Tuesday, July 14, 2026

New explosions near port cities, Iranian state media report, as Tehran hits UAE tankers in strait

 


New explosions near port cities, Iranian state media report, as Tehran hits UAE tankers in strait



Summary



  1. Escalation of rhetoric and pressure around conflict - UK foreign secretarypublished at 00:27

    Yvette Cooper, a woman wearing glasss, looking up, with the Union Jack flag behind her.Image source,Getty Images

    UK Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper has said she's spoken with US colleagues over the UK's opposition to tolls in the Strait of Hormuz.

    Speaking to the Foreign Affairs Committee, Cooper said the "discussion" took place during the Nato summit last week.

    "We were talking about that we could not end up with tolls and with a system on the Strait of Hormuz that would undermine the freedom of navigation and the law of the sea."

    She added she felt there's currently an "escalation of rhetoric around the conflict itself and the putting on of pressure".

    Cooper also blamed Iran for "an increasing of pressure on all sides" by attacking commercial shipping in the southern shipping route in Omani waters, saying the move "totally undermines the law of the sea".

  2. Iran to loom over Trump's meeting with the Iraqi PMpublished at 00:04

    Bernd Debusmann Jr
    White House reporter

    US President Donald Trump is scheduled to meet with new Iraqi Prime Minister Ali al-Zaidi at the White House in a few hour's time - a meeting in which the issue of Iran is likely to dominate discussions.

    Trump publicly supported al-Zaidi to become Iraq's new PM after months of political deadlock following the country's parliamentary elections last year, and in April posted that his success was the "beginning of a tremendous new chapter" in US-Iraqi relations.

    The US president is likely to use the meeting to push al-Zaidi to move to disarm Iranian-backed and affiliated militia groups.

    While Iraq's government has given non-state armed groups until September to give up their weapons, several of them have said they won't, and experts have warned that government operations against them could lead to fighting.

    According to US officials, these groups have attacked US diplomatic and military personnel and facilities more than 600 times, including drone attacks on the American embassy and military airfields.

    This, in turn, has prompted US retaliatory operations against militia leaders and bases.


  1. Netanyahu warns that Israel's response to any Iranian attacks will be 'much more powerful'published at 23:46 14 July

    raeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu gestures during a ceremony marking the 50th anniversary of Operation Entebbe at the President's Residence in Jerusalem, July 12, 2026Image source,Reuters

    Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says Israeli retaliation against Iran will be "much more powerful" if it is attacked first.

    "I will say it to the leaders of Iran: Do not count on things remaining quiet if you attack us," he says in a video published on his social media.

    He warns that Israel's response will not be the same at the last time it was attacked by Iran, even though that was "already powerful enough".

    "The days are over when someone strikes us and we don't strike them back twofold," he adds.

    "We did this to the Axis of Evil in Iran, and we will continue to do so to anyone who harms us. That is what we do."

  2. Resumption in hostilities has knock-on financial impactpublished at 23:24 14 July

    Nick Edser
    Business reporter

    While higher oil prices might be the most visible impact on the financial markets from the resumption in hostilities in the Middle East, there are other knock-on effects too.

    The cost of borrowing for governments has been rising on worries that higher energy costs will increase inflation, which will lead central banks to raise interest rates to keep price rises under control.

    In the UK, government borrowing costs have risen above 5% for the first time since May.

    The 10-year bond yield - effectively the interest rate charged to the UK government for a 10-year loan - hit 5.04% on Tuesday morning before slipping back. In May, the rate had peaked at 5.17%, which was the highest level since 2008.

    The UK is not alone in seeing higher borrowing costs, as bond yields for other European countries have also risen. However, the UK has often seen a bigger impact than elsewhere, which analysts put down to a more inflation-prone economy, together with speculation earlier this year over the leadership of the government.

    The trend could be a problem for Andy Burnham, who is set to replace Sir Keir Starmer as prime minister on 20 July. Rising yields on bonds mean the government will have to spend more on interest payments.


Nga was BN’s other ‘poster boy’ in Johor polls, says Kian Ming





Nga was BN’s other ‘poster boy’ in Johor polls, says Kian Ming


The former MP says controversial remarks made by the DAP deputy chairman galvanised support for BN as it stormed to a big win in Johor


DAP deputy chairman Nga Kor Ming made several sensational statements during the Johor election campaign, including a pledge to resign as minister if former prime minister Najib Razak is freed from jail.



PETALING JAYA: DAP deputy chairman Nga Kor Ming was essentially Barisan Nasional’s other “poster boy” in the Johor polls, with the federal minister’s controversial remarks galvanising BN support, former MP Ong Kian Ming claimed today.

Ong, also of DAP, said several statements made by Nga on the campaign trail in Johor had made him a lightning rod for many Malay voters.



Ong Kian Ming.

This included his vow to resign as housing and local government minister if former prime minister Najib Razak was freed of his jail term in the SRC International case.


“You could see that many of the things he said during and before the campaign had sparked a negative reaction,” said the former two-term MP.

“It basically made Malay voters say, ‘I’m going to come out and vote; I’m going to make sure BN wins and Pakatan Harapan doesn’t.’ And this affected a lot of the seats PKR and Amanah contested,” he said on BFM’s Breakfast Grille.



PKR central committee member Elizabeth Wong agreed, citing Nga’s pledge to replace all 123 new village chiefs in Johor with DAP appointees should PH form the Johor government.


Elizabeth Wong.

Wong, the former three-term Bukit Lanjan assemblyman, said this was a “problematic” statement that not only offended the Malays but even Johor Chinese living in these areas.


“We have to remember, all these new village and Chinese village chiefs are very close to the grassroots. So, can you imagine, their jobs are essentially at stake.

“So, I doubt they would give any votes to us.”


