Houthis launch missile, 4 drones in latest attack off Yemen

Houthis launch missile, 4 drones in latest attack off Yemen
Workers prepare foodstuff provided by the Iranian embassy in Sanaa, Yemen, on March 13, 2024, to be distributed to Houthi fighters who were wounded in war. (Reuters)
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Updated 14 March 2024
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Houthis launch missile, 4 drones in latest attack off Yemen

Houthis launch missile, 4 drones in latest attack off Yemen
  • US and UK counter-attacks on Houthi positions have not stopped the Iran-backed militia from attacking ships passing through the Red Sea

RIYADH: Houthi forces fired one anti-ship ballistic missile and four drones in their latest attack on ships transiting the waterway off Yemen, but all were destroyed, the US military said on Thursday.

In a post on X, the US Central Command said the missile and drones were launched from Houthi-controlled areas of Yemen into the Gulf of Aden between 2 a.m. and 4:50 p.m. (Sanaa time) on March 13, 2024.

Fortunately the attacks "did not impact any vessels and there were no injuries or damage reported," the CENTCOM said, adding that US naval forces in the area "successfully engaged and destroyed" the Houthi weapons.

"These actions are taken to protect freedom of navigation and make international waters safer and more secure for US Navy and merchant vessels," the post said.

On Wednesday, US and British forces carried out airstrikes on Houthi positions in the western Yemen city of Hodeidah, a day after the Iran-backed militia launched missile and drone attacks on ships in the Red Sea.

An earlier CENTCOM post said the Houthis fired a close-range ballistic missile at the US naval destroyer Laboon, but it did not strike the ship or cause any damage.

The US and UK, supported by other nations, had also launched dozens of attacks on military targets in Sanaa, Saada, Taiz, and other Houthi-controlled territories, hitting missile and drone launchers and depots, radar sites, and other military infrastructure.

The attacks, however, has not stopped the Houthis, whose leaders had promised to continue attacking ships suspected of transporting goods to Israel.

The Houthis have expressed solidarity with the Palestinian people amid an Israeli offensive in the Gaza Strip, which was triggered by the massive Hamas attack on southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023.


Iran president says not seeking war with Israel, vows response to strikes

Iran president says not seeking war with Israel, vows response to strikes
Updated 3 sec ago
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Iran president says not seeking war with Israel, vows response to strikes

Iran president says not seeking war with Israel, vows response to strikes
TEHRAN: President Masoud Pezeshkian said on Sunday that Iran did not seek war with Israel but was ready to deliver “an appropriate response” to strikes this week on Iranian military sites.
“We do not seek war but we will defend the rights of our nation and country,” Pezeshkian told a cabinet meeting, adding that Iran “will give an appropriate response to the aggression of the Zionist regime.”
On Saturday, Israel conducted air strikes on military sites in Iran in response to Tehran’s October 1 attack on Israel, itself retaliation for the killing of Iran-backed militant leaders and a Revolutionary Guards commander.
Israel has warned Tehran against responding.
Pezeshkian blamed the soaring regional tensions on Israel’s “aggression” and US support for the country, which Tehran does not recognize.
“If the aggressions of the Zionist regime and its crimes continue, the tensions will spread,” said the Iranian president.
Pezeshkian added that the United States had “promised to end the war in return for our restraint, but they did not keep their promise,” Pezeshkian added.
Iran has called for an end to the Gaza war, triggered by the October 7 attack on Israel last year, carried out by the Tehran-backed Palestinian militant group Hamas.
Iran also backs other armed groups in the region, including Lebanon’s Hezbollah which has been fighting an all-out war with Israeli forces for the past month after a year of largely low-intensity exchanges.

War casts shadow over ancient Baalbek

War casts shadow over ancient Baalbek
Updated 12 min 21 sec ago
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War casts shadow over ancient Baalbek

War casts shadow over ancient Baalbek
  • Only about 40 percent of Baalbek’s residents remain in the city, local officials say, mainly crammed into the city’s few Sunni-majority districts

BAALBEK: Since war erupted between Israel and Hezbollah, the famed Palmyra Hotel in east Lebanon’s Baalbek has been without visitors, but long-time employee Rabih Salika refuses to leave — even as bombs drop nearby.

The hotel, which was built in 1874, once welcomed renowned guests including former French President Charles de Gaulle and American singer Nina Simone.

