Israel official says ‘intention’ to renew Gaza talks ‘this week’

Israel official says ‘intention’ to renew Gaza talks ‘this week’
Displaced Palestinians, who fled their house due to Israeli strikes, shelter at a tent camp in the Al-Mawasi area in Rafah on May 22, 2024. (Reuters)
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Updated 25 May 2024
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Israel official says ‘intention’ to renew Gaza talks ‘this week’

Israel official says ‘intention’ to renew Gaza talks ‘this week’
  • “There is an intention to renew the talks this week and there is an agreement,” said the official
  • The official did not elaborate on the agreement

JERUSALEM: An Israeli official said Saturday the government had an “intention” to renew “this week” talks aimed at reaching a hostage release deal in Gaza, after a meeting in Paris between US and Israeli officials.
“There is an intention to renew the talks this week and there is an agreement,” the official told AFP on condition of anonymity.
The Israeli official did not elaborate on the agreement, but Israeli media reported that Mossad chief David Barnea had agreed during meetings in Paris with mediators CIA Director Bill Burns and Qatari Prime Minister Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani on a new framework for the stalled negotiations.
Top US diplomat Antony Blinken also spoke with Israeli war cabinet minister Benny Gantz about new efforts to achieve a ceasefire and reopen the Rafah border crossing, Washington said.
Talks aimed at reaching a hostage release and truce deal in the Gaza Strip ground to a halt this month after Israel launched a military operation in the territory’s far-southern city of Rafah.
The Gaza war broke out after Hamas’s October 7 attack resulted in the deaths of more than 1,170 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli official figures.
Militants also took 252 hostages, 121 of whom remain in Gaza, including 37 the army says are dead.
Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed at least 35,903 people in Gaza, mostly women and children, according to data from the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry.


Lebanon former central bank governor Riad Salameh arrested, judicial source says

Lebanon former central bank governor Riad Salameh arrested, judicial source says
Updated 37 sec ago
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Lebanon former central bank governor Riad Salameh arrested, judicial source says

Lebanon former central bank governor Riad Salameh arrested, judicial source says
Salameh has been charged with financial crimes including money-laundering, embezzlement and illicit enrichment

BEIRUT: Lebanon’s former central bank governor, Riad Salameh, was arrested on Tuesday during a judicial hearing in the capital Beirut, a senior judicial source told Reuters.
Salameh has been charged with financial crimes including money-laundering, embezzlement and illicit enrichment. He denies all wrongdoing.
Salameh was Lebanon’s central bank governor for 30 years until July 2023. In his final months as governor, Germany issued an arrest warrant for him on corruption charges.
He is being investigated in Lebanon and at least five European countries for allegedly taking hundreds of millions of dollars from Lebanon’s central bank to the detriment of the Lebanese state and laundering the funds abroad.

Illegal Israeli outposts surge in West Bank: BBC analysis

Illegal Israeli outposts surge in West Bank: BBC analysis
Updated 6 min 9 sec ago
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Illegal Israeli outposts surge in West Bank: BBC analysis

Illegal Israeli outposts surge in West Bank: BBC analysis
  • Investigation reveals close ties between settler groups, government
  • UN records over 1,100 settler attacks against Palestinians in past 10 months

LONDON: The number of Israeli settlement outposts in the occupied West Bank has surged in recent years, new analysis by the BBC has found.

There are now at least 196 outposts in the Palestinian territory, including farms, housing units and groups of caravans, with 29 established in the last year alone.

Despite being illegal under both Israeli and international law, outposts have been established using funding from organizations with close ties to the Israeli government.

Palestinians living near the outposts have suffered violent harassment and intimidation from settler communities, many of which employ armed militias with impunity.

The murky boundaries of the outposts often mean that their inhabitants come into contact with, and threaten, local Palestinians.

Ayesha Shtayyeh, a Palestinian grandmother, said she was held at gunpoint last October and told to leave the home that her family had owned for 50 years.

The settler who threatened her is believed to be Moshe Sharvit, who was sanctioned by the UK and US.

By using outposts, settlers are able to appropriate Palestinian land at a more rapid pace, the BBC found.

Analysis by the British broadcaster used data from Israeli anti-settlement groups and the Palestinian Authority, finding that almost half (89) of the 196 outposts had been established since 2019.

Azi Mizrahi, a former Israel Defense Forces commander in the area, admitted that outpost-building makes violence more likely.

“Whenever you put outposts illegally in the area, it brings tensions with the Palestinians … living in the same area,” he said.

Unlike settlements, outposts lack official Israeli planning approval, but authorities still turn a blind eye to them.

The UN’s top court in July ruled that Israel should end all settlement-building and withdraw settlers from the Occupied Territories.

Two organizations with close ties to the Israeli government were found by the BBC to have financed the establishment of new West Bank outposts.

The ties between the World Zionist Organization, Amana and the government reveal the deliberate nature of Israel’s land grabs in the West Bank.

The WZO, established more than a century ago, employs a “settlement division” that is financed entirely by Israeli public funding.

That division handles contracts and land allocations in the Occupied Territories, and has granted settlers the freedom to build new outposts on appropriated land.

Amana, a key settler organization, loaned settlers hundreds of thousands of shekels to build new outposts in the West Bank.

Both organizations used farming or grazing land categories as cover to support secret outpost-building, the BBC found.

Amana CEO Ze’ev Hever was secretly recorded in 2021 as saying: “In the last three years … one operation we have expanded is the herding farm (outposts). Today, the area (they control) is almost twice the size of built settlements.”

