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Middle East crisis live: Iran dismisses Trump claim of talks; von der Leyen says global energy situation is ‘critical’

If you’re just joining us, here’s a snapshot of the latest key developments in week four of the US-Israel war on Iran. At least six people have been injured in an Iranian missile attack in Tel Aviv on Tuesday, Israeli media is reporting. Iran earlier launched a fresh wave of missiles against Israel just hours after Donald Trump hailed “very good” talks to end the war, although Tehran denied any discussions took place. Trump’s claim came ahead of his 48-hour deadline on Iran to reopen the strait of Hormuz shipping lane or see the US “obliterate” its power plants. An Israeli strike south of Beirut killed two people on Tuesday, Lebanon’s health ministry said, while strikes on the capital’s southern suburbs continued throughout the night. Iran’s powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) called Trump’s words “psychological operations” that had no impact on Tehran’s fight, while parliamentary speaker Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf said it was “fake news … used to manipulate the financial and oil markets”. The US will continue striking Iran and the pause applies only to attacks on the country’s energy sites during what Donald Trump has called “productive” talks with Iranian leaders, Semafor is reporting, citing a US official. “The stop on attacks for five days is only on their energy sites,” the news site quoted the unnamed official as saying. European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen said it was time for negotiations with Iran, given the global energy situation was now “critical”. A Pakistani official and a second source told Reuters that direct talks on ending the war could be held in Islamabad this week. The Pakistani official said the US president, JD Vance, as well as Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, were expected to meet Iranian officials in Islamabad this week, after a call between Trump and Pakistan’s army chief, Asim Munir. Benjamin Netanyahu said he had spoken with Trump, who saw a chance of an agreement with Iran, but added that Israel would continue its strikes against Iran and Lebanon. Trump believed there was a possibility of “leveraging the mighty achievements obtained by the Israeli and the US military, in order to realise the goals of the war in a deal – a deal that will preserve our vital interests”, the Israeli prime minister claimed in a video statement released by his office. Israel said it had launched “wide-scale” strikes on Iran on Monday morning, while Tehran continued to fire missiles at the UAE and Saudi Arabia. The Israeli military also claimed to have hit struck the main security headquarters of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps as part of a “wave of strikes that was completed a short while ago in the heart of Tehran”. An Israeli strike also hit Beirut’s southern suburbs on Monday, Agence France-Presse quoted state media as saying, hours after the Israeli army issued an order for residents of the area to evacuate. An AFPTV live broadcast showed a cloud of smoke over the densely populated southern suburbs, which are considered a Hezbollah stronghold and have not been hit since Friday night. British destroyer HMS Dragon arrived in the eastern Mediterranean, three weeks after an Iranian-made drone hit the British base of RAF Akrotiri in Cyprus, the UK’s defence secretary said. The British government has faced criticism for the slowness to deploy a warship to the region, after moves by Greece and France to send extra naval support to Cyprus after the attack. Slovenia became the first EU member state to introduce fuel rationing in a bid to tackle disruptions caused by the US-Israeli war on Iran and Tehran’s retaliation on their allies in the Gulf. Saudi Arabia’s defence ministry said it had intercepted and destroyed at least five drones over the kingdom’s eastern region. The US embassy in Muscat lifted its shelter in place guidance for the city, but the guidance remains in place for the rest of Oman, the embassy said on X. It earlier issued a security alert for the whole country because of “ongoing activity”, without elaborating.

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Group of dogs that went missing in China go viral after walking 17km home

A group of seven dogs that went missing in China have gone viral after a video emerged of them walking more than 17km back home to their village, reuniting with owners who had been searching for them for days. The video, first posted online on 15 March, shows the dogs – including a golden retriever, labrador, German shepherd and Pekinese – walking along the highway in Changchun, the capital of China’s north-east Jilin province, where temperatures are dropping below 0C overnight. Leading the pack is a corgi, later identified in Chinese media as Dapang, or “big fatty”. The video went viral online and reportedly clocked up more than 230m views. One volunteer for a local stray dog rescue centre called Tong Tong said that she went door-knocking in nearby villages and posted missing dog flyers for the hounds after seeing the video, because she was concerned about their welfare in the sub-zero temperatures. “On the morning of 18 March, I woke up to find it was snowing in Changchun. I was especially worried about the seven dogs, afraid that they hadn’t eaten or drunk anything. So I borrowed a drone and set off to search for them,” Tong Tong said in a video posted by the rescue centre. On 19 March, it was reported that the dogs had found their way home. Three of the dogs, including Dapang, belong to a woman who lives in a village near Changchun. She told Chinese media that she had been looking for her dogs for four days, and was on the point of giving up, when Dapang wandered into the house on 18 March. The owner then searched in nearby villages and found the other dogs, who had been taken in by another villager. It is not clear why the dogs went missing but some netizens raised concerns that they could have been kidnapped for dog meat, which is still eaten as a delicacy in some parts of China. However, some theorised they could have also been stolen to be resold as pets or for other purposes, or have wandered off by themselves. On 21 March Jilin’s provincial culture and tourism bureau said that the dogs had wandered off of their own accord, attracted by the German shepherd who was on heat and has been known to disappear for a few days at a time. State media warned that the incident “reflects the shortcomings of online information dissemination – a mixture of true and false information, where subjective speculation is easily taken as fact and spread”. Some netizens joked that the dogs’ adventure could be turned into a film, or a real life version of Paw Patrol, a Canadian cartoon for children about a boy and his pack of rescue dogs. “Watching this made me want to cry. Dogs are humans’ friends forever,” wrote one Weibo user. Additional research by Yu-Chen Li

