US imposes sanctions on leaders of Russia’s AO Kaspersky Lab | Technology News

Biden administration cites cybersecurity risks as reason for slapping sanctions on the Russia-based software company.

The United States has slapped sanctions on 12 people in senior leadership roles at Russia’s AO Kaspersky Lab, citing cybersecurity risks, a day after it announced plans to bar the sale of the company’s antivirus software over “national security concerns”.

The sanctions imposed on Friday target its most senior leaders, including Kaspersky’s long-serving chief operating officer, Andrei Tikhonov, and chief legal officer, Igor Chekunov, the US Department of the Treasury said.

“Today’s action against the leadership of Kaspersky Lab underscores our commitment to ensure the integrity of our cyber domain and to protect our citizens against malicious cyber threats,” Treasury Undersecretary Brian Nelson said in a statement.

The sanctions prohibit American companies or citizens from trading or conducting financial transactions with the sanctioned executives, and they freeze the executives’ assets held in the United States.

AO Kaspersky is one of two Russian units of Kaspersky Lab, which was placed on Washington’s trade-restriction list on Thursday for allegedly cooperating with Russian military intelligence to support Moscow’s cyber-intelligence goals.

‘Unfair competition’

Kaspersky said in a statement on Thursday that it will “pursue all legally available options to preserve its current operations and relationships”, adding that it “does not engage in activities which threaten US national security”.

The Kremlin has criticised the US decision to ban Kaspersky’s antivirus software as a way to remove competition for American companies.

“Kaspersky Lab is a company which is very, very competitive on the international level,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told journalists on Friday. “This is a favourite method of unfair competition from the part of the United States. They resort to such tactics every time.”

US Department of State spokesperson Matthew Miller, however, said the company was subject to the “jurisdiction, control or direction of the Russian government, which could exploit the privileged access to obtain sensitive data”.



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Balkan region hit by major power outage during heatwave | Climate News

Cause of blackout remains unknown, but early indications point to spike in electricity use due to severe heat enveloping the region.

A major electricity blackout has hit Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Albania and most of Croatia’s Adriatic coast, leaving people sweltering in the middle of a severe heatwave.

Temperatures in Montenegro’s capital, Podgorica, reached 38 degrees Celsius (100 degrees Fahrenheit) on Friday. Power distributor CEDIS said “network outages” cut power across most of the country.

Sasa Mujovic, Montenegro’s energy minister, told local media the electricity outage was regional in nature and linked to the ongoing heatwave.

“There has been a sudden increase in consumption because of high temperatures,” Mujovic said.

In Bosnia, there was no power in the capital, Sarajevo, and the cities of Banja Luka and Mostar. Local media reported blackouts across the country.

“The exact cause of the blackout is still unknown, but we presume it involves the overloading of the interconnector,” said Midheta Kurspahic, a spokesperson from the Bosnia and Herzegovina Electricity Company.

Traffic ground to a halt in the Croatian coastal city of Split after traffic lights failed, state TV HRT reported. Ambulance sirens rang out across the city.

Croatia’s HEP power utility said the outage in parts of the country was caused by “an international disturbance that affected several countries” without going into detail.

“The Croatian transmission system operator is conducting an analysis with the system operators of neighbouring countries to determine the cause,” HEP said. The utility said it put its production capacities into full operation to ensure “supply in the shortest possible time”.

Albania’s Top Channel TV said the capital, Tirana, and a number of towns also had no electricity.

Extreme heatwave the cause?

Operators said they started restoring supply by midafternoon on Friday.

Reporting from Sarajevo, Al Jazeera’s Aida Hadzimusic said the exact reason behind the regional blackout remains unknown.

“According to Croatian officials, it did not happen in Croatia, and they said it might have occurred somewhere between Greece and Albania. But that’s all preliminary information. They also said it might take up to six months before we know the official investigation results about the incident,” Hadzimusic said on Friday.

“Croatian officials also said it might be related to an extreme heatwave. Here in the Balkans, we have one of the hottest days today. It is almost 40C [104F] and it has affected thousands in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia and Albania. It is also affecting tourists in the Adriatic region since we are in the middle of the tourist season.”

Human-caused climate change is heating up the planet at an alarming rate, resulting in repeated intense heatwaves, according to the global scientific community. Extreme heat also raises reliance on energy-guzzling air conditioners.

