Azerbaijan Pays Tribute to Pilots, Passengers who Perished in Air Crash

People carry a coffin with the body of a victim of the Azerbaijan Airlines' Embraer passenger plane crash near the Kazakh city of Aktau, upon the arrival at an airport in Baku, Azerbaijan, December 28, 2024. REUTERS/Aziz Karimov
People carry a coffin with the body of a victim of the Azerbaijan Airlines' Embraer passenger plane crash near the Kazakh city of Aktau, upon the arrival at an airport in Baku, Azerbaijan, December 28, 2024. REUTERS/Aziz Karimov
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Azerbaijan Pays Tribute to Pilots, Passengers who Perished in Air Crash

People carry a coffin with the body of a victim of the Azerbaijan Airlines' Embraer passenger plane crash near the Kazakh city of Aktau, upon the arrival at an airport in Baku, Azerbaijan, December 28, 2024. REUTERS/Aziz Karimov
People carry a coffin with the body of a victim of the Azerbaijan Airlines' Embraer passenger plane crash near the Kazakh city of Aktau, upon the arrival at an airport in Baku, Azerbaijan, December 28, 2024. REUTERS/Aziz Karimov

Azerbaijan on Sunday paid tribute to the pilots and passengers of the Azerbaijan Airlines passenger plane that crashed in Kazakhstan killing 38 people after Russian air defenses were used against Ukrainian drones.

Flight J2-8243 crashed on Wednesday in a ball of fire near the city of Aktau in Kazakhstan after diverting from southern Russia where Ukrainian drones were attacking several cities.

Captain Igor Kshnyakin and co-pilot Alexander Kalyaninov, both ethnic Russians with Azerbaijan citizenship, and Hokuma Aliyeva, a flight attendant, were given full honors at a ceremony at the Alley of Honor in central Baku attended by President Ilham Aliyev and his wife, Mehriban.

The pilots have been lauded in Azerbaijan for landing in a way which allowed 29 people to survive but led to their own deaths.

Azerbaijan's presidential office said that after the yet-to-be explained incident over Russian airspace, the pilots battled to control the plane - desperately trying to find a landing spot, Reuters reported.

With holes in the fuselage, some crew injured, passengers praying for their lives in a de-pressurized cabin and the plane spiraling out of control, the pilots flew across the Caspian Sea towards their death in an crash landing.
"Only through the courage and professionalism of the pilots was an emergency landing successfully carried out," Azerbaijan's presidential office said.
The Alley of Honor is Azerbaijan's most sacred modern burial ground - where prominent politicians, poets and scientists are laid to rest, including Heydar Aliyev, the late father of the current president.
Captain Kshnyakin's daughter, Anastasia Kshnyakina, said her father was a dedicated pilot who took his responsibilities to his passengers extremely seriously.
"My father always said: when I take off, I am responsible not only for my life, but also for the lives of all passengers and crew members," Kshnyakina said.
"With his last flight, he proved what a true hero should be."
Russia's Vladimir Putin on Saturday apologized to Azerbaijan's president for a "tragic incident" in Russian airspace involving the plane which Baku said crashed after some sort of external interference.
Four sources with knowledge of the preliminary findings of Azerbaijan's investigation into the disaster told Reuters on Thursday that Russian air defenses had mistakenly shot it down.
The extremely rare publicized apology from Putin was the closest Moscow has come to accepting some blame for Wednesday's disaster, although the Kremlin statement did not say Russia had shot down the plane, only noting that a criminal case had been opened.
The Embraer passenger jet had flown from Azerbaijan's capital Baku to Grozny, in Russia's southern Chechnya region, before veering off hundreds of miles across the Caspian Sea.



Ukraine Hikes Military Pay and Seeks More Foreign Fighters, Zelenskiy Says

 Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy speaks during a joint press conference with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte after talks, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine, June 3, 2026. (Reuters)
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy speaks during a joint press conference with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte after talks, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine, June 3, 2026. (Reuters)
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Ukraine Hikes Military Pay and Seeks More Foreign Fighters, Zelenskiy Says

 Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy speaks during a joint press conference with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte after talks, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine, June 3, 2026. (Reuters)
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy speaks during a joint press conference with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte after talks, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine, June 3, 2026. (Reuters)

Ukraine ‌will hike military wages and seek to recruit more fighters abroad, President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said on Friday, as the army faces a manpower shortage after four years of war with Russia.