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Tuesday briefing: With the horror of conflict throughout the globe, how likely is world war three?

Good morning. The world is at war. From the trenches of eastern Ukraine to the missile-streaked skies of the Gulf, a growing proportion of humanity is living under the horror of conflict. For some observers, there are gnawing fears that the worst is yet to come. The apparent collapse of the rules-based international order, the irrelevance of institutions designed to uphold it, and the interconnectedness of the fighting have sparked warnings that we could be at the beginning of a third world war. Indeed, half of Britons polled in a recent YouGov survey thought world war three was likely in the next five to 10 years. On Monday, Donald Trump stepped back from deepening the US and Israel’s war with Iran, announcing that he would postpone military strikes on Iranian power plants for a five-day period after “very good and productive conversations” about the end to the fighting. Iran denied this version of events, claiming Trump had been scared off by their threats of attacks on water infrastructure in the Gulf. But, despite calmer stock markets and a sharp drop in the oil price, there is little sign that the fighting is near an end. For this morning’s First Edition, I asked the Guardian’s diplomatic editor, Patrick Wintour, about the credibility of the claims that we are sliding into a third major global conflict in a little over a century. First, the headlines. Five big stories Middle East | The Israeli military said it had launched a new wave of strikes on Tehran, after Donald Trump signalled a pause in US attacks against energy infrastructure after what he said were productive talks with Iran. UK Politics | Ministers are looking at providing support for household bills next winter, Keir Starmer said, as he suggested the energy price shock unleashed by the Iran conflict could continue for months to come. London | Security agencies are investigating whether a group linked to Iran is behind an arson attack on four ambulances belonging to a Jewish charity in north London. Climate crisis | More countries will face critical food insecurity if world heats up by 2C, analysis shows. New York | The pilot and co-pilot of an Air Canada Express regional jet have been killed after it collided with a fire truck while landing at New York’s LaGuardia airport. In depth: ‘The conflicts are inextricably linked’ It is a horrifying question to contemplate: are we in the foothills of a third world war? President Trump’s former Russia adviser, Fiona Hill, is among the loudest voices arguing that we are, says Patrick Wintour. She points to the scale and interconnectedness of current conflicts, imploring us all to recognise the severity of the situation. “So many parts of the globe are in conflict. The Middle East, Europe and China are all locked in conflict, not necessarily all military. Sometimes it’s diplomatic, sometimes it’s sort of a shadow war, sometimes it’s cyber. We are, I think, in a linked set of conflicts now,” says Patrick. “Take one example, which is illustrative. The Russians have offered to stop giving Iran intelligence or military help if, in return, the Americans force Ukraine into concessions about land. The conflicts are inextricably linked there.” A major driver of global instability, says Patrick, is the collapse of Pax Americana, the term given to the prolonged post-second world war period of reduced large-scale conflict maintained by US might. Under Trump, the US has given up on its position of maintaining a rules-based international order through alliances and organisations such as the UN, prompting a rapid global realignment. In many parts of the world, the consequences of the American pullback from this system – however flawed – have been brutal. “No one can quite understand what America is, due to the lack of stability and predictability which was the basis of Pax Americana. There was an alliance of nations, and they had a shared view of how the world should be led. Now that’s gone, and America acts alone,” says Patrick. “The US is also struggling to come to terms with the fact that when it used to say jump, Europe would jump. Now they are not because there is a battle going on inside Europe to try to become more independent from America.” For the global south, western hypocrisy – perceived or otherwise – is a major diplomatic issue when trying to build common positions to stop fighting, Patrick tells me. There is a sense that the west has not been able to apply the same moral standards to conflicts, such as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the conflict in Israel and Palestine. “For the global south, the argument will be that they’re expected to show undying support for Ukraine against Russia. Yet Europe is very silent about what Israel is doing in Palestine, which obviously the global south feels very strongly about. This bleeds into the kind of relationship the global south has with Europe,” he adds. *** A ‘multidimensional war scenario’ For Patrick, the threshold for a third major global war has not yet been met. An opportunistic Chinese invasion of Taiwan would change that. But that appears unlikely, at least in the short term, he says. “What everyone’s looking at is whether China sees an opportunity with America [being] so distracted, and goes for Taiwan. The Chinese insist that’s not