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How has the medical gender gap been affecting women’s health? | Health

From overlooked symptoms to misdiagnosis, how has the medical gender gap been affecting women’s health for years?

Amid ongoing discourse and scrutiny of healthcare systems around the world, another crucial area that requires urgent attention is the gender health gap. This episode will look into the ways women’s bodies have been neglected in medical research for decades and confront the consequences this imposes while exploring the required solutions needed to address this disparity.

Presenter: Anelise Borges

Guests:
Amy Shah – Nutrition specialist
Kera Nyemb-Diop – Nutrition scientist
Sarah Honey – Hormonal health expert and nutritionist

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Niger revokes French nuclear group’s licence at major uranium mine | Mining News

Removal of Orano licence highlights tensions with France, with Russia said to be eyeing the major site.

Niger’s military government has revoked the operating licence of French nuclear fuel producer Orano at one of the world’s biggest uranium mines, as it continues to cut ties with former colonial power France.

State-owned Orano said on Thursday that it had been ordered out of the Imouraren mine in northern Niger which sits on an estimated 200,000 tonnes of the metal, used for nuclear power and weapons.

Reporting from Abuja, Al Jazeera’s Ahmed Idris said the Nigerien Ministry of Mining had warned it would revoke Orano’s licence if development of the mine had not started by June 19.

Orano insisted in a statement on Thursday that it had recently resumed “activities” at the site, reopening “infrastructures” to accommodate “construction teams”, its work in line with the wishes of the government, which came to power in a coup in July last year.

Mining was meant to have started at Imouraren in 2015 but development was frozen after the collapse in world uranium prices in the wake of the 2011 Japanese disaster when a tsunami hit the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant in the northeast of the country.

Russian interest

The Nigerien government’s decision to revoke Orano’s licence may have wider geopolitical stakes. As Al Jazeera’s Idris noted, relations between Niger and its former colonial ruler took a “nosedive” after last year’s coup.

Supporters of the military government protest outside the French airbase in Niamey to demand the departure of the French army from the country [File: AFP]

“The Nigerien government ordered the French ambassador to leave,” he said. “That was followed by the eviction of several hundreds of French soldiers based in Niger and the shutting down of all French bases in Niger.”

The government, which has increasingly turned to Russia and Iran for support, pledged to review foreign mining concessions in the country after it took power in July last year.

Now, said Idris, it seems it is targeting French businesses

“Russian companies have indicated interest in the uranium mining site in Imouraren and we’ve seen also a flurry of activities between Russian businesses and … Russian mercenaries in Niger, which could point to the direction where this new license …  may be headed to,” he added.

Orano has been present in Niger since 1971. A uranium mine at Arkokan has been closed since 2021 but Orano runs another uranium mine in the northern region of Arlit despite what it terms “logistical” difficulties.

Niger, which accounts for about a quarter of the natural uranium supplied to Europe, is landlocked and its border with Benin, its main sea access, is closed, hindering exports of its minerals. The government says this is for “security” reasons.

Orano said it was “prepared to keep open all channels of communication with the Niger authorities on this subject, while reserving the right to contest the decision to withdraw the mining licence in the national or international courts”.

The Niger government did not immediately comment.

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Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 847 | Russia-Ukraine war News

As the war enters its 847th day, these are the main developments.

Here is the situation on Friday, June 21, 2024.

Fighting

  • Three people were killed and four others injured, including a 14-year-old boy, after Russia attacked the village of Rozkishne, about 25km (16 miles) from the front line, in Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk region. Prosecutors said Russia used a Smerch system to launch cluster munitions.
  • Seven workers were injured and power supplies cut off to more than 218,000 people after Russia launched a barrage of missiles and drones across four regions of Ukraine causing “significant” damage to a thermal power plant, officials said.
  • Ukraine’s rights ombudsman Dmytro Lubinets said 10 Ukrainian children and their families had been returned after being forced to live in Russian-occupied parts of Ukraine’s Donetsk, Kherson and Zaporizhia regions.
  • Russian officials reported fires at two fuel depots in the Russian regions of Tambov and Adygea after Ukraine’s SBU security agency said it carried out drone attacks in the area.

