Mothers in Gaza struggle to protect children amid war

Mothers in Gaza struggle to protect children amid war
A mother and her daughter prepare traditional unleavened bread in their destroyed house in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip. (File/AFP)
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Updated 25 December 2023
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Mothers in Gaza struggle to protect children amid war

Mothers in Gaza struggle to protect children amid war
  • Save the Children organization has declared Gaza the world’s most dangerous place for children

LONDON: More children have died during Israel’s war in Gaza than in all the world’s major conflicts combined over the last three years, Sky News reported on Monday. 

The British news channel highlighted the dire situation facing families in Gaza, drawing attention to the struggles of mothers like Lina Hammad.

Hammad, who recently gave birth to twins at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, is facing the almighty challenge of keeping her babies and two other children healthy during the conflict.

She described living in a cold, damp room, and suffering from a difficult birth without adequate medical supplies due to Israel’s siege.

She told Sky News: “We are sitting on blankets on a cement floor. There are no vaccinations. We need nappies, milk and clothes.”

The children are suffering from chest infections and diarrhea, and their conditions are exacerbated by the cold and windy conditions in their inadequate shelter. 

Hammad’s concerns reflect the fear of parents across Gaza as they battle to protect their children from the devastating consequences of war, hunger, and disease.

The Save the Children organization has declared Gaza the world’s most dangerous place for children. In addition, the telecommunications system in the region has collapsed, leaving many, like Hammad, unable to contact loved ones.

She told Sky News: “(The children) are still coughing. I swear they can’t sleep at night. I fear for them. Last night my son was suffocating.”

The situation in the West Bank is also deteriorating with Palestinians facing an increase in arrests, raids and road closures. This has led to heightened tension and worse living conditions under the Israeli military occupation. 

The UN has reported that 2023 has been the deadliest on record for Palestinians in the West Bank. According to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, 457 Palestinians and 35 Israelis have been killed in the occupied territory this year.

The impact of daily Israeli military raids in Husan village in the West Bank is deeply felt. Residents have reported a significant decline in their quality of life following the Oct. 7 attacks by Hamas in Israel.

Mahmoud Zeoul, 18, was killed during a recent raid. The Israel Defense Forces claims it is investigating the incident but Zeoul’s mother accuses the IDF of responding disproportionately to resistance.

Tensions are high in the West Bank, with local residents, including those in Bethlehem, canceling Christmas celebrations in solidarity with those suffering in Gaza.

Resident Daniella Dukmak told Sky News that this year’s Christmas celebration was incredibly sad and being overshadowed by events in Gaza.
 


Jordan PM resigns after general election

Jordan PM resigns after general election
Updated 6 sec ago
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Jordan PM resigns after general election

Jordan PM resigns after general election
AMMAN: Jordan’s Prime Minister Bisher Khasawneh submitted his resignation on Sunday to King Abdullah II, state media reported, after parliamentary elections dominated by frustration over the Gaza war.
Under the kingdom’s constitution, the government usually resigns after legislative elections. It is the king who appoints the prime minister, not parliament which has limited powers.
The country’s leading Islamist party, the Islamic Action Front, came out top in Tuesday’s poll, winning 31 out of the 138 seats in parliament.
The IAF is a political offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhood in Jordan, and the result gives the Islamists their largest representation since 1989.
Despite a low turnout of 32 percent, the party’s success came with voters frustrated about economic woes and Israel’s war against the Palestinian militant group Hamas in the Gaza Strip.
Jordan in 1994 signed a peace treaty with Israel, becoming only the second Arab state to do so after Egypt, but regular protests have called for its dissolution since the war erupted last October.
Nearly half of the country’s population is of Palestinian origin.
Khasawneh, 55, had headed the government since October 2020.
Jordan’s parliament is bicameral. In addition to the elected parliament there is also a senate with 69 members appointed by the monarch.
The Gaza war has hit tourism to Jordan, which relies on the sector for about 14 percent of its gross domestic product.
The kingdom is heavily dependent on foreign aid, especially from the United States and the International Monetary Fund.
In the first quarter of 2024, the unemployment rate was 21 percent.

Jordan King Abdullah II accepts cabinet resignation

Jordan King Abdullah II accepts cabinet resignation
Updated 26 sec ago
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Jordan King Abdullah II accepts cabinet resignation

Jordan King Abdullah II accepts cabinet resignation

DUBAI: Jordan's Prime Minister Bisher Khasawneh submitted his resignation on Sunday, according to the state-run Petra news agency, following the parliamentary election results last week which was saw some gains for the Islamist opposition.  

A palace statement said the prime minister has submitted the resignation of the government to Jordan’s King Abdullah II.

The government usually quits after a parliamentary election, in line with a constitutional custom.

Al-Khasawneh,  a veteran diplomat and former palace advisor, is considered the longest-serving prime minister during King Abdullah II's reign, which began in 1999.

