Families of Bedouin hostages wait for news as Gaza fighting resumes

Families of Bedouin hostages wait for news as Gaza fighting resumes
Photo of shows Israeli released hostages siblings Bilal, second right and Aisha Al-Ziyadne, left, reuniting with their family at Soroka Medical Center, Israel. (GPO/AP)
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Updated 03 December 2023
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Families of Bedouin hostages wait for news as Gaza fighting resumes

Families of Bedouin hostages wait for news as Gaza fighting resumes
  • “There were tough times, we always had hope”
  • Bedouin Arabs make up about 4 percent of Israel’s population

TIRABIN AL SANA, Israel: The family members of four Bedouin Arabs taken hostage on Oct. 7 during the assault on southern Israel by Hamas gunmen have welcomed the return of two of the captives but wait for news of the others as fighting resumes in the Gaza Strip.
Yosef Hamis Ziadna, his sons Hamza and Bilal and his daughter, Aisha, were working on the Holit farm on Israel’s border with Gaza when they were seized by the gunmen along with more than 200 other Israelis and foreigners.
Aisha and Bilal were handed over during the seven-day truce between Israel and Hamas that ended on Friday morning but Yosef and Hamza are still being held, along with two other Bedouins, Farhan Al-Qadi and Samer Al-Talalqa.
“There were tough times, we always had hope,” said their cousin Kamel Al-Ziadna. “We want the release of Yousef and Hamza and all those held hostages, and Samer and Farhan, may God bring them back to their families.”
Bedouin Arabs make up about 4 percent of Israel’s population, living mainly in the southern Negev desert and in northern Israel.
Kamel said the families were urging Hamas to release their hostages. “They are Arab, Muslim youth,” he said.
While they wait, like the families of other hostages released during the week-long pause, their emotions are mixed.
When the news came through that Aisha and Belal were to be released, there was a large gathering of family and friends that celebrated through the night.
“It was nice moments, but the happiness was missing something, so until the whole family is reunited with Hamza and Yousef, then we will hold a huge party, and we will gather with friends and family and all those who shared these difficult times with us,” he said.


At least 28 dead in Iran coal mine blast, state TV says

At least 28 dead in Iran coal mine blast, state TV says
Updated 19 min 17 sec ago
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At least 28 dead in Iran coal mine blast, state TV says

At least 28 dead in Iran coal mine blast, state TV says
  • The accident was caused by a methane gas explosion in blocks B and C of the mine
  • The total number of workers in the blocks at the time of the explosion was 69

TEHRAN: A gas explosion in a coal mine in Iran’s South Khorasan Province killed at least 28 people and injured 17, state television said on Sunday, with 24 people still missing.
The accident was caused by a methane gas explosion in two blocks of the mine run by the Madanjoo company, state TV said. There were 69 workers in the blocks at the time of the explosion, it said.
“Seventeen injured people were transported to the hospital and 24 people are still missing,” state TV said citing the head of Iran’s Red Crescent.
The explosion occurred at 9 p.m. (1730 GMT) on Saturday, state media said.
President Masoud Pezeshkian expressed condolences to the victims’ families. “I spoke with ministers and we will do our best to follow up,” Pezeshkian said in televised comments.


Lebanon PM cancels trip to UN General Assembly over intensified Israeli strikes

Lebanon PM cancels trip to UN General Assembly over intensified Israeli strikes
Updated 22 September 2024
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Lebanon PM cancels trip to UN General Assembly over intensified Israeli strikes

Lebanon PM cancels trip to UN General Assembly over intensified Israeli strikes
  • Hezbollah, Israel exchange heavy fire after deadly Israeli strike

BEIRUT: Lebanon’s Prime Minister Najib Mikati cancelled his trip to the United Nations’ General Assembly in New York after Israel strikes on Beirut’s suburb killed at least 37.

In a statement, he said the trip was part of the “intensification of Lebanese diplomatic action to stop the prolonged Israeli aggression against Lebanon.”