Nga had also drawn a stern rebuke from his Cabinet colleague, BN secretary-general Zambry Abd Kadir, after he labelled Zambry’s higher education ministry as being “slow like a turtle” over allowing holders of the Unified Examination Certificate to enter public universities.

BN stormed to a convincing victory in the Johor polls, winning 48 seats in the 56-member state assembly, with Johor menteri besar Onn Hafiz Ghazi considered as the coalition’s poster boy.

PH won the remaining eight seats, four less than the 12 seats it won in 2022, while Perikatan Nasional was wiped out.


Anwar urges Melaka DAP to reconsider state govt exit, keep working until election






Anwar urges Melaka DAP to reconsider state govt exit, keep working until election



Pakatan Harapan chairman Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim (left) says he has asked DAP secretary-general Anthony Loke (right) to speak with his Malaccan part colleagues to delay they decision to withdraw from the state government until the election. — Picture by Firdaus Latif

First Published: Tuesday, 14 Jul 2026 6:35 PM MYT


PORT DICKSON, July 14 — Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim has urged Melaka DAP to postpone its decision to withdraw from the state government administration so that the focus can remain on development and the people’s welfare.

Anwar, who is also Pakatan Harapan (PH) chairman, said the matter had been discussed with DAP secretary-general Anthony Loke and Melaka Chief Minister Datuk Seri Ab Rauf Yusoh, expressing hope that negotiations would continue to reach the best possible solution.

“I’ve already raised the matter and spoken to minister Loke (DAP secretary-general), Melaka DAP and the Chief Minister, asking them to negotiate first... postpone it for the time being so that we can continue working with the state government until the election,” he told reporters after officiating the AI-powered Midport Smart Container Terminal project here today.

Anwar said differences of opinion among component parties in a ruling coalition were normal, but should not derail the development agenda or efforts to safeguard the people’s welfare.

“Even if there are two or three issues that we disagree on, that’s all right. There are many matters on which we do not see eye to eye now, but when it comes to policies for economic growth and the people’s well-being, we move forward together.

“So, I hope they will reconsider (and postpone the decision),” he said.

He said the move was important to ensure the state government could continue carrying out its duties and responsibilities smoothly until the election.


Melaka DAP today announced its immediate withdrawal from the state government after the Melaka State Legislative Assembly passed amendments to the State Constitution to allow for the appointment of nominated assemblymen.

Melaka DAP chairman Khoo Poay Tiong said the decision was in line with the party’s stand in opposing the bill, which it claimed was contrary to the principles of democracy and elections. — Bernama

US targets ICC with sweeping campaign to protect Americans



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US targets ICC with sweeping campaign to protect Americans


14 Jul 2026 • 9:11 AM MYT


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Washington launches a coordinated effort against the International Criminal Court, accusing it of threatening US sovereignty and servicemen.



WASHINGTON: The United States on Monday announced a sweeping campaign against the International Criminal Court (ICC) that could include further sanctions and other measures, accusing it of posing “an intolerable threat to US sovereignty.”

The Trump administration said it would pressure other countries to withdraw from the court, marking a sharp escalation in the US effort to isolate the Hague-based institution and starve it of political and financial support.

“The ICC and its friends are waging a war against our country, not with bullets or missiles, but with statutes, compacts and the force of so-called international law,” US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said in a video statement.

The State Department said in a statement that the campaign will “systematically disable the ICC’s ability to operate, target American servicemen or officials, or otherwise threaten American sovereignty.”

The US has previously targeted individual court officials it deems a threat to US interests, but the new “whole of government” campaign will pressure other nations “to withdraw from the ICC and cut off any financial support to the court,” a State Department official told AFP on condition of anonymity.


‘Threat to America’

In February 2025, shortly after President Donald Trump returned to office, Washington slapped asset freezes and travel bans on several ICC officials over an arrest warrant issued for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu over the war in Gaza.

But on Monday, the State Department focused on what it called the ICC’s “intolerable threat to US sovereignty,” saying the court “claims the authority to prosecute and even imprison American servicemen and officials operating on behalf of America’s national interest.”

“Americans never signed up for this, and all American presidents since the ICC’s ratification have maintained that the ICC does not have jurisdiction over Americans,” the department’s statement said.

Rubio added that the ICC “threatens every aspect of our political and legal system,” and that it has moved from being a “narrow backstop” charged with prosecuting “only the gravest offenses…when a nation’s courts were unable.”

In addition to levying further travel and financial restrictions on people associated with the court, the State Department official said: “We will watch with interest which nations join ranks with us against this threat to Americans who are willing to risk their lives to protect others.”

“While the calls are intended to highlight the ICC’s abuses and the risks posed to Americans and other nations, nations that refuse to reject the ICC’s false authority while relying on US assistance are likely to come under increased scrutiny,” the official said.

US reservations about the court predate the Trump. The US, like Israel, has not ratified the international treaty that established the ICC and it has rejected the court’s jurisdiction in cases involving the US or Israel.


Judges’ lawsuit

Three ICC judges sanctioned by the Trump administration filed a lawsuit in June against the president and other senior US officials, arguing that the measures imposed on them were unlawful.

In a complaint filed in New York, Canadian judge Kimberly Prost, Uganda’s Solomy Balungi Bossa and Benin’s Reine Adelaide Sophie Alapini-Gansou said the sanctions were intended to “exert extrajudicial pressure.”

Established in 2002, the ICC prosecutes individuals accused of the gravest atrocities, including war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide.

Russia is also not a member of the ICC. Its President Vladimir Putin has been the subject of an ICC arrest warrant since March 2023.


India summons Iran envoy over dead sailor amid more strikes

 

Iran war: India summons Iran envoy over dead sailor amid more strikes