the case, and they certainly won’t do it for a year or two, but it must be tempting for people in the Chinese government if they are intent on recapturing Taiwan. This would be a good moment to do it because America is massively overstretched and also led by an incredibly unpopular leader,” he says. “That would be how we got to a world war, but I don’t think that’s what China is actually going to do. I think we’re in this multidimensional war scenario, and we are going to be like that for quite a long time.” *** Military readiness v reality I end by asking Patrick whether the UK would even be ready for such a conflict. At Davos earlier this year, the Canadian prime minister, Mark Carney, urged middle powers to form alliances that could operate together in a world where US and China are increasingly in competition, warning: “If we’re not at the table, we’re on the menu.” It depends on what kind of war we are talking about, says Patrick. “We are moving very slowly to try to re-establish our military strength. Reputationally, we are still strong. We still have a very good military officer class. But the actual weaponry and the number of people to fight are limited. “In Europe, there has been a belief that we could spend more on welfare and less on defence. And now that’s got to change, I’m afraid. That’s going to be very painful, but I think it’s going to be a requirement. And then it is also going to require the UK to think more about its relations with Europe. You don’t have to reverse Brexit, but you’re going to have to recognise that Europe is our future and not America.” What else we’ve been reading This week’s pet I’ll never forget – a series that never disappoints – is Harriet the hedgehog, who took to living in Roger Leitch’s airing cupboard. Martin Belam Chinamaxxing (pictured above) has been one of the biggest social media trends of the last year, with influencers celebrating Chinese customs by drinking hot water, wearing slippers around the house, using chopsticks and eating Chinese food. Read Isabella Lee’s piece about what she hopes remains from the social media fad. Patrick Fotohane Darkroom is a space for the children of Mardin – a Turkish city that borders Syria and Iraq – to learn how to shoot, develop and print their own analogue photographs, giving them the chance to tell their stories themselves, Flora Medina reports for i-D magazine. Martin While immigration enforcement raids have made international headlines in the US, a recent crackdown in the UK has gone largely unnoticed. Sammy Gecsoyler investigates the huge spike in immigration raids on businesses since Labour came to power. Patrick Hartlepool hit the headlines for saying it had too many, but here Anne Karpf argues, with the aid of a lovely anecdote about children dancing, that memorial benches keep the dead part of the flow of everyday life. Martin Sport Cricket | The England Wales Cricket Board has said it will stand by director of cricket Rob Key and multi-format head coach Brendon McCullum despite the men’s team’s humiliating Ashes tour. Football | Ben White has been recalled by Thomas Tuchel for England men’s friendlies against Uruguay and Japan, ending his partly self-imposed exile. Tuchel also called up Harvey Barnes, whom Scotland had been hoping to lure for their World Cup squad. Football | Uefa has rejected requests from English clubs to increase the size of Champions League squads to 28 next season, after a backlash led by their counterparts in Spain. The front pages “Trump stalls strikes amid claims of ‘productive’ talks with Tehran” is the Guardian splash. “Trump: I’ll run the Strait with ayatollah” is top story at the Telegraph, the FT has “Trump touts diplomatic end to war” and the Mirror says “It’s not over”. The Mail headlines on “Trump blinks first” and the Times runs “Trump: I’d bet on a deal with Iran”. The i Paper splashes on “UK investigates possible Iran link to arson attacks on Jewish ambulances”, while the Sun says “Barmy Beeb bans Bob”, in reference to Bob Monkhouse. Today in Focus Israel’s second front: on the ground in Lebanon The conflict in the Middle East is being fought from the air – except in southern Lebanon where Israel and Hezbollah are fighting a bitter ground war. Will Christou reports. Cartoon of the day | Pete Songi The Upside A bit of good news to remind you that the world’s not all bad Deep in Cambodia’s limestone caves, scientists have revealed a hidden world of life – including species never seen before. Surveying more than 60 caves across 10 hills in Battambang, a team led by international wildlife conservation charity Fauna & Flora found “a vast array of wildlife” thriving in karst landscapes of sinkholes, springs and caverns. Among the discoveries: a “spectacular new species of pit viper” (pictured above) and multiple new geckos, including a “night wanderer” spotted only in this habitat. The findings suggest many more species may yet be uncovered. In one of the planet’s most fragile ecosystems, the work is a reminder that there are still extraordinary new discoveries waiting in the dark. Sign up here for a weekly roundup of The Upside, sent to you every Sunday Bored at work? And finally, the Guardian’s puzzles are here to keep you entertained throughout the day. Until tomorrow. Quick crossword Cryptic crossword Wordiply

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Trump claims ‘productive’ talks with Iran but Tehran denies contact

