Blast hits Iraq former paramilitaries depot: officials

A paramilitary of the Hashed al-shaabi (Popular Mobilisation) forces stands guard during the funeral of a comrade, who died in American air strikes targeting Iran-backed groups the day before, at the Hashed al-shaabi forces' headquarters in Baghdad on January 25, 2024. (AFP)
A paramilitary of the Hashed al-shaabi (Popular Mobilisation) forces stands guard during the funeral of a comrade, who died in American air strikes targeting Iran-backed groups the day before, at the Hashed al-shaabi forces' headquarters in Baghdad on January 25, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 20 July 2024
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Blast hits Iraq former paramilitaries depot: officials

Blast hits Iraq former paramilitaries depot: officials
  • A security source confirmed the blast, adding that it “occurred in a warehouse storing equipment that belongs to Hashed Al-Shaabi”

BAGHDAD: An explosion ripped through “logistics” warehouses belonging to former pro-Iran paramilitaries south of the Iraqi capital Baghdad on Thursday, officials said.
“At 7:00 p.m. (1600 GMT)... an explosion occurred in logistics warehouses belonging to the 42 Brigade... in the Yusufiyah area, south of Baghdad,” said the Hashed Al-Shaabi — an alliance of pro-Iranian former paramilitary groups now integrated into the regular army.
The cause of the blast was not immediately known, and the Hashed said it assigned a committee to investigate.
Firefighters were battling the blaze, it added in a statement.
A security source confirmed the blast, adding that it “occurred in a warehouse storing equipment that belongs to Hashed Al-Shaabi.”
A Hashed official said he did not rule out the possibility of an “air strike.”
In April, one person was killed and eight wounded in a blast at a military base housing Hashed groups in Babylon province, south of Baghdad.
An investigation found the blast was caused by munitions stored on-site, not by an air strike.
The Hashed Al-Shaabi is an integral part of the Iraqi security apparatus under the authority of the prime minister.
It includes some pro-Iran groups which have carried out dozens of attacks against US forces in Iraq and neighboring Syria.
The latest blast comes after two drones were launched on Tuesday against an Iraqi base used by US-led troops without causing any damage.
 

 


UN mission suspects war crimes in Sudan, calls for peacekeeping force

UN mission suspects war crimes in Sudan, calls for peacekeeping force
Updated 12 sec ago
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UN mission suspects war crimes in Sudan, calls for peacekeeping force

UN mission suspects war crimes in Sudan, calls for peacekeeping force
  • Report said that both the Sudanese army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces were responsible for attacks on civilians
GENEVA: Both sides in Sudan’s civil war have committed abuses on a large scale which may amount to war crimes or crimes against humanity, a UN-mandated mission said on Friday, recommending an arms embargo and a peacekeeping force to protect civilians.
The 19-page report by a UN Fact-Finding Mission, based on 182 interviews with survivors, their family members and witnesses, said that both the Sudanese army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces were responsible for attacks on civilians and had used torture and carried out arbitrary arrests. “The gravity of these findings underscores the urgent and immediate action to protect civilians,” said the mission’s chair Mohamed Chande Othman, calling for an independent and impartial force to be deployed without delay.

Iraqi date farmers fight drought to protect national treasure

Iraqi date farmers fight drought to protect national treasure
Updated 15 min 39 sec ago
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Iraqi date farmers fight drought to protect national treasure

Iraqi date farmers fight drought to protect national treasure
  • Dates are Iraq’s second-largest export product after oil, which dominates export revenues and generates more than $120 million
  • The date palm and its bounty are national icons, but they are being battered by drought

