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Blasts rock Damascus during Macron visit

Bombs exploded near the hotel where Emmanuel Macron was staying in Syria on Tuesday, a security source said, but the French president did not hear ​the explosions, the Elysee said, and he met Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa ​soon afterwards. The blasts underscore the major security challenges in Syria, ⁠where Macron is the first head of state of a European Union country to ​visit since rebels led by Sharaa toppled Bashar al-Assad in 2024. A Reuters ​witness heard explosions in the vicinity and saw smoke rising. Roads were sealed off, and security measures were implemented, the security source said. The Elysee said the blasts were not audible ​from the presidential motorcade, and a Reuters journalist with the press group ​accompanying Macron did not hear the blast or see any commotion during the French president's morning ‌events. ⁠State television later reported that Macron and Sharaa had met at the Syrian Presidential Palace. Read: Turkish foreign minister says Anka...
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Indonesia to buy BrahMos missiles, Indian govt official says

India will supply BrahMos supersonic ​cruise missiles and Astra air-to-air missiles to Indonesia, an Indian government official said on Tuesday, as ‌Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi started a two-day visit to Jakarta. Indian sources earlier told Reuters that the deal, worth around $630 million, would likely be signed during Modi's visit. Indonesia would be the third country to sign an agreement to buy the missiles, which are ​manufactured by BrahMos Aerospace Private Limited. The deal would mark a major expansion of India's defence exports and ​deepen strategic ties with Southeast Asia's largest economy at a time of growing competition ⁠with China for influence in the Indo-Pacific. BrahMos missiles, jointly developed by India and Russia, are among the world's ​fastest cruise missiles and can be launched from land, sea, and air platforms. The Astra beyond-visual-range air-to-air missiles can be ​integrated on Russian-made Sukhoi fighter jets in the Indon...

Clashes escalate at Sri Lanka prison to leave 25 dead, many more injured

Twenty-five people were killed and about 100 injured as security officials struggled to contain two days of ‌clashes between rival groups of inmates at a prison in Sri Lanka, authorities said on Monday, marking the deadliest such violence in years. The clashes began on Sunday between more permanent, convicted prisoners and those under temporary detention at the prison in the coastal town of Negombo, about ​35 kilometres north of the commercial capital city of Colombo, authorities said. The prison holds about 2,400 inmates, according ​to data from the Department of Prisons. Two prisoners died on Sunday and 38 inmates were ⁠injured. But a second, more deadly round of clashes erupted on Monday morning, leaving 23 others, including six prison officials, ​dead. Police riot control squads armed with batons and police special forces were rushed to the prison to control the riot. A ​police bus carried the injured inmates, some of them sprawled on its floor, to hospital. Areas...

Hamas dissolves Gaza governing body, clearing way for technocratic committee

The Palestinian movement Hamas announced on Monday that it had dissolved its governing body in the Gaza Strip after nearly 20 years in power, paving the way for a technocratic committee to administer the territory. The move marked a significant political shift by Hamas, which has administered Gaza since it gained control from rival Palestinian movement Fatah in 2007. Since a ceasefire took effect in Gaza last October between Hamas and Israel, the group has repeatedly asserted it is prepared to step aside from day-to-day governance, but the issue of its disarmament remains unresolved due to repeated Israeli ceasefire violations. "The movement has decided to dissolve the Gaza government committee and to appoint a nationally accepted figure to oversee the committee's work until the National Committee for the Administration of Gaza formally assumes its responsibilities," a Hamas official told AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity as he was not authorised to talk publ...

Israeli army demolishes homes in southern Lebanon despite framework deal

The Israeli army demolished several homes on Monday in the southern Lebanese town of Aitaroun and carried out an explosion in the town of Houla amid continuing violations of a framework agreement signed between Beirut and Tel Aviv. Lebanon's state-run National News Agency NNA reported that Israeli forces blew up several homes in Aitaroun. Israeli forces also carried out an overnight explosion in Houla in the Marjayoun district, the agency said, without specifying the target. The operations coincided with continued flights by Israeli drones over Beirut's southern suburbs. Read: Israeli defense minister threatens Iranian leaders as Iranians mourn Khamenei The latest incidents occurred despite an ongoing ceasefire and a US-sponsored framework agreement signed on June 26 between Lebanon and Israel, which provides for a phased Israeli withdrawal from all Lebanese territory, beginning with two unspecified pilot zones. Israel has continued military operations in Lebanon sin...

Pope urges Europe to protect migrants in visit to Island Frontier

Pope Leo XIV on Saturday pressed Europe to do more to protect and integrate migrants as he visited Italy's Lampedusa island, a major port of call for those risking the perilous crossing from Africa. His trip to the migration frontline was a stark message to both EU and US leaders in a period of both growing intolerance and indifference. The Catholic Church's first US pope, who has clashed with President Donald Trump's administration over its treatment of migrants, chose to mark July 4, the United States' 250th anniversary of independence, at a migration hotspot. Leo's visit also comes just two weeks after the European Union's approval of new migrant rules allowing much broader detention powers and the creation of deportation centres outside the bloc. "From this far-flung corner of Europe on the Mediterranean Sea, one can more clearly perceive the momentous challenge that the phenomenon of migration poses to European societies," Leo told crowds...

Outgoing UK PM Starmer says successor cannot spend less time on foreign affairs

Outgoing Prime Minister Keir Starmer said whoever succeeds him would have to devote as much time to international crises ​and diplomacy as he did, rejecting suggestions Britain's next leader ‌could focus more heavily on domestic issues. Starmer, who announced last month that he would step down after two years in office, said in a ​BBC interview on Friday that foreign and domestic policy ​could not be separated as Britain faced an increasingly ⁠volatile world. "There's often this discussion - what's the right balance ​between dealing with international affairs and dealing with domestic affairs? They're ​one and the same thing," he said. Asked whether a prime minister could spend less time on diplomacy than he had, Starmer replied: "No, I don't ​think it is possible." Starmer has faced criticism from some opponents over ​the amount of time he has spent on foreign policy. Lawmaker Andy Burnham, widely ‌expected ⁠to replace Starmer,...