Israel issues travel warning to parts of Sri Lanka over terrorism threat

Israel issues travel warning to parts of Sri Lanka over terrorism threat
A police commando stands guard in front of a restaurant in Arugam Bay, Sri Lanka on Oct. 23, 2024. (AP)
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Updated 23 October 2024
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Israel issues travel warning to parts of Sri Lanka over terrorism threat

Israel issues travel warning to parts of Sri Lanka over terrorism threat
  • The security council did not specify the exact nature of the threat and called on Israelis in the rest of Sri Lanka to be cautious
  • “The Israeli security establishment ... is in close contact with the security authorities in Sri Lanka and is following the developments,” it said

JERUSALEM/COLOMBO: Israel’s national security council called on Israelis on Wednesday to immediately leave some tourist areas in southern Sri Lanka over the threat of a possible terrorist attack.
The agency said the warning pertained to the area of Arugam Bay and beaches in the south and west of Sri Lanka, and stemmed from “current information about a terrorist threat focused on tourist areas and beaches.”
The security council did not specify the exact nature of the threat and called on Israelis in the rest of Sri Lanka to be cautious and refrain from holding large gatherings in public areas.
“The Israeli security establishment ... is in close contact with the security authorities in Sri Lanka and is following the developments,” it said.
The US embassy in Sri Lanka also released a security alert stating it had received “credible information warning of an attack targeting popular tourist locations in the Arugam Bay area.”
“US citizens are strongly urged to avoid the Arugam Bay area until further notice,” it added but did not give details.
Germany’s Foreign Ministry also urged travelers to avoid the area or to leave it as soon as possible, citing “indications of possible attacks on tourist destinations.”
Police security has been beefed up in the area and officials are on high alert, police spokesperson Nihal Thalduwa said in a video statement released in Colombo.
“This area is a popular spot for surfing and this has attracted a large number of Israeli tourists. We are working to ensure they remain safe,” Thalduwa said.
Sri Lanka, famed for its pristine beaches, tea plantations and historic temples, is seeing a resurgence in tourists as the island nation recovers from a severe financial crisis.
In the first eight months of this year, 1.5 million tourists arrived in Sri Lanka, including a total of 20,515 from Israel, government data showed.


’The whole city shook’: Israel pounds Lebanon’s ancient Tyre

’The whole city shook’: Israel pounds Lebanon’s ancient Tyre
Updated 8 sec ago
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’The whole city shook’: Israel pounds Lebanon’s ancient Tyre

’The whole city shook’: Israel pounds Lebanon’s ancient Tyre
  • Thick black plumes of smoke were seen rising from several neighborhoods, with parts of the evacuation area just 500 meters from the city’s ancient ruins
  • The strikes caused “massive destruction and serious damage to homes, infrastructure, buildings, shops and cars,” said NNA

TYRE, Lebanon: Israeli strikes on Wednesday pounded Lebanon’s Tyre, an ancient coastal city which boasts a UNESCO World Heritage site, leaving swathes of its center in ruins.
The raids, among the worst since the start of the Israel-Hezbollah war last month, hit the “heart of Tyre,” said Rana, a resident who asked to only use her first name over security concerns.
“The whole city shook,” said Rana, after fleeing to the seafront following an Israeli military warning for people to evacuate much of Tyre’s center in the morning.
Thick black plumes of smoke were seen rising from several neighborhoods, with parts of the evacuation area just 500 meters (yards) from the city’s ancient ruins.
The strikes caused “massive destruction and serious damage to homes, infrastructure, buildings, shops and cars,” said the official National News Agency.
AFP footage showed entire neighborhoods buried under rubble.
The Israeli army struck “command and control complexes of various Hezbollah units,” according to a post from the military’s Arabic-language spokesman, Avichay Adraee, on social media platform X.
Adraee described Tyre as an “important” Hezbollah stronghold, although Amal, an ally of the Iran-backed group, was believed to hold more sway there.
Bilal Kashmar of Tyre’s disaster management unit said seven building were completely levelled and more than 400 apartments in their vicinity damaged in the strikes.
Four streets were completely blocked by debris, he told AFP, adding that at least two people were left wounded after most residents fled.
Before Hezbollah and Israel started trading fire over the border last year, at least 50,000 people lived in Tyre, a vibrant city home to both Christians and Muslims.
The city was emptied of most of its population when Israel’s heavy bombardment began last month.
Only 14,500 remained there on Tuesday, Kashamr said.
But the city saw a fresh exodus on Wednesday as people began to escape immediately after the Israeli army issued an evacuation warning for four neighborhoods at 8:00 am (0500 GMT).
Emergency teams drove around the city, urging people to evacuate over megaphones, a video journalist collaborating with AFP said.
An AFP photographer in the city of Sidon, further north, saw dozens of cars on the coastal highway filled with families carrying mattresses, suitcases and clothes.
“Some families, who had not left the city of Tyre before, began leaving their homes to stay clear of areas that the Israeli enemy threatened to target,” NNA said.
Civil defense teams helped transport elderly people and people with limited mobility “to safe areas,” the NNA added.
The Risala Scouts, rescuers affiliated with Hezbollah ally Amal, deployed ambulances to targeted areas to transport wounded civilians to nearby hospitals.
“We are working on providing alternative housing with municipalities,” said Rabih Issa, an official with the organization.
Tyre is one of the oldest continuously inhabited cities in the world. It is home to important archaeological sites, mainly from Roman times.
Kashmar of Tyre’s disaster management unit said there has yet to be a damage assessment for heritage sites.
However, “damage is possible,” he said, explaining that one strike hit less than 50 meters away from one of the city’s ruins.
UNESCO said it was “closely following the impact of the ongoing conflict on the World Heritage site of Tyre” using remote sensing tools and satellite imagery.
On September 23, Israel launched an intensive air campaign in Lebanon, after almost a year of cross-border exchanges with Hezbollah over the Gaza war.
Since then, at least 1,552 people have been killed in Israeli strikes on Lebanon, according to an AFP tally of health ministry figures, although the real number is likely to be higher due to data gaps.


