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  • Who is princess Basma bint Saud? Why did Mohammad bin Salman set her free?

    Riyadh: Winds of change seem to be blowing in Saudi Arabia as authorities released a 57-year-old princess and her daughter from jail after three years.
    Basma bint Saud, 57, who was a vocal supporter of women’s rights in the kingdom, was detained in March 2019. Later human rights groups urged King Salman and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to release her on health grounds.

    “Basma bint Saud Al Saud and her daughter Suhoud… have been released,” the ALQST for Human Rights said on Twitter.

    “She was denied the medical care she needed for a potentially life-threatening condition,” the rights group added. “At no point during her detention has any charge been leveled against her.”

    Saudi officials were not immediately available to comment on the case.

    Princess Basmah was arrested shortly before a planned trip to Switzerland for medical treatment, according to a source close to the family. The nature of her illness has never been disclosed.

    Princess Basmah was kept in Al-Ha’ir prison, where numerous other political detainees have been held.

    In written testimony to the United Nations in 2020, her family had said her detention was likely due in large part to her “record as an outspoken critic of abuses”.

    She has also deemed an ally of Mohammed bin Nayef, who was supposed to ascend to the throne before he was pushed back to accommodate Prince Mohammad bin Salman.

    In November 2017, a vast anti-corruption campaign saw Riyadh’s luxury Ritz-Carlton hotel serve for three months as a de facto detention center for dozens of princes and senior officials suspected of graft or disloyalty. In March 2020, the royal guard arrested King Salman’s brother and nephew, accusing them of fomenting a coup against Prince Mohammed, according to several sources.

    Prince Mohammed bi Salman has taken a number of steps to do away with the kingdom’s hardline Islamist image since he was named as the legal heir to the crown.

    He has lifted the ban on women driving and the easing of so-called “guardianship” rules that give men arbitrary authority over female relatives.

  • Fake Video Of Dr Sushil Razdan Viral On Social Media

    Video of this person has gone viral in Kashmir today. Dr Sushil Razdaan was written on the Video but this person is not Sushil Razdaan. Dr Razdaan is a renowned Neurologist, he has also made it clear that it was not his Video.

  • Iran and China Concludes a Strategic Pact Binding them for a Quarter of a Century

    Are China and Iran about to become strategic partners?

    By: Lyes Mauni Jalali | The National Interest

    Or does the West have nothing to worry about? What might be called the “alarmist” view is that Iran and China have concluded a strategic pact which binds them for a quarter of a century touching a wide range of domains, not only oil and gas, but also military, intelligence, and connectivity to China’s Belt and Road Initiative.

    By this token, Iran’s “pivot to the East” represents a permanent shift in its strategic posture, ensuring an era of competition with the West. The basis of this view is a memorandum of understanding (MOU) that was leaked in June 2020, which purports to be a Comprehensive Strategic Partnership Roadmap between the governments of Iran and China. This eighteen-page document exists in three languages (Farsi, Mandarin, English), but only the Farsi version has been released.

    The $400 billion deal struck between Beijing and Tehran was officially announced in late March of 2021.

    The second view might be termed the “assuager” view and it posits that no Iran-China rapprochement is in the works; It’s business as usual in the world of great power politics, and what is uppermost in the minds of the Chinese leadership is how to restore normalcy in its trade relationship with the United States ($550 billion annually versus $25 billion with Iran). As for the “China-Iran” deal, this is merely posturing and chest-thumping on the part of Iranian authorities attempting to sway public opinion at home; to persuade the Iranian people that it is not about to crumble and that it does have options other than the United States.

    On these views, similar policy trajectories emerge—each inhospitable to a “clean return” to the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA). The implication of the first view is that Tehran and Beijing (and Moscow too) have a common strategic interest in containing and countering U.S. military preeminence and will seek to do so in a hard-nosed manner. Amid this posture, the United States is best served with a policy of isolating Iran and seeking a “longer and stronger agreement” that would deal with other “deeply problematic” issues.

    Similarly, the second view reasons that given that no permanent strategic partnership is in the works, nor is a long-term partnership likely to emerge, it is best to dispense with the 2015 JCPOA, and to negotiate new terms better suited for the current security landscape. Hence, whatever diplomatic leverage has emanated from President Donald Trump’s “maximum pressure” policy should be the basis for negotiating a new comprehensive agreement which addresses the concerns of U.S. regional allies (Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Israel), failing which sanctions must persist, including secondary sanctions (deterring third parties from conducting business with Iran), and if Iran continues to pose security concerns, all options ought to be on the table.

    Aside from hindering nuclear diplomacy, these worldviews signify the likelihood of longer-term difficulties between Washington and Tehran. Indeed, if Tehran is seen as being steered by Beijing, or alternately if it is conceived of as a middling power lost at sea, the pathologies of the American national security establishment will have little other to do—rightly so—than to land on a mixture of bellicose threats and minor adjustments. But strategists in Washington who have taken to these views have been too intoxicated by old ways of practicing international politics: an incessant obsession with maintaining “credibility” and paying lip service to a “rules-based” order. These tendencies have come at the cost of clear-eyed thinking on Iran.

