Arab League condemns surge in West Bank settler attacks

Special Arab League condemns surge in West Bank settler attacks
Smoke fills the sky after Israeli settlers set fire to the properties of Palestinian villagers in the West Bank village of Al-Mughayyir, Saturday, April 13, 2024. (AP Photo)
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Updated 16 April 2024
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Arab League condemns surge in West Bank settler attacks

Arab League condemns surge in West Bank settler attacks
  • Gamal Roshdy: Incidents of violent crimes, arson and property destruction perpetrated by armed settlers have seen a noticeable surge
  • Tensions in the West Bank have been especially high since the outbreak of the Israel-Hamas war in the Gaza Strip on Oct. 7

CAIRO: The Arab League on Tuesday strongly denounced relentless attacks carried out by Israeli settlers on Palestinian cities and towns across the West Bank.

“These attacks, often perpetrated under the tacit approval and protection of Israeli authorities, are exacerbating a pervasive state of impunity and continued oppression of Palestinian lives and properties,” the league said in a statement.

Gamal Roshdy, the secretary-general’s spokesperson, said that while daily atrocities committed by Israeli forces in Gaza demand attention, they must not overshadow the escalating violence in the West Bank.

He added: “Incidents of violent crimes, arson and property destruction perpetrated by armed settlers have seen a noticeable surge, facilitated by a settler-led government that shields them from accountability.”

Roshdy warned that the imposition of sanctions by some countries on settlers, though a belated gesture, falls short of addressing the escalating crisis and safeguarding Palestinian civilians in the West Bank.

He called for action from the UN Security Council to end the “shameful cycle and the culture of impunity prevailing in the West Bank,” and to “hold these settlers accountable for their reprehensible crimes against the Palestinian people.”

Tensions in the West Bank have been especially high since the outbreak of the Israel-Hamas war in the Gaza Strip on Oct. 7.

On Friday, dozens of Israeli settlers stormed a Palestinian village in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, shooting at and burning houses and cars.

The Palestinian Foreign Ministry has strongly condemned the settler violations and crimes against Palestinians across the West Bank.


Jordanian FM arrives in Damascus to meet Syrian President

Jordanian FM arrives in Damascus to meet Syrian President
Updated 55 sec ago
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Jordanian FM arrives in Damascus to meet Syrian President

Jordanian FM arrives in Damascus to meet Syrian President

DUBAI: Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi arrived in Damascus on Sunday to meet Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, Al Arabiya TV reported.

 


UAE President, EU chief urge Gaza, Lebanon ceasefire

UAE President, EU chief urge Gaza, Lebanon ceasefire
Updated 20 October 2024
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UAE President, EU chief urge Gaza, Lebanon ceasefire

UAE President, EU chief urge Gaza, Lebanon ceasefire
  • Both leaders emphasized the importance of protecting civilians in line with international law

DUBAI: UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al-Nahyan and Ursula von der Leyen, President of the European Commission, held a phone conversation to address the urgent need for a ceasefire in Gaza and Lebanon.  

Both leaders emphasized the importance of protecting civilians in line with international law and ensuring the safe and sufficient delivery of humanitarian aid to alleviate their suffering in the conflict zones. 

They also discussed efforts to prevent the further escalation of tensions in the Middle East, stressing the need for collective action to contain the conflict, which poses a serious threat to regional security and stability.  

The two leaders reiterated their support for a just, comprehensive, and lasting peace in the region, grounded in the two-state solution. 

Sheikh Mohamed underscored the UAE’s commitment to working alongside international and regional partners, including the EU, to prevent the expansion of conflict in the Middle East and provide humanitarian aid to civilians. 

Sheikh Mohamed and President von der Leyen also reviewed relations between the UAE and the European Union, exploring ways to strengthen ties and achieve shared interests.  

Sheikh Mohamed reaffirmed the UAE's commitment to enhancing strategic relations with the EU and its member states, with a focus on mutual development and cooperation in areas such as trade and investment. He also expressed his support for further Gulf-European collaboration to benefit both regions.