Hezbollah says launched drones at Israeli base near Haifa

Hezbollah says launched drones at Israeli base near Haifa
Updated 23 October 2024
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Hezbollah says launched drones at Israeli base near Haifa

Hezbollah says launched drones at Israeli base near Haifa
  • Hezbollah launched "an air attack with a swarm of explosives-laden drones" on the base south of Haifa

BEIRUT: Hezbollah said it launched drones towards a military base near the north Israel city of Haifa on Wednesday, dedicating the attack to the group's slain chief Hassan Nasrallah.
Hezbollah fighters launched "an air attack with a swarm of explosives-laden drones" on the base south of Haifa, a statement from the Iran-backed group said, adding it came "in response to" Israel attacks and dedicating it to Nasrallah, who was killed in an Israeli strike last month.


Conflict in Lebanon could cause 9.2 percent drop in GDP in 2024: UN

Conflict in Lebanon could cause 9.2 percent drop in GDP in 2024: UN
Updated 23 October 2024
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Conflict in Lebanon could cause 9.2 percent drop in GDP in 2024: UN

Conflict in Lebanon could cause 9.2 percent drop in GDP in 2024: UN
  • “The scale of the military engagement, the geopolitical context, the humanitarian impact and the economic fallout in 2024 are expected to be much greater than in 2006,” UNDP said
  • “The escalating hostilities in Lebanon in 2024 strike while Lebanon is already weakened by years of political, economic, and social crises“

UNITED NATIONS: Fighting in Lebanon could further destabilize the country’s economy, already devastated by years of crisis, the UN warned Wednesday, predicting a 9.2 percent drop in GDP in 2024 if the conflict continues.
After a year of border skirmishes, Israel and the Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah are now engaging in open conflict. Late last month, Israel launched a ground offensive in southern Lebanon.
“The scale of the military engagement, the geopolitical context, the humanitarian impact and the economic fallout in 2024 are expected to be much greater than in 2006,” when the last Israel-Hezbollah war erupted, the UN Development Programme said in an initial evaluation of the economic impact on Lebanon.
“The escalating hostilities in Lebanon in 2024 strike while Lebanon is already weakened by years of political, economic, and social crises,” it said.
Lebanon’s GDP contracted by 28 percent between 2018 and 2021, and the Lebanese pound lost more than 98 percent of its value, sparking hyperinflation and a significant loss of purchasing power, the report said.
Despite all that, the situation seemed to have stabilized in 2022 and 2023, and the UN agency had predicted 3.6 percent growth in 2024, Kawthar Dara, an economist in the UNDP country office in Lebanon, told AFP.
But if the fighting persists until the end of the year, “GDP is projected to decline by 9.2 percent,” she added, citing two main reasons — companies unable to do business because of Israeli air strikes, and capital destruction, from factories to roads.
The conflict, which has intensified since September 23, “threatens to further destabilize Lebanon’s already fragile economy,” and lead to a “prolonged economic downturn.”
“Even if it ends in 2024, the consequences of the escalation of hostilities in Lebanon are expected to persist for years,” the UNDP report said.
Without “substantial” international support, Lebanon’s economic outlook is “grim,” with GDP expected to contract by 2.28 percent in 2025 and another 2.43 percent in 2026.
And while in 2006, economic activity quickly resumed along with reconstruction, this time, “the dynamic is totally different,” Dara said, expressing concern about the willingness of international donors to come to Lebanon’s aid again.
The UN agency said in its report that with living conditions severely diminished, “it is imperative for the international community to mobilize immediate humanitarian relief support,” along with development assistance for longer-term recovery.