Donald Trump has claimed there have been talks between the US and Iran over the past day in which the two sides had “major points of agreement”, appearing to avert a potentially severe escalation of the conflict. Tehran has denied the claim, in which Trump also speculated that a deal could soon be done to end the war. Iran’s foreign ministry spokesperson said no talks had been held with the US since the bombing campaign began 24 days ago. Trump’s threat at the weekend to “hit and obliterate” Iran’s power stations and energy infrastructure if Tehran did not allow shipping to move freely through the strait of Hormuz, and Iran’s threat to destroy infrastructure across the Middle East in retaliation, had raised fears of a deepening conflict and global economic crisis. In a flurry of presidential announcements on Monday, Trump first posted on social media that he had extended his deadline by five days, saying the US and Iran had held “very good and productive conversations” in recent days, then told reporters in Palm Beach, Florida, that his Middle East envoy, Steve Witkoff, and close aide and son-in-law Jared Kushner had held “very, very strong talks” with the Iranians a day earlier. Later on Monday, Trump played up the chances of a deal, saying: “We’re giving it five days and then we’re going to see where that takes us. And I would say at the end of this period, I think it could very well end up being a very good deal for everybody.” A European official said that while there had been no direct negotiations between the two nations, Egypt, Pakistan and Gulf states were relaying messages. A Pakistani official and a second source told Reuters that direct talks on ending the war could be held in Islamabad this week. The Pakistani official said the US president, JD Vance, as well as Witkoff and Kushner, were expected to meet Iranian officials in Islamabad this week, after a call between Trump and Pakistan’s army chief, Asim Munir. The White House confirmed Trump’s call with Munir. When asked about a possible visit by Witkoff and Kushner to Islamabad, White House spokesperson Karoline Leavitt said: “These are sensitive diplomatic discussions and the US will not negotiate through the press. This is a fluid situation, and speculation about meetings should not be deemed as final until they are formally announced by the White House.” Oman, Turkey, Egypt and Pakistan have all been reported to have been involved in efforts to broker an end to hostilities in recent days, but it is unclear how substantial or productive such contacts have been. Oman’s foreign minister, Badr bin Hamad Al Busaidi, said on Monday that Oman was working hard to secure safe passage through the strait of Hormuz. Keir Starmer told a parliamentary committee on Monday that the UK was aware discussions were happening. Starmer and Trump talked late on Sunday by telephone, according to Downing Street. The EU chief, Ursula von der Leyen, called for an immediate end to hostilities, describing a “critical” situation for energy supply chains globally. “We all feel the knock-on effects on gas and oil prices on our businesses and our societies,” von der Leyen said on Tuesday, on a visit to Australia. “It is of utmost importance that we come to a solution that is negotiated, and this puts an end to the hostilities that we see in the Middle East,” she added. In reaction to the intensifying energy crisis, Japan said it will release another part of its strategic oil reserves from Thursday, and will tap into joint stockpiles held by producing nations in the country by the end of the month. Early on Tuesday, state-run Iranian media reported another round of missiles fired at Israel, and rescue services in Israel showed images of a damaged building in the north but reported no casualties. Lebanese state media said Israel carried out seven air raids on south Beirut overnight. In all his comments, Trump declined to say with whom the US was speaking in Iran. “We’re dealing with the man who, I believe, is the most respected and the ‘leader’. It’s a little tough – we’ve wiped out everybody,” Trump said, stating only that the US had not talked to current supreme leader, Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei. A senior Iranian official told Reuters the US had requested a meeting with Iran’s parliament speaker, Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf, but that the supreme national security council had yet to decide on any proposed talks and Iran had yet to respond. Qalibaf himself described “fake news … used to manipulate the financial and oil markets”. The Fars news agency, which is linked to the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), had earlier also denied any talks, saying there were neither direct nor indirect communications with the US. Iran’s IRGC said they were launching fresh attacks on US targets, and described Trump’s words as “psychological operations” that were “worn out” and having no impact on Tehran’s fight. The Iranian state news agency Irna quoted a foreign ministry spokesperson as saying “friendly countries” had sent messages indicating that the US wanted talks to end the war but none had taken place. Iran has been defiant in the face of Trump’s threats and more than three weeks of the joint US-Israeli offensive. In response to Sunday’s ultimatum, Tehran threatened to target power plants supplying US bases across the Middle East, vital desalination facilities in Gulf countries, and to intensify strikes on Israel. More than 2,000 people have been killed in the war that the US and Israel launched on 28 February, the majority of them in Iran. In Lebanon, authorities said 1,039 had been killed in Israel’s offensive against Hezbollah, with 2,876 others wounded. Additional reporting by Saeed Shah in Islamabad

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Irish metals refinery is in supply chain that feeds Russian war machine, records suggest

