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Syria blast kills senior commander in Kurdish security forces: monitor

Syria blast kills senior commander in Kurdish security forces: monitor
A war monitor said a senior commander from the security forces in northeast Syria’s semi-autonomous Kurdish-led administration was killed on Tuesday in a blast near a prison in Hasakah province. (AFP/File)
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Updated 03 September 2024

Syria blast kills senior commander in Kurdish security forces: monitor

Syria blast kills senior commander in Kurdish security forces: monitor
  • The commander in the Asayish security forces had played “a prominent role in leading military operations against the Daesh group in Raqqa province“
  • The Kurds have established a semi-autonomous administration spanning swathes of the north and northeast

BEIRUT: A war monitor said a senior commander from the security forces in northeast Syria’s semi-autonomous Kurdish-led administration was killed on Tuesday in a blast near a prison in Hasakah province.
“A commander in the Kurdish security forces was killed and another person was wounded” in an explosion near the prison in Umm Farsan on the outskirts of the city of Qamishli “at the same time as a Turkish drone was flying in the area,” the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
The commander in the Asayish security forces had played “a prominent role in leading military operations against the Daesh group in Raqqa province,” a former bastion of the jihadists in Syria, said the Britain-based Observatory.
A local Kurdish news agency reported “the sound of an explosion... resulting from the targeting of a car” in the area.
The incident came a day after Syria’s Kurdish authorities in Hasakah province released 50 Syrian prisoners accused of belonging to Daesh as part of a general amnesty deal, an official had told AFP.
The Kurds have established a semi-autonomous administration spanning swathes of the north and northeast.
The US-backed, Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces spearheaded the battle that dislodged Daesh group militants from their last scraps of Syrian territory in 2019.
Turkiye sees the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG), which dominate the SDF, as an offshoot of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which it considers a “terrorist” group.
The Turkish army, which has troops and proxies in northern Syria, regularly carries out strikes in Kurdish-held areas.
Turkiye controls two large strips of territory along the border after expelling Kurdish forces in successive campaigns.


Family of Palestinian-American boy held by Israel ask US govt for help securing his release

Family of Palestinian-American boy held by Israel ask US govt for help securing his release
Updated 5 sec ago

Family of Palestinian-American boy held by Israel ask US govt for help securing his release

Family of Palestinian-American boy held by Israel ask US govt for help securing his release
  • Muhammad Zaher Ibrahim, 16, was detained 5 months ago on charges of rock-throwing
  • He has yet to see a courtroom, has lost significant weight and developed scabies in jail

LONDON: A Palestinian-American family is trying to secure the release of a 16-year-old detained by Israel for more than five months, The Guardian reported. 

Muhammad Zaher Ibrahim was detained at the family’s home in the occupied West Bank in February when he was 15, accused by Israel of throwing rocks at soldiers.

He was blindfolded, handcuffed and taken to Megiddo Prison in Israel where, his family say, he has lost a significant amount of weight while awaiting trial.

The family splits its time between their home in the West Bank town of Silwad and the city of Palm Bay, Florida.

His father Zaher Ibrahim wrote to his local Congressman Mike Haridopolos asking for help in securing his son’s release.

“The Megiddo Prison is notorious for brutality and suffering,” Zaher Ibrahim wrote to Haridopolos on a form seen by The Guardian. “We are kindly asking for some support in this matter. We have exhausted all efforts locally here in Israel and have no other option than to ask our local Florida office officials to reach out on our behalf.”

Haridopolos’s office said it had been informed by the State Department that the US Embassy in Israel is “following standard procedures” on the matter.

A spokesperson for the department said it has “no higher priority than the safety and security of US citizens.”

Muhammad Ibrahim’s detention first came to prominence after his cousin Sayfollah Musallet was allegedly killed by Israeli settlers in the West Bank in July.

Musallet, 20, who was also a US citizen, had been visiting relatives when he was beaten to death.

There are hundreds of Palestinian children in detention in Israeli jails, many without charge or contact with their families.

According to Defense for Children International-Palestine, as of March this year that figure was 323 aged 12-17 years.

Between 2005 and 2010, 835 Palestinian children in that age bracket were tried for stone-throwing by Israeli military courts. Only one was acquitted.

