ISTANBUL
Here’s a rundown of all the news you need to start your Sunday, including Iran’s top security official signaling progress in efforts to de-escalate tensions with the US; new Epstein files include images, emails linked to former Prince Andrew; and the SDF terror group targets civilians in northern Syria, violating a ceasefire agreement with the government.
TOP STORIES
Iran’s top security official has signaled progress in efforts to de-escalate tensions with the US following days of heightened strain.
In a post on social media, Ali Larijani, secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, said a “structured framework” for negotiations is “taking shape and moving forward.”
He brushed aside “manufactured hype of the media’s war narrative.”
Larijani’s remarks come amid intense diplomatic activity led by several regional countries, most notably Türkiye, aimed at mediating between arch foes Tehran and Washington and easing tensions.
Photographs released as part of newly unsealed US Justice Department files linked to late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein appear to show Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, known as Prince Andrew, kneeling on all fours above a woman, according to BBC News.
The images, included in the latest batch of documents made public by US authorities, show Mountbatten-Windsor in close physical proximity to an unidentified, fully clothed woman lying on the ground.
In two of the photographs, he is seen touching her stomach, while another image shows him looking directly at the camera. No information has been provided about when or where the photographs were taken.
BBC News reported that it has approached Mountbatten-Windsor for comment. He has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing in relation to Epstein.
The YPG/SDF terror organization violated a ceasefire agreement with the Syrian government by targeting civilians attempting to flee besieged areas in northern Aleppo province.
Alikhbariah TV said SDF fighters opened fire on civilians as they tried to leave the villages of al-Qubba and al-Jaada, which have been under siege for days by the group, heading toward the Qara Qozak bridge south of Ain al-Arab (Kobani) in the eastern Aleppo countryside.
The reports did not specify the nature of the attack or whether there were casualties.
NEWS IN BRIEF
BUSINESS & ECONOMY
Russia condemned US President Donald Trump's latest executive order declaring a national emergency and establishing a process to impose tariffs on goods from countries that sell or otherwise provide oil to Cuba.
Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova reaffirmed that Russia opposes unilateral sanctions against sovereign independent states, defining such measures as “categorically unacceptable.”
“We strongly condemn the illegitimate prohibitive measures against Havana and the pressure on the Cuban leadership and citizens,” Zakharova said, adding Russia is confident that Cuba will continue to maintain effective foreign economic ties “despite the external obstacles to its development.”
The US government entered a temporary shutdown after no funding law was enacted.
Despite the Senate passing a funding package ahead of a midnight deadline, it needed the approval of the House of Representatives, which is not expected to return to Washington until Monday.
Senators voted 71-29 on the package, which includes five long-term appropriations bills, while extending funding for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) for two weeks to allow negotiations on immigration enforcement.
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