He is expected to be replaced by former planning minster Jaafar Hassan, who is U.S.-educated and is now the head of King Abdullah's office. 


Israel PM warns Houthis of ‘heavy price’ after missile attack

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks during a press conference for the international media.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks during a press conference for the international media.
Updated 6 min 44 sec ago
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Israel PM warns Houthis of ‘heavy price’ after missile attack

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks during a press conference for the international media.
  • The Houthis are among the Iran-backed groups in the Middle East that have been drawn into the conflict triggered by Hamas’s October 7 attack

JERUSALEM: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday warned Yemen’s Houthis of retaliation after the militia claimed a missile attack on central Israel.
“This morning, the Houthis launched a surface-to-surface missile from Yemen into our territory. They should have known by now that we charge a heavy price for any attempt to harm us,” Netanyahu said at the start of a cabinet meeting, according to a statement from his office.
“Those who need a reminder in this matter are invited to visit the port of Hodeida,” he added, referring to Yemen’s Red Sea city that Israeli warplanes bombed in July after the Houthis claimed a drone strike that killed a civilian in Tel Aviv.
The Houthis are among the Iran-backed groups in the Middle East that have been drawn into the conflict triggered by Hamas’s October 7 attack on southern Israel.
On Israel’s northern flank, Lebanon’s Hezbollah movement has traded regular cross-border fire with Israeli forces in exchanges that threaten to spiral into all-out war.
On Sunday morning about 40 projectiles were fired from Lebanon toward Israel’s Upper Galilee region and the annexed Golan Heights, Israel’s military said.
Tens of thousands of people have been displaced on both sides of the Israel-Lebanon border, and Netanyahu said on Sunday that the current situation was not sustainable.
“The existing situation will not continue. We will do everything necessary to return our residents safely to their homes,” he said.
“We are in a multi-arena campaign against Iran’s evil axis that strives to destroy us.”
He described speaking with residents and authorities in the north, saying, “I hear the distress, I hear the cries.
“The status quo will not continue. This requires a change in the balance of power on our northern border.”


Iran’s President to attend BRICS summit in Russia

Iran’s President to attend BRICS summit in Russia
Updated 15 September 2024
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Iran’s President to attend BRICS summit in Russia

Iran’s President to attend BRICS summit in Russia
  • Pezeshkian will attend the summit of the BRICS group of major emerging economies, scheduled to be held in Kazan, Russia from Oct. 22 to 24

DUBAI: Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian will attend the upcoming BRICS summit in Russia, state media cited Tehran’s ambassador in Moscow as saying on Sunday, amid tensions with the West over military cooperation between the two countries.

Iran’s ambassador in Russia Kazem Jalali confirmed on Sunday that Pezeshkian will attend the summit of the BRICS group of major emerging economies, scheduled to be held in Kazan, Russia from Oct. 22 to 24, according to Iran’s state media.
Pezeshkian will meet his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin there, Jalali said.
Iran and Russia are set to sign a bilateral comprehensive cooperation agreement.
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said on Tuesday that Russia had received ballistic missiles from Iran and was likely to use them in Ukraine within weeks. Cooperation between Moscow and Tehran threatened wider European security, he said.
The United States, Germany, Britain and France on Tuesday imposed new sanctions on Iran, including measures against its national airline Iran Air.
Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi said on Wednesday that Tehran did not deliver any ballistic missiles to Russia and that sanctions imposed by the US and the three European countries against Iran were not a solution.


UAE will not back postwar Gaza plans without Palestinian state

UAE will not back postwar Gaza plans without Palestinian state
Updated 15 September 2024
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UAE will not back postwar Gaza plans without Palestinian state

UAE will not back postwar Gaza plans without Palestinian state

DUBAI: The UAE is not prepared to support a postwar plan for Gaza that does not include a Palestinian state, Foreign Minister Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan said on X on Saturday. 

“The UAE is not ready to support the day after the war in Gaza without the establishment of a Palestinian state,” his post on X said.

 

Anwar Gargash, an Emirati diplomatic adviser and a former minister of state, said Sheikh Abdullah’s statement made clear that the UAE rejects anything but a two-state solution for Palestine and Israel.

“The statement by His Highness Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed that the UAE is not prepared to support the day after the war in Gaza without the establishment of a Palestinian state reflects our firm and steadfast position in supporting our Palestinian brothers and our conviction that there is no stability in the region except through a two-state solution,’’ Gargash wrote on X.

“The UAE will stand by the Palestinian people and their right to self-determination,” he added.

Earlier, the UAE called for a temporary international mission to lay the foundation for a new form of governance in Gaza after the war ends.

In a statement, Reem bint Ebrahim Al-Hashimy, the country’s minister of state for international cooperation, reaffirmed the UAE’s support for international efforts to achieve the two-state solution and for the mission that would help establish law and order and respond to the humanitarian crisis in postwar Gaza.