Palestinian president Abbas blames Hamas for continuing war in Gaza

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas blamed Hamas for the continuing war in Gaza. (Reuters/File Photo)
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas blamed Hamas for the continuing war in Gaza. (Reuters/File Photo)
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Updated 14 July 2024
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Palestinian president Abbas blames Hamas for continuing war in Gaza

Palestinian president Abbas blames Hamas for continuing war in Gaza
  • His comments signal rising tension between Abbas’s Fatah faction and the Islamist Hamas group

RAMALLAH: Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said Israel and the US were responsible for an attack that killed dozens in the Gaza Strip on Saturday, but the Western-backed leader also blamed Hamas for the continuing war in Gaza.
His comments signal rising tension between Abbas’s Fatah faction and the Islamist Hamas group, which accused the Palestinian president of taking Israel’s side.
Israel said the attack was aimed at killing the Hamas military chief Mohammad Deif and his aide. It remained unclear whether Deif or his deputy were killed in the strike that left at least 90 Palestinians dead and 300 wounded, according to Gaza health ministry.
“The Palestinian presidency condemns the slaughter and holds the Israeli government fully responsible, also the US administration that provides all kinds of support to the occupation and its crimes,” said Abbas in a statement published by his office.
But Abbas, whose authority maintains a limited self-rule in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, assigned some blame to Hamas, whose Oct 7 attack inside Israel, in which 1,200 people were killed and around 250 others were abducted, kicked off the nine-month war in Gaza.
“The presidency sees that by escaping national unity, and providing free pretexts to the occupation state, the Hamas movement is a partner in bearing legal, moral and political responsibility for the continuation of the Israeli war of genocide in Gaza Strip,” the statement said.
Hamas has run Gaza since its 2007 takeover of the coastal territory from Abbas loyalists.
Senior Hamas official Sami Abu Zuhri told Reuters Abbas’s statement meant the Palestinian Authority “has chosen to be in the same trench with the occupation.”
“Such an attitude will not succeed in blackmailing the resistance or pressuring it,” said Abu Zuhri.
Efforts by Arab mediators, led by Egypt, have so far failed to reconcile power struggles between the two sides.
Another Hamas leader, Basem Naim, who took part in previous reconciliation talks with Abbas’s Fatah faction, said Abbas was to blame for the failure to reach a unity deal.
Naim said Abbas’s comments made him and his authority “partner to the Zioinist enemy and its crimes not only in Gaza but also in all of the Palestinian land.”


Rapid Support Forces told to ensure safe entry of aid into Sudan

Rapid Support Forces told to ensure safe entry of aid into Sudan
Updated 29 sec ago
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Rapid Support Forces told to ensure safe entry of aid into Sudan

Rapid Support Forces told to ensure safe entry of aid into Sudan
  • The US-sponsored talks on securing a ceasefire for the devastating conflict in Sudan kicked off on Wednesday this week

RIYADH: Members of the international community gathered in Switzerland for Sudan ceasefire talks on Friday, where a joint statement was issued calling for the safe passage of aid groups into Sudan.
In the statement, Saudi Arabia, the US, Switzerland, the UAE, Egypt, the African Union and the UN said: “The delegations in Geneva welcome the decision by the Sudanese Armed Forces to open the Adre border crossing — a critical step for saving lives and preventing the spread of famine and we look forward to seeing the first convoys cross in the coming days. We call on the Rapid Support Forces to take immediate steps to ensure that the aid groups entering through the Adre border are provided safety, unfettered humanitarian access, and operational independence from armed and political actors.”
The statement added: “Immediate steps must be taken to move humanitarian assistance into Darfur and across Sudan with safe and unhindered passage to the people in need, regardless of which party controls territory. The expansion of humanitarian assistance is a top priority for the members of the international community gathered in Switzerland.”
The US-sponsored talks on securing a ceasefire for the devastating conflict in Sudan kicked off on Wednesday this week. The talks, which could last up to 10 days, are being held behind closed doors in an undisclosed location.


Israel FM says expects allies to attack Iran if it strikes

Israel FM says expects allies to attack Iran if it strikes
Updated 16 August 2024
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Israel FM says expects allies to attack Iran if it strikes

Israel FM says expects allies to attack Iran if it strikes

LONDON: Israeli Foreign Minister Israel Katz told his French and British counterparts Friday that his country expects support “in attacking” Iran if it strikes Israel.
“If Iran attacks, we expect the coalition to join Israel not only in defense but also in attacking significant targets in Iran,” Katz told his French and UK counterparts during their visit to Israel.

