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Lebanon joins Ƶ’s Middle East Green Initiative

Caretaker Prime Minister Najib Mikati (R) confirmed on Friday that “Lebanon has joined the Green Middle East Initiative (L), launched by Ƶ’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.” (Supplied/AFP)
Caretaker Prime Minister Najib Mikati (R) confirmed on Friday that “Lebanon has joined the Green Middle East Initiative (L), launched by Ƶ’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.” (Supplied/AFP)
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Updated 30 August 2024

Lebanon joins Ƶ’s Middle East Green Initiative

Lebanon joins Ƶ’s Middle East Green Initiative
  • Caretaker PM Najib Mikati calls move ‘essential for Lebanon’

BEIRUT: Caretaker Prime Minister Najib Mikati confirmed on Friday that “Lebanon has joined the Green Middle East Initiative, launched by Ƶ’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.”

Mikati described the step as “essential for Lebanon, especially as southern villages and towns have suffered significant environmental and agricultural damage, necessitating cooperation with all of Lebanon’s friends.”

Mikati told Agriculture Minister Abbas Al-Hajj Hassan, and Environment Minister Nasser Yassin about the country’s inclusion in the initiative, and Hassan said: “Israel is destroying large areas, whether agricultural lands, fruit-bearing trees, or forests.

“Approving Lebanon’s participation in the initiative is a very positive sign for us Lebanese, the government, and especially for the Agriculture and Environment Ministries.

“The timing of today’s announcement comes amid the ongoing Israeli attacks on Lebanon. We thank the Kingdom for its efforts, as it has always stood by Lebanon in the toughest of times.”

Yassin said that one of the initiative’s goals was “to plant 40 billion trees across the Middle East.”

He added: “A key part of Ƶ’s initiative is to protect the region, the Gulf, and Middle Eastern countries from ongoing climate change; halt land degradation and desertification; and explore ways to adapt more effectively to potential future changes.”

Yassin thanked “Ƶ for agreeing to consider Lebanon’s file and for its inclusion in this very important initiative.”

He said: “This is part of the continuous and long-standing cooperation with Ƶ over the decades. This initiative is timely and will be followed up by the Ministries of Agriculture and Environment and all concerned parties through joint reserves to increase vegetation cover.”

The cost of the damage to southern Lebanese border towns during the first six months of Israeli attacks has exceeded $1.5 billion, according to government figures.

The shelling and airstrikes have damaged the livelihoods of residents in the border area and their agricultural holdings.

Satellite images show the destruction of entire neighborhoods in villages along the Blue Line and the disappearance of forested areas covering mountain slopes and valleys.

Israeli attacks have displaced more than 110,000 people from dozens of villages.

Lebanese authorities have accused Israel of using phosphorus bombs to destroy forests and crops, while the Ministry of Agriculture has been unable to conduct a final assessment of the extent of the damage due to the ongoing Israeli operation.

The Ministry of Agriculture said in July: “The Israeli bombardment with white phosphorus (has) led to 700 small and large fires. More than 2,500 dunams (617 acres) of land have been completely burned, and the area of affected land consisting of forest and agricultural lands has reached 6,000 dunams (1,482 acres), with the targeted trees being olive, pine and oak.

“The damage to forested areas home to oak, Mount Tabor oak and laurel trees amounts to 55 percent, agricultural and citrus trees to 35 percent, and grasslands to 10 percent.”

Lebanese authorities are waiting for a ceasefire to conduct a final survey of the damage, but compensation is uncertain in a country that has been affected by a severe economic crisis for nearly five years.

Israeli raids on border villages continued on Friday, including valleys and forested areas, causing extensive damage.

The Israeli military fired flares over border villages near the Blue Line in the western and central sectors, reaching the outskirts of the city of Tyre. It also dropped incendiary bombs on the outskirts of the towns of Naqoura and Alma Al-Shaab.

The Israelis claimed that its warplanes “targeted several Hezbollah rocket launchers in southern Lebanon.”


Palestinians say settlers’ arson attack kills man in West Bank

Palestinians say settlers’ arson attack kills man in West Bank
Updated 57 min 57 sec ago

Palestinians say settlers’ arson attack kills man in West Bank

Palestinians say settlers’ arson attack kills man in West Bank
  • “Forty-year-old Khamis Abdel-Latif Ayad was martyred due to smoke inhalation caused by fires,” the Palestinian health ministry said
  • The Palestinian Authority said some villages around Silwad also came under attack by settlers

SILWAD, Palestinian Territories: The Palestinian Authority said Israeli settlers set fire to homes and cars in a West Bank village on Thursday, killing one man, in the latest attack in the occupied territory.

