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UK Removes Tariffs on all Imports from Ukraine

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The United Kingdom (UK) says it will cut tariffs on all goods imported from Ukraine to zero.

In an announcement on Monday evening, the government said the move came in response to a direct request from Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to support his country’s economy.

According to the statement, removing tariffs on key Ukrainian exports, including barley, honey, tinned tomatoes, and poultry, will help Ukrainian businesses and producers when they need it most.

“All tariffs on goods imported from Ukraine will now be reduced to zero and all quotas will be removed under the free trade agreement, providing Ukraine economic support in their hour of need,” the statement reads.

“The prime minister pledged to cut tariffs to support Ukraine’s economy through this crisis when he visited Kyiv earlier this month.”

Speaking on the development, Anne-Marie Trevelyan, UK international trade secretary, said: “The UK will continue to do everything in its power to support Ukraine’s fight against Putin’s brutal and unprovoked invasion and help ensure the long-term security and prosperity of Ukraine and its people.”

“We stand unwaveringly with Ukraine in this ongoing fight and will work to ensure Ukraine survives and thrives as a free and sovereign nation.”

In addition, the UK government announced an export ban on products and technology that Russia could use to “repress” the people of Ukraine

The ban will target goods such as interception and monitoring equipment and “will close any existing loopholes to ensure that Russia is not buying these goods from the UK”.

Last week, the UK said it would increase current tariff sanctions against Russia and added more products facing import bans.

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Iran Threatens U.S, Israel with Harsher Attacks

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Iran has warned the United States (U.S.) and Israel that it would launch further and more severe attacks, escalating tensions amid ongoing hostilities.

A spokesman for the country’s armed forces headquarters said yesterday that Iran’s adversaries underestimated its military capabilities.

”You know nothing about our very extensive and strategic capabilities,” the spokesman said, adding that recent strikes by the U.

S. and Israel had failed to significantly weaken Iran’s military strength.

The spokesman dismissed the importance of previously targeted sites, describing them as insignificant, and insisted that key military production facilities remained intact and beyond the reach of foreign forces.

He also rejected claims that Iran’s strategic weapons programmes, including missile systems, long-range drones, air defence technologies and electronic warfare capabilities had been seriously damaged.

The warning signals a potential intensification of the conflict, with the spokesman stating that military operations would continue until Iran’s opponents “capitulate”.

Syria rejects forced deportations from Germany amid migration debate

Syria has rejected proposals for the large-scale return of its nationals from Germany, warning against any forced deportations amid an ongoing migration debate in Europe.

Syrian Foreign Minister, Asaad al-Shaibani, said Syrians living abroad should be viewed as “strategic resources, not a burden”, dismissing suggestions that they should be compelled to return.

”We categorically reject any attempts at forced deportation. Authorities are working with international partners to rebuild infrastructure and create conditions for a voluntary and dignified return,” he wrote on X.

At a joint press conference, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz had said that up to 80 per cent of the more than 900,000 Syrians living in Germany could return home within three years.

He said that returnees would be needed to support reconstruction efforts, while noting that well-integrated Syrians would be allowed to remain.

The remarks sparked criticism across Germany’s political spectrum.

A day later, Merz said the figure had been cited by al-Sharaa, a claim the Syrian leader rejected during an event in London.

Al-Sharaa insisted that any return of refugees must be voluntary and linked to improvements on the ground in Syria, warning that forced deportations could trigger further displacement.

Germany has hosted more Syrians than any other European Union country since the outbreak of the Syrian civil war, which lasted 14 years.

Following the ousting of longtime ruler Bashar al-Assad in late 2024 by a rebel alliance led by al-Sharaa, calls have intensified among conservative politicians in Germany for refugees to return.

U.S. Military Strikes Over 12,300 Targets in Iran, Says Centcom

The U.S. military on Wednesday said that it had struck more than 12,300 targets in Iran during the conflict, which has been ongoing for just over a month.

The U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM), which oversees U.S. forces in the region, said in an update on Wednesday that its forces “Damaged or Destroyed” more than 155 Iranian vessels among the more than 12,300 targets struck since the start of the war.

“CENTCOM forces are striking targets to dismantle the Iranian regime’s security apparatus, prioritising locations that pose an imminent threat,” the command said.

The Israeli military said on Wednesday that Israel had so far carried out more than 800 strikes in Iran.

Israel and the United States have been attacking Iran since Feb. 28, with Iran responding with attacks on Israel and U.S. allies in the Gulf region.

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Israel Intensifies Lebanon Attacks, Hits Areas Not in Hezbollah’s Control

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Israel has intensified its attacks on Lebanon this week, hitting areas outside of Hezbollah’s control on Tuesday.

