UN chiefs call for Gaza ceasefire as a ‘path out of this horror’

UN chiefs call for Gaza ceasefire as a ‘path out of this horror’
Palestinians wounded in Israeli strikes lie on the floor as they are assisted at the Indonesian hospital after Al-Shifa Hospital has gone out of service amid Israeli ground offensive, in the northern Gaza Strip on November 16, 2023. (Reuters)
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Updated 18 November 2023
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UN chiefs call for Gaza ceasefire as a ‘path out of this horror’

UN chiefs call for Gaza ceasefire as a ‘path out of this horror’
  • Gazans are enduring a bombardment ‘rarely experienced in this century,’ High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk tells General Assembly
  • ‘We are not asking for the moon, we are asking for the basic measures required to meet the essential needs of the civilian population’ says UN humanitarian boss Martin Griffiths

NEW YORK CITY: Palestinians in Gaza, whose rights for years have been “comprehensively restricted,” are now enduring a bombardment of an intensity “rarely experienced in this century,” as well as ongoing urban warfare, a leading UN official said on Friday.
Volker Turk, the high commissioner for human rights, added that one in every 57 people living in the Gaza Strip has been killed or wounded in the past five weeks.
Speaking during a meeting of the General Assembly requested by the UN’s Arab Group and the Organization of Islamic Cooperation to discuss the humanitarian situation in Gaza, he said: “The levels of distress are unimaginable; the situation is a living nightmare.”
More than 11,100 people have been killed in the territory, more than 4,600 of them children, according to figures from the Gazan health ministry. More than 26,000 people have been injured, many of them severely, and at least 2,000 are presumed trapped under the rubble of damaged or destroyed buildings, with no means available to reach or rescue them. Israeli airstrikes have struck many civilian locations, including hospitals, schools, markets, bakeries and homes.
“An entire population is being deeply traumatized, and the impact on children in particular will have far-reaching consequences,” Turk told the large gathering of ambassadors and heads of UN agencies.
He lamented the fact that many Palestinians have been unable to comply with instructions from Israeli forces to move from northern Gaza, scene of the most intense military action, to the south of the territory. Hundreds of thousands of people, including many children, disabled people, and the sick and wounded, remain stuck in the north, where the shelling is intense and humanitarian access has been impossible.
Turk dismissed the current Israeli proposal for the establishment of a so-called “safe zone” as “untenable,” warning: “The zone is neither safe nor feasible for the number of people in need.”
He joined the heads of other UN agencies, including the World Food Programme, the World Health Organization, and the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East, in warning that fuel supplies in Gaza are on the verge of completely running out.
“Already, this is leading to the collapse of water, sewage and crucial healthcare services, and could end the trickle of humanitarian assistance that Israel has to date permitted to enter Gaza,” Turk said.
He also repeated a warning from the WFP that Gazans “are facing the immediate possibility of starvation.”
He then sounded “the loudest possible alarm bell about the West Bank” and East Jerusalem, expressing great concern about the intensification of violence there and “severe discrimination against Palestinians.”
He said: “I am alarmed by the rise in killings of Palestinians by Israeli security forces and by settlers, displacement of Palestinian communities due to settler violence, a sharp increase in seemingly arbitrary arrests and detention, and the ill-treatment of Palestinians in detention.
“These heighten a potentially explosive situation that is well past the early-warning level.”
Turk called for a humanitarian ceasefire and an end to the fighting, “not only to deliver urgently needed food and provide meaningful humanitarian assistance but also to create space for a path out of this horror.”
“All forms of collective punishment must come to an end. Israelis’ freedom is inextricably bound up with Palestinians’ freedom. Palestinians and Israelis are each other’s only hope for peace.”
Martin Griffiths, the UN’s humanitarian chief, told the General Assembly that “international humanitarian law appears to have been turned on its head.”
He said that more than 41,000 housing units have been destroyed or severely damaged, amounting to about 45 per cent of the total housing stock in Gaza, and it is estimated that more than 1.5 million people are internally displaced.
“Many of them have fled southward in search of relative safety, only to be now told to relocate — many of them for the second time — westward,” he added. “Nevertheless, hundreds of thousands remain in the north, where the fiercest fighting and bombardment is taking place.
“There is little-to-no medical care available in northern Gaza. Out of 24 hospitals with in-patient capacity in the north, only one, Al-Ahli in Gaza city, is presently operational and admitting patients. Eighteen hospitals have shut down and evacuated since the start of hostilities.”
Across the Strip, food and water supplies are running “perilously low,” Griffiths said, and the chronic lack of fuel means communications networks and other essential services, such as water desalination plants, “are progressively dropping offline.”
He urged Hamas to release all the hostages that are still being held, and stressed the need for the humanitarian effort to shift from “ad hoc delivery of assistance to a continuous flow of aid.” To help facilitate this he called for the opening of additional border-crossing points and permission for fuel deliveries to begin.
Griffiths also pleaded for “a humanitarian ceasefire — call it what you will but the requirement, from a humanitarian point of view, is simple: stop the fighting to allow civilians to move safely. Do it for as long as possible, to facilitate an unimpeded humanitarian response. Give the people of Gaza a breather from the terrible, terrible things that have been put on them these last few weeks. And, without condition, release all the hostages.
“We are not asking for the moon, we are asking for the basic measures required to meet the essential needs of the civilian population and stem the course of this crisis.”