Houthis criticized after educator dies in custody

Houthis criticized after educator dies in custody
Updated 23 October 2024
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Houthis criticized after educator dies in custody

Houthis criticized after educator dies in custody
  • Family of Mohammed Naj Khamash received a phone call from the Houthis asking them to collect his remains
  • Houthis abducted 55-year-old Khamash from Sanaa in June as the militia launched a surprise crackdown on a number of organizations

AL-MUKALLA: The death of a Yemeni educational expert and Ministry of Education official in a Houthi-run detention facility was a result of torture, it is being claimed.

Yemeni government officials and human rights activists said the family of Mohammed Naj Khamash, the director general of primary and secondary education at the Ministry of Education, received a call from the Houthis on Tuesday asking them to collect his remains. They were told his death was caused by a heart attack.

The Houthis abducted 55-year-old Khamash from Sanaa in June as the militia launched a surprise crackdown on Yemeni employees of UN agencies, international human rights and aid organizations, diplomatic missions, and education experts.

The Yemeni government’s Ministry of Human Rights office in Sanaa, which is outside Houthi-controlled areas, has disputed that Khamash died of natural causes. Instead they say he was brutally tortured in Sanaa detention facilities and his family prevented from visiting or contacting him.

“We strongly condemn the terrorist Houthi militia’s actions, including the death of abducted Mohammed Naj Khamash, the continuation of physical and psychological torture, and the deliberate neglect and denial of treatment and health care to abductees, which has resulted in the deaths of a number of them in Houthi prisons,” the office said.

Khamash’s death is the latest in a string of mysterious fatalities of Houthi detainees in Sanaa and other areas under their control which Yemeni activists and rights groups say are the result of mistreatment, deplorable conditions, and deprivation of medical care. Sabri Al-Hakimi, a prominent educationist, died in March after being abducted and held in a detention facility in the city.

International charity Save the Children temporarily halted operations in Houthi-controlled areas of Yemen late last year in an attempt to pressure the organization to explain the death of employee Hisham Al-Hakimi during detention by the militia.

The Houthis continue to hold a number of prominent teachers and educators, including Mohammed Hatem Al-Mekhlafi, a professor of public education at Sanaa University and co-author of the country's primary school curriculum, and Mujeeb Al-Mekhlafi, an educational training expert.

Al-Mekhlafi and other abducted educationalists appeared in videos broadcast by Houthi media, confessing to inserting “American ideas” such as homosexuality and atheism into Yemeni school curricula, persuading Yemeni children to normalize relations with Israel, and recruiting Yemenis for Israeli and American intelligence agencies.

Khamash’s death sparked condemnation from local and international rights groups, who called for stronger international action to pressure the Houthis to release the abductees and end the widespread torture in their detention facilities.

The Geneva-based SAM Organization for Rights and Liberties issued a statement urging the international community to take immediate action to rescue abductees from Houthi prisons.

“SAM urges the international community to take immediate action to rescue detainees in Houthi prisons, emphasizing that the continued occurrence of serious human rights violations, such as torture and ill-treatment, necessitates effective and serious pressure on the Houthis to release detainees and protect their rights,” it read.

On Wednesday, a Houthi drone dropped two bombs on a school in Al-Hanaeh, in Yemen’s southern province of Taiz, injuring two students, according to SABA.


Hezbollah's Hashem Safieddine, heir apparent to Nasrallah, killed in Israeli attack, group says

Hezbollah's Hashem Safieddine, heir apparent to Nasrallah, killed in Israeli attack, group says
Updated 23 October 2024
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Hezbollah's Hashem Safieddine, heir apparent to Nasrallah, killed in Israeli attack, group says

Hezbollah's Hashem Safieddine, heir apparent to Nasrallah, killed in Israeli attack, group says
  • Hezbollah confirmed that Safieddine was killed in an Israeli airstrike
  • A relative of Nasrallah, Safieddine had sat on the group's Jihad Council - the body responsible for its military operations

BEIRUT: Hashem Safieddine, the top Hezbollah official widely expected to succeed slain secretary general Hassan Nasrallah, was killed in an Israeli attack, the group said Wednesday.
Hezbollah confirmed that Safieddine was killed in an Israeli airstrike.
Safieddine had been running Hezbollah alongside its deputy secretary general Naim Qassem since Nasrallah's assassination and was expected to be formally elected as its next secretary general, although no official announcement had yet been made.
A relative of Nasrallah, Safieddine had sat on the group's Jihad Council - the body responsible for its military operations. He was also head of its executive council, overseeing Hezbollah's financial and administrative affairs.
Safieddine assumed a prominent role speaking for Hezbollah during the year of hostilities with Israel that ultimately led to his death, addressing funerals and other events that Nasrallah had long been unable to attend for security reasons.
His killing further erodes the group's top leadership as Israeli strikes pummel Lebanon's south, eastern Bekaa Valley and southern suburbs of Beirut - all Hezbollah strongholds - and the group's fighters seek to push back Israeli ground incursions.