“However, in light of developments related to the Israeli aggression, I decided to refrain from traveling,” he said in a statement published in the state-run news agency NNA.

Mikati urged the international community to stop Israel’s massacres and called for the adoption of international laws to protect civilians “from being military and war targets.”

Israel’s attack on Beirut, targeting Hezbollah commanders, killed 16 members including senior leader Ibrahim Aqil and another commander, Ahmed Wahbi, in the deadliest strike in nearly a year of conflict with Israel.

The strike sharply escalated the conflict and inflicted another blow on Hezbollah after two days of attacks in which pagers and walkie-talkies used by its members exploded.
The attacks on communications devices were widely believed to have been carried out by Israel, which has neither confirmed nor denied involvement.

Cross-border strikes continued as Israeli warplanes carried out the heaviest bombardment in 11 months of fighting across Lebanon’s south, and Hezbollah claimed rocket attacks on military targets in Israel’s north.
The Israeli army said it hit around 180 targets, destroying thousands of rocket launch barrels.


Israeli forces raid Al Jazeera West Bank office, order 45-day closure

Israeli forces raid Al Jazeera West Bank office, order 45-day closure
Updated 22 September 2024
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Israeli forces raid Al Jazeera West Bank office, order 45-day closure

Israeli forces raid Al Jazeera West Bank office, order 45-day closure
  • Israel’s military has repeatedly accused journalists from the Qatari network of being “terrorist” allies of Hamas
  • Al Jazeera denies Israel’s accusations and claims that Israel systematically targets its employees in the Gaza Strip.

DOHA: Qatari broadcaster Al Jazeera said that Israeli forces raided its office in Ramallah in the occupied West Bank on Sunday and issued a 45-day closure order.
Israel’s government last week announced it was revoking the press credentials of Al Jazeera journalists in the country, four months after banning the channel from operating inside Israel.
“There is a court ruling for closing down Al Jazeera for 45 days,” an Israeli soldier told Al Jazeera’s West Bank bureau chief Walid Al-Omari, the network reported, citing the conversation which was broadcast live.
“I ask you to take all the cameras and leave the office at this moment,” the soldier said, according to the footage, which showed heavily armed and masked troops entering the office.
The broadcaster said the soldiers did not provide a reason for the closure order.
Israel’s army did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government has had a long-running feud with Al Jazeera that has worsened since the Gaza war began following the October 7 attack by Palestinian militant group Hamas.
The Israeli military has repeatedly accused journalists from the Qatari network of being “terrorist agents” in Gaza affiliated with Hamas or its ally, Islamic Jihad.
Al Jazeera denies Israel’s accusations and claims that Israel systematically targets its employees in the Gaza Strip.
The media office of the Hamas-run government in Gaza condemned Sunday’s raid, saying in a statement it was a “resounding scandal and a blatant violation of press freedom.”

The Israeli parliament passed a law in early April allowing the banning of foreign media broadcasts deemed harmful to state security.
Based on this law, the Israeli government approved on May 5 the decision to ban Al Jazeera from broadcasting from Israel and close its offices for a renewable 45-day period, which was extended for a fourth time by a Tel Aviv court last week.
The shutdown had not affected broadcasts from the West Bank or the Gaza Strip, from which Al Jazeera was still covering Israel’s war with Palestinian militants.
Al Jazeera correspondent Nida Ibrahim said the network’s West Bank office closure “comes as no surprise” after the earlier ban on reporting from inside Israel.
“We’ve heard Israeli officials threatening to close down the bureau,” she said on the network.
“But we (had) not been expecting it to happen today.”
Bureau chief Omari said that “targeting journalists this way always aims to erase the truth and prevent people from hearing the truth.”
In May, the network condemned as “criminal” the ban on it operating over its coverage of the Gaza war.
“We condemn and denounce this criminal act by Israel that violates the human right to access information,” the channel said in a statement.
 