Iraq Kurds head to polls with little hope for change

Iraq Kurds head to polls with little hope for change
Updated 20 October 2024
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Iraq Kurds head to polls with little hope for change

Iraq Kurds head to polls with little hope for change
  • Activists and opposition figures contend that the region, autonomous since 1991, faces the same issues affecting Iraq as a whole

IRBIL: Voters in Iraq’s autonomous Kurdistan region will head to the polls on Sunday to elect a new parliament for the oil-rich region where voters express disenchantment with the political elite.
Iraqi Kurdistan presents itself as a relative oasis of stability in the turbulent Middle East, attracting foreign investors due to its close ties with the United States and Europe.
However, activists and opposition figures contend that the region, autonomous since 1991, faces the same issues affecting Iraq as a whole: corruption, political repression and cronyism among those in power.
Originally scheduled for two years ago, the vote has been postponed four times due to disputes between the region’s two historic parties, the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK).
Each party is controlled by a powerful Kurdish family — the KDP by the Barzanis and the PUK by the Talabanis.
Despite holding election rallies and mobilizing their patronage networks, experts say there is widespread public disillusionment with the parties, exacerbated by the region’s bleak economic conditions.
“I am against this government,” said Dilman Sharif, a 47-year-old civil servant in Sulaimaniyah, the second-largest city in Iraqi Kurdistan and a stronghold of the PUK.
“I urge everyone to mobilize and vote against this regime,” he said before the election, saying he planned to vote for the opposition.
Opposition parties such as New Generation and a movement led by Lahur Sheikh Jangi, a dissident from the Talabani clan, may gain from a protest vote, said Sarteep Jawhar, a PUK dissident and political commentator.
More than 1,200 polling stations across four constituencies will open at 7:00 am (0400 GMT) and close at 6:00 pm.
Political analyst Shivan Fazil, a researcher at US-based Boston University with a focus on Iraq, noted that there was “a growing fatigue with the region’s two ruling parties.”
“People’s living conditions have deteriorated over the last decade,” he said, citing erratic payment of salaries for the region’s 1.2 million civil servants as problematic because the money serves as “a vital source of income for households.”
This issue is tied to ongoing tensions between Kurdistan and the federal Iraqi government in Baghdad. The two administrations have also disputed control of the region’s lucrative oil exports.
Turbulent elections
The creation of the four new constituencies for this election — a change from only one previously — “could lead to redistribution in vote shares and seats in the next parliament,” Fazil said.
He still predicted, however, that the KDP would maintain its majority due to its “internal discipline and cohesion.”
The KDP is the largest party in the outgoing parliament, with 45 seats against 21 for the PUK.
The KDP’s majority was assured by an alliance with deputies elected via a quota reserved for Turkmen, Armenian and Christian minorities.
Iraqi court rulings have reduced the number of seats in the Kurdish parliament from 111 to 100, but with five seats still reserved for the minorities.
Of the region’s six million inhabitants, 2.9 million are eligible to vote for the 100 representatives, including 30 women mandated by a quota.
In the last regional elections in 2018, voter turnout was 59 percent.
Once elected, the new representatives will need to vote for a new president and prime minister, with both roles currently filled by KDP figures Nechirvan Barzani and his cousin, Masrour Barzani.
Mohamed Al-Hassan, the United Nations special representative in Iraq, welcomed the election as an opportunity for the Kurdistan region to “reinvigorate democracy and inject new ideas into its institutions.”
However, 55-year-old teacher Sazan Saduala says she will boycott the election.
“This government cannot be changed by voting,” she said. “It maintains its power through force and money.”