“Forty-year-old Khamis Abdel-Latif Ayad was martyred due to smoke inhalation caused by fires set by settlers in citizens’ homes and vehicles in the village of Silwad at dawn,” the Palestinian health ministry said in a statement.

Witnesses provided corresponding accounts of the attack on Silwad, a village in the central West Bank near several Israeli settlements.

Raafat Hussein Hamed, a resident of Silwad whose house was torched in Thursday’s attack, said that “a car dropped them (the settlers) off somewhere, they burned whatever they could and then ran away.”

Hamed said the assailants “come from an outpost,” referring to wildcat settlements that are illegal under Israeli law, as opposed to formally recognized settlements.

All settlements in the West Bank, which Israel has occupied since 1967, are illegal under international law.

The Palestinian Authority (PA) said some villages around Silwad also came under attack by settlers, with vehicles, homes and farmlands set ablaze.

According to the PA’s government media office, “Israeli soldiers accompanying the settlers fired live bullets and tear gas at unarmed Palestinian civilians who tried to defend the communities.”

Contacted by AFP, the Israeli military said it was looking into the reported incidents.

The West Bank is home to some three million Palestinians, who live alongside about 500,000 Israeli settlers.

Violence in the territory has surged throughout the Gaza war triggered by Hamas’s October 2023 attack on Israel.

Earlier this month, the Palestinian Authority and witnesses in the village of Taybeh — just southeast of Silwad — reported two arson attacks by Israeli settlers.

In 2015, a Palestinian couple and their baby burned to death after settlers attacked their village of Duma, also in the central West Bank.

According to an AFP tally based on PA figures, Israeli security forces and settlers have killed at least 966 Palestinians, including militants and civilians, in the West Bank since the start of the Gaza war.

At least 36 Israelis, including civilians and troops, have been killed in Palestinian attacks or during Israeli military operations over the same period, according to official figures.


Portugal to consider recognizing Palestinian state in September: PM

Portugal to consider recognizing Palestinian state in September: PM
Updated 31 July 2025

Portugal to consider recognizing Palestinian state in September: PM

Portugal to consider recognizing Palestinian state in September: PM
  • The procedure could be concluded during the 80th UNGA in New York in September

LISBON: The Portuguese government will consult the president and parliament on the question of recognizing the State of Palestine at the UN in September, Prime Minister Luis Montenegro’s office said Thursday.

Portugal “is considering recognition of the Palestinian state, as part of a procedure that could be concluded during the high-level week of the 80th United Nations General Assembly, to be held in New York in September,” the statement said.


Turkish city calls for help after heat tops 50C

Turkish city calls for help after heat tops 50C
Updated 31 July 2025

Turkish city calls for help after heat tops 50C

Turkish city calls for help after heat tops 50C
  • “We cannot cope with the heat,” ice-cream maker Recep Esiyok, 59, said
  • The country is still in the grip of the heatwave and since Sunday temperatures overall have surged from six to 12 degrees above seasonal norms

SILOPI, Turkiye: A choking heatwave left astonished locals in southeastern Turkiye calling for state help to pay their air conditioning bills after the temperature surged past 50C.

“We cannot cope with the heat,” ice-cream maker Recep Esiyok, 59, told AFP in Silopi, where meteorologists measured 50.5C on Friday — a national record.

“I’ve been living in Silopi for about 30 years. I’ve never seen such heat... I’ve never seen such heat anywhere.”

He is getting through the heatwave thanks to the air conditioner in his shop, but is now worried about paying for the electricity.

“My bill last month was 59,000 lira (1,450 dollars). We are asking for state support on this issue.”

Before Friday’s record, the previous peak in Turkiye had been 49.5C in August 2023.

Scientists agree that climate change caused by humans burning fossil fuels is increasing the likelihood, length and intensity of heatwaves.

“The heat has reached a point where it’s incomparable to previous years,” said Halil Coskun, 52, a local reporter.

The country is still in the grip of the heatwave and since Sunday temperatures overall have surged from six to 12 degrees above seasonal norms, according to the state meteorology directorate.

Turkiye has fought fires in several regions since the start of the summer.

Last week, 10 people perished while fighting a fire in Eskisehir province.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Monday the country has experienced drier conditions than normal over the past five years as a result of global warming.

“Extreme heat, low humidity, and strong winds are unfortunately increasing the risk of fire,” he said.

