani, told the Security Council that his country “never initiated this war”. Saeid said “once the aggressors stopped their attacks, Iran stopped its lawful military response as well”.Saeid also expressed his country’s strong commitment to diplomacy as the path through which differences can and should be resolved.“Iran continues to believe that a diplomatic resolution to nuclear and sanction issues is possible,” Saeid said.He called on the Security Council to condemn Israel’s and the United States’ attacks on Iran and their International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)-protected nuclear facilities and work to ensure that they never happen again.Saeid added that Iran upheld Council Resolution 2231 and the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), and that remedial measures were “fully consistent” with these two instruments.Howevet, Israel warned that diplomacy with Iran over its nuclear programme had failed.Israeli Ambassador Danny Danon defended his country’s military operation against Iran, describing it as a necessary move to neutralise a “double existential threat” from Tehran’s nuclear and missile programmes.He said Israel achieved complete air superiority and removed key regime targets, acting in coordination with the U.S.Danon accused Iran of deceiving the world for years, using diplomacy as cover to advance its nuclear weapons programme.“There is still time to take meaningful and decisive action to ensure that the threat of a nuclear Iran does not return stronger than before,” he said.“We are often told that diplomacy must be given a chance, it was given every chance, every round, every channel, every deadline.“But so far it has failed, the regime in Tehran never had any intention of complying,” he added.The United States, in its position, urged Iran to return to the negotiation table and renounce its nuclear programme.Acting U.S. Permanent Representative to the UN, Amb. Dorothea Shea, said Iran’s increase in nuclear activity lacked “any credible civilian justification.”The UK Ambassador Barbara Woodward welcomed the ceasefire brokered by U.S. President Donald Trump but warned that “the situation remains extremely fragile.”Expressing that “now is the time for a return to diplomacy,” Woodward urged Iran to engage in talks without delay, warning that its nuclear programme had exceeded “any credible civilian justification.”She said all diplomatic levers would be deployed for a negotiated outcome and to “ensure Iran does not develop a nuclear weapon.”Echoing UN appeals for dialogue, the European Union stressed that “a lasting solution to the Iranian nuclear issue can only be through a negotiated deal, not military action.”Briefing the Council, Amb. Stavros Lambrinidis said, ”Ensuring that Iran does not acquire or develop a nuclear weapon remains a key security priority for the EU”.A fragile ceasefire brokered by the United States between Iran and Israel appears to be holding, marking a tentative halt to a dangerous regional escalation.UN political affairs chief Rosemary DiCarlo said the fragile ceasefire announced by U.S. President Donald Trump provided “an opportunity to avoid a catastrophic escalation and achieve a peaceful resolution of the Iran nuclear issue.”Amid the relative calm, the UN renewed its call for a diplomatic solution to the Iran nuclear issue, warning that the objectives of the Iran nuclear deal (JCPOA) and the resolution that endorsed it remained unmet.JCPOA is an agreement negotiated between Iran and the Permanent Members of the UN Security Council, with the EU.It aims to limit Iran’s nuclear programme to exclusively peaceful purpose in return for sanctions relief and other provisions. (NAN)Foreign News
German Nurse Gets Life in Jail after Murdering 10 to Reduce Workload
A palliative care nurse in Germany has been sentenced to life in prison after he was convicted of the murder of 10 patients and the attempted murder of 27 others.
Prosecutors alleged that the man, who has not been publicly named, injected his mostly elderly patients with painkillers or sedatives in an effort to ease his workload during shifts overnight.
The offences were committed between December 2023 and May 2024 in a hospital in Wuerselen, in western Germany.
Investigators are reported to be looking into several other suspicious cases during his career.
The unnamed man had been employed at the hospital in Wuerselen since 2020, after completing training as a nursing professional in 2007.
Prosecutors told a court in Aachen that he showed “irritation” and a lack of empathy to patients who required a higher level of care, and accused him of playing “master of life and death”.
The court was told that he injected patients with large doses of morphine and midazolam, a type of sedative, in an effort to reduce his workload during night shifts.
He was arrested in 2024.
When issuing the life sentence, the court said that the man’s crimes carried a “particular severity of guilt” which should bar him from early release after 15 years.
He will be able to appeal the verdict.
Prosecutors have said that exhumations are taking place to identify further potential victims, which could see the man put on trial again.
The case bears similarity to that of former nurse Niels Högel, who was handed a life sentence in 2019 after he was convicted of murdering 85 patients at two hospitals in northern Germany.
A court found that he administered lethal doses of heart medication to people in his care between 1999 and 2005.
He is believed to be the most prolific killer in Germany’s modern history.
Foreign News
World’s Oldest President Sworn in for Eighth Term in Cameroon
Cameroon’s 92-year-old leader Paul Biya has been sworn in for another seven years as president in a ceremony at the country’s parliament in Yaoundé.
Biya won a controversial eighth term in a fiercely disputed election last month.
He has been in power for 43 years, and addressed only one campaign rally before the election.
The nonagenarian, the world’s oldest head of state, won 54% of the vote, compared to the 35% of Issa Tchiroma Bakary, according to the official results.
Tchiroma Bakary maintains he was the rightful winner of the poll and has accused the authorities of fraud, which they have denied.The announcement of the result led to major protests across the country.
Foreign News
Niger CAN Appeals for Peaceful LG Polls
From Dan Amasingha, Minna
The Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), Niger State chapter has appealed to all the stakeholders in Niger State to ensure that November 1 local government polls are peaceful.Chairman of CAN in the state, Most Rev. Dr. Bulus Dauwa Yohanna called on residents to come out en masse to exercise their franchise during the local government council elections.
The State CAN Chairman advised that voter apathy is not a good sign for the process and urged residents to actively participate in the forthcoming Local Government Elections. Yohanna, who is also the Catholic Bishop of Kontagora Diocese in a statement in Minna urged eligible voters who have registered to go get their Permanent Voter’s Card from the Independent National Electoral Commission’s (INEC office.According to him; “the 2025 local government elections are around the corner, I want to appeal to those who are yet to collect their PVCs to quickly collect them to avoid unnecessary rush and to regret in the future.”He therefore called on all Christian faithfuls to participate actively in the electoral process adding that “it is your civic right.”In his words, the Chairman said: “I call on all residents to participate in the November, 1st Chairmanship and Councillorship elections.“Let it be known that we are the determinants of who leads us at the local and grassroots levels. As Christians, we must participate actively in politics either as members of political parties or as electorates.“To avoid voter apathy, let us come out and vote in the people of our choice into various offices”.He admonished political parties to feed candidates that can provide basic amenities and meet the yearnings of the people.According to him, there is a need for all Bloc leaders both at the State and LGA level, leaders/heads of churches to call on their members not to sit on the fence but to participate actively and to ignore statements like “Votes do not count”.While calling on security personnel to discharge their duties, he appealed to Nigerlites to conduct themselves peacefully during and after the elections and avoid any acts that will bring about break down of law and order in the state.Bishop Yohanna also called on the INEC to publish and announce PVCs collection centres to enable those who registered online to pick up their cards.