    Blessed with decades of prosperity and security, we have lost the tradition of thinking geopolitically about international politics (as practiced by Alfred Mahan, Walter Lippmann, George Kennan, and Henry Kissinger). It is this habit of mind that is much needed in an assessment of Iran—an awareness for the nature of change in global politics and a sense of what opportunities and difficulties present themselves accordingly.

    On this approach, there is a third view which grows from a middle-ground understanding of the Iran-China strategic context. This view suggests that Iran has neither fully committed to the “East Pivot,” nor will it do so if it can get an agreement with the West. But failing an agreement with the West, Tehran will fully commit to China. The policy implication of this view—if one accepts “strategic competition” as the guiding principle on China—is that the Biden administration should “test the opposite premise” of isolating Tehran, “by restoring nuclear diplomacy, lowering regional tensions, and forging new arrangements.” Crucially, to accomplish this vision, a “fast timeline” of re-joining the 2015 Iran deal is necessary—but far from sufficient.

    This paper elaborates on this third view. First, I outline China’s strategic interest in Iran. Second, I lay out Iran’s strategic interest with regard to China and the West. Third, I address what the United States’ response should be in view of this strategic context. Ultimately, I argue that the national interest is best served with prudent diplomacy towards Iran, that it’s best to avoid the risk of pushing Iran further into China’s arms, and that a “clean return” to the JCPOA as soon as a feasible re-entry solution is found is critical. Then and only then can the shift to tackling regional instability (proxies and missiles) occur. Of greater significance, such an opening gambit would mark the beginning, not the end, of redefining the United States’ relationship with Iran.

    To Understand China’s strategic interest in Iran, we must first take a bigger picture view of China’s grand-strategic aims in the region. In 2013, President Xi Jinping announced China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) during his visit to Kazakhstan and Indonesia. Xi outlined China’s priorities in the region in terms of growing economic ties, widening access to maritime trade corridors, establishing security relationships, and facilitating cultural exchanges. Most significantly, however, is China’s vast collection of infrastructure projects—railways, energy pipelines, highways, seaports, border crossings—both westward, through the mountainous former Soviet republics, and southward, to Southeast Asia. China’s ambition is stunning. Presently, more than sixty nations (representing two-thirds of the world’s population) have signed on to projects related to China’s BRI.

    But China’s regional ambitions—as structured by the overarching BRI—face a clear hurdle with respect to Russia, namely that any successful engagement with the Middle East, key to Xi’s broader notion of a Sinosphere of shared prosperity in Eurasia, is to a great extent at the mercy of Russia. Since the late 1950s, Moscow has been a major political actor in countries like Egypt, Syria, Iraq, and Libya—each of which were at one time Soviet client states. Today, Russia remains a key power broker in the region, maintaining relationships with three major constituents: Israel, Iran, and the Arab states.

    For its part, Beijing sees Russia as a “genuine strategic partner” based on the two countries’ fundamental interest in deterring the United States from undermining their domestic and global position. But even this Beijing-Moscow “authoritarian international” faces its challenges—and this is particularly true in the Middle East. For starters, Russia seeks a potential role for itself within the U.S.-China paradigm as the leader of a nonaligned movement—a “third way.” Second, Moscow has engaged in a precarious balancing act, pursuing opportunities for cooperation with countries such as India, Korea, and Japan, which represent Beijing’s regional rivals.

    Lastly, both Beijing and Moscow are positioned to be in growing conflict over the Arctic and its potential of being a strategic resource base. These general developments have led to “cooperation, ambiguity, and tension” in Sino-Russia relations. As one analyst framed it, cooperation between Beijing and Moscow is “hamstrung by historical suspicions, cultural prejudices, geopolitical rivalry, and competing priorities.”

    China’s pact with Pakistan—a country that is peerless in terms of the depth and extent of BRI investment (including launching Pakistani sensing satellites from China and developing fighter jets such as the JF-17)—has been a singular success for China to break out of the Russian straitjacket in Central Asia and create a bypass through South Asia. But Pakistan is not enough, and without Iran there can be no meaningful infiltration of the Middle East.

    From this perspective, it becomes clear what Iran means to China: elbowing out of the Russian straitjacket in Central Asia and paving the bricks of the Eurasian BRI. Both in terms of geography and political-economy, Iran represents a series of opportunities for advancing the BRI agenda. Iran provides overland access to Iraq and Syria—where postwar reconstruction by Chinese firms can be turned into permanent arteries of trade. Iran is also a necessary powerbroker in Syria, a country with a foothold in the Mediterranean, where Chinese outposts are being implanted in Greece and Italy.

    Iran also provides the Caspian-Gulf linkage (ending in Chabahar Port in the Persian Gulf, downstream of the Strait of Hormuz, not far from Gwadar Port in Pakistan, the terminus of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor). Iran is also a pivotal player in Iraq, Lebanon, and Yemen, and has a key cultural foothold in Afghanistan, notably amongst the Dari-speaking population (Afghan dialect of Persian) including the Hazaras (Persian-speaking and of Shiite faith), chipping away at Russia’s cultural dominance of Central Asia.

