Hawkish Israeli minister calls for voluntary emigration of Gazans

Hawkish Israeli minister calls for voluntary emigration of Gazans
This picture taken on November 13, 2023 from a position along the border with the Gaza Strip in southern Israel shows smoke erupting amid ongoing battles between Israel and the Palestinian Hamas movement. (AFP)
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Updated 14 November 2023
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Hawkish Israeli minister calls for voluntary emigration of Gazans

Hawkish Israeli minister calls for voluntary emigration of Gazans
  • Smotrich: Israel ‘will no longer be able to accept the existence of an independent entity in Gaza’

JERUSALEM: A senior far-right member of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government said on Tuesday Gaza could not survive as an independent entity and it would be better for Palestinians there to leave for other countries.

Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, who heads one of the religious nationalist parties in Netanyahu’s coalition, said he supported a call by two members of the Israeli parliament who wrote in a Wall Street Journal editorial that Western countries should accept Gazan families who expressed a desire to relocate.

The comments underscore fears in much of the Arab world that Israel wants to drive Palestinians out of land where they want to build a future state, repeating the mass dispossession of Palestinians when Israel was created in 1948.

“I welcome the initiative of the voluntary emigration of Gaza Arabs to countries around the world,” Smotrich said in a statement. “This is the right humanitarian solution for the residents of Gaza and the entire region after 75 years of refugees, poverty and danger.”

He said an area as small as the Gaza Strip without natural resources could not survive alone, and added: “The State of Israel will no longer be able to accept the existence of an independent entity in Gaza.”

Smotrich spoke during Israel’s invasion of the Gaza Strip, a blockaded coastal enclave ruled by Hamas that is home to some 2.3 million people, most of them refugees after earlier wars.

Palestinians and leaders of Arab countries have accused Israel of seeking a new “Nakba” (catastrophe), the name given to the displacement of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians who fled or were driven from their homes in the wake of the 1948 war that accompanied the founding of the state of Israel.

Most ended up in neighboring Arab states, and Arab leaders have said any latter-day move to displace Palestinians would be unacceptable.

Israel withdrew its military and settlers from Gaza in 2005 after a 38-year occupation, and Netanyahu has said it does not intend to maintain a permanent presence again, but that Israel would maintain security control for an indefinite period.

However there has been little clarity about Israel’s longer term intentions, and countries including the US have said that Gaza should be governed by Palestinians.

Meanwhile, when Hamas gunmen stormed southern Israel on Oct. 7 and rocket sirens pierced the early morning quiet across the country, Israel’s premier museums went into war mode, rushing to protect their most precious artwork and artefacts.

The Dead Sea Scrolls. Ancient dedication plaques on loan from the Louvre. A 1916 masterpiece by Austrian painter Gustav Klimt. These and other treasures were quickly taken off display and brought to special bunkers to ensure they are not damaged during the war.

“To take off an exhibition is something that usually is not done because we trust the building, we trust the safety of the showcases. But this is a different situation so we have to act accordingly,” said Hagit Maoz, curator of the Shrine of the Book at Jerusalem’s Israel Museum.

The iconic building, shaped like the lids of the jars in which the Dead Sea Scrolls were found, is usually packed with visitors eager to glimpse the collection of ancient religious texts. Today the eight display cases lining the walls have paper notes saying “temporarily removed.”

The last time the museum removed the display, Maoz said, was during the 1991 Gulf War when Iraq fired missiles at Israel.

Nurith Goshen, curator of Chalcolithic and Bronze Age archaeology, was cleaning up broken glass from a rocket strike near her home outside Jerusalem on Oct. 7 when the museum called announcing the war protocol and asking to confirm her list.

“You really have to choose the finest or the most fragile artefacts,” she said.

Her list included items on loan from the Louvre and the British Museum, and she said they got permission from those museums before taking them down.

“You really understand the meaning of what we are holding here, and what we have under our custodianship for Israel, but also for the world,” said Goshen.

The Tel Aviv Museum of Art took similar precautions.

Gustav Kimt’s Portrait of Friedericke Maria Beer, painted two years before his death, is now stored on a rack in a fortified underground bunker with other works. The paintings left behind blank spaces on the gallery’s wall.

“These works of art have experienced war, some of them survived World War Two,” said museum director Tania Coen-Uzzielli. “We are custodians for a short time, and we needed to protect them. To protect them for posterity and for history.” 