A leading Irish metals refinery is part of an international aluminium supply chain that appears to conclude with shipments to arms producers feeding the Kremlin’s war machine in Ukraine, leaked records and public data suggests. Trading records show that shipments to Russian smelters from Aughinish Alumina, which is located on the Shannon estuary in the west of Ireland and has been owned by the Russian aluminium group Rusal since 2006, have increased sharply since the invasion of Ukraine in 2022. Ireland exported $243m (£180m) of alumina to Russia in 2022, according to the Observatory of Economic Complexity (OEC), a data analytics website,and this rose by 55% to $376m in 2024. Aughinish is Ireland’s only producer of alumina and the largest producer of the main raw material for making aluminium in Europe, according to a 2021 report by the accounting group KPMG. The rising trade with Russia does not appear to breach sanctions law and can be interrogated via publicly available shipping records. However, analysis of further data – leaked to the Russian investigative website iStories and shared with international media groups including the Guardian, the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) and the Irish Times – raises fresh questions about the EU’s ability to prevent Russian arms manufacturers from utilising the trading bloc’s raw materials. The records also appear to misalign with previous reassurance from the Irish government. In 2022, Ireland’s then public expenditure minister of state, Patrick O’Donovan, told the country’s parliament that the plant “is not in any way connected to a war machine”. Having been presented with findings from the new data, Aughinish representatives did not comment when asked by the Guardian and the OCCRP how the facility ensured products had not contributed to Russian assaults on Ukraine. O’Donovan did not comment. Prof Aristides Matopoulos, a defence supply chains specialist from Cranfield University, said: “Defence supply chains are inherently multi-tier and cross-border, which creates structural gaps that can render sanctions architecture not fully fit for purpose. “When you trace the supply chain – from bauxite mine to alumina refinery, to smelter, to trading intermediary, and ultimately to a weapons producer – it becomes clear that every node in the chain could appear fully compliant while still enabling strategic materials to reach sanctioned end users. This is because end-use tracing of commodities such as alumina across opaque supply chains, while technically possible, remains highly challenging in practice.” Rusal’s shipments of alumina between its sites in Ireland and Russia are legal as the EU has not placed sanctions on the commodity – even though the resultant aluminium has wide military uses and about a quarter of Rusal’s shares are owned indirectly by the under-sanctions Russian metals tycoon Oleg Deripaska. The oligarch has personally been placed under sanctions by the UK, the EU and the US, but in 2019 the US lifted embargos imposed on Rusal after Deripaska relinquished his controlling interest in the aluminium group’s largest shareholder, EN+. Rusal also avoided sanctions in the EU and the UK after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. A spokesperson for Aughinish said: “We operate in strict compliance with all applicable EU laws, including sanctions, export control measures and trade regulations. We uphold a strong commitment to lawful and responsible business practices and continuously monitor regulatory developments to ensure the highest standards of compliance. The company implemented a robust sanctions compliance and due diligence framework covering its entire supply chain.” The Aughinish refinery was built in the 1970s by the aluminium giant Alcan as Ireland prepared to join what was then the European Economic Community (EEC). The facility was acquired by the commodity trader Glencore, which then joined forces with the Russian aluminium groups Rusal and SUAL in 2006 to create the “world’s biggest aluminium producer”. The plant is one of the largest employers in the west of Ireland, and was reported as employing about 900 staff and supplying about 30% of the EU’s alumina, for use in everything from medical devices to mobile phones, according to the KPMG report. Rusal’s refinery in Aughinish extracts aluminium oxide – otherwise known as alumina – from the sedimentary rock bauxite. The alumina is then shipped to several Russian sister companies in the wider Rusal group, including a huge smelter at Krasnoyarsk, the second largest city in Siberia, where it is converted into aluminium. Analysis of public records suggests that almost 500,000 tonnes of alumina, worth about $200m, was exported from Aughinish to Krasnoyarsk in 2024, which accounted for around two-thirds of the aluminium oxide imported into Russia by that Rusal smelter that year. The quantities of Irish alumina shipped appear to satisfy about 25% of the Siberian facility’s annual aluminium output of 1m tonnes. During the same period, aluminium produced at Krasnoyarsk was sold through Rusal’s in-house trading firm, OK Rusal TD, to a third-party trading company called Aluminium Sales Company (ASK), the leaked records suggest, with ASK seeming to have paid Rusal about $300m in 2024. The data also sets out apparent connections between ASK and Rusal including overlaps in property and financing: ASK shares addresses with Rusal branches in Russian cities such as Moscow, Volgograd and Bratsk, while it also looks to have received loans from the aluminium group. Meanwhile, ASK customers include dozens of under-sanctions arms companies that have produced missiles, explosives and long-range bombers that have been used in attacks on Ukraine. For example, during 2024, ASK’s largest client appeared to be the Sverdlov plant in the Russian town of Dzerzhinsk, about 250 miles to the east of Moscow, which manufactures missile casings and explosives and was said by Ukrainian forces to have been targeted by its forces in October. The Sverdlov plant is Russia’s only significant maker of the high explosives RDX and HMX, according to a Ukrainian intelligence official and the Council of the European Union, which placed the company under sanctions in 2023. In total, companies that manufacture weapons paid ASK $337m for aluminium under Russian state defence contracts from February 2022 and April 2025, according to the leaked documents. Spokespeople for ASK, Rusal, EN+ and Deripaska did not respond to invitations to comment on the analysis of the data when approached by the Guardian – including questions on whether the use of an intermediary trading company was a method of avoiding sanctions. Rusal’s Aughinish’s spokesperson said: “We particularly underline the fact that both alumina and aluminium are an internationally recognised basic commodity, the very nature of which means they serve broad general purpose societal needs and vital for countless civilian industries. “We believe, that any attempt to state the contrary is flawed and seeks to create a biased narrative. Especially singling out one company for criticism in this manner discredits legitimate and vital business operations supporting thousands of workers, contractors and families, bringing economic value.” A spokesperson for Ireland’s department of enterprise, tourism and employment said: “The general principle of EU sanctions on Russia is that their imposition does not have a greater impact on a European member state than on Russia itself. The Aughinish plant is not subject to sanctions by the EU, nor has it been proposed by the EU for sanctions. Alumina is also not a sanctioned good therefore its export to other countries, including Russia, is not restricted. The Irish authorities are committed to ensuring all sanctions are observed once they take force. “Ireland remains unequivocal in its continuing support for Ukraine in light of Russia’s unjustified invasion.”

