
Putin is set to take questions from international journalists
ST. PETERSBURG, Russia (AP) — Russian President Vladimir Putin is set to take questions Wednesday from international journalists on the sidelines of the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum.
Putin scheduled a roundtable session with senior news leaders of international news agencies, including The Associated Press. Among other issues, he's expected to spell out Moscow's position on the conflict between Israel and Iran that he offered to help mediate in a weekend call with U.S. President Donald Trump.
Russia has maintained a delicate balancing act in the Middle East for decades, trying to navigate its warm relations with Israel even as it has developed strong economic and military ties with Iran, a policy that potentially opens opportunities for Moscow to play power broker to help end the confrontation.
Putin's comments will also be watched closely for clues to his strategy in the three-year conflict in Ukraine, where Russia has intensified its aerial campaign and stepped up ground attacks along the more than 1,000-kilometer (over 600-mile) front line. He has effectively rejected Trump's offer of an immediate 30-day ceasefire, making it conditional on a halt on Ukraine's mobilization effort and a freeze on Western arms supplies.
The Russian leader has used the annual forum to highlight Russia's economic achievements and seek foreign investment. Western executives, who attended the event in the past, have avoided it after Putin sent troops into Ukraine in February 2022, leaving it to business leaders from Asia, Africa and Latin America.
On the sidelines of the forum, Putin is set to have meetings with Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto and former Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff, who now heads the New Development Bank created by the BRICS alliance of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa. He's also expected to confer with top officials from China, South Africa and Bahrain and the head of the OPEC group of oil-producing countries.
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Associated Press
31 minutes ago
- Associated Press
Kyiv rescuers find more bodies as death toll from latest Russian missile attack climbs to 28
KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Emergency workers pulled more bodies Wednesday from the rubble of a nine-story Kyiv apartment building demolished by a Russian missile, raising the death toll from the latest attack on the Ukrainian capital to 28. The building in Kyiv's Solomianskyi district took a direct hit and collapsed during the deadliest Russian attack on Kyiv this year. Authorities said that 23 of those killed were inside the building. The remaining five were killed elsewhere in the city. Workers used cranes, excavators and their hands to clear more debris from the site Wednesday, and sniffer dogs searched for buried victims. The blast also blew out windows and doors in neighboring buildings in a wide radius of damage. The attack overnight on Monday into Tuesday was part of a sweeping barrage — Russia fired more than 440 drones and 32 missiles in what Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said was one of the biggest bombardments of the war, now in its fourth year. Russia has launched a summer offensive on parts of the roughly 1,000-kilometer (620-mile) front line and has intensified long-range attacks that have struck urban residential areas. At the same time, U.S.-led peace efforts have failed to grain traction. Also, Middle East tensions and U.S. trade tariffs have drawn world attention away from Ukraine's pleas for more diplomatic and economic pressure to be placed on Russia. The U.S. Embassy in Kyiv said the attack clashed with the attempts by the administration of President Donald Trump to reach a settlement that will stop the fighting. 'This senseless attack runs counter to President Trump's call to stop the killing and end the war,' the embassy posted on social platform X. Kyiv authorities declared Wednesday an official day of mourning. Mourners laid flowers on swings and slides at a playground across the street from the collapsed building. On Tuesday, a man had waited hours there for his 31-year-old son's body to be pulled from the rubble. Valentin Hrynkov, a 64-year-old handyman in a local school who lived on the seventh floor of a connected building that did not collapse, said he and his wife woke up to the sound of explosions followed by a pause, and then another blast that rattled their own building. He said his wife had shrapnel injuries in her back and his legs and feet were cut by broken glass. The damage trapped them in their apartment for around 30 minutes before rescue workers could free them, he said. He felt an overwhelming sense of 'helplessness and primal fear' during the attack, he told The Associated Press. ___ Follow AP's coverage of the war in Ukraine at