Hezbollah, Israel exchange heavy fire after deadly Israeli strike

Hezbollah, Israel exchange heavy fire after deadly Israeli strike
Updated 16 min 28 sec ago
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Hezbollah, Israel exchange heavy fire after deadly Israeli strike

Hezbollah, Israel exchange heavy fire after deadly Israeli strike
  • Israel army says it hit 290 targets, destroying rocket launchers
  • Hezbollah says it targeted air base with dozens of missiles

BEIRUT: Israel and Lebanon exchanged heavy fire into Sunday, with Israeli warplanes carrying out the most intense bombardment in almost a year of war across Lebanon’s south, while Hezbollah claimed rocket attacks on military targets in Israel’s north.
The Israeli military said it struck around 290 targets on Saturday including thousands of Hezbollah rocket launcher barrels and said it would continue to strike targets of the Iran-backed movement.
Israel closed schools and restricted gatherings in many northern areas of the country and the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights early on Sunday.
Sirens sounded all night as multiple rockets and missiles were fired from Lebanon and Iraq, most of which were intercepted by Israeli aerial defense systems, the military said.
Israeli media reported that a number of buildings were hit directly or by falling missile debris, and ambulance services said they treated some lightly injured people. No serious casualties were reported.
Hezbollah said it targeted the Israeli Ramat David Airbase with dozens of missiles in response to “repeated Israeli attacks on Lebanon,” the group posted on its Telegram channel early on Sunday.
The successive barrages of rocket attacks launched by Hezbollah at Ramat David are the deepest strikes it has claimed since hostilities began.
Iran-backed Iraqi militants in a statement also claimed an explosive drone attack on Israel early on Sunday.

Escalating attacks
The escalating attacks come less than 48 hours after an Israeli airstrike targeting Hezbollah commanders killed at least 37 people in a suburb of the Lebanese capital, according to authorities.
Hezbollah, a powerful Iran-backed group, said 16 members including senior leader Ibrahim Aqil and another commander, Ahmed Wahbi, were among those killed on Friday in the deadliest strike in nearly a year of conflict with Israel.
Israel’s army said it hit an underground gathering of Aqil and leaders of Hezbollah’s elite Radwan forces, and had almost completely dismantled its military chain of command.
The attack levelled a multi-story residential building in the crowded suburb and damaged a nursery next door, a security source said. Three children and seven women were among those killed, according to Lebanon’s health ministry.
Friday’s strike sharply escalated the conflict and inflicted another blow on Hezbollah after two days of attacks in which pagers and walkie-talkies used by its members exploded.
The death toll in those attacks, widely believed to have been carried out by Israel, has risen to 39 with more than 3,000 injured. Israel has neither confirmed nor denied involvement.
In what it said was the initial retaliation for the attacks with the exploding devices, Hezbollah on Sunday posted on its Telegram channel that it had launched rockets at Israeli military-industry facilities.
Israel quickly responded, striking Hezbollah targets in Lebanon, the military said in a statement.
US national security adviser Jake Sullivan said he was worried about escalation but that the Israeli killing of a top Hezbollah leader brought justice to the group, which Washington designates a terrorist organization.
“While the risk of escalation is real, we actually believe there is also a distinct avenue to getting to a cessation of hostilities and a durable solution that makes people on both sides of the border feel secure,” Sullivan told reporters.
Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati canceled a planned trip to the UN General Assembly in New York.

Israel braces for retaliation
Hezbollah has said it would keep fighting Israel until it agrees to a ceasefire in its war against Hamas in the Palestinian enclave of Gaza — triggered by a Hamas-led rampage in southern Israel on Oct. 7.
US officials say that is unlikely anytime soon. Israel wants Hezbollah to cease fire and withdraw forces from the border region, adhering to a UN resolution signed with Israel in 2006, irrespective of any Gaza deal.
Anticipating retaliation, the Israeli military restricted gatherings and raised the alert level for residents of northern communities. The alert went as far south as the coastal city of Haifa, signalling Israel thought Hezbollah could strike deeper than it had since the war with Hamas began.
In southern Lebanon on Saturday, people described huge explosions that lit up the night sky and shook the ground as Israel carried out its latest strikes.
Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, who said last week Israel was launching a new phase of war on the northern border, posted on X: “The sequence of actions in the new phase will continue until our goal is achieved: the safe return of the residents of the north to their homes.”
Tens of thousands of people have left their homes on both sides of the Israel-Lebanon border since Hezbollah began firing rockets at Israel in October in sympathy with Palestinians in Gaza.
A communique from a US summit hosted by President Joe Biden with the leaders of Japan, India and Australia stressed the need to prevent the Gaza war “from escalating and spilling over in the region” but did not specifically mention the Israel-Hezbollah conflict.
With at least 70 people killed in Lebanon over the past week, the conflict toll in the country since October has surpassed 740 during the worst Israel-Hezbollah flare-up since a 2006 war.