Zelenskiy's government said in May it would study possible measures to boost military personnel numbers after talks on how to end the war with Russia stalled.

"We agreed on how to increase the financial resilience of our defense and further transformation ‌of the ‌Ukrainian army," Zelenskiy said in his daily ‌address ⁠after meeting key ⁠cabinet ministers.

"The cabinet of ministers will approve a specific mechanism, and the government should start the first new payments as early as June," he added.

DEFENSE SPENDING BOOST

Ukraine has secured a €90 billion loan from the European Union, allowing the government to increase defense spending to ⁠a record 4.4 trillion hryvnias ($97 billion) this ‌year. The funds are due ‌to start flowing this month.

Zelenskiy said on Friday the ‌government would raise the basic military wage by one-third ‌to 30,000 hryvnias ($700).

The step was aimed at matching the country's average monthly salary, which has steadily risen during the war due to staff shortages, military analysts and economists ‌said.

Infantry soldiers fighting on the frontline will receive an average monthly salary of 300,000 ⁠hryvnias (about $7,000), ⁠up from about 100,000 to 150,000 hryvnias at present.

They will also be offered a new type of fixed-term contract for 10, 14, or 24 months for combat duties.

Kyiv also wants to recruit more foreign fighters. "I have instructed to create significantly more opportunities to recruit foreign volunteers into the Ukrainian army, and there will be more recruitment channels in this regard," Zelenskiy said.

About 10,000 foreign volunteers have joined the Ukrainian army from more than 70 countries since the war began, according to estimates by Ukrainian military publications.


Israeli Firm BlackCore Suspected of Meddling in New York and Scotland Votes, France Says

France's Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu looks on during a press conference following a meeting with several political parties and security institutions representatives on safeguarding democratic debates against foreign interference after Paris prosecutors opened in May a probe to investigate whether an Israeli company interfered in local French elections, at the Matignon Hotel in Paris on June 11, 2026. (AFP)
France's Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu looks on during a press conference following a meeting with several political parties and security institutions representatives on safeguarding democratic debates against foreign interference after Paris prosecutors opened in May a probe to investigate whether an Israeli company interfered in local French elections, at the Matignon Hotel in Paris on June 11, 2026. (AFP)
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Israeli Firm BlackCore Suspected of Meddling in New York and Scotland Votes, France Says

France's Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu looks on during a press conference following a meeting with several political parties and security institutions representatives on safeguarding democratic debates against foreign interference after Paris prosecutors opened in May a probe to investigate whether an Israeli company interfered in local French elections, at the Matignon Hotel in Paris on June 11, 2026. (AFP)
France's Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu looks on during a press conference following a meeting with several political parties and security institutions representatives on safeguarding democratic debates against foreign interference after Paris prosecutors opened in May a probe to investigate whether an Israeli company interfered in local French elections, at the Matignon Hotel in Paris on June 11, 2026. (AFP)

Israeli firm BlackCore, suspected of interfering in France's local elections in March, is also suspected of meddling in elections in New York City and Scotland, and operating in Angola and Togo, France's disinformation detection service, Viginum, said on Thursday.

Last month, Reuters revealed that French authorities suspected BlackCore was behind an online smear campaign targeting three mayoral candidates from the hard-left, pro-Palestine France Unbowed party (LFI) in the local elections.

At a press conference on Thursday alongside French Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu, Viginum chief Marc-Antoine Brillant said technical work had led them to BlackCore. Viginum subsequently presented a detailed report on BlackCore's alleged actions around the world.

"This modus operandi was not limited to municipal elections in France," he ‌said. "It also appears ‌to have been used to carry out foreign digital interference operations in other ‌countries or ⁠regions, such ⁠as Angola, Togo, the elections in Scotland, and the 2025 municipal election in New York."

However, Brillant said it was still unclear who had commissioned BlackCore to meddle in France.

"Our investigations did not make it possible to identify the sponsor or sponsors, if indeed they exist, behind this foreign digital interference," he said.

Lecornu said the French government had asked Israel for explanations of BlackCore's actions, but also for help in trying to find out who may have been behind the smear campaign.