Janajah: Bare feet pressed against the rough trunk of a palm tree, his back supported by a metal and fabric harness, Ali Abed begins the climb to the dates above.
In Iraq, the date palm and its bounty are national icons, but they are being battered by drought.
Once known as the country of “30 million palm trees,” Iraq’s ancient date-growing culture had already suffered from upheaval, especially during the 1980-88 war with Iran, before climate change became a major threat.
In the still lush countryside of central Iraq, near Janajah village in Babylon province, hundreds of date palms stand tall and majestic, surrounded by vines and fruit trees.
During harvest season, the branches are heavy with clusters of yellow and red dates.
Rising at dawn to avoid the searing heat, harvesters climb the palms using only their upper body strength, aided by a harness and rope wrapped around the trunk.
“Last year, the orchards and the palm groves were thirsty; we almost lost them. This year, thanks to God, we had good water and a good harvest,” said Abed, a 36-year-old farmer from Biramana, a village a few kilometers (miles) from Janajah.
Once at the top, they pick the ripe dates, filling baskets that are lowered to the ground and emptied into basins, which are then loaded onto lorries.
Abed noted, however, that the harvest is much smaller now — about half of what it used to be. He once collected more than 12 tons but now brings in just four or five.
Abed criticized the lack of government support, saying aerial insecticide campaigns are not enough.
Iraq has spent over a decade trying to revive the date palm, a vital economic asset and national symbol.
Authorities and religious institutions have launched programs and mega-projects to encourage tree planting and growth.
An agriculture ministry spokesperson told the official INA news agency last month that, “for the first time since the 1980s,” the number of date palms had risen to “more than 22 million,” up from a low of just eight million.
During the Iran-Iraq War, palm groves were razed in vast areas along the border to prevent enemy infiltration.
Today, dates are Iraq’s second-largest export product after oil, which dominates export revenues and generates more than $120 million, according to the World Bank.
In 2023, Iraq exported around 650,000 tons of dates, official statistics show.
Yet around Janajah, many palm trees lie dead and decapitated.
“All these palm trees are dead due to the drought; the whole region is suffering,” said 56-year-old farmer Maitham Talib.
“Before, we had water. People irrigated abundantly. Now, we need complicated machinery,” he said, observing the harvest.
The United Nations has labelled Iraq one of the five countries in the world most vulnerable to some of the effects of climate change.
The country has endured four consecutive years of drought, though this year saw some relief with winter rainfall.
Alongside rising temperatures that have hit 50 degrees Celsius (122 Fahrenheit) in summer and declining rainfall, Iraq also faces falling river levels, blamed on dams built upstream by Iran and Turkiye.
Kifah Talib, 42, lamented the slow devastation wrought by the drought.
“It used to be paradise: apple, pomegranate, citrus trees and vines — everything grew here,” he said.


Israeli forces withdraw from Jenin and its camp, Palestine news agency says

Israeli forces withdraw from Jenin and its camp, Palestine news agency says
Updated 06 September 2024
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Israeli forces withdraw from Jenin and its camp, Palestine news agency says

Israeli forces withdraw from Jenin and its camp, Palestine news agency says
  • Witness say the Israeli forces left behind extensive damage to infrastructure

CAIRO: Israeli forces have withdrawn from the city of Jenin and a refugee camp there, following a 10-day episode of “violent aggression,” the Palestine news agency (WAFA) said on Friday.

Twenty-one people were killed in the city and camp, the Palestinian health ministry said in a statement.

A Reuters witness said the Israeli forces left behind extensive damage to infrastructure.

In a statement on Facebook, the Palestinian foreign ministry accused Israel of transferring to the occupied West Bank its brutal destruction and devastation in the Gaza Strip, as evidenced by the situation in the cities of Jenin and Tulkarm, and the refugee camps there.


Tunisian police re-arrest presidential candidate minutes after his release

Tunisian police re-arrest presidential candidate minutes after his release
Updated 06 September 2024
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Tunisian police re-arrest presidential candidate minutes after his release

Tunisian police re-arrest presidential candidate minutes after his release
  • Zammel was arrested on Monday on suspicion of falsifying voter forms, a charge he denies
  • He is one of the 3 candidates approved to run in the Oct. 6 election along with President Saied and Zouhair Maghzaoui

TUNIS: Tunisian police late on Thursday re-arrested presidential candidate Ayachi Zammel, just minutes after he was released from jail on a judge’s order, lawyers said.
Zammel is one of three candidates approved to run in the Oct. 6 presidential election, which opposition critics say is rigged in favor of President Kais Saied.
Zammel was arrested on Monday on suspicion of falsifying voter forms. Each candidate must submit forms from 10,000 supporters to qualify for the election. He denies the allegation.
“He was kidnapped by members of the National Guard to an unknown location,” Zammel campaign member Mahdi Abdel Jawad told Reuters.

Abdessatar Massoudi and Dalila Ben Mbarek, two lawyers for Zammel, said he was kidnapped immediately after his release from Borj El Amri prison.
Along with Zammel and Saied, politician Zouhair Maghzaoui is approved to run in the Oct. 6 election.
Zammel has said he faces “restrictions and intimidation” because he is a serious competitor to Saied. He has pledged to rebuild democracy, guarantee freedoms and fix Tunisia’s collapsing economy.
Saied was democratically elected in 2019, but then tightened his grip on power and began ruling by decree in 2021 in a move the opposition has described as a coup.
Major political factions say Saied’s years in power have eroded the democratic gains of Tunisia’s 2011 revolution.
Tunisian opposition parties and human rights groups have accused the authorities of using arbitrary restrictions to help ensure Saied’s reelection.
The electoral commission on Monday rejected an administrative court ruling reinstating three prominent presidential candidates, reinforcing opposition fears that the commission sought to favor the incumbent president.
Law professors, rights groups and political parties said the commission’s decisions threatened to undermine the legitimacy and credibility of the elections and called on it to back down. (Reporting by Tarek Amara; Editing by Cynthia Osterman and Leslie Adler)