British and French foreign ministers visited Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories to call for an urgent ceasefire in Gaza and a de-escalation in any wider conflict in the Middle East.
The visit by Britain’s David Lammy and France’s Stephane Sejourne comes as a new round of Gaza ceasefire talks was underway in Doha, an effort to end 10 months of fighting in the Palestinian enclave and bring 115 Israeli and foreign hostages home.
The talks came as Iran appeared on the point of retaliating against Israel following the assassination of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran on July 31.
“This is a dangerous moment for the Middle East,” Lammy said in a statement. “The risk of the situation spiralling out of control is rising. Any Iranian attack would have devastating consequences for the region.”
Britain and France are calling for a diplomatic solution to achieve a ceasefire in Gaza and restore peace along the Israeli-Lebanese border, the British foreign ministry said.
“It’s never too late for peace. We must at all costs avoid a regional war, which would have terrible consequences,” French foreign minister Sejourne said in a statement.
The visit by the duo marks the first UK-France joint visit to Israel in more than 10 years.


Suicide bomber kills 12 soldiers in southern Yemen, council says

Suicide bomber kills 12 soldiers in southern Yemen, council says
Updated 17 min 56 sec ago
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Suicide bomber kills 12 soldiers in southern Yemen, council says

Suicide bomber kills 12 soldiers in southern Yemen, council says
  • No group immediately claimed responsibility

ADEN: A suicide bomber killed 12 Yemeni soldiers in a military post in the southern province of Abyan on Friday morning, authorities said.
The attacker “drove a booby-trapped car into a site for the security forces,” in the Mudiyah district, Mohamed Al-Naqib, a spokesperson for the Southern Transitional Council, said.
No group immediately claimed responsibility, but militants linked to Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) have stepped up attacks on military facilities in Yemen.
Al Qaeda’s Yemeni branch has used a nine-year conflict between the Iran-aligned Houthi group and a Saudi-backed coalition to bolster its influence in a country that shares a border with Saudi Arabia and sits near major shipping lanes.
The Southern Transitional Council — which is allied with the Saudi coalition and controls large parts of the south which it wants to secede — has stepped up offensives against Al-Qaeda elements in Abyan over the past year.
AQAP has survived years of attempted crackdowns by the US military, the coalition and the Houthis, taking advantage of Yemen’s mayhem, tribal sympathies and the large stretches of empty territory.


Earthquake of magnitude 4.8 strikes Jordan-Syria border, GFZ says

Earthquake of magnitude 4.8 strikes Jordan-Syria border, GFZ says
Updated 39 min 6 sec ago
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Earthquake of magnitude 4.8 strikes Jordan-Syria border, GFZ says

Earthquake of magnitude 4.8 strikes Jordan-Syria border, GFZ says
  • The earthquake, felt by residents across Syria and Lebanon, was revised from an earlier 5.2 magnitude
BEIRUT: A magnitude 4.8 earthquake struck the Jordan-Syria border on Friday, the German Research Center for Geosciences (GFZ) said.
The quake was at a depth of 10 km (6 miles), it said.
The earthquake, felt by residents across Syria and Lebanon, was revised from an earlier 5.2 magnitude.
Syria’s National Earthquake Center said the tremor was felt by residents of Salamiyah city in western Syria, near where a 4.8 magnitude earthquake struck late on Monday, causing panic and dozens of injuries but no casualties.

41 Palestinians injured in Gaza war flown to Malaysia for treatment

41 Palestinians injured in Gaza war flown to Malaysia for treatment
Updated 43 min 52 sec ago
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41 Palestinians injured in Gaza war flown to Malaysia for treatment

41 Palestinians injured in Gaza war flown to Malaysia for treatment
  • The Palestinians, aged between eight months and 62 years, were flown to Malaysia from Cairo
  • The injured were accompanied by 86 family members or next of kin

SELANGOR: Forty-one Palestinian civilians who suffered various injuries in the war in Gaza were flown to Malaysia on Friday for treatment, officials said.
The Palestinians, aged between eight months and 62 years, were flown to the majority Muslim nation from the Egyptian capital Cairo onboard two Malaysian air force transport aircraft.
“We carried out this mission purely on humanitarian considerations, and to show our solidarity against what is happening to the people of Palestine,” Malaysian Defense Minister Mohamed Khaled Nordin told a news conference after receiving the patients.
“It also shows our nation’s stand against this inhumane genocide.”
Nordin said the injured were selected after a “careful evaluation” to ensure they were fit for the 19-hour flight that made a stopover in Karachi, Pakistan.
The injured were accompanied by 86 family members or next of kin.
The Gaza war was triggered by Hamas’s unprecedented October 7 attack on Israel, resulting in the deaths of 1,198 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally of Israeli official figures.
Militants also seized 251 hostages, 111 of whom are still held in Gaza, including 39 the Israeli military says are dead.
Some were freed during a one-week truce in November.
The war has displaced almost the entire population of Gaza and destroyed much of its housing and other infrastructure, leaving widespread shortages of food.
Gaza’s health ministry, which does not provide a breakdown of civilian and militant casualties, said on Thursday that the war has killed more than 40,000 people.