Politics and diplomacy

  • A Russian military court jailed 27-year-old teacher Daniil Kliuka for 20 years after finding him guilty of “high treason” for sending money to Ukraine. Kliuka was arrested in February 2023 in the Lipetsk region, south of Moscow. He said the money was for relatives in Russian-occupied parts of the country.
  • Ksenia Karelina, a Russian-American woman, went on trial behind closed doors for alleged treason after authorities accused her of donating money to Ukraine. Karelina was arrested in January while visiting her parents in Yekaterinburg and could face a life sentence if found guilty.
  • The lawyer for Russian opposition politician Ilya Yashin, who was jailed in December 2022 for condemning Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine, told the AFP news agency that Yashin had been moved to a punishment cell. Yashin is serving an eight-and-a-half-year sentence.
  • Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte, a staunch supporter of Ukraine, was set to become the next secretary-general of NATO after Romania’s president withdrew his own candidacy

Weapons

  • South Korea said it might provide weapons to Ukraine – reversing a longstanding policy that bars it from selling weapons into active conflict zones – after Russia and North Korea announced a new mutual defence pact where each would provide military assistance to the other if they were the target of armed aggression.
  • Russian President Vladimir Putin, who made his first visit to Pyongyang in 24 years, said Seoul would be making a “big mistake” if it supplied arms to Ukraine, and said Moscow was prepared to send weapons to North Korea.
  • Romania said it would send one of its two operational Patriot air defence systems to Ukraine.
  • The White House said it would prioritise deliveries of anti-air missiles to Kyiv, sending the weapons to Ukraine ahead of other countries that have placed orders.
  • Pentagon spokesperson Air Force Major General Patrick Ryder said Ukraine was authorised to use US-supplied weapons to hit Russian forces anywhere across the border into Russia and not just in the area around the northeastern Kharkiv region. “The ability to be able to fire back when fired upon is really what this policy is focused on,” Ryder said.

 

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Putin says Russia may send weapons to North Korea | Vladimir Putin News

President Vladimir Putin said that Russia might supply weapons to North Korea in what he suggested would be a mirror response to the Western arming of Ukraine.

Putin was speaking to reporters in Vietnam on Thursday, a day after visiting nuclear-armed North Korea and signing a mutual defence agreement with its leader, Kim Jong Un.

Western countries have shunned North Korea because of its development of nuclear and ballistic missiles in defiance of United Nations sanctions, and view the growing ties between Moscow and Pyongyang with concern.

Putin threatened earlier this month that Russia might supply arms to Western adversaries because the West was providing high-precision weapons to Ukraine and giving it permission to fire them at targets inside Russia.

Russia’s President Vladimir Putin and Vietnam’s President To Lam attend a reception at the Hanoi Opera House in Hanoi, Vietnam [Reuters]

In his latest comments, he said North Korea could be one such recipient of Russian arms.

“I said, including in Pyongyang, that we then reserve the right to supply weapons to other regions of the world. Taking into account our agreements with [North Korea], I do not exclude this either,” he said.

The treaty signed by Putin and Kim on Wednesday commits each side to provide immediate military assistance to the other in the event of armed aggression against either one of them.

Putin said Moscow expected that its cooperation with North Korea would serve as a deterrent to the West, but that there was no need to use North Korean soldiers for the war in Ukraine.

“Regarding the possibility of somehow using each other’s capabilities in the conflict in Ukraine, we are not asking anyone for this, no one has offered us this, therefore there is no need,” he said.

The United States and Ukraine say North Korea has already provided Russia with significant quantities of artillery shells and ballistic missiles, which Moscow and Pyongyang have denied.

Putin said South Korea would be making “a big mistake” if it decided to supply arms to Ukraine, and that Moscow would respond to such a move in a way that would be painful for Seoul.

The remarks came after South Korean news agency Yonhap said Seoul would review the possibility of supplying weapons to Ukraine in light of the mutual defence pact signed by Putin and Kim a day earlier.

“In connections to sending lethal weapons to combat zones in Ukraine, this would be a very big mistake. I hope this will not happen,” Putin said. “If it will, then we will take the according decision that the current South Korean leadership will probably not like.”

South Korea has seen a major growth in international military sales in recent years. But it has a long-standing policy of barring weapons sales into active conflict zones, which it has stuck to despite US and Ukrainian calls to reconsider.