Judge questions Lebanon’s detained ex-central bank chief Salameh, sources say

Judge questions Lebanon’s detained ex-central bank chief Salameh, sources say
Updated 4 sec ago
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Judge questions Lebanon’s detained ex-central bank chief Salameh, sources say

Judge questions Lebanon’s detained ex-central bank chief Salameh, sources say
BEIRUT: A judge began interrogating Lebanon’s detained former central bank governor Riad Salameh in Beirut on Monday, judicial sources said, the first hearing since he was held last week and charged with alleged financial crimes including embezzling public funds.
The judge questioning Salameh, who ran the central bank for three decades until July 2023, is expected to decide whether to keep him in detention or release him pending further questioning over alleged embezzlement, forgery and illicit enrichment.
If the prosecution continues, it would mark a rare case of a serving or retired senior Lebanese official facing accountability in a system which critics say has long shielded the elite.
Salameh was long feted as a financial wizard in Lebanon but left office with his reputation shredded by corruption charges at home and abroad and the catastrophic collapse of Lebanon’s financial system in 2019.
Salameh’s media office has said he will not comment publicly on the case, in line with the law. It said in a statement he had cooperated in the past with more than 20 criminal probes in Beirut and Mount Lebanon, and was cooperating with the investigation after his detention.
Salameh has denied previous corruption charges.

Turkey says its air strikes hit PKK targets in northern Iraq

Turkey says its air strikes hit PKK targets in northern Iraq
Updated 9 min 17 sec ago
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Turkey says its air strikes hit PKK targets in northern Iraq

Turkey says its air strikes hit PKK targets in northern Iraq

ISTANBUL: Turkish air strikes in northern Iraq destroyed 21 targets of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) on Monday, Turkey's Defence Ministry said, adding many militants had been "neutralised" in the attack.
Ankara typically uses the term "neutralised" to mean killed.
The operations targeted PKK bases in Gara, Hakurk, Metina and Qandil, the ministry statement said.


Israeli strikes in central Syria kill seven — war monitor

Israeli strikes in central Syria kill seven — war monitor
Updated 09 September 2024
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Israeli strikes in central Syria kill seven — war monitor

Israeli strikes in central Syria kill seven — war monitor
  • Israel has carried out hundreds of strikes in Syria since 2011, targeting pro-Iranian groups
  • Latest airstrikes targeted an area housing scientific research centers and weapons experts

DAMASCUS: Israeli strikes in central Syria killed at least seven people late Sunday, including three civilians, a war monitor reported.
Since the start of the civil war in Syria in 2011, Israel has carried out hundreds of strikes there, targeting pro-Iranian groups in particular.
“The number of dead in the Israeli strikes on the Masyaf region stands at seven, namely three civilians, including a man and his son who were in a car, and four unidentified soldiers,” said the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which has a vast network of sources inside the country.
The attack also wounded at least 15 others and destroyed military facilities in the area, the Observatory said.
“Thirteen violent explosions rang out in the zone housing scientific research centers in Masyaf where pro-Iranian groups and weapons development experts are present,” the group said in an earlier statement.
The Syrian state news agency Sana had previously reported five killed and 19 wounded near Masyaf, citing a medical source.
“Around 11:20 p.m. (2020 GMT) on Sunday, the Israeli enemy carried out an air attack from the northwest of Lebanon targeting a number of military sites in the central region,” Sana reported, citing a military source.
“Our air defense shot down some missiles.”
Israeli air raids in Syria have intensified since the October 7 Hamas attack on Israel that sparked the war in Gaza.
Israeli authorities rarely comment on individual strikes in Syria, but have repeatedly said they will not allow arch-enemy Iran to expand its presence there.
At the end of August, three pro-Iranian fighters were killed in the central region of Homs in strikes attributed to Israel, the Observatory said.
A few days later, the Israeli military said it had killed an unspecified number of fighters belonging to Hamas ally Islamic Jihad in a strike in Syria near the Lebanese border.


US, UK aircraft bomb Houthi-held area as militia claims downing US drone

US, UK aircraft bomb Houthi-held area as militia claims downing US drone
Updated 09 September 2024
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US, UK aircraft bomb Houthi-held area as militia claims downing US drone

US, UK aircraft bomb Houthi-held area as militia claims downing US drone
  • A Houthi-run news agency reported the strikes but did not say if there had been any loss of life
  • Houthis have targeted over 100 commercial and naval ships in the Red Sea since late last year

AL-MUKALLA: US and UK warplanes have blasted Houthi sites in Yemen’s Ibb province after the Yemeni militia claimed to have shot down a new US drone.

