Iraq lodges UN complaint over Israel using its airspace to attack Iran

Iraq lodges UN complaint over Israel using its airspace to attack Iran
Iran suspended on October 26 all flights temporarily, the aviation authority announced, after Israel announced it was conducting strikes in the country. (File/AFP)
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Iraq lodges UN complaint over Israel using its airspace to attack Iran

Iraq lodges UN complaint over Israel using its airspace to attack Iran
  • Iraqi foreign ministry would also bring up “this violation” in talks with the United States

BAGHDAD: Iraq has condemned Israel’s use of its airspace to attack neighboring Iran in a protest letter sent to United Nations chief Antonio Guterres and the UN Security Council, Baghdad said Monday.
A statement from government spokesman Bassim Alawadi said the letter condemns “the Zionist entity’s blatant violation of Iraq’s airspace and sovereignty by using Iraqi airspace to carry out an attack on the Islamic Republic of Iran on October 26.”
Alawadi said the Iraqi foreign ministry would also bring up “this violation” in talks with the United States, Israel’s close ally and top arms provider.
Israel on Saturday launched air strikes on military sites in Iran, risking further regional escalation more than a year into the Gaza war and a month into the Israel-Hezbollah war in Lebanon.
The Israeli raid was in retaliation for an Iranian missile attack on October 1, itself retaliation for the killing of Iran-backed militant leaders and a Revolutionary Guards commander.
The Iranian military said that some Israeli aircraft had fired a “small number of long-range missiles... from a distance,” inside the US-patrolled airspace of Iraq.
Iranian foreign ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei said on Monday that Tehran was “sure that no neighboring country has given this permission to the Zionist regime” to use its airspace.
“We certainly hope that our friends in Iraq will announce the necessary reactions, including by registering their protest with the United Nations, and will not allow such incidents to happen again,” Baghaei added.
Baghdad has close ties with Tehran but also a strategic partnership with Washington, which has troops in Iraq as part of an international anti-jihadist coalition.
While the Iraqi government has sought to avoid being dragged into the escalating regional conflict, some pro-Iran factions have launched attacks on US forces in the region and claimed responsibility for drones sent to Israel.
One Tehran-aligned group, the influential Kataeb Hezbollah, condemned on Sunday the Israeli use of Iraqi airspace to attack Iran as a “dangerous precedent.”
It accused the United States of being complicit in the Israeli attack, warning both of a response to this “aggression.”


WFP calls for full access to Sudan amid looming famine

WFP calls for full access to Sudan amid looming famine
Updated 4 min 39 sec ago
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WFP calls for full access to Sudan amid looming famine

WFP calls for full access to Sudan amid looming famine
  • WFP warns famine already declared at Darfur’s Zamzam camp

PORT SUDAN: The World Food Programme has called on the warring parties in Sudan’s conflict to grant full access to the agency as the country faces the imminent threat of famine.
Sudan has been gripped by war since April 2023 between the regular armed forces led by the country’s de facto leader Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) led by his former deputy Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo.
The conflict has killed tens of thousands of people, displaced millions and resulted in one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises.
Both sides have been accused of committing war crimes, including targeting civilians and preventing aid from reaching those in need, as well as using methods that amount to starving millions.
“We want complete and unfettered access as well as the ability to get in through as many different entry points into Sudan as possible,” WFP’s executive director Cindy McCain told AFP on Sunday.
She warned that with the whole of Sudan currently at famine alert level and famine already declared at Darfur’s Zamzam camp, “it will spread so it’s really urgent and that we can get in and we can do it at scale.”
About 11.3 million people have been uprooted by the war, among them nearly three million who have fled outside Sudan, according to the UN refugee agency.
About 26 million people face acute food insecurity, and a UN-backed assessment in August said the war had pushed the Zamzam displacement camp in North Darfur state into famine.
“For us it’s about getting food and trucks in there so it’s important that the gates stay open,” McCain said, adding that this included not just Sudan’s border crossing with Chad but all crossings into the country.
“We need as many of them open as possible,” she said.
On October 18, Western countries including Britain, the United States, France and Germany urged both sides in war-torn Sudan to let in “urgently required” aid to millions of people in dire need.
“The two sides’ systematic obstruction of local and international humanitarian efforts is at the root of this famine,” the European and North American nations said in a joint statement.