There’s ongoing debate on how strong of a security commitment the deal between Russia and North Korea entails. While some analysts see the agreement as a full restoration of the countries’ Cold War-era alliance, others say the deal seems more symbolic than substantial.

Ankit Panda, a senior analyst at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said the text appeared to be carefully worded so as to not imply automatic military invention.

But “the big picture here is that both sides are willing to put down on paper, and show the world, just how widely they intend to expand the scope of their cooperation”, he said.

In his remarks to reporters in Hanoi, Putin also expanded on comments he made earlier this month about nuclear weapons, saying Moscow was thinking about possible changes to its doctrine on their use.

Putin said this was being driven by changing views on nuclear use among Russia’s adversaries.

Russia’s existing doctrine states that it may use nuclear weapons in response to a nuclear attack or in the event of a conventional attack that poses an existential threat to the state.

Since the start of the war in Ukraine, some hawks among Russian military analysts have been advocating that Moscow should consider revising that stance and even delivering some kind of nuclear strike that might “sober up” its adversaries in the West.

Putin told reporters that Russia was thinking about changing its doctrine because its potential enemies were working on “new elements” related to lowering the threshold for nuclear use.

“In particular, explosive nuclear devices of extremely low power are being developed. And we know that there are ideas floating around in expert circles in the West that such means of destruction could be used,” he said.

Putin said there was “nothing particularly terrible” about this, but Russia needed to pay attention to it.

Since launching his full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, something he casts as a special military operation to secure Russia’s own security, Putin has frequently spoken about the size and potency of Russia’s nuclear arsenal and warned the West that it risks a global conflict if it wades deeper into the war.

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Beluga whales rescued in ‘high-risk’ operation | Conflict

NewsFeed

Video shows the ‘high-risk’ operation that saved two Beluga whales from Ukraine and transported them by plane to their new home in Spain.

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World leaders launch programme to boost vaccine production in Africa | Health News

Initiative announced in Paris will incentivise and offset start-up costs for vaccine manufacturing in the continent.

French President Emmanuel Macron has joined several African leaders to kick off a planned $1.1bn project to accelerate vaccine production in Africa, after the COVID-19 pandemic exposed inequalities in access to inoculation.

The launch of the African Vaccine Manufacturing Accelerator at an event in Paris on Thursday will provide financial incentives to boost local vaccine manufacturing in the continent.

African Union Commission chief Moussa Faki Mahamat welcomed the initiative, saying that it “could become a catalyst for promoting the pharmaceutical industry in Africa and fostering collaboration between member states”.

Africa imports “99 percent of its vaccines at an exorbitant cost”, he said.

Macron said the programme “will be an essential step towards a genuine African vaccine market”.

The European Union said the bloc and its member states will contribute $800m to the vaccine manufacturing scheme. It said the programme will offset start-up costs and ensure demand for vaccines made in Africa.

“Importantly, it will also support the sustainable growth of Africa’s manufacturing base and contribute to the African Union’s ambition to produce most vaccines required by African countries on the continent,” the EU said in a statement.

Many African leaders and advocacy groups say Africa was unfairly locked out of access to COVID-19 treatment tools, vaccines and testing equipment — which many richer countries bought up in huge quantities — after the pandemic was declared in 2020.

Helen Rees, Executive Director of Wits RHI at the University of the Witwatersrand, said the COVID pandemic revealed the lack of equity in access to vaccines.

“By the time we got really good access to vaccines here [in Africa], many countries had already experienced COVID outbreaks, many people had immunity from natural infection. The impact of the vaccines was much less here simply because we got them too late,” she told Al Jazeera.

“COVID started a dialogue about access to vaccines, medicines and diagnostics – everything you need to control outbreaks and to stop vaccine-preventable diseases. And that dialogue is centred around equity and how we increase access in the African region.”

The World Health Organization (WHO) and advocacy groups want to help Africa better prepare for the next pandemic, which many health experts say is inevitable.

“There is no doubt that the delays in reaching low-income countries and communities with vaccines cost lives,” WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said on Thursday. “We cannot allow the same thing to happen next time. And there will be a next time.”

When the coronavirus pandemic began, South Africa was the only country in the continent with any ability to produce vaccines, officials say, and Africa produced a tiny fraction of all vaccines worldwide.

WHO failed in its efforts to help countries agree to a “pandemic treaty” – to improve preparedness and response to pandemics – before its annual meeting last month.