Another tactic employed by the government is to retroactively classify outposts as legal. Last year, authorities began legalizing 10 outposts and granted at least six others full legal status.

Moayad Shaaban, the chief of the PA’s Colonization and Wall Resistance Commission, said: “It reaches a point where Palestinians don’t have anything anymore. They can’t eat, they can’t graze, can’t get water.”

The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs warned that settler violence in the West Bank has reached “unprecedented levels.”

OCHA recorded more than 1,100 settler attacks against Palestinians in the past 10 months alone. Those attacks led to the deaths of 10 Palestinians and injuries to 230.


Syria blast kills senior commander in Kurdish security forces: monitor

Syria blast kills senior commander in Kurdish security forces: monitor
Updated 7 min 39 sec ago
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Syria blast kills senior commander in Kurdish security forces: monitor

Syria blast kills senior commander in Kurdish security forces: monitor
  • A commander in the Kurdish security forces was killed, at the same time as a Turkish drone was flying in the area

BEIRUT: A war monitor said a senior commander from the security forces in northeast Syria’s semi-autonomous Kurdish-led administration was killed on Tuesday in a blast near a prison in Hasakah province.
“A commander in the Kurdish security forces was killed and another person was wounded” in an explosion near the prison in Umm Farsan on the outskirts of the city of Qamishli “at the same time as a Turkish drone was flying in the area,” the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.


Turkiye arrests alleged Mossad financial operative

Turkiye arrests alleged Mossad financial operative
Updated 03 September 2024
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Turkiye arrests alleged Mossad financial operative

Turkiye arrests alleged Mossad financial operative
  • Turkiye, which has denounced Israel for its war against Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip, has this year detained more than 20 people suspected of having ties to Mossad

ANKARA: Turkiye arrested a Kosovan national accused of managing the financial network of Israel’s Mossad intelligence agency in the country, the Turkish intelligence organization said on Tuesday.
Liridon Rexhepi was detained in Istanbul on Aug. 30, suspected of transferring funds to Mossad personnel operating in Turkiye, the Turkish intelligence agency MIT said.
Turkiye, which has denounced Israel for its war against Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip, has this year detained more than 20 people suspected of having ties to Mossad.
Rexhepi had been under surveillance since his entry into Turkiye on Aug. 25, the MIT statement said. He is alleged to have facilitated financial transfers from eastern European countries, primarily Kosovo, to Mossad agents in Turkiye.
The statement said the funds transferred by Rexhepi were reportedly used for intelligence gathering in Syria, conducting psychological operations against Palestinians, and coordinating drone-related operations.
Rexhepi used money transfer services to move funds into Turkiye. Once in the country, the funds were distributed to field operatives who, in turn, channelled some of the money to assets in Syria, often utilising cryptocurrency for these transactions, the sources said.


Iran’s Supreme Court backs death penalty for Guard volunteer over 2022 protest killing, lawyer says

Iran’s Supreme Court backs death penalty for Guard volunteer over 2022 protest killing, lawyer says
Updated 03 September 2024
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Iran’s Supreme Court backs death penalty for Guard volunteer over 2022 protest killing, lawyer says

Iran’s Supreme Court backs death penalty for Guard volunteer over 2022 protest killing, lawyer says
  • The sentence imposed on the Basij member marks a rare moment for Iran to hold accountable its security forces, who waged a bloody, monthslong crackdown on all dissent over Amini’s death.

DUBAI: Iran’s Supreme Court has upheld a death sentence imposed on a member of the all-volunteer wing of the country’s paramilitary Revolutionary Guard who stormed a house during the 2022 protests over the death of Mahsa Amini and killed a 60-year-old man, a lawyer said Tuesday.
The sentence imposed on the Basij member marks a rare moment for Iran to hold accountable its security forces, who waged a bloody, monthslong crackdown on all dissent over Amini’s death. More than 500 people were killed and over 22,000 were detained.
Since then, Iran has put to death multiple protesters who were detained in the crackdown and accused of killing security forces, after closed-door trials criticized by activists abroad.
Lawyer Payam Derafshan, who represented a protester detained in 2022, told The Associated Press that the Supreme Court reached its verdict on Aug. 26 over the killing of Mohammad Jamehbozorg, a carpet seller in the city of Karaj.
The convicted Basij member and others stormed Jamehbozorg’s home in Karaj, some 40 kilometers (25 miles) northwest of the capital, Tehran, looking for demonstrators taking part in the Amini protests, including his son. The Basij member, identified only by initials, shot Jamehbozorg in the head, killing him.
Two other Guard members also received prison sentences. Iran’s government and state media did not report the ruling.
Amini, 22, died after being arrested by Iran’s morality police over allegedly improperly wearing her hijab, or headscarf. In March, a UN fact-finding mission said Iran was responsible for the “physical violence” that led to Amini’s death and concluded that Tehran committed “crimes against humanity” through its actions in suppressing the protests.
There has been another case of a security force member receiving the death penalty over a killing in the Amini protests. In 2023, a military court sentenced Col. Jafar Javanmardi, the police chief of northern port city of Bandar Anzali, for killing a young man while not observing the country’s laws related for using live ammo.
The Supreme Court is still reviewing Javanmardi’s initial death sentence.
Cases involving security forces accused of brutality have been a particular focus of Iran’s new reformist President Masoud Pezeshkian. Last week, Pezeshkian ordered an investigation into the death of a man in custody after activists alleged he had been tortured to death by police officers.