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Denmark election: far right has slowed under Frederiksen – but at what cost?

Mayasa Mandia, a recent graduate living in the small Danish town of Kokkedal, will be voting for the left in Tuesday’s general election – but it won’t be for Mette Frederiksen’s Social Democrats. The 23-year-old, a practising Muslim, says that under Frederiksen’s government far-right commentary has become normalised in the Danish mainstream. She has seen this, she says, at her own university, where there were discussions about banning prayers. “There are more important issues to talk about than the skin tone of someone or whether or not they wear a scarf on their head and whether that scarf is reflective of our Danish values or not,” said Mandia. But, under Frederiksen’s centrist coalition, anti-immigrant rhetoric and Islamophobia have become increasingly commonplace in Danish politics, she feels. On Tuesday, in an election expected to give Frederiksen a third term as prime minister, Mandia will be giving her vote to one of the leftwing parties hoping to form a “red bloc” coalition with the Social Democrats. Unusually in a continent where far-right forces are making unprecedented inroads, polling for the anti-immigration Danish People’s party (DPP) is relatively low – the party is forecast to garner about 7.5% of the vote, with smaller parties of a similar bent predicted to pick up a further 9%. Many feel that is not because their ideas have been vanquished, but because they have been co-opted by Frederiksen’s centre-left. The prime minister’s hardline immigration policies – she came into government in 2019 saying she wanted to cut asylum seeker numbers to zero – have attracted global attention and inspired similar approaches across Europe, including in Sweden and, more recently, the UK. Domestically they have been stalling the growth of the far right, while at the same time pulling rightwing rhetoric and extremist ideas leftward into the mainstream, say analysts. When, on the campaign trail, Frederiksen said she did not want Denmark to receive any refugees from Iran, which is under attack from the US and Israel, Mandia felt the prime minister was courting those rightwing voters. The difference in her approach to those fleeing war from Ukraine, she said, was “hypocritical” – and telling. “We should be open to give asylum to them the same way we open to give asylum to western people affected by war,” she said. Kokkedal, which lies north of Copenhagen in Zealand, became a DPP flashpoint back in 2012 after news spread of a decision by a housing association to not have a Christmas tree but spend money on a celebration for Eid. The association was accused of waging a “war on Christmas”. Flyering outside a branch of Lidl on Monday afternoon, close to the Egedalsvænge housing estate, DPP candidate Mikkel Hartwich said the row had contributed to his attraction to the party. “We have to make sure that Denmark is still for the Danish guys and girls, and if you have to come to Denmark you have to contribute,” he said, holding a basket of mini Haribo sweets. “You have to be careful about what we are and you have to help with a lot of stuff.” Michala Clante Bendixen, who runs the refugee advisory group Refugees Welcome Denmark and is Denmark’s country coordinator for the European Commission’s Migrant Integration Hub, said: “What we have seen is the Social Democrats copying the nationalist parties, especially the Danish People’s party (DPP), and every time they try to meet them, the nationalist parties will just take it one step further, then accuse the Social Democrats of not doing anything.” The overall effect, she said, had pushed the whole of the political spectrum right on the issue of immigration. “What used to be extreme ideas that were not taken seriously by the major parties are now mainstream ideas in Denmark. So they have pushed the whole scene to the right.” This was also reflected in polling, she said. “The general population in Denmark used to be very open-minded and tolerant compared to other countries in Europe, but now surveys show we have changed.” Rune Stubager, a political science professor at Aarhus University, said that with the exception of 2015, when they exceeded 20%, “immigration-sceptic” parties had not been able to grow beyond about 15% of the overall vote. “Had the mainstream parties not moved, I would have expected the immigration-sceptic parties to grow like we’ve seen in other countries where mainstream parties have not tightened immigration regulation to the same extent,” he added. “So, in that sense, they have not suppressed the immigration-sceptic parties, but they have prevented them from growing beyond a certain segment of the electorate.” Frederiksen has been widely predicted to continue as prime minister after the election, but the last Verian poll, published on Monday, predicted that neither the red nor the blue bloc would be able to form a majority without the Moderates, putting the Moderates leader, Lars Løkke Rasmussen, in the position of kingmaker. Pensioner Mohammad Iftikhar, 71, said he planned to vote for the Social Democrats. He liked Frederiksen, he said, particularly for her handling of the Greenland crisis when Donald Trump threatened to acquire the Arctic island. The former university worker, who is from Pakistan and used to live in the UK, said it was no good Britain trying to copy Denmark’s immigration policies because it is so much bigger. “This is a small country,” he says. “They have eyes on everything. They can help everyone. Not in England.” His wife, Hanne Iftikhar, 62, who works for the union 3F, said the current coalition had done well, but that Frederiksen had gone “a little too far” on immigration.

