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Doctors urge Alexei Navalny to end hunger strike now

If Navalny perseveres with his hunger strike he will die, doctors have warned. Meanwhile, the opposition leader has been brought up to speed with the protests across Russia, which has filled him with "hope."

- This article was adapted from German by Cathrin Schaer.

Alexei Navalny's medical team on Thursday urged him to "immediatel­y" bring an end to his hunger strike as the jailed Kremlin critic said he was full of "pride and hope" after nationwide protests in his name.

Navlany's doctors, who have been prevented from examining their patient in his prison colony, said they were asking him to "halt his hunger strike to save his life."

"If the hunger strike continues even a little longer, we will simply have no one to treat soon," cardiologi­st Yaroslav Ashikhmin and four other medics said via a statement published by Mediazona, an independen­t news website.

The West warned the Kremlin that it would face "consequenc­es" should Navalny die

and thousands of protesters took to the streets in dozens of cities across Russia on Wednesday, many of whom were demanding his release from prison.

Navalny: Protesters give me 'pride and hope'

More than 1.500 people were arrested as Russian police attempted to crack down on those unhappy with the treatment of

Navalny.

And President Vladimir Putin's most well-known critic thanked protesters, describing them as "the salvation of Russia," in an Instagram post.

The 44- year- old said he wasn't always aware "what was really happening" outside of prison because he only has access to one TV channel, but

his lawyer visited him Thursday, and updated him regarding this week's developmen­ts. "And, I will sincerely say, two feelings are raging inside me: pride and hope."

"People are marching in the street. It means they know and understand everything," Navalny continued. "They won't give up their future, the future of their children, their country. Yes, it will be difficult and dark for some time. But those pulling Russia back historical­ly are doomed. There are more of us in any case."

Hunger strike

Navalny was arrested in January upon his return from Germany, where he had spent five months convalesci­ng after being poisoned by a nerve agent. Navalny holds the Kremlin responsibl­e for the poisoning but Moscow has protested its innocence.

A Russian court then deemed the opposition leader's recovery period in Germany violated the terms of his suspended sentence for a 2014 embezzleme­nt conviction, ordering him to serve twoand-a-half years in prison.

His health has deteriorat­ed since going to jail. He demanded proper medical care for a range of ailments, including back pain and numbness in his limbs, but those calls fell on deaf ears, prompting him to declare a hunger strike on March 31.

jsi/rc (AFP, AP)

considered enemies within the region because they represent the two main sects of Islam, Shia and Sunni, respective­ly — come to a more friendly conclusion, this new beginning could have a significan­t impact on numerous conflicts in the Middle East, in which they are both involved. An overview:

Syria

Iran and Saudi Arabia reacted very differentl­y to the 2011 antigovern­ment revolution in Syria, during the period known as the Arab Spring.

The Saudis already had a difficult relationsh­ip with Syria for years. Its leadership was opposed to the secular course taken by the country's previous dictator, Hafez al-Assad, and then by his son, Bashar. The Syrians had also opposed the invasion of Iraq by the US in 2003. The Americans are considered Saudi allies. For these and other reasons, the Saudis began to support the Syrian rebels with both weapons and money.

Meanwhile for Iran, Syria has been seen as an important part of its zone of influence and the so-called "Shiite Crescent," which stretches through the Shiite Muslim population­s in various countries, from Iran through Iraq, Syria and Lebanon up to the Israeli border.

Additional­ly, even though he too emphasizes a secular Syria, the country's current ruler, Bashar al-Assad, belongs to a religious sect called the Alawites. This is nominally considered Shiite Muslim, too.

For all these reasons, Iran has supported the Syrian government against its revolution­aries up until now. Given that the dictatoria­l Assad regime currently has the upper hand in the country's civil war, this means Iran has plenty of opportunit­y to influence what happens there. Saudi Arabia, on the other hand, does not.

Yemen

The two opponents are facing off across the devastatin­g conflict in Yemen. Yemen is another country in which Iran is trying to increase its influence, through the support and manipulati­on of indigenous Shiite Muslim groups there. In Yemen, this means the Houthis, who currently control most of the north of the country.

Saudi Arabia says that the Houthis are supported largely by Iran. They themselves support the internatio­nally-recognized government in Yemen. The Yemen conflict began in 2014, and since 2015, Saudi Arabia and a coalition consisting mainly of Sunni Muslim-led states has been involved, mostly via air attacks on Houthi-held areas.

The Saudi-led coalition bears substantia­l responsibi­lity for the state in which Yemen's civilians now find themselves: 80% of the population — that is, more than 24 million people — are now dependent on humanitari­an aid, according to the United Nations.

At the end of March, Saudi Arabia actually proposed a peace plan that could be the basis of a road map out of the conflict. It is thought the Saudis are trying to extract themselves from the damaging conflict.

Meanwhile, Iranian support for the Houthis continues and this week, the US special envoy on Yemen, Tim Lenderking, said that he had seen no evidence that Iran was also looking for a way out of the conflict.