CNBC
an hour ago
- CNBC
Klarna CEO wants to turn the platform into a 'super app' with AI
Klarna's CEO is so bullish about artificial intelligence that he sees it changing the way the fintech's 100 million users bank every day as he sets out to diversify the company's services. On Wednesday, Klarna — a pioneer of the popular "buy now, pay later" payment method — is announcing the launch of mobile phone plans in the U.S. via a partnership with telecom services startup Gigs. The plans come with unlimited data, calls and texts and will cost $40 a month. The new phone offering aligns with CEO Sebastian Siemiatkowski's vision to make Klarna more of an all-encompassing personalized financial "super app" that can offer services outside the realms of traditional finance. It isn't the company's first attempt. Previously, Klarna tried to make itself more akin to a "super app" — similar to Ant Group's Alipay and Tencent's WeChat Pay — offering additional services through multiple different buttons. This ended up being "confusing for the customer," Siemiatkowski told CNBC in an interview. But the Klarna boss stressed the part AI can play in Klarna's fresh attempt. "I think in this new AI world, there's a better opportunity to serve customers with different services and then adopt the kind of level of articulation and visualization of those services than there was historically," he said. "With AI, you can abstract and adopt the experience much more to the specific user you're dealing with," Siemiatkowski said in an interview. Super apps are popular in China and in other parts of Asia. They're meant to serve as a one-stop shop for all your mobile needs — for example, having taxi-hailing and food ordering in the same place as payment and messaging services. While super apps have flourished in Asia, adoption in Western markets has nonetheless been slower due to a number of reasons. Siemiatkowski says he's spending a lot of his time focusing on AI. "There's a tremendous opportunity for that — but it's just getting it to work," he said. "Everyone who has used it knows it can spit out some exciting stuff but then you need to make sure that it works every time." Going forward, Klarna's chief sees the platform becoming more of a "digital financial assistant" for users' every-day banking needs. "If we have some information that suggests that you are overpaying for your carrier subscription or your data or whatever, we can now offer you both a suggestion of a better price model, but also with a click, implement that and make it a reality," Siemiatkowski said. Acknowledging issues with Klarna's previous attempt to become a super app, Siemiatkowski says the technology just wasn't "mature" enough at the time. Klarna reported a $99 million loss for the quarter that ended in March, citing one-off costs relating to depreciation, share-based payments and restructuring. Still, Klarna has a perception problem to overcome. In the U.S., the firm has become synonymous with the "buy now, pay later" (BNPL) payment method, which allows consumers to pay off orders over monthly installments — typically interest-free. By contrast, in Europe, consumers recognize they can use Klarna to store their deposits and pay for things in one go as well as via a credit plan, Siemiatkowski noted. He also expressed frustration with "the kind of memes that we get in in the U.S. when it's like, 'Oh, Klarna launched with DoorDash ... it is a sign of the macroeconomic environment," referring to a tie-up the company announced with food delivery app DoorDash earlier this year that was met with backlash online. Siemiakowski said this kind of reaction wouldn't happen in the German or Nordic markets, where Klarna operates more like online payment system PayPal. He sees a future where Klarna works as a more all-encompassing financial ecosystem with add-on services such as features for investments in stocks and cryptocurrencies — which, he adds, is "not that far off." "Offering people the ability to invest in both stock and crypto is is what's becoming a kind of more standard part of a neobank offering," he said, while stressing he doesn't want to compete with popular U.S. stock trading app Robinhood. Klarna paused plans to go public in April, after U.S. President Donald Trump announced sweeping tariffs on dozens of countries. Siemiatkowski said that Klarna has already achieved what it set out to do in order to be ready for that milestone — namely, building up a brand in the U.S. "The U.S. is now our largest market by number of users. It's a profitable market for us," he said. "Those things have been accomplished." Whether the company does or doesn't go public, the business strategy for Klarna remains the same. "That is just a healthy way to drive liquidity for our shareholders, as well as give the company more ways to fund itself, if it would like to do so, and ... to show that this is a an established company," Siemiatkowski said.


