Russia says 23,000 militants from 20 terror groups operating in Afghanistan
More than 23,000 militants from about 20 international groups are currently operating in Afghanistan, posing a threat to regional and global security,...
Kazakhstan says it's allocated $2.2 million to strengthen scientific monitoring of the Caspian Sea amid growing concern over falling water levels, biodiversity loss and rising industrial pressure on the world’s largest inland body of water.
The funds will be used to purchase equipment for offshore monitoring and to upgrade hydrobiological and hydrochemical laboratories. According to the government, the investment will allow the institute to move towards comprehensive monitoring directly in the sea’s waters, including systematic observation of hydrometeorological and biological indicators, strengthening the scientific basis for policy decisions.
At the same time, the institute says it's expanding international cooperation by joining the Association of Universities and Research Centres of Caspian littoral states. The Cabinet of Ministers has stressed that without coordinated action among all countries bordering the sea, effective conservation measures will remain difficult to achieve.
The project is under direct government oversight. Prime Minister Olzhas Bektenov has instructed the Ministry of Ecology and Natural Resources to ensure the full implementation of Caspian-related research, while the Ministry of Finance has been tasked with strict control over the targeted use of the allocated funds.
The Caspian Sea remains a strategic natural asset for Kazakhstan. With a coastline stretching 2,320 km, the longest among all Caspian states, the country bears particular responsibility for the condition of the sea, which plays a significant role in the economic and social development of western regions.
Scientific assessments point to increasingly alarming trends. According to Kazakh researchers, the level of the Caspian Sea is showing a persistent decline and could approach minus 33 metres by 2050, while a drop to minus 28.5 metres is already considered critical for both the ecosystem and maritime economic activity.
Environmental experts link the degradation to climate change, reduced river inflows due to water regulation, expanding oil extraction and transportation, and pollution from ships’ ballast water. Scientists warn that continued sea level decline could have irreversible consequences for the region, prompting growing calls for a multinational conservation coalition involving all five Caspian states to prevent the sea from following the path of the Aral Sea.
Italy said a fond farewell to the Winter Olympics on Sunday with an open-air ceremony in the ancient Verona Arena that celebrated art and sporting achievement at a Games lauded as a model for how to stage such events.
The United States and Iran will hold a new round of nuclear negotiations in Geneva on Thursday as part of renewed diplomatic efforts to reach a potential agreement, Oman’s Foreign Minister Badr Albusaidi announced on Sunday.
Further Iran-U.S. nuclear talks are scheduled in Geneva on Thursday (26 February) as diplomacy resumes over Tehran’s nuclear programme following earlier mediation efforts. But will the talks move Iran-U.S. negotiations closer to a deal, and what should be expected from the meeting?
Mexican authorities said on Sunday that Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, known as El Mencho and head of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG), was killed during a military operation in the western state of Jalisco.
Syria has secured a $50 million financing package from the World Bank to support transport infrastructure projects as the country advances its economic recovery efforts, Syrian media reported on Sunday.
More than 23,000 militants from about 20 international groups are currently operating in Afghanistan, posing a threat to regional and global security, according to Russia’s Security Council Secretary Sergei Shoigu.
An Iranian military helicopter crashed in the city of Dorcheh, in Iran on Tuesday (24 February), causing the death of the pilot, co-pilot and two market sellers, state media reported.
An investigation into a protest outside a Washington, D.C. hotel on 19 February, where President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev was staying, has revealed new details, placing the incident within a broader security context.
The United Nations mission in Afghanistan said on Monday it had received “credible reports” that at least 13 civilians were killed and seven others injured in overnight Pakistani airstrikes inside Afghanistan.
Four members of Syria’s Internal Security Forces were killed and two others injured on Monday (23 February) in an attack by the ISIS (Daesh) terrorist group targeting a checkpoint west of Raqqa in northeastern Syria, the Interior Ministry said.
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