Critic of Tunisia president gets new jail term: lawyer

Updated 23 sec ago
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Critic of Tunisia president gets new jail term: lawyer

Critic of Tunisia president gets new jail term: lawyer
Dahmani, 56, was arrested on May 11 after having already been sentenced to eight months in prison in another case
Thursday’s sentence was issued after she claimed in another statement that sub-Saharan Africans in Tunisia, including black Tunisians, faced racism

TUNIS: A Tunisian court sentenced lawyer and media figure Sonia Dahmani to two years in prison on Thursday over comments she made criticizing racism in the country, her legal representative said.
Dahmani, 56, was arrested on May 11 after having already been sentenced to eight months in prison in another case.
Her arrest came when masked police raided Tunisia’s bar association, where she had sought refuge, following public remarks on television the authorities deemed critical in the initial case.
Thursday’s sentence was issued after she claimed in another statement that sub-Saharan Africans in Tunisia, including black Tunisians, faced racism, her lawyer Chawki Tabib told AFP.
She did not provide any details on the statements that landed her the sentence.
Dahmani still faces three other cases, one of her lawyers, Pierre-Francois Feltesse, told AFP.
In September, she was sentenced to eight months in prison over comments — also regarding migration in Tunisia — she made on television.
In a talk show, she had sarcastically questioned Tunisia’s state of affairs in response to claims that sub-Saharan migrants were settling in the country.
“What extraordinary country are we talking about?” she said at the time.
A judicial report later said her comments referenced a speech by President Kais Saied, who said Tunisia would not become a resettlement zone for migrants blocked from going to Europe.
Saied, democratically elected in 2019, has ruled Tunisia by decree since a 2021 power grab. He was re-elected this month by a landslide with 90 percent of the vote.
In both cases, Dahmani was sentenced under Decree 54, a law enacted by Saied in 2022 that criminalizes “spreading false news.”
The National Union of Tunisian Journalists says it has been used to prosecute tens of journalists, lawyers and opposition figures.


A Tunisian court sentenced lawyer and media figure Sonia Dahmani to two years in prison on Thursday over comments she made criticizing racism in the country, her legal representative said. (Instagram: @soniadahmani)

Israeli hostage families urge Netanyahu, Hamas to reach Gaza deal

Israeli hostage families urge Netanyahu, Hamas to reach Gaza deal
Updated 37 min 20 sec ago
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Israeli hostage families urge Netanyahu, Hamas to reach Gaza deal

Israeli hostage families urge Netanyahu, Hamas to reach Gaza deal
  • “Time is running out for the hostages,” said the Hostages and Missing Families Forum

JERUSALEM: An Israeli group representing families of Gaza hostages called Thursday on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Hamas to secure an agreement for the release of captives, after new truce talks were announced.
“We demand the Israeli prime minister grant the negotiating team full authority to secure this deal. Time is running out for the hostages,” said the Hostages and Missing Families Forum, adding: “We urgently call on world leaders to exert maximum pressure on Hamas to accept this deal and end a humanitarian catastrophe that has already claimed too many innocent live.”


Israeli raid topples residential buildings in Bekaa, victims trapped

Israeli raid topples residential buildings in Bekaa, victims trapped
Updated 54 min 12 sec ago
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Israeli raid topples residential buildings in Bekaa, victims trapped

Israeli raid topples residential buildings in Bekaa, victims trapped
  • Israeli drone chases car between Kahale and Aley in Mount Lebanon, killing the driver and one passenger
  • Beirut’s southern suburb witnessed the most violent attacks since hostilities against Hezbollah increased

BEIRUT: Residential buildings in Khodor, Baalbek, were targeted in Israeli raids on Thursday, leaving victims trapped beneath rubble for several hours. An initial attack left seven people dead and 14 injured.

Residents of the area, where most people rely on agriculture for a living, urged the authorities and the Red Cross to send bulldozers and heavy equipment to rescue those who were trapped.

Attacks continued during Thursday, reaching the city of Byblos for the first time. Israeli warplanes attacked the Almat area, which has no residential homes. Their target is not yet known.

An Israeli drone chased a car between Kahale and Aley in Mount Lebanon, killing the driver and one passenger, who was his brother, and severely injuring two children. Identified as Hussein and Haidar Srour, from the southern border village of Aita Al-Shaab, they were transferred to Hezbollah’s Al-Rassoul Al-Azam Hospital for treatment.