Overlooking a large archeological complex encompassing the ruins of an ancient Roman town, the Palmyra has kept its doors open through several conflicts and years of economic collapse.

“This hotel hasn’t closed its doors for 150 years,” Salika said, explaining that it welcomed guests at the height of Lebanon’s 1975-1990 civil war and during Israel’s last war with Hezbollah in 2006. The 45-year-old has worked there for more than half his life and says he will not abandon it now.

“I’m very attached to this place,” he said, adding that the hotel’s vast, desolate halls leave “a huge pang in my heart.”

He spends his days dusting decaying furniture and antique mirrors. He clears glass shards from windows shattered by strikes.

Baalbek, known as the “City of the Sun” in ancient times, is home to one of the world’s largest complex of Roman temples — designated a World Heritage Site by UNESCO.

But the latest Israel-Hezbollah war has cast a pall over the eastern city, home to an estimated 250,000 people before the war.

After a year of cross-border clashes with Hezbollah, Israel last month ramped-up strikes on the group’s strongholds, including parts of Baalbek.

Only about 40 percent of Baalbek’s residents remain in the city, local officials say, mainly crammed into the city’s few Sunni-majority districts.

On Oct. 6, Israeli strikes fell hundreds of meters (yards) away from the Roman columns that bring tourists to the city and the Palmyra hotel.

UNESCO told AFP it was “closely following the impact of the ongoing crisis in Lebanon on the cultural heritage sites.”

More than a month into the war, a handful of Baalbek’s shops remain open, albeit for short periods of time.

“The market is almost always closed. It opens for one hour a day, and sometimes not at all,” said Baalbek Mayor Mustafa Al-Shall.

Residents shop for groceries quickly in the morning, rarely venturing out after sundown.

They try “not to linger on the streets fearing an airstrike could hit at any moment,” he said.

Last year, nearly 70,000 tourists and 100,000 Lebanese visited Baalbek. But the city has only attracted five percent of those figures so far this year, the mayor said.

Even before the war, local authorities in Baalbek were struggling to provide public services due to a five-year economic crisis.

Now municipality employees are mainly working to clear the rubble from the streets and provide assistance to shelters housing the displaced.

A Baalbek hospital was put out of service by a recent Israeli strike, leaving only five other facilities still fully functioning, Shall said.

Baalbek resident Hussein Al-Jammal said the war has turned his life upside down.

“The streets were full of life, the citadel was welcoming visitors, restaurants were open, and the markets were crowded,” the 37-year-old social worker said. “Now, there is no one.”

His young children and his wife have fled the fighting, but he said he had a duty to stay behind and help those in need.

“I work in the humanitarian field, I cannot leave, even if everyone leaves,” he said.

Only four homes in his neighborhood are still inhabited, he said, mostly by vulnerable elderly people.

“I pay them a visit every morning to see what they need,” he said, but “it’s hard to be away from your family.”

Rasha Al-Rifai, 45, provides psychological support to women facing gender-based violence.

But in the month since the war began, she has lost contact with many.

“Before the war ... we didn’t worry about anything,” said Rifai, who lives with her elderly parents.

“Now everything has changed, we work remotely, we don’t see anyone, most of the people I know have left.”

“In the 2006 war we were displaced several times, it was a very difficult experience, we don’t want this to happen again,” she said. “We will stay here as long as it is bearable.”


Egypt proposes initial two-day truce in Gaza with limited hostage-prisoner exchange

Palestinians inspect the damage after an overnight Israeli airstrike in Beit Lahia, the northern Gaza Strip, on October 27, 2024
Palestinians inspect the damage after an overnight Israeli airstrike in Beit Lahia, the northern Gaza Strip, on October 27, 2024
Updated 27 October 2024
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Egypt proposes initial two-day truce in Gaza with limited hostage-prisoner exchange

Palestinians inspect the damage after an overnight Israeli airstrike in Beit Lahia, the northern Gaza Strip, on October 27, 2024
  • El-Sisi also said that talks should resume within 10 days of implementing the temporary ceasefire in efforts to reach a permanent one
  • Israel has said the war cannot end until Hamas has been wiped out as a military force and governing entity in Gaza