Strikes without warning hit a vehicle north of Beirut and the Jnah neighbourhood in the heart of the capital.

Attacks also continued in the city’s southern suburbs and the country’s south, both where Hezbollah has a strong presence.

A building was destroyed on the road to Beirut’s airport after an evacuation order, and in the south, a strike hit a health facility, killing a paramedic, according to Lebanon’s health ministry.

Israel’s military said it had hit Hezbollah infrastructure in Beirut and killed a senior commander and another senior figure from the Iran-backed armed group.

Hezbollah joined the ongoing regional war on 2 March, sending missiles towards Israel, after the US and Israel attacked the armed group’s ally Iran on 28 February.

Israeli attacks have kept bombarding Lebanon as its troops have moved into the country’s south.

On Tuesday, a vehicle was targeted in the Mansourieh area, a predominantly Christian residential neighbourhood north of Beirut.

Meanwhile, the Jnah neighbourhood in the heart of the capital was attacked after midnight. The Lebanese health ministry said the Al-Zahraa Hospital had received and treated “a number of those injured in the air strike”.

Hassan Jalwan, who lives near Jnah, said he heard several “big explosions” overnight.

“Nobody knows what’s happening,” he said, adding that “displaced people have been sleeping in the open” in the area.

The Dahieh neighbourhood to the south of Beirut, where Hezbollah has a strong presence, continues to be a target. A building was destroyed on Tuesday in Ghobeiry on the road to the airport following an evacuation order.

Also on Tuesday, Lebanon’s health ministry said at least seven people had been killed by Israeli strikes in the country’s south, including the paramedic.

The number of health workers who have been killed since the start of the war has now reached 53.

Earlier, the Lebanese army cleared its last positions in the south, pulling out from Ain Ibel and Rmeish villages a day after an army checkpoint was hit and a soldier was killed by an Israeli air strike, according to the Lebanese Armed Forces. The Israeli military has not appeared to have commented yet on the reported death.

However, some residents of the villages refuse to leave.

In the predominantly Christian village of Rmeish, Father Najib Al Amil appeared in a video on social media, where he said: “There is grass and soil. We rely on God and will stay in our village. We either all die together and lose our land or live and our villages will live with us.”

Israel has announced its decision to control large swathes of land in southern Lebanon – up to the Litani River, about 30km from the border with Israel to create a buffer security zone.

Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said Israel would keep security control over the territory even after the end of the current war against Hezbollah. The plan has drawn criticism from the UN.

Hundreds of thousands of people have been forced to leave the south, but there are still tens of thousands who have refused to go.

Supply lines to the south have been cut by Israel targeting bridges and infrastructure, making villages in the south uninhabitable.

Katz said more than 600,000 displaced Lebanese residents would be “completely prohibited” from returning to that area until the safety of residents of northern Israel was guaranteed.

The Israeli defence minister also said all houses in villages near the border in Lebanon will be destroyed “according to the model of Rafah and Beit Hanoun in Gaza”.

In total, 1,268 people in Lebanon have been killed since the beginning of the attacks, the country’s health ministry said on Tuesday.

More than one million people have been displaced, the UN reported.

This is a critical time for Lebanon and the residents of the south. Many see Israel’s strategy in the south mimicking that of Gaza destruction, depopulation and occupation.

The government said earlier that this constitutes a violation of the country’s sovereignty.

South Lebanon previously lived under Israeli occupation for nearly 18 years, between 1982 and 2000.

Some Lebanese have lived through the displacement and loss of land generation after generation.

Many in Lebanon believe that Israel is more powerful than Hezbollah and capable of destroying the south with its advanced missiles and drones. At the same time, if Israel is to stay in the south, Hezbollah is more powerful on the ground and can engage in a guerrilla war to wear out the Israelis and prevent them from staying put.

In short, for the hundreds of thousands who have been forced out of their homes, this war is not ending anytime soon.

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 Assailants kill 73 at South Sudan Gold Mine

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Armed assailants killed 73 people at a gold mine in South Sudan, government officials said on Monday, in violence linked to a dispute over gold extraction.

The attacks occurred on Saturday near Jebel Iraq in Central Equatoria state in the south of the country, Vice President James Wani Igga said.

At least 25 others were injured and some fled the scene.

Authorities warned that the death toll could rise as the search for missing people continues.

It remained unclear which group was responsible for the attack.

The vice president said an official investigation would be launched and security measures at mining sites and commercial centres would be strengthened.

Charles Madut, the governor of Northern Bahr el Ghazal state in the country’s north-west, condemned the attack, describing the violence against innocent civilians as unacceptable and said that the perpetrators must be brought to justice. 

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