He said the state was using drones to monitor and protect forests.

The streets were relatively empty and the atmosphere tense in Silopi, a Kurdish city whose main income is trade with Iraq across the border 10 kilometers (six miles) away.

“When it’s hot, there’s no one outside during the day,” said Esiyok.

Other locals complained at the lack of vegetation to provide relief around the town, which lies at the foot of a mountain.

“Unfortunately, the forests here were burned in the past for security reasons,” said Coskun.

He said the Turkish army cleared them in the search for fighters from the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), a rebel group that recently disarmed.

Turkiye’s parliament this month also passed a bill that opens certain agricultural lands including olive groves to mining activities, despite widespread opposition.

“We could at least minimize the heat by planting trees, not by felling them,” Coskun said.

Sweating in his kebab shop, another local, Cemil Seher, said that summers in Silopi last not three months, but five.

For Seher, 51, air conditioning is no longer a luxury but a necessity.

“AC is essential here as much as bread and water,” he said.

“When the air conditioners are running, the electricity bills are very high,” he said, demanding authorities offer discounts for businesses.

“I want a discount not only for Silopi but for the entire region from here to Sanliurfa” in the east, he said.

“I am not making a profit because I’ve been working... to pay my electricity bill.”


UK govt minister rejects claims by peers that Palestine recognition unlawful

UK govt minister rejects claims by peers that Palestine recognition unlawful
Updated 31 July 2025

UK govt minister rejects claims by peers that Palestine recognition unlawful

UK govt minister rejects claims by peers that Palestine recognition unlawful
  • Gareth Thomas: ‘The Palestinians have an inalienable right to statehood’
  • Peers cite Montevideo Convention mandating conditions for statehood, but Britain not a signatory

LONDON: A government minister in the UK has rejected claims that plans to recognize Palestine breach international law.

It came after an influential group of House of Lords peers wrote to the attorney general warning against the move by Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who had earlier this week pledged to recognize a Palestinian state in September if Israel fails to reach a ceasefire with Hamas, among other conditions.

The group of 38 peers wrote to Lord Hermer in a letter that said Starmer’s pledge may be unlawful under the 1933 Montevideo Convention.

The treaty mandates certain conditions for statehood, which the peers warned a Palestinian state may not fulfill.

Business Minister Gareth Thomas, however, told Sky News on Thursday that the UK is not signed up to the Montevideo Convention.

“I respect the views of those lawyers, but in the end, recognition of a state is a political judgment, and we’ve been very clear that our judgment is that the Palestinians have an inalienable right to statehood,” he said.

“I don’t think we are in breach of international law. We’re not signed up to the Montevideo Convention. We’re clear what needs to happen,” he added.

“The fact that so many other countries have either already recognized the state of Palestine, or are joining our efforts to recognize the state of Palestine, I think is very significant.”

Among other conditions demanded by Starmer from Israel are the entry of more aid into Gaza, an end to land grabs in the West Bank, and a commitment to a long-term peace process.

The peers’ letter claimed that Palestine “does not meet the international law criteria for recognition of a state, namely, defined territory, a permanent population, an effective government and the capacity to enter into relations with other states.” There is no certainty over Palestine’s borders and no single government, they added.


US sanctions Palestinian Authority officials, PLO members

US sanctions Palestinian Authority officials, PLO members
Updated 31 min 50 sec ago

US sanctions Palestinian Authority officials, PLO members

US sanctions Palestinian Authority officials, PLO members

WASHINGTON: The US imposed sanctions on Palestinian Authority officials and members of the Palestine Liberation Organization on Thursday, saying the groups are undermining peace efforts as American officials separately seek to salvage ceasefire talks in Gaza.

The move prevents those targeted from receiving visas to travel to the United States, the US State Department said, although it did not list any specific individuals.

“It is in our national security interests to impose consequences and hold the PLO and PA accountable for not complying with their commitments and undermining the prospects for peace,” the department said in a statement.

The State Department said the two Palestinian groups had “taken actions to internationalize its conflict with Israel,” including through the International Criminal Court, and said both had continued “to support terrorism.”

Representatives for the Palestinian Authority and the Palestine Liberation Organization could not immediately be reached for comment.

The sanctions come as US special envoy Steve Witkoff was expected to arrive in Israel on Thursday in a bid to save Gaza ceasefire talks and tackle a humanitarian crisis in the Palestinian enclave.

Israel faces growing world pressure over the war in Gaza, and several Western powers have said they will recognize a Palestinian state.