The Houthi-run official news agency reported on Sunday that American and British warplanes carried out three airstrikes on the Maytam region, north of Ibb province, the latest in a series of military operations against the Houthis in response to their attacks on ships.

The Houthis did not provide information on the targeted area in the region, or if there were any human or property damages.

Since early this year, US and UK forces have launched strikes on Houthi-held Yemeni provinces including Sanaa, Saada, Hodeidah, Ibb, and others, targeting missile and drone launchers and storage facilities, as well as explosive-laden drone boats ready to attack ships in international shipping lanes off Yemen.

This comes as Houthi military spokesman Yahya Sarea claimed on Saturday night that the Yemeni militia had shot down a US military MQ-9 drone engaged in “hostile activities” over the central province of Marib, the eighth such claim since the start of their anti-ship campaign in November.

The Houthis did not immediately publish a video of the operation to back up their claim, something they routinely do hours or days later.

The Houthis earlier claimed to have shot down the same kind of US drone over Hodeidah, Saada, and Marib using locally produced missiles.

Since late last year, the Houthis have launched hundreds of ballistic missiles, drones, and drone boats at over 100 commercial and naval ships in the Red Sea, Bab Al-Mandab Strait, Gulf of Aden, and Indian Ocean, claiming to be acting in solidarity with the Palestinian people against Israel’s war in Gaza.

During their campaign, the Houthis captured one commercial ship, sank two others, and set fire to numerous more.

The Greek-flagged Sounion oil ship carrying 150,000 tonnes of crude oil is still burning and abandoned in the Red Sea, having been repeatedly struck by Houthi fire.

Rescuers who visited the ship last week determined that it was too dangerous to relocate and looked at various possibilities for defusing the hazard on-site.

At the same time, the EU naval operation in the Red Sea, EUNAVFOR ASPIDES, said on Saturday that its three naval units had defended 230 ships on the major commerce artery, shot down 17 drones, two drone boats, and four ballistic missiles, and rescued 29 sailors since the mission began in February.

In a separate development, the Houthis said on Saturday that lightning bolts had killed 160 people in regions under their control since the beginning of the year, including 22 deaths in strikes during the last two days.

The most recent round of torrential and intense rains, which started in late July, has killed over 100 people, displaced thousands of families, destroyed hundreds of houses, and washed away roads and other infrastructure throughout Yemen, mainly in the country’s central highlands and western coastal provinces.

Meanwhile, heavy fighting between Yemeni government troops and the Houthis has erupted in hilly parts of the southern province of Lahj, killing or injuring numerous combatants from both sides.

Local media reported on Sunday that joint government soldiers from the Security Belt and the Giants Brigades recovered two areas in the Al-Musaymir District of Lahj that had fallen to the Houthis in recent days.

During the fighting, a Yemeni government soldier was killed, as well as an undetermined number of Houthis.

Despite a dramatic decline in hostilities in Yemen since April 2022 under the UN-brokered ceasefire, the Houthis have continued to wage lethal attacks on government soldiers in Taiz, Lahj, Dhale, and Marib.


Iraq, US agree on phased pullout of coalition troops

Iraq, US agree on phased pullout of coalition troops
Updated 09 September 2024
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Iraq, US agree on phased pullout of coalition troops

Iraq, US agree on phased pullout of coalition troops
  • Pullout to be completed from Bagdad and other parts of federal Iraq by September 2025 and from Kurdistan by September 2026, says Iraq defense chief
  • The US has some 2,500 troops in Iraq and 900 in Syria as part of the international coalition against the Daesh group

BAGHDAD: Iraq and the United States have agreed on a phased pullout of the US-led anti-jihadist coalition but have yet to sign a final agreement, the Iraqi defense minister said Sunday.
The US has some 2,500 troops in Iraq and 900 in Syria as part of the international coalition against the Daesh group.
They have been engaged in months of talks with Baghdad on a withdrawal of forces, but fell short of announcing any timeline so far.
On Sunday, Iraqi Defense Minister Thabet Al-Abbassi told pan-Arab television channel Al-Hadath that the coalition would pull out from bases in Baghdad and other parts of federal Iraq by September 2025 and from the autonomous northern Kurdistan region by September 2026.
The pullout is “two-phased” and “maybe we will sign the agreement within the next few days,” Abbassi said.
He added that US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin had said in a meeting that “two years were not enough” to carry out the withdrawal.
“We refused his proposal regarding an (extra) third year,” Abbassi said.
Coalition forces have been targeted dozens of times with drones and rocket fire in both Iraq and Syria, as violence related to the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza since early October has drawn in Iran-backed armed groups across the Middle East.
US forces have carried out multiple retaliatory strikes against these groups in both countries.
The Daesh group seized parts of Iraq and Syria in 2014, and was defeated by Baghdad three years later and in Syria in 2019.
But jihadist fighters continue to operate in remote desert areas although they no longer control any territory.
Iraqi security forces say they are capable of tackling Daesh remnants unassisted, as the group poses no significant threat.