CAIRO: Egypt has proposed an initial two-day ceasefire in Gaza to exchange four Israeli hostages of Hamas for some Palestinian prisoners, Egypt’s president said on Sunday as Israeli military strikes killed 45 Palestinians across the enclave.
Egyptian leader Abdel Fattah El-Sisi made the announcement as efforts to defuse the devastating, more than year-long war resumed in Qatar with the directors of the CIA and Israel’s Mossad intelligence agency taking part.
Speaking alongside Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune during a press conference in Cairo, El-Sisi also said that talks should resume within 10 days of implementing the temporary ceasefire in efforts to reach a permanent one.
There was no immediate comment from Israel or Hamas but a Palestinian official close to the mediation effort told Reuters: “I expect Hamas would listen to the new offers, but it remains determined that any agreement must end the war and get Israeli forces out of Gaza.”
Israel has said the war cannot end until Hamas has been wiped out as a military force and governing entity in Gaza.
The US, Qatar and Egypt have been spearheading negotiations to end the war that erupted after Hamas fighters stormed into southern Israel on Oct. 7 last year, killing 1,200 people and taking more than 250 hostages, by Israeli tallies.
The death toll from Israel’s retaliatory air and ground onslaught in Gaza is approaching 43,000, Gaza health officials say, with the densely populated enclave in ruins.
An official briefed on the talks told Reuters earlier on Sunday that negotiations in Doha will seek a short-term ceasefire and the release of some hostages being held by Hamas in exchange for Israel’s release of Palestinian prisoners.
The objective, still elusive after multiple mediation attempts, is to get Israel and Hamas to agree to a halt in fighting for less than a month in the hope this would lead to a more permanent ceasefire.
At least 43 of those killed in Gaza on Sunday were in the north of the enclave, where Israeli troops have returned to root out Hamas fighters who it says have regrouped there.
Jabalia in focus
Earlier on Sunday, 20 people were killed following an airstrike on houses in Jabalia, the largest of the Gaza Strip’s eight historic refugee camps, which has been the focus of an Israeli military offensive for more than three weeks, medics and the Palestinian official news agency WAFA said.
Another Israeli airstrike on a school sheltering displaced Palestinian families in Shati camp in Gaza City, killed nine people and wounded 20 others, with many in critical condition, medics said.
Footage circulated on Palestinian media, which Reuters could not immediately verify, showed people rushing to the bomb site to help evacuate the casualties. Bodies were scattered on the ground, while some carried wounded children in their arms before loading them in a vehicle.
The Israeli military said it was looking into the report on the strike on the school.
Three local journalists were among those killed at the school in Shati — Saed Radwan, head of digital media at Hamas Al-Aqsa television, Hanin Baroud, and Hamza Abu Selmeya, according to Hamas media.
On Sunday, Israel’s military said it had killed more than 40 militants in the Jabalia area in the past 24 hours, as well as dismantling infrastructure and locating large quantities of military equipment.
Israeli military strikes on the towns of Jabalia, Beit Hanoun and Beit Lahiya in northern Gaza have so far killed around 800 people during a three-week offensive, the Gaza health ministry said.


Yemeni riyal nears historic low in government-controlled areas

Money traders and local media said the Yemeni riyal was on track to break another record of 2,100 against the dollar on Sunday.
Money traders and local media said the Yemeni riyal was on track to break another record of 2,100 against the dollar on Sunday.
Updated 27 October 2024
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Yemeni riyal nears historic low in government-controlled areas

Money traders and local media said the Yemeni riyal was on track to break another record of 2,100 against the dollar on Sunday.
  • Violent protests have erupted in Aden, the interim capital, and other cities in recent years, as the riyal’s depreciation has raised food and fuel prices

AL-MUKALLA: The Yemeni riyal fell to 2,045 against the dollar in government-controlled areas on Sunday, just days after an all-time low of 2,000.

As the Yemeni government and its financial institutions called for an international bailout, money traders and local media said the riyal was on track to break another record of 2,100 against the dollar.

The riyal traded at 215 against the dollar during the early months of the war, which began after the Houthi militia forcibly took power a decade ago.

Violent protests have erupted in Aden, the interim capital, and other cities in recent years, as the riyal’s depreciation has raised food, fuel and transportation prices.

The Aden-based central bank has shut down unlicensed exchange firms and ships, as well as those not following its monetary rules. It has ordered the relocation of banks from Houthi-controlled Sanaa to Aden, and sold dollars from its dwindling foreign currency reserves in public auctions to help local traders obtain enough to import food and other essentials.