Newsweek
an hour ago
- Newsweek
Reclaiming Religious Freedom—A Liberal Responsibility
Advocates for ideas and draws conclusions based on the interpretation of facts and data. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. On June 17, the International Religious Freedom Summit was held in Nairobi, Kenya. Recently, 200 Christian IDPs (Internally Displaced Persons) were massacred in Nigeria. Terrorist groups like Al‑Shabab frequently also target Christians in Kenya. Dr. Gloria Samdi-Puldu, president of the Nigerian-based LEAH Foundation, supports girls and women like Leah Sharibu, kidnapped by the extremist group Boko Haram in 2018 for refusing to renounce her Christian faith. Samdi-Puldu, who is exhausted by the trauma she faces daily, shared that religious persecution is finally being recognized, giving her reason for hope. What she may not realize is the actual lack of interest in combating religious persecution. Red Cross officials inspect the damage at the burnt COCIN Church building in Mangu, Nigeria, on Feb. 2, 2024, following weeks of intercommunal violence and unrest in the Plateau State. Red Cross officials inspect the damage at the burnt COCIN Church building in Mangu, Nigeria, on Feb. 2, 2024, following weeks of intercommunal violence and unrest in the Plateau State. KOLA SULAIMON/AFP via Getty Images The world is facing one of the fastest-growing human rights crises: religious persecution, increasingly escalating into ethno-religious cleansing and genocide. And it's growing in many parts of the world. Yet liberal politicians, media outlets, and NGOs too often stay silent. This abandons what former President Bill Clinton intended when he championed the International Religious Freedom Act in 1998, making religious freedom a cornerstone of American foreign policy. This has created a vacuum filled by conservative organizations, which—while doing important and lifesaving work—can also bring ideological baggage to what should be a universal human rights cause. The cost is real—120,000 Armenians were ethnically cleansed in 2023 with little Western media attention. Uyghur Muslims in China, Baha'is in Iran, Alawites in Syria, and Christians in Nigeria suffer daily atrocities. When I meet survivors of religious persecution, they ask, "Why don't Western liberals care about us?" Robert Řehák, the Czech Republic's ambassador for Holocaust issues, interfaith dialogue and freedom of religion, leads the International Religious Freedom or Belief Alliance (IRFBA), sometimes called the Article 18 Alliance. This intergovernmental coalition brings together 43 countries, working collectively to promote and defend freedom of religion or belief worldwide. "The struggle for religious freedom is a necessity because the world is increasingly radicalized and polarized. To combat this, we need avenues for dialogue that can counter these dangerous tendencies. It is also a fight for peace, prosperity, and the prevention of future conflicts," Řehák told Newsweek. Hard Lessons from the Field In Beirut, Lebanon, I recently met Ablahad Stayfo, an Assyrian/Syriac activist who spent 15 years opposing the Assad regime in Syria. When I interviewed him in 2012, I asked whether the opposition valued religious freedom. He dismissed the question. Now, in 2025, he told Newsweek, "You were right, Nuri. We should have made it a priority. The progressive politicians we worked with didn't care. And now Syria's future is uncertain." My organization ADFA commissioned Layal Nehme to document Christians who fled Syria and Iraq to Lebanon. When I recently asked what happened to those she interviewed, her response was devastating. "Unfortunately, most have emigrated to Canada or Australia. While I am happy for them, I am devastated that the numbers of Christians are dwindling," she said. The Price of Liberal Silence Why the silence? Too many liberals fear that talking about religious freedom will align them with religious conservatives. But this fear is morally bankrupt. The regimes that persecute religious minorities are also the ones that oppress women, LGBTQ people, journalists, and dissidents. When the movement lacks progressive voices, it risks becoming ideologically skewed. Without sustained political pressure from across the spectrum, authoritarian regimes and extremist groups face little consequence for destroying religious communities. Time to Act At the IRF Summit in Washington, D.C., this January, I urged humanitarian organizations to improve their media outreach—to keep these stories alive and visible. This benefits both the media and the communities they aim to help. I urge my progressive friends to reclaim religious freedom as a liberal value: —Show up at conferences and advocacy events. —Speak out about religious persecution. —Support bipartisan initiatives like the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF). —Cover religious freedom violations with urgency. —And encourage more countries to join the International Religious Freedom or Belief Alliance (IRFBA). This is not a fight that belongs to the right or the left. When we think that way, we fail those who need us most. It's time for liberals to join the fight again—a cause they themselves began—and to understand that it is their struggle as well. Listening to eyewitnesses and survivors from several African countries—of different faiths—was both heart-wrenching and deeply important. Several African activists I spoke with criticized the IRF Summit, saying it should have been organized by Africans themselves. That critique matters. But if local capacity or resources were lacking, then the summit in Kenya was still a meaningful start. It laid the foundation for continued cooperation. Importantly, both Muslims and Christians were given the floor to address the attendees. To ignore the growing threat to religious freedom is to ignore Article 18 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights—and to fail those who need us most. Nuri Kino is an independent investigative multi-award-winning reporter and minority rights expert. The views expressed in this article are the writer's own.