Published November 01,2024
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Moscow is able to help within the settlement of conflicts within the Middle East and has contacts with all events involved, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov stated on Friday.
Commenting at a press briefing in Moscow on media experiences claiming Israel requested Russia to function a mediator in contacts with Hezbollah, Peskov cited President Vladimir Putin who earlier stated Moscow “maintains contacts with all relevant parties.”
“And, of course, if our efforts can be effective somewhere, than Russia will be ready to make them,” he added.
Israel, which has killed 43,000 Palestinians in Gaza since a cross border assault by Hamas final October, expanded the battle in Lebanon in late September.
Turning to the Nov. 5 US presidential election, Peskov stated statements by Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump in regards to the destruction of the Nord Stream 2, in addition to about necessity “to divide Russia and China” had been “incomprehensible.”
In an earlier interview with journalist Tucker Carlson, Trump had denied Democrats’ claims that he has ties with Russia, recalling that he blocked the development of the Nord Stream 2 gasoline pipeline.
“The main feature of our cooperation with China is that it is not directed against third countries, it is aimed solely at the interests of the peoples of our two countries,” he stated.
The spokesman then backed the Russian Autonomous Non-profit Organization Dialog lawsuit in opposition to the US Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI), noting there was no a lot hope for unbiased perspective on the a part of US courts.
“Rights must be defended by all legal means. … But it can be assumed with a high degree of confidence that in such cases, American courts will immediately start to lose their impartiality, balance and fairness. They will forget about these principles. Therefore, there are no great hopes for the possibility of a truly unbiased consideration of such cases in American courts,” he stated.
Turning to the presidential election in Moldova, the official rejected accusations of Russia’s interference in Moldova’s presidential election: “We strongly reject any accusations that we somehow interfere in this, we are not doing this.”
On Oct. 20, Moldovans headed to the polls to vote at a presidential election, through which incumbent President Maia Sandu, seen as pro-Western, sought a second time period in workplace. Sandu acquired lower than 50% of the vote, paving the way in which for a runoff on Nov. 3.
Source: www.anews.com.tr