Netanyahu residence targeted by drone as Hezbollah launches barrage at Israel

Netanyahu residence targeted by drone as Hezbollah launches barrage at Israel
Updated 20 October 2024
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Netanyahu residence targeted by drone as Hezbollah launches barrage at Israel

Netanyahu residence targeted by drone as Hezbollah launches barrage at Israel
  • Netanyahu, wife were not at residence in Caesarea during drone attack, says his office
  • Sirens blared across Israel throughout morning as Hezbollah fires projectiles from Lebanon

JERUSALEM: Israel said a drone targeted Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s residence on Saturday, as Hezbollah launched a barrage of projectiles into Israel from its northern neighbor Lebanon.
On the southern front, Israel hammered Gaza with air strikes, with an overnight raid on Jabalia in the north killing 33 people, according to the besieged civil defense agency.
Netanyahu’s office said the prime minister and his wife were not at their residence in the central town of Caesarea during the drone attack and there were no injuries. Earlier, the military said a drone launched from Lebanon had “hit a structure” in Caesarea.
Sirens blared across Israel throughout the morning as Hezbollah fired projectiles from various locations in Lebanon.
The Iran-backed group said it launched a large salvo of advanced rockets at a military base in Israel’s Haifa region.
A man in the northern Israeli port city of Acre died after being struck by shrapnel, the Magen David Adom emergency service said, while shrapnel also wounded five people in the Haifa city of Kiryat Ata.
Late last month Israel ramped up air strikes on Lebanon and deployed ground forces after nearly a year of cross-border exchanges.
The fighting in Gaza came after the Israeli military killed Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar on Wednesday.
Sinwar, accused of masterminding the October 7 attack on Israel, was seen as pivotal to ending the Gaza war and securing the release of Israeli hostages.
On Friday, Qatar-based Hamas official Khalil Al-Hayya reiterated no hostages would be freed “unless the aggression against our people in Gaza stops.”
Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, whose country also backs Hamas, said the group “will not end at all with the martyrdom of Sinwar.”
As fighting raged in Gaza, civil defense agency spokesman Mahmud Bassal announced “33 deaths and dozens of wounded” in an Israeli strike on the northern area of Jabalia overnight.
The Israeli military said it was “looking into it.”
Early on Saturday, three houses in the Jabalia refugee camp were targeted, the civil defense agency said, while witnesses told AFP there was heavy gunfire and shelling in the direction of the camp.
Israeli forces have focused their attacks on northern Gaza, where they say Hamas is regrouping.
Witnesses also reported Israeli shelling in central Gaza’s Al-Bureij camp.
Israeli forces, accused of targeting health facilities, were shelling Indonesian Hospital in north Gaza, medics there said.
The violence has dashed hopes Sinwar’s death might bring the war closer to an end.
“We always thought that when this moment arrived, the war would end and our lives would return to normal,” 21-year-old Gazan Jemaa Abu Mendi said.
“But unfortunately, the reality on the ground is quite the opposite. The war has not stopped, and the killings continue unabated.”
Netanyahu said that while Sinwar’s killing did not spell the end of the war, it was “the beginning of the end.”
US President Joe Biden, along with the leaders of Germany, France and Britain, urged “the immediate necessity to bring the hostages home to their families, for ending the war in Gaza, and ensure humanitarian aid reaches civilians.”
In August, Netanyahu called Sinwar “the only obstacle to a hostage deal.”
Ayala Metzger, daughter-in-law of killed hostage Yoram Metzger, said with Sinwar dead it was “unacceptable” that hostages remained in captivity.
An Israeli autopsy found Sinwar was initially wounded in the arm by shrapnel, but killed by a gunshot to the head, the New York Times reported. The circumstances of the shot remain unclear.
Hamas sparked the war in Gaza with its October 7 attack last year that resulted in the deaths of 1,206 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally of official Israeli figures.
During the attack, militants took 251 hostages back into Gaza. Ninety-seven are still being held there, including 34 who the Israeli military has confirmed are dead.
Israel’s campaign to crush Hamas and bring back the hostages has killed 42,519 people in Gaza, mostly civilians, according to data from the health ministry in the Hamas-run territory, figures the UN considers reliable.
A conservative estimate puts the death toll among children in Gaza at over 14,100, said James Elder, spokesman for the United Nations children’s agency UNICEF.
For the one million children in the besieged territory, “Gaza is the real-world embodiment of hell on Earth,” he said.
Criticism has been mounting over the civilian toll and lack of food and aid reaching Gaza, where the UN has warned of famine.
There is also growing concern about the toll in Lebanon, where Israel is fighting a war with Hamas ally Hezbollah.
Lebanon’s health ministry said two people were killed in an Israeli strike on a vital highway north of Beirut on Saturday.
Since late September, the war has left at least 1,418 people dead in Lebanon, according to an AFP tally of Lebanese health ministry figures, though the real toll is likely higher.
The war has also drawn in other Iran-aligned armed groups, including in Yemen, Iraq and Syria.
On Friday and Saturday, the Israeli military reported drones being launched from Syria.
Iran conducted a missile strike on Israel on October 1, for which Israel has vowed to retaliate.
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said on Saturday that the “possibility of war in the region is always serious.”
“We want to reduce tensions, but.. we are ready for any scenario.”