 


Multi-day Israeli raids leave West Bank Palestinians trapped ‘in prison’

Multi-day Israeli raids leave West Bank Palestinians trapped ‘in prison’
Updated 06 September 2024
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Multi-day Israeli raids leave West Bank Palestinians trapped ‘in prison’

Multi-day Israeli raids leave West Bank Palestinians trapped ‘in prison’

JENIN: Palestinian man Adnan Naghnaghia has been holed up at home for eight days as Israeli forces were carrying out raids, battling militants and making arrests in the occupied West Bank.

“It’s like a prison,” said the 56-year-old father of five, a resident of the Jenin refugee camp in the northern West Bank, an area targeted in a series of major Israeli “counter-terrorism” operations since August 28.

Israel has occupied the West Bank since 1967, and its forces regularly make incursions into Palestinian communities, but the current raids as well as comments by Israeli official mark an escalation, residents say.

As the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza nears its 12th month, Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said Wednesday that Israel must use its “full strength” to combat “the resurgence of terrorism” in the West Bank, which is separated from the Gaza Strip by Israeli territory.

“There is no other option, use all the forces... with full strength,” said Gallant.

The ongoing raids in the northern West Bank have killed 36 Palestinians since last week, according to the Palestinian health ministry. Some of the dead have been claimed by militant groups as members. Israeli forces have also arrested dozens of Palestinians.

In the latest violence, the health ministry said Thursday five people were killed in a strike on a car in the Tubas area south of Jenin, with the military saying it had targeted “armed terrorists.”

The presence of Israeli troops, in their longest operation in decades against West Bank militants, has brought life in Jenin to a standstill, said Naghnaghia.

“They force you to stay inside the house instead of going out and living a normal life.”

Venturing out has become so perilous that Naghnaghia was speaking to an AFP correspondent by phone even though they were both in the Jenin camp, just 600 meters (yards) apart.

In the camp’s narrow alleys, armored vehicles and bulldozers have left behind a trail of destruction amid the battles.

Most residents “already left,” seeking safety elsewhere, said Naghnaghia.

Jenin city and the adjacent refugee camp have long been a bastion of Palestinian armed groups fighting against Israel.

While Hamas does not have a strong presence in the West Bank, opinion polls suggest its popularity has grown among Palestinians during the Gaza war, triggered by its October 7 attack on Israel. Other militant groups like Islamic Jihad are particularly active in the northern West Bank.

Years of repeated raids have made Jenin camp residents “experts” at waiting them out, said Naghnaghia who had stocked up food for days.

But now he fears it may not last long enough.

“We plan for two-three days, not one or two weeks,” he said.

On Monday Israeli troops searched the family home where about 20 of Naghnaghia’s relatives including children were staying.

Before they left, he recounted, one of the soldiers fired a shot inside the house, at the ceiling.

The 56-year-old said he did not know why the troops were there.

In Jenin city, 68-year-old Fadwa Dababneh has her groceries delivered to her by an ambulance. Other vehicles have largely disappeared off the streets as gunfire rings out, and many roads have been overturned by bulldozers.

For bottled water, “we arranged with the Red Crescent car, they gave us some,” she said.

Medics treat casualties, but now also deliver food and other basics, or help residents make necessary trips across the city.

One woman, who asked not to be named, told AFP she had to take an ambulance to make it to a routine checkup at a hospital.

“Just look at it — so much destruction, so much devastation. People are really exhausted,” she said.

The military operations have forced health professionals to make quick changes to the way they operate. Some, unable to travel home as freely as they used to, are now working 24-hour shifts.

“To leave the hospital now, we need a permit, or we have to coordinate with an ambulance, as the area we’re in is dangerous,” said Moayad Khalifeh, a 29-year-old doctor near the Jenin camp.

He works at Al-Amal, a maternity hospital which has begun taking in wounded from the raids.

“Most of the activity, clashes and blockades happen right at our door,” said Khalifeh.

The hospital’s director, Mohammad Al-Ardeh, was unable to reach the facility for a week due to the fighting, instead managing operations by phone, and some staff members have been unable to come to work, he told AFP.

Making matters worse, water supply “has been cut off maybe six or seven times” since last week, and there have been frequent power cuts.

Since the Gaza war began on October 7, Israeli troops or settlers have killed at least 661 Palestinians in the West Bank, according to the Palestinian health ministry.

At least 23 Israelis, including security forces, have been killed in Palestinian attacks in the territory during the same period, according to Israeli officials.