"I do not doubt for a single instant that if a French private group, from French soil ⁠moreover, had engaged in foreign digital interference in Israel, they would have done the ‌same to its ambassador on site," Lecornu said.

Israel's embassy in Paris ‌confirmed that France had reached out, saying it was waiting to receive details from the French probe to conduct its own.

"Israel ‌has of course no intention to interfere in the French political process, be it at the national ‌or municipal level," it said in a statement.

NEW YORK AND SCOTTISH ELECTIONS ALSO TARGETED

Brillant did not explicitly mention who was targeted in last year's New York City election, which was won by Zohran Mamdani. His victory thrilled many younger Jewish progressives but spooked more traditional pro-Israel New Yorkers with his outspoken support for the Palestinian cause.

Mamdani's team did not immediately respond to ‌a request for comment. Neither did New York City and New York state officials.

The New York Police Department and the US cyber defense agency CISA did ⁠not immediately return emails seeking ⁠comment. The FBI declined comment.

In a subsequent report, Viginum said it had detected BlackCore-linked accounts targeting John Swinney, the first minister of Scotland.

Swinney has described the situation in Gaza as a "man-made humanitarian catastrophe", saying a genocide may be unfolding, citing civilian casualties, widespread destruction and statements by Israeli officials.

"These reports of bad actors attempting to interfere in the Scottish Parliament elections are deeply concerning," Swinney said in an email.

He called on the British government, "which has responsibility for national security", to make "dealing with hostile state online interference a far higher priority."

An email seeking comment from Scottish election officials was not immediately returned.

The governments of Angola and Togo also did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Before scrubbing its online presence following enquiries from Reuters, BlackCore described itself as "an elite influence, cyber, and technology company built for the modern sera of information warfare."

It said it provided governments and political campaigns with "cutting-edge strategies, advanced tools, and robust security to shape narratives."

It has not responded to repeated requests for comment.


Trump Says Iran’s Leaked Deal Terms Are Untrue

US President Donald Trump. (AFP file)
US President Donald Trump. (AFP file)
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Trump Says Iran’s Leaked Deal Terms Are Untrue

US President Donald Trump. (AFP file)
US President Donald Trump. (AFP file)

US President Donald Trump denied on Friday that the United States has made major concessions to Iran and a senior US official called an emerging pact "performance-based" with Tehran getting no frozen assets until its part of the agreement is fulfilled.

In a post on his Truth Social platform, Trump said Iran's leaked comments on a deal with the United States do not represent what has been agreed to in writing.

"What they said, including their weak and pathetic statement on having a deal, bears no relation to the truth. Very dishonorable people to deal with. ‌With them, there ‌is no such thing as dealing in good faith. ‌AMAZING!," ⁠he wrote on ⁠Truth Social.

Iran's version of the deal as outlined by the IRNA news agency said the United States will release part of Iran's frozen assets immediately after the deal is signed with the remainder freed gradually during further negotiations.

It says Iran's nuclear program remains untouched.

The senior US official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that under the agreement Iran's nuclear material "will ⁠be destroyed and removed" and its nuclear program will ‌be dismantled.

Iran is believed to possess 900 ‌pounds (408 kg) of highly enriched uranium.

"None of their money released until they perform. Strait ‌of Hormuz will be open. No Iran funding of terrorist groups," ‌the official said.

"This is what they have agreed to. This is a performance-based deal," the official said.

Trump said on Thursday he was calling off new strikes on Iran because a deal had been reached.

Terms of the deal as described on ‌Friday by Iranian officials appear to offer Tehran much of what it has demanded so far, with Trump ⁠appearing to win ⁠little of what he has sought, beyond the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, which Iran shut after he ordered attacks in February.

A senior Iranian source told Reuters on Friday that the draft would waive sanctions on Iran's oil, unfreeze billions of dollars of its funds, and require a cessation of hostilities on all fronts, including in Lebanon.

Nuclear issues would be set aside for later talks. Washington wants a deal to ensure that Iran never develops a nuclear weapon. Iran says it is not seeking one.

The waiving of sanctions, unfreezing of Iranian assets and halt to Israeli attacks on Lebanon are essential Iranian demands. The source made no mention of what Iran might offer in return.