Israeli strikes on Beirut after evacuation warning

Israeli strikes on Beirut after evacuation warning
Updated 22 min 44 sec ago
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Israeli strikes on Beirut after evacuation warning

Israeli strikes on Beirut after evacuation warning
  • Israel army says hit Hezbollah ‘command center’ in Beirut
  • Lebanon state media says Israel hits dozens of southern locations overnight

JERUSALEM:  The Israeli military said it carried out a strike Sunday on a Hezbollah command center and underground weapons facility in the Lebanese capital Beirut.
“Earlier this morning (Sunday), the IAF (Israeli air force) conducted an intelligence-based strike on a command center of Hezbollah’s intelligence headquarters and an underground weapons workshop in Beirut,” the military said in a statement.
Lebanese state media reported two Israeli strikes on Sunday morning in Haret Hreik and one in Hadath — all in Hezbollah’s southern Beirut stronghold of Dahiyeh after the Israeli army warned civilians to evacuate the stronghold of Lebanon’s Hezbollah movement.
The Israeli military said it also killed three Hezbollah militants in other strikes in southern Lebanon where it says its troops are engaged in targeted raids.

The Israeli army earlier ordered civilians located near buildings it said were “affiliated with Hezbollah” in two neighborhoods in south Beirut to immediately evacuate early Sunday, marking the facilities on two maps and saying the military would “work against” them soon.
The “urgent warning” was issued by the military’s Arabic spokesman Avichay Adraee, and concerned the neighborhoods of Haret Hreik and Hadath.
“You are located near facilities and interests affiliated with Hezbollah, which the IDF will work against in the near future,” Adraee said on Telegram.
“For your safety and the safety of your family members, you must evacuate the building and those adjacent to it immediately and move away from it for a distance of no less than 500 meters.”
Similar warnings have preceded Israeli air strikes in recent weeks after Israel stepped up its campaign against Iran-backed Hezbollah, which has a stronghold in the southern suburbs of the Lebanese capital.s

Strikes on south Lebanon

Israel struck dozens of south Lebanon villages and towns overnight and targeted Nabatiyeh city for a third time this week, Lebanese state media said on Sunday.
“Warplanes struck... the city of Nabatiyeh seven times” including on an inhabited building, with rescuers still looking for survivors under the rubble, the official National News Agency said.
The city where Hezbollah and ally Amal hold sway had seen deadly Israeli strikes on Wednesday that killed its mayor, with bloody attacks last week razing its marketplace.
It added that Israeli jets “conducted strikes” on more than 50 towns and villages including the border villages of Kfarshuba, Bint Jbeil and Khiam that have seen heavy fighting, reporting casualties.
“Israeli troops blew up the Tarrash neighborhood in Mais Al-Jabal,” a border village where Hezbollah has clashed with Israeli soldiers, “after booby-trapping it with highly explosive materials,” the NNA said.
The troops “bulldozed the cemetery in the village of Blida” nearby, the NNA added.
Israel and Hezbollah, an ally of the Palestinian militant group Hamas, had been trading near-daily fire across the Lebanese border since the outbreak of the war in Gaza last year.
But Israel sharply escalated its campaign late last month, launching devastating air strikes and deploying ground forces.
Since late September, the war has killed at least 1,454 people in Lebanon, according to an AFP tally of Lebanese health ministry figures.