    With inputs from Lyes Mauni Jalali | The National Interest

    (Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by Kashmir Today staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

  • Saudi Arabian, Kuwaiti, Omani, Bahraini Foreign Ministers and GCC secretary general to visit China

    At the invitation of Chinese State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi, Saudi Arabian Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud, Kuwaiti Foreign Minister and Minister of State for Cabinet Affairs Sheikh Ahmad Nasser Al-Mohammad Al-Sabah, Omani Foreign Minister Sayyid Badr Hamad al-Busaidi, Bahraini Foreign Minister Abdullatif bin Rashid Al Zayani and Secretary-General of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) Nayef bin Falah Al-Hajraf will visit China from January 10 to 14, according to Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin on Saturday.

    Source: Xinhua

    (Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by Kashmir Today staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

  • Video | Youngest female Reporter from Kashmir

    Watch: Youngest female Reporter from Kashmir:

    Disclaimer: This video is not a work by Kashmir Today Staff.

    No copyright infringement intended.

  • This Happened Yesterday At Gulmarg

    This Happened Yesterday At Gulmarg.

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  • GoC 15 Corps D P Pandey visits Gurduwara Chattipadhshai Rainawari, Sgr; prays for peace

    Says prayed for peace, urges youth of Kashmir should follow narrative of peace, development; army not doing any favour to people by conducting rescue operations

    Srinagar, Jan 09: General officer Commanding (GoC) of army’s Srinagar—based 15 Corps Lieutenant General D P Pandey visited Gurduwara Chattipadhshai in Rainawari area of old Srinagar on the occasion of Guru Gobind Singhji  Jayanti.

    “I have visited every religious place in Kashmir, but wanted to visit this Gurduwara too,” said GoC Panday, as per news agency—Kashmir News Observer (KNO).

    He said his message to youth of Kashmir especially Srinagar need to change the narrative that existed for years and they should follow narrative of peace and development so that every face smiles.

    At Gurduwara, GoC said he prayed for peace and development of Kashmir. He said that the army was not doing any favour to people by conducting rescue operations in snow—bound areas. “It is in our blood to serve people,” he said—(KNO)

  • Poem by Kh. Syed Mohd. Amin Andleeb

    File Photo | Syed Mohd. Amin Andleeb

    Author: Kh. Syed Mohd. Amin Andleeb

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    Disclaimer: This video is not a work by Kashmir Today Staff.

    No copyright infringement intended.

  • Omicron: Director SKIMS Dr Parvaiz Koul Appeals People

    Omicron: Director SKIMS Dr Parvaiz Koul Appeals People

  • Snow fury: 150 transformers, 1031 feeders of 11kv damaged across Kashmir

    55 transformers replaced, 909 feeders repaired: Chief Engineer KPDCL

    Srinagar, Jan 08: The fresh snowfall across Kashmir has resulted in massive damage to the electricity transformers as well as 11 kilowatt feeders in the Valley.

    An official document available with the news agency—Kashmir News Observer (KNO) reads that a total of 1031 11kv feeders had suffered technical snag across Kashmir while in north Kashmir’s Baramulla district, all 171 11 kv feeders had got damaged followed by Budgam where 103 out of 104 feeders were damaged by 09:00 AM today.

    However, the document reads that 909 feeders of 11 kv have been repaired till 05:20 PM while only 122 are under fault across Kashmir.

    In Srinagar, 49 feeders out of 266 were damaged till morning while only 10 were under fault in the evening, the document said, adding that in Budgam of total 103 damaged feeders, 84 were repaired till evening while only 19 were under fault.

    According to the document, 7 feeders of 11kv had got damaged by today morning while only one was under fault by evening. It added that 27 out of 46 feeders were damaged in Bandipora while only two were under fault in the evening.

    It further revealed that 46 feeders out of 98 were under fault this morning and only three were under fault by the evening.

    In Shopian, 30 out of 35 feeders were under fault in the morning and only five were under fault by 05:20 PM. 84 out of 119 feeders were damaged in Anantnag till 09 AM and all were repaired till evening.

    Kulgam district in South Kashmir had also recorded 100 per cent damage in 11kv feeders with official documents revealing that all 55 feeders were under fault in the morning and by 05:20 PM only 13 were under fault.

    In Baramulla district, 39 feeders are under fault where all—171 feeders were damaged.

    Out of 75 damaged, only 30 feeders were under fault by 05:20 PM in Kupwara, it said.

    Moreover, Chief Engineer, Kashmir Power Distribution Corporation Limited (KPDCL), Aijaz Ahmad Dar informed KNO that 150 transformers at different places across the Valley were also damaged due to the fresh snowfall.

    However, he said that 55 transformers have been replaced till evening while the work on other damaged transformers is going on.

    “The number of damaged transformers may increase once the weather condition improves as at present there is transpiration difficulty due to the continuous snowfall,” he said.

    He added that the men and machinery has already been kept on toes to ensure that the people will not face any hardships and the repairs are done at a shortest possible time—(KNO)