But the measures have failed to support the riyal, which fell from around 1,200 per dollar in April 2022, following the formation of the Presidential Leadership Council, to 2,000 a week ago.

The government has blamed the Yemeni riyal’s devaluation on Houthi attacks on oil terminals in the southern provinces of Hadramout and Shabwa, which resulted in a halt in oil exports, as well as currency speculation by local money traders and exchange firms.

It comes as Ahmed Ghaleb, governor of Aden’s central bank, reiterated a governmental appeal to the international community to help contain the riyal’s depreciation and ensure it can continue meeting financial obligations such as paying salaries.

According to official Yemen news agency SABA, Ghaleb, currently in Washington DC, said during a meeting with US Yemen envoy Tim Lenderking that the Houthis’ strikes on oil facilities in late 2022, as well as their attacks on international shipping, had deprived the Yemeni government of its main source of revenue. They had also increased shipping and insurance costs, exacerbating the country’s humanitarian crisis.

Speaking last week to a gathering of central bank governors and financial ministers from the Middle East, North Africa, Afghanistan and Pakistan region, Ghaleb said Yemen had lost over $6 billion in revenue in the 30 months since its oil exports stopped. He also said Houthi attacks on ships had disrupted the flow of supplies and escalated poverty and food insecurity.

The Yemeni government has repeatedly said it cannot pay employees in areas under its control without financial aid.

Teachers, security and military personnel, and other government employees in Aden, Al-Mukalla and other government-controlled cities have complained their salaries are paid weeks late and have lost value due to the riyal’s depreciation.

“Salaries are paid late, losing value. The teacher, who previously received $320, is now paid $53. We went on strike to protest the collapse of salaries, but no one paid attention,” Abu Mohammed, a teacher from Hadramout province, told Arab News on Sunday.


Israeli attacks in southern Lebanon delay army officer’s hometown burial

Israeli attacks in southern Lebanon delay army officer’s hometown burial
Updated 27 October 2024
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Israeli attacks in southern Lebanon delay army officer’s hometown burial

Israeli attacks in southern Lebanon delay army officer’s hometown burial
  • Burials in temporary alternative locations the norm with many of those killed from villages along southern border amid clashes between Israeli forces and Hezbollah militants

BEIRUT: Ongoing Israeli strikes in southern Lebanon have forced the burial of Lebanese Army officer Maj. Mohammed Farhat to take place in an alternative location.

Farhat, 30, was killed on Thursday alongside Cpls. Mohammed Hussein Nazzal and Moussa Youssef Mahna while attempting to evacuate wounded civilians in Yater, a town in the Bint Jbeil district.

Originally from Deir Qanoun Ras Al-Ain in Tyre, Farhat’s family was unable to bury him in his hometown due to the conflict.

Instead, he was laid to rest temporarily in the Maronite-majority town of Rash’in, located 95 km north of Beirut.

Burials in temporary alternative locations have been the norm with many of those killed from villages along the southern border amid clashes between Israeli forces and Hezbollah militants.

The burial, marked by a joint Muslim-Christian ceremony, symbolized national unity and coexistence amid deep political divides and Lebanon’s ongoing crisis.

The ceremony began at the Central Military Hospital in Beirut, where Gen. Joseph Aoun, army commander, saluted Farhat’s coffin.

The procession then moved to Saint Maron Church in Rash’in, where a Muslim cleric prayed over Farhat’s body, underscoring Lebanon’s diverse yet united respect for its fallen soldiers.

Farhat’s death has sparked accusations of targeted violence, as social media activists recalled his confrontation with Israeli forces in March 2023.

At that time, Farhat challenged Israeli officers over an attempt to install barbed wire in disputed territory near Aita Al-Shaab, which earned him widespread admiration in Lebanon.

“Rash’in welcomed my brother with honor, just as they had when he served there for nine years,” said Farhat’s brother, Ali.

“The people of Rash’in insisted on holding the prayer in their town as a tribute to him,” he added.

In a eulogy, a representative of Aoun commemorated Farhat’s bravery, describing him as “a son of Deir Qanoun Ras Al-Ain” and “a courageous officer.”

He added: “Our martyr is an example of courage and giving, a man of difficult missions who stood firm and strong in front of the soldiers of the Israeli enemy in defense of his land, and he was an honorable model of good morals, chivalry, nobility and virtue.”