Tunisia coastguard recovers bodies of 16 migrants

Tunisia coastguard recovers bodies of 16 migrants
Updated 16 min 10 sec ago
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Tunisia coastguard recovers bodies of 16 migrants

Tunisia coastguard recovers bodies of 16 migrants
  • Bodies were found on Saturday and Sunday

TUNIS: Tunisia’s coast guard has recovered the bodies of 16 migrants off the coast of the towns of Maloulech, Salakta and Chebba, the national guard said on Monday, the latest migrant boat disaster in the Mediterranean.
“The bodies were found at the weekend and on Monday... The victims have not been identified because the bodies had decomposed,” a senior official in the national guard, Houssem Eddine Jebabli, told Reuters.
Last month at least 15 Tunisian people died, including three infants, and 10 others were missing after their boat sank off the Tunisian coast at Djerba as they sought to cross the Mediterranean to Europe.
The bodies of 13 sub-Saharan African migrants were also recovered in the same area last month.
Tunisia is grappling with an unprecedented migration crisis and has replaced Libya as the major departure point for both Tunisians and people from elsewhere in Africa seeking a better life in Europe.


Lebanon says five dead in Israeli strike on Tyre city center

Lebanon says five dead in Israeli strike on Tyre city center
Updated 44 min 35 sec ago
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Lebanon says five dead in Israeli strike on Tyre city center

Lebanon says five dead in Israeli strike on Tyre city center
  • Work is ongoing to remove the rubble

BEIRUT: Lebanon’s health ministry said Israel struck the southern city of Tyre on Monday, killing at least five people and wounding 10 others.
An “Israeli enemy strike this morning on a building” in the center of the coastal city “led to a provisional toll of five dead and 10 wounded,” a health ministry statement said.
It added that “work is ongoing to remove the rubble.”
An AFP video journalist saw emergency personnel rush a survivor to an ambulance on a stretcher, while other rescuers worked to put out a heavily smoldering fire at the site, where a residential apartment block had collapsed like a pancake.
Tyre, an ancient coastal city which boasts a UNESCO World Heritage site, was subjected to heavy Israeli strikes last week, leaving swathes of the center in ruins.
Israel last month escalated air strikes on Hezbollah strongholds and sent ground forces into Lebanon, following a year of cross-border exchanges of fire with the Iran-backed group over the Gaza war.


Iran Guards chief warns Israel of ‘bitter consequences’ after attack

Iran Guards chief warns Israel of ‘bitter consequences’ after attack
Updated 27 min 56 sec ago
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Iran Guards chief warns Israel of ‘bitter consequences’ after attack

Iran Guards chief warns Israel of ‘bitter consequences’ after attack
  • Salami said the Israeli attack was a sign of “miscalculation and helplessness”

TEHRAN: The top commander of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards has warned Israel it would face “bitter consequences” after its attack on Iranian military sites, local media said on Monday.
Guards chief Hossein Salami, quoted by Tasnim news agency, said Israel had “failed to achieve its ominous goals” with its air raids on Saturday.
Israel struck military sites in response to Tehran’s October 1 missile attack, itself retaliation for the killing of Iran-backed militant leaders and a Revolutionary Guards commander.
Salami said the Israeli attack was a sign of “miscalculation and helplessness” as Israel battles Tehran-aligned militants in Gaza and Lebanon.
“Its bitter consequences will be unimaginable” for Israel, Salami warned according to Tasnim.

Iran will ‘use all available tools’

On Monday Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei said that Tehran will “use all available tools” to respond to Israel’s weekend attack on military targets in Iran,
Speaking at a weekly televised news conference, Baghaei said: “(Iran) will use all available tools to deliver a definite and effective response to the Zionist regime (Israel).”
The nature of Iran’s response depends on the nature of the Israeli attack, Baghaei added, without elaborating.
Scores of Israeli jets completed three waves of strikes before dawn on Saturday against missile factories and other sites near Tehran and in western Iran, Israel’s military said.
Iranian media have played down the severity of the Israeli operation, signalling what analysts say is the Islamic republic’s reluctance to escalate further.
Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Sunday said that Israel’s attack which killed four soldiers “should neither be exaggerated nor minimized.”
He described it as a “miscalculation” on Israel’s part.
President Masoud Pezeshkian said: “We do not seek war but we will defend the rights of our nation and country.”
Iran “will give an appropriate response to the aggression of the Zionist regime,” Pezeshkian added.
Also on Sunday, Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi reiterated Iran’s “right to respond,” also saying that Tehran had “received indications” hours before Israel’s attack.
US news website Axios on Saturday said Israel has “sent message to Iran” ahead of its attack and warned it “against a response.”