The project was shelved largely due to disagreements over sharing information about pathogens that cause epidemics and the high-tech tools used to fight them.

Negotiators will resume work on the treaty in hopes of clinching a deal by the next WHO annual meeting in 2025.

Thursday’s event in Paris, which was attended by leaders Botswana, Rwanda, Senegal, Ghana, also aimed to give a funding boost to Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, a public-private partnership that helps get needed vaccines to developing countries around the world.

Gavi is seeking $9bn to bolster its vaccination programmes in poorer countries from 2026 to 2030.

Gavi Chief Executive Sania Nishtar said the group aims to move more quickly and offer more vaccines, including expanding a malaria vaccine roll-out, which began in Cameroon this year.

The global vaccine alliance wants to reach “the highest number of children, covering them against the widest number of diseases … in the shortest possible time”, Nishtar told the Reuters news agency on Wednesday ahead of the meeting.

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Who can fix Britain’s economy? | Elections

Main political parties have laid out their economic plans in election manifestos.

The economy is turning a corner.

That is the message delivered by British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak since he called the general elections for July 4.

But the latest data shows the worst might not be over for the United Kingdom yet. Economic growth flatlined in April and millions across the UK are still feeling the pinch of high food, energy and housing prices.

Whichever party wins the election will face the challenge of reviving growth while limiting a rise in government debt.

And the tariff battle between the European Union and China is picking up speed.

Plus, Elon Musk’s eye-popping pay.

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Romania to send Patriot system to Ukraine as Russia pounds its power grid | Russia-Ukraine war News

NATO member’s donation comes after Ukraine’s repeated calls on allies to boost its air defences.

NATO member Romania has announced it will send a Patriot missile system to Ukraine, which has repeatedly called on its allies to increase their air defence support as Russia attacks its energy infrastructure.

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said last week that Russia had destroyed half of Ukraine’s electricity-generating capacity and it needed seven Patriot missile systems and other aerial defences to shield Ukraine’s urban centres.

“Considering the significant deterioration of the security situation in Ukraine, … council members decided to donate a Patriot system to Ukraine in close coordination with allies,” Romania’s Supreme Council of National Defence said in a statement on Thursday.

Thanking Romania, Zelenskyy posted on X: “This crucial contribution will bolster our air shield and help us better protect our people and critical infrastructure from Russian air terror.”

Seeking to curb each other’s ability to fight in a war that is now in its third year, Russia resumed its aerial pounding of Ukraine’s power grid, and Kyiv’s forces again targeted Russian oil facilities with cross-border drone attacks, officials said on Thursday.

Russia fired nine missiles and launched 27 Shahed drones at energy facilities and critical infrastructure in central and eastern Ukraine, the Ukrainian air force said. Air defences intercepted all the drones and five cruise missiles, it added.

The attack hit power structures in the Donetsk, Dnipropetrovsk, Kyiv and Vinnytsia regions of Ukraine, causing “extensive damage”, according to the national power company Ukrenergo. Seven workers were injured, it said.

Ukrenergo announced extended blackouts across the country despite receiving electricity imports and help with emergency supplies from European countries.

Private energy company DTEK said one of its power plants was hit in the overnight attack but did not specify its location.

Three company employees were injured and the plant’s equipment was severely damaged, DTEK said on social media.

Attacks on Russia

In Russia, meanwhile, authorities in two regions reported fires at oil storage depots after drone attacks, two days after a Ukrainian strike started a huge blaze at another refinery.

The overnight drone attacks were carried out by Ukraine’s Security Service, known by its acronym SBU, a Kyiv security official told The Associated Press news agency.

The attacks triggered fires at the facilities, which processed and stored crude oil and its derivatives used to supply the Russian army, the official said.

The head of Russia’s Adygea region, Murat Kumpilov, said a Ukrainian drone attack sparked a fire at an oil depot in the town of Enem that was later extinguished.

The governor of the Tambov region, Maxim Yegorov, said an oil reservoir was set ablaze at an oil depot there.

Krasnodar Governor Veniamin Kondratyev said a drone hit a private house in the town of Slavyansk, killing a woman.

Russia’s Ministry of Defence said air defences downed 15 Ukrainian drones over three regions but did not mention any damage.

The ministry said it has shot down more than 26,000 Ukrainian drones since the start of the war.



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