Beirut’s southern suburb witnessed the most violent attacks since the expansion of Israel’s hostilities against Hezbollah, with some 17 raids launched on areas surrounding Laylaki and Haret Hreik.

One residential complex was completely destroyed with a fire visible from far away. Those who live there evacuated the area some weeks ago, traveling to Beirut, Mount Lebanon, Tripoli or the north.

Emergency Committee Coordinator and caretaker Environment Minister Nasser Yassin, in Paris on Thursday for a conference to rally support for Lebanon, said: “Lebanon will need $250 million a month to help more than a million people displaced by Israeli attacks, and to cover the costs of war and displacement consequences on key sectors.”

He said the government response, helped by local initiatives and international aid, only covered 20 percent of the needs of around 1.3 million people. He estimated the damage caused to southern Lebanon, Bekaa, Beirut and the capital’s southern suburb ran to billions of dollars.

The twelfth plane operated by KSrelief as part of the Saudi aid effort landed at Beirut’s Rafik Hariri International Airport on Thursday carrying essential humanitarian supplies including food and medical stocks.

Meanwhile, southern Lebanon was heavily hit, especially Jbaa, Houmine Al-Tahta, Kfar Dounine, Aita Al-Shaab and Beit Lif. The Israeli army continued bombing houses on the outskirts of border town Aita Al-Shaab, while another raid on a house in Yater, Bint Jbeil, resulted in numerous deaths and injuries. Two paramedics were hurt as Israeli warplanes targeted the same area during rescue efforts.

A series of raids on Tyre destroyed a number of buildings, while a motorcycle rider was killed and his passenger injured after being targeted by a drone. Aita Al-Shaab and Ramyah were targeted at dawn by artillery shelling and heavy machine gun fire, while airstrikes on Bori Qalaouiye killed town mayor Hassan Rmeity.

On Wednesday, a Lebanese army officer and two soldiers were killed trying to evacuate the wounded following an airstrike on Yater. They were named as Maj. Mohammad Farhat, Sgt. Moussa Mehanna and Pvt. Mohammed Nazzal.

The General Directorate of Internal Security Forces announced it was mourning Sgt. Ali Jihad Farhat, killed on Wednesday in a strike on his hometown of Arabsalim in the Nabatieh region.

Israeli army spokesman Avichay Adraee said: “The Israeli Air Force planes targeted more than 160 Hezbollah targets, including rocket launchers, military buildings and infrastructure across Lebanon.

“The army found a housing area used by Hezbollah members, as well as dozens of weapons, including Kalashnikov rifles and shoulder-fired rockets, inside a house in southern Lebanon, in addition to combat means including rocket launchers, mortars, weapons and ammunition, and weapons depots containing hundreds of anti-armor rockets and mortar shells.”

Meanwhile, Hezbollah announced it had shelled the St. Jean logistics base between the settlement of Nahariya and the city of Acree and targeted two gatherings of Israeli forces in the settlements of Al-Manara and Misgav Am. It also attacked the settlement of Karmiel and shelled Kiryat Shmona, the city of Nahariya, the city of Safed and the Zevulun military-industrial base in the north of Haifa.

Hezbollah has stopped naming those who were killed since thousands of communications devices exploded in September.


Yemenis furious as riyal hits record low against the dollar 

Yemenis furious as riyal hits record low against the dollar 
Updated 24 October 2024
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Yemenis furious as riyal hits record low against the dollar 

Yemenis furious as riyal hits record low against the dollar 
  • Money traders and local media on Thursday said that the riyal was trading at 2,040 against the dollar in the port city of Aden
  • In an effort to limit the riyal’s depreciation, PLC chairman Rashad Al-Alimi has ordered the implementation of the government’s Economic Rescue Plan

AL-MUKALLA: The Yemeni riyal has fallen to a historic low of 2,000 against the US dollar in government-controlled areas, raising concerns that it will exacerbate the dire humanitarian situation and fuel further violence in the war-torn country. 

Money traders and local media on Thursday said that the riyal was trading at 2,040 against the dollar in the port city of Aden, Yemen’s interim capital, and other Yemeni cities controlled by the Yemeni government, a dramatic devaluation against the dollar.