Egypt proposes initial two-day truce in Gaza with limited hostage-prisoner exchange

Egypt proposes initial two-day truce in Gaza with limited hostage-prisoner exchange
Updated 28 October 2024
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Egypt proposes initial two-day truce in Gaza with limited hostage-prisoner exchange

Egypt proposes initial two-day truce in Gaza with limited hostage-prisoner exchange
  • El-Sisi says talks should resume within 10 days of implementing temporary ceasefire in efforts to reach permanent one
  • Israel says war cannot end until Hamas has been wiped out as a military force and governing entity in Gaza

CAIRO: Egypt has proposed an initial two-day ceasefire in Gaza to exchange four Israeli hostages of Hamas for some Palestinian prisoners, Egypt’s president said on Sunday as Israeli military strikes killed 45 Palestinians across the enclave.
Egyptian leader Abdel Fattah El-Sisi made the announcement as efforts to defuse the devastating, more than year-long war resumed in Qatar with the directors of the CIA and Israel’s Mossad intelligence agency taking part.
Speaking alongside Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune during a press conference in Cairo, El-Sisi also said that talks should resume within 10 days of implementing the temporary ceasefire in efforts to reach a permanent one.
There was no immediate comment from Israel or Hamas but a Palestinian official close to the mediation effort told Reuters: “I expect Hamas would listen to the new offers, but it remains determined that any agreement must end the war and get Israeli forces out of Gaza.”
Israel has said the war cannot end until Hamas has been wiped out as a military force and governing entity in Gaza.
The US, Qatar and Egypt have been spearheading negotiations to end the war that erupted after Hamas fighters stormed into southern Israel on Oct. 7 last year, killing 1,200 people and taking more than 250 hostages, by Israeli tallies.
The death toll from Israel’s retaliatory air and ground onslaught in Gaza is approaching 43,000, Gaza health officials say, with the densely populated enclave in ruins.
An official briefed on the talks told Reuters earlier on Sunday that negotiations in Doha will seek a short-term ceasefire and the release of some hostages being held by Hamas in exchange for Israel’s release of Palestinian prisoners.
The objective, still elusive after multiple mediation attempts, is to get Israel and Hamas to agree to a halt in fighting for less than a month in the hope this would lead to a more permanent ceasefire.
At least 43 of those killed in Gaza on Sunday were in the north of the enclave, where Israeli troops have returned to root out Hamas fighters who it says have regrouped there.
Jabalia in focus
Earlier on Sunday, 20 people were killed following an airstrike on houses in Jabalia, the largest of the Gaza Strip’s eight historic refugee camps, which has been the focus of an Israeli military offensive for more than three weeks, medics and the Palestinian official news agency WAFA said.
Another Israeli airstrike on a school sheltering displaced Palestinian families in Shati camp in Gaza City, killed nine people and wounded 20 others, with many in critical condition, medics said.
Footage circulated on Palestinian media, which Reuters could not immediately verify, showed people rushing to the bomb site to help evacuate the casualties. Bodies were scattered on the ground, while some carried wounded children in their arms before loading them in a vehicle.
The Israeli military said it was looking into the report on the strike on the school.
Three local journalists were among those killed at the school in Shati — Saed Radwan, head of digital media at Hamas Al-Aqsa television, Hanin Baroud, and Hamza Abu Selmeya, according to Hamas media.
On Sunday, Israel’s military said it had killed more than 40 militants in the Jabalia area in the past 24 hours, as well as dismantling infrastructure and locating large quantities of military equipment.
Israeli military strikes on the towns of Jabalia, Beit Hanoun and Beit Lahiya in northern Gaza have so far killed around 800 people during a three-week offensive, the Gaza health ministry said.