ALPS Group urges Sudan’s warring parties to open all famine-stricken areas to relief operations

ALPS Group urges Sudan’s warring parties to open all famine-stricken areas to relief operations
Updated 22 September 2024
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ALPS Group urges Sudan’s warring parties to open all famine-stricken areas to relief operations

ALPS Group urges Sudan’s warring parties to open all famine-stricken areas to relief operations
  • In a statement, the group urged both Sudan's army and its rival RSF to allow relief efforts “to reach the heartland of the crisis and contain the famine"
  • It also urged the paramilitary RSF “to refrain from any attacks targeting civilians” and the Sudan Armed Forces “to stop its widespread aerial bombardments” 

RIYADH: A coalition of nations working for a resolution of Sudan’s civil war urged the warring parties on Saturday to expand access to famine-stricken areas by humanitarian relief efforts.

In a joint statement, the ALPS Group said that while humanitarian operations “are now moving across conflict lines from Port of Sudan through Shendi to Khartoum,” wider access must be ensured for relief efforts “to reach the heartland of the crisis and contain the famine.”

“(T)his expansion of humanitarian access, while a positive sign, remains insufficient to meet both the needs of the people and to ensure the efficient delivery of the hundreds of thousands of tons of additional humanitarian assistance being mobilized for the people of Sudan,” the statement said.

The ALPS Group — which stands for Aligned for Advancing Lifesaving and Peace in Sudan — issued the statement after a virtual meeting on September 19, during which it received “sobering updates” on the ground situation in the troubled North African nation.

The group includes Saudi Arabia, the US, Switzerland, the UAE, Egypt, the African Union, and the United Nations. 

Sudanese queue to fill on water Port Sudan on August 26, 2024, after a dam collapsed as a result of heavy rain. (AFP)

During the virtual meeting, the group noted an instance of “catastrophic malnutrition” at the Zamzam camp near the town of El-Fasher in North Darfur state. 

Already the largest refugee camp in Sudan with half a million people, Zamzam has become more crowded after war broke out in April 2023 between Sudan’s army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), according to relief agencies.

Recent reports have said the famine-stricken camp is now facing the risk of infectious diseases after it was hit by floods.

The humanitarian group Medicins Sans Frontieres (MSF), or Doctors Without Borders, had earlier warned last May about an "acute disaster on a catastrophic scale" happening in the camp as the number of evacuees continued to swell.

In this picture from the humanitarian aid group Medicins Sans Frontieres, people wait to receive treatment at El Fasher hospital in Sudan in May 2023. (MSF photo)

In its statement on Saturday, the ALPS Group welcomed the full opening by the government of General Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan of the Kassala and Dongola airports for the UN’s World Food Program’s Humanitarian Air Service. 

However, it said, RSF and Sudan Armed Forces should also ensure “unhindered and safe access” for relief efforts along the Khartoum route and other routes, including from Khartoum to El Obeid and to Kosti, from Kassala to Wad Medani and beyond. 

The ALPS Group also urged the paramilitary RSF “to refrain from any attacks targeting civilians” and the Sudan Armed Forces “to stop its widespread aerial bombardments.” 

It also called on international partners to join efforts to reach immediate humanitarian pauses to the fighting to allow humanitarian access and corridors for civilians most in need.