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Japan to begin biggest-ever oil release from national reserves as Middle East energy crisis bites

Japan will begin the biggest-ever release of oil from its strategic reserves this week, the prime minister, Sanae Takaichi, has said, as the country braces for possible shortages caused by the US-Israel war on Iran. The government last week approved the release of 15 days’ worth of private-sector reserves, amid concern that the conflict in the Middle East will continue to hinder the flow of tanker traffic along the strait of Hormuz. The release of state-owned reserves will begin on Thursday, Takaichi said in a post on X. Japan, a resource-poor country with a huge economy, imports more than 90% of its crude oil from the Middle East, making it particularly vulnerable to the closure of the waterway. Takaichi, who last week resisted calls by Donald Trump to send Japanese maritime self-defence forces to the region, said peace and stability in the Middle East were “extremely important for Japan and the international community”. She added that Tokyo would continue to “make all necessary diplomatic efforts in close coordination with related countries”. Takaichi told Trump during their summit in Washington that Japan’s postwar constitution prevented her from dispatching the country’s naval forces to the strait of Hormuz. Altogether, about 80m barrels of stockpiled oil – equivalent to 45 days of domestic demand – is being provided to domestic refiners. That is 1.8 times the quantity made available after an earthquake and tsunami badly damaged the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in March 2011, leading to the temporary closure of all of Japan’s atomic plants. As of the end of last year, Japan held reserves of about 470m barrels of oil, equivalent to 254 days of domestic consumption. The government last week introduced subsidies for fuel products to cap gasoline prices at about ¥170 ($1.10) per litre. The move came after the average retail price of gasoline rose to a record ¥190.8 per litre. The initial subsidy will be reviewed every week based on oil prices. Concern that the strait of Hormuz could remain closed for an extended period has triggered anxiety among some Japanese consumers over the availability of toilet paper and other household essentials. This week, the trade and industry ministry advised consumers not to hoard toilet roll, after social media posts triggered fears that its price and supply could be negatively affected by disruption to oil imports. In a post on X, the ministry urged shoppers to make “rational decisions about toilet paper purchases based on accurate information”, in an attempt to head off a repeat of serious shortages experienced during the early days of the Covid-19 pandemic and during the Middle East “oil shock” in 1973, which ushered in an era of low growth for Japan’s previously booming economy. About 97% of toilet paper sold in Japan is manufactured domestically using recycled paper and pulp, the Japan Household Paper Industry Association said, adding that the industry was not dependent on materials from the Middle East. The association, which represents 41 firms that make toilet paper and other household sanitary paper products, said in a statement there were “no problems with the procurement, manufacturing and supply of raw materials”, adding that its members would be able to increase output if necessary. That hasn’t prevented alarmist posts on social media, however. One X user wrote: “We’d better buy toilet paper before the price skyrockets due to the surge in oil prices, or we’re in big trouble.” Another speculated that groundless fears meant a toilet paper shortage could become a self-fulfilling prophecy: “If people panic and buy in bulk thinking supplies will run out, the shelves will temporarily be empty.” Other posts claimed their local stores had run out of toilet paper, while others showed people stockpiling essentials such as cat food, toiletries and even beer. The Mainichi Shimbun quoted the paper association’s head, Morio Ishizuka, as saying: “Please buy only the usual amount you need. We ask everyone to share information calmly so as not to fuel anxiety.”