A decade ago, when the Houthis seized power, 215 riyals were needed to buy a dollar.

The riyal fell to an all-time low of 1,700 against the dollar in June, after hovering at about 1,200 for months after the formation of the Presidential Leadership Council in early 2022.

In an effort to limit the riyal’s depreciation, PLC chairman Rashad Al-Alimi has ordered the implementation of the government’s Economic Rescue Plan, which focuses on combating corruption and all forms of smuggling, including the smuggling of hard currencies out of the country, containing the money supply in the market, optimizing import expenditures, reinforcing and supporting central bank measures, and boosting the agricultural sector.

Al-Alimi held talks with senior military and security officials and asked them to assist in implementing the central bank’s measures to limit the depreciation of the riyal.

During a meeting with the central bank leadership last week, Prime Minister Ahmed Awadh bin Mubarak said that the rapid devaluation of the riyal was unjustified and blamed it on “a deliberate plan” to undermine the economy of Yemen’s government-controlled areas. 

At the same time, the official news agency SABA reported that the governor of the central bank in Aden, Ahmed bin Ahmed Ghaleb, and the minister of finance, Salem bin Buraik, are now in the US where they lobby for international assistance to the Yemeni economy to shore up the riyal during their meetings with officials from the International Monetary Fund, the Arab Monetary Fund, and other international funds.

To boost the bank’s shrinking liquidity and keep the currency stable, the central bank announced in the past three days that it would sell $80 million from its foreign currency reserves in public auctions, as well as another auction for short-term and long-term government debt instruments, beginning with 15 billion riyals and offering expected returns of 18 percent to 20 percent. 

During previous rounds of riyal devaluation, the central bank in Aden closed exchange companies and shops suspected of engaging in currency speculation, canceled the informal transfer system between local exchange firms and replaced it with a new system under its control, and supplied the dollar to local fuel and goods importers.

Al-Alimi and his government officials have repeatedly blamed the country’s economic downturn on the Houthis’ economic measures against the government, such as prohibiting local traders from importing goods through government-controlled ports and the militia’s attacks on oil terminals in the southern provinces of Hadramout and Shabwa, which halted oil exports, the government’s primary source of revenue.

According to the monthly bulletin on food security in Yemen, released by the World Food Programme in late September, the Yemeni riyal has devalued by 24 percent year on year and lost 68 percent of its value in government-controlled areas over the past five years, attributing the decline to shrinking foreign reserves, suspended oil experts from government areas, and dwindling remittance inflows. The WFP predicted that the riyal would reach 2,100 against the dollar by January next year.

The devaluation of the riyal has pushed up prices of basic commodities, fuel and transport in recent months, sparking protests in some areas such as Taiz, as well as angry reactions from Yemenis in the streets and on social media. 

People say that the riyal’s rapid depreciation has made their lives difficult and pushed them into famine. Mohammed Al-Youbi, a father of seven from the small village of Al-Ma’afari in Merkhah Al-Ulya district in Shabwa province, told Arab News that most of his children are unable to attend school because he cannot afford to transport them and that his family “cannot afford to buy meat or chicken and other basic stuff.”

Al-Youbi added: “People are heading for the abyss; we complained and posted about it on social media, but no one cared. The government is riddled with corruption, and ministers don’t care because their salaries are in dollars.”


Spain busts network smuggling Syrians, Algerians to EU

Spain busts network smuggling Syrians, Algerians to EU
Updated 24 October 2024
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Spain busts network smuggling Syrians, Algerians to EU

Spain busts network smuggling Syrians, Algerians to EU
  • Migrants paid the smuggling ring up to $10,800 each for trips on small boats
  • The authorities arrested three people in the Toledo area

MADRID: Spanish police on Thursday said they had broken up a network suspected of smuggling at least 70 Syrian and Algerian migrants to Spain and made three arrests.
The migrants paid the smuggling ring up to 10,000 euros ($10,800) each for trips on small boats from Algeria to Spain before traveling to other European countries, police said in a statement.
The boats lacked any safety measures, water or food, posing a “serious risk” to the migrants’ lives, while the organization used violence against those who failed to pay on time, it added.
The migrants suffered “dire” living conditions in the Madrid and nearby Toledo regions before continuing to other destinations in Spain and elsewhere in Europe, notably Germany, police said.
The authorities arrested three people in the Toledo area, including the group’s leader who was placed in detention.