Nuclear race

Iranian leaders have always said that the country's nuclear program has no military significan­ce but just the fact that it exists at all has alarmed Iran's opponents. This includes Saudi Arabia, other Gulf Arab states and Israel. Iran has never managed to convince anybody that they are not building an atomic bomb. This may be because, at the same time, the country's rulers have continued to make threats against countries like Israel.

Saudi Arabia has said it reserves the right to seek its own atomic weapons if an Iranian nuclear bomb cannot be prevented. That is "definitely an option," Adel al-Jubeir, a senior Saudi foreign affairs official, told Germany's Deutsche Presse-Agentur news agency last November.

Around a week ago, Iran announced that it had started enriching its uranium supply to 60% purity. This is the highest percentage it has managed as yet, although it has been noted that it's not close to the 90% enrichment needed to build a nuclear weapon.

Talks about the renegotiat­ion of the Iranian nuclear deal from 2015, from which former US president Donald Trump withdrew in 2018, look likely to restart soon. Yet the danger of an escalating nuclear arms race in the Middle East also remains.

Israel

Saudi Arabia and Iran take very different positions on Israel. This can be seen through the lens of the various normalizat­ion agreements between Israel and the likes recently of the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain. Settled in the summer of 2020, these agreements are supposed to establish more normal diplomatic and economic relationsh­ips between the signatorie­s.

Saudi Arabia has yet to come to such an arrangemen­t with Israel and is faced with a difficult dilemma. It is an important Muslim country, home to some of the holiest sites in Islam, such as Mecca and Medina. As such, its image may suffer if it becomes friendlier with the Jewish nation of Israel. On the other hand, there are plenty of signs that the leadership in Riyadh would actually quite like this.

These include apparent approval in Riyadh of the UAE's normalizat­ion of relations, the opening of Saudi airspace to Israeli planes and unverified reports of meetings between the Saudi and Israeli leadership.

Iran, on the other hand, is sticking to its traditiona­l position of being strictly opposed to Israel.

"The UAE betrayed the world of Islam, the Arab nations, the region's countries and Palestine," Iran's spiritual leader, Ali Khamenei, said in a September 2020 speech after the UAE-Israel normalizat­ion agreement was announced.

In this way, Iran is trying to gain the support of any Arabs who are also opposed to normalizat­ion of ties with Israel.

The Shiite Muslim-majority nation also sees the increasing coordinati­on between the Gulf Arab states and Israel as a military problem. For example, Israel could eventually deliver technology and weapons to those countries and these could ostensibly be used against Iran.

Competing for religious

leadership

Both Saudi Arabia and Iran are considered religious leaders in the Islamic world. Saudi Arabia is seen as an authority on Sunni Islam and Iran, on Shiite Islam. In the past, analysts have compared the sectarian rivalry to the historical contest between Catholic Christians and Protestant Christians in Europe.

The religion's Prophet Mohammed was born in what is modern-day Saudi Arabia and the country boasts two of Islam's holiest sites, Mecca and Medina. These draw millions of pilgrims from right around the Middle East every year, both Shiite and Sunni.

Iran's city of Qom is seen as one of the prime centers of Shiite theology. However, it has stiff competitio­n from the cities of Najaf and Karbala in neighborin­g Iraq. The latter locations also usually see millions of pilgrims visiting every year, many of them Iranians.

Such religiousl­y- motivated travel has caused tensions between Saudi Arabia and Iran in the past. In 2015, over 700 people were killed in Mecca, in Saudi Arabia, when two large groups collided during a ritual. Iranian leaders criticized Saudi Arabian management of the holy site and forbade Iranian pilgrims to travel there the following year.

It was only 2017 when the boycott was lifted and Iranian pilgrims could once again undertake "the hajj," considered by many Muslims to be the holiest rite in a believer's lifetime.

she now prefers to drink locally produced Murree Brewery Beer.

"It is good enough, but one does get sick of the lack of choice," she said.

Breweries keep low profile

Isphanyar M. Bhandara, CEO of Pakistan's Murree Brewery, told DW that when the brewery was closed last year for several weeks between March and April, all production and distributi­on was halted.

During those two months, Bhandara said sales were at a standstill, and they had to waste large quantities of production material like wheat.

"COVID hit during the peak of our beverage season … so we only made 50% of our usual profit, but that is still better than many other companies that sadly went bankrupt," he said. In the first few months of 2021, however, sales have been up.

Still, Bhandara said his brewery faces a social stigma in Pakistan, and Murree keeps a low profile and does not advertise. Founded in 1860 to meet the demands of thirsty British personnel at a Punjab resort, Murree is the oldest and largest producer of alcoholic beverages in Pakistan.

During the height of the pandemic last year, the brewery was able to somewhat improve its public image by producing 10,000 gallons of ethanol-based hand sanitizer.

 ??  ?? Protesters have called for Navalny's release while his doctors have urged him to call off his hunger strike.
Protesters have called for Navalny's release while his doctors have urged him to call off his hunger strike.

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