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Ukraine war briefing: Russia setting up long-range drone bases in Belarus, Zelenskyy says

Russia plans to open four control stations for long-range attack drones in Belarus, Zelenskyy said on Monday, adding: “There will be responses to this. And they will be felt.” Zelenskyy has in recent months repeatedly warned about Belarus becoming more involved in Russia’s war, and added in comments on X he had instructed the service’s chief to inform Kyiv’s partners about these plans. Speaking later in his nightly video address, the president said that earlier in the war, Belarusian assistance had for a time intensified the damage inflicted by Russian attacks until Ukraine took action against it. “We now have information from our intelligence that Russia intends to continue using the territory of Belarus and temporarily occupied territory of Ukraine to build ground control stations for long-range drones,” he said. Belarus’s foreign ministry did not immediately reply to a request for comment outside business hours. Russian missile and drone strikes triggered air raid alerts across Ukraine on Tuesday, with attacks killing two people in Poltava and a third in Zaporizhzhia, regional military administrations said. Air raid alerts were issued across Ukraine except for Odesa region, according to regional authorities. “As a result of the enemy attack on Poltava community, damage was recorded to residential buildings and a hotel. Fires broke out,” Vitali Dyakivnych, head of the Poltava regional military administration, posted on Telegram. “Unfortunately, two people died and seven were wounded as a result of the attack,” he said, later revising the number of wounded to 11. Farther south, Russia carried out a “massive combined missile-drone strike” in Zaporizhzhia, according to Ivan Fedorov, head of the regional military administration. One person died and five were wounded, he said. Six apartment buildings and two private houses, a shop, non-residential buildings, and an industrial infrastructure facility were damaged, he added. The European Union executive has demanded clarity from Hungary after reports that its foreign minister had passed sensitive information about EU negotiations to Russia. On Saturday, the Washington Post quoted serving or former European security officials as saying Péter Szijjártó had regularly called his Russian counterpart, Sergei Lavrov, during breaks in EU meetings to give “direct reports on what was discussed” and suggest possible courses of action. On Monday, the European Commission’s spokesperson, Anitta Hipper, said: “[A] relationship of trust between member states, and between them and the institution, is fundamental for the work of the EU. We expect the Hungarian government to provide the clarifications.” The Hungarian prime minister, Viktor Orbán, is one of the few EU leaders to maintain close ties with Russia amid the war in Ukraine. The US media outlet’s report has raised hackles in Brussels, where many officials remain furious that Hungary continued to block a loan of €90bn ($104bn) to Ukraine at an EU leaders’ gathering last week. Szijjártó has described the report as “fake news” and “senseless conspiracy theories”. But Hungary’s minister for European affairs, János Bóka, said: “It is perfectly normal for the Hungarian foreign minister to speak by telephone with his Russian counterpart.” Germany described the allegations as “very serious”. “Discussions within the EU, including among EU foreign ministers, are confidential,” a German foreign ministry spokesperson said. “We will not tolerate any violation of them,” he added. Ukraine’s military intelligence has “irrefutable” evidence that Russia continues to provide intelligence to Iran, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on Monday, saying such activity could only prolong the war in the Middle East. “Russia is using its own signals intelligence and electronic intelligence capabilities, as well as part of the data obtained through cooperation with partners in the Middle East,” he said on X. Speaking later in his nightly video address, Zelenskyy said there was “growing evidence” of continued Russian efforts to funnel intelligence to Iran. “This is clearly destructive activity and must be stopped as it only leads to further destabilisation. All responsible states have an interest in ensuring security and preventing bigger problem,” he said. “Markets are already reacting negatively and this is significantly complicating the fuel situation in many countries. By helping the Iranian regime survive and strike more accurately, Russia is effectively prolonging the war.” The Kremlin last week dismissed a Wall Street Journal report that Russia was sharing satellite imagery and improved drone technology with Iran as “fake news”. Senior US officials travelled to Kyiv this week for a meeting of the US-Ukraine Reconstruction Investment Fund, with both sides hoping to move forward soon with a first investment project, US and Ukrainian officials said. The fund, established as part of a minerals deal signed in April, began operations in December. Focused on investments in critical minerals and other strategic sectors, it is expected to reach $200m by the end of the year. Ukrainian officials hope to announce three initial investment projects this year. “We are working hard to bring the first deal to the investment committee for approval. For the moment we think that it is on track to happen,” a Ukrainian official said. The official said the fund aimed to fund investments in three priority areas – critical minerals, hydrocarbon extraction and dual-use technologies – this year. The UN undersecretary-general, Rosemary DiCarlo, told the security council on Monday that an estimated 15,364 civilians, including 775 children, had been killed in Ukraine since the full-scale Russian invasion in February 2022. The US undersecretary of state, Christopher Landau, told the council that the US remained committed to working with Russia and Ukraine to end the war. “We reiterate our call on both sides to negotiate in good faith, in a spirit of flexibility, compromises and a duty to protect and preserve the lives of their citizens,” Landau said. US and Ukrainian delegations recently held two days of bilateral talks in Miami, Florida, on finding ways to end the four-year war, although the war in Iran has overshadowed those efforts.