Ayed Abu Eqtaish, the West Bank-based accountability program director at Defense for Children International-Palestine, told The Guardian: “Palestinian children in Israeli prisons are totally disconnected from the outside world. They (Israel) will not recognize whether you are American, Somalian or whatever your citizenship.”

Abu Eqtaish said since Oct. 7, 2023, conditions in Israeli jails for Palestinians have worsened, adding: “Now they are stricter in punishment and sentences. We encounter problems knowing about living conditions inside prisons. There’s no family presence. Lawyer visits are very restricted.”

A State Department official told the Ibrahim family via email that embassy staff had visited him in prison but faced contact restrictions put in place by Israel.

During one welfare check, he was found to have lost 12 kg in weight. In another, staff reported that he was receiving treatment for scabies contracted in jail.

In a statement, a State Department spokesperson told The Guardian that it “works to provide consular assistance which may include visiting detained US citizens to ensure they have access to necessary medication or medical attention and facilitating authorized communications with their family or others.”


Hamas armed wing publishes video of Gaza hostage

Hamas armed wing publishes video of Gaza hostage
Updated 18 min 39 sec ago

Hamas armed wing publishes video of Gaza hostage

Hamas armed wing publishes video of Gaza hostage
  • The video featured a skinny and bearded man several Israeli media identified as Evyatar David

JERUSALEM: The armed wing of Palestinian militant group Hamas released a minute-long video Friday of an Israeli hostage held in Gaza looking weak and malnourished, inside a narrow concrete tunnel.

“They eat what we eat. It is the occupation government that has decided to starve them,” the Ezzedine Al-Qassam Brigades said in the caption of the video featuring a skinny and bearded man several Israeli media identified as Evyatar David, seized on October 7, 2023.

AFP could not independently verify the video’s authenticity.


Israeli writer Grossman denounces Gaza ‘genocide’

Israeli writer Grossman denounces Gaza ‘genocide’
Updated 01 August 2025

Israeli writer Grossman denounces Gaza ‘genocide’

Israeli writer Grossman denounces Gaza ‘genocide’
  • “For many years, I refused to use that term: ‘genocide’,” Grossman told La Repubblica
  • He told the paper he was using the word “with immense pain and with a broken heart“

ROME: : Award-winning Israeli author David Grossman called his country’s campaign in Gaza “genocide” and said he was using the term with a “broken heart.”

This came days after a major Israeli rights group also used the same term, amid growing global alarm over starvation in the besieged territory.

“For many years, I refused to use that term: ‘genocide’,” the prominent writer and peace activist told Italian daily La Repubblica in an interview published on Friday.

“But now, after the images I have seen and after talking to people who were there, I can’t help using it.”

Grossman told the paper he was using the word “with immense pain and with a broken heart.”

“This word is an avalanche: once you say it, it just gets bigger, like an avalanche. And it adds even more destruction and suffering,” he said.

Grossman’s works, which have been translated into dozens of languages, have won many international prizes.

He also won Israel’s top literary prize in 2018, the Israel Prize for Literature, for his work spanning more than three decades.

He said it was “devastating” to “put the words ‘Israel’ and ‘famine’ together” because of the Holocaust and our “supposed sensitivity to the suffering of humanity.”

The celebrated author has long been a critic of the Israeli government.


US envoy visits distribution site in Gaza as humanitarian crisis worsens

US envoy visits distribution site in Gaza as humanitarian crisis worsens
Updated 01 August 2025

US envoy visits distribution site in Gaza as humanitarian crisis worsens

US envoy visits distribution site in Gaza as humanitarian crisis worsens
  • Witkoff and Huckabee toured one of Gaza Humanitarian Foundation’s distribution sites in Rafah
  • All four of the group’s sites are in zones controlled by the Israeli military and have become flashpoints of desperation

DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip: US President Donald Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff visited southern Gaza on Friday amid international outrage over starvation, shortages and deadly chaos near aid distribution sites.

With food scarce and parcels being airdropped, Witkoff and US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee toured one of Gaza Humanitarian Foundation’s distribution sites in Rafah, Gaza’s southernmost city. Chapin Fay, the group’s spokesperson, said the visit reflected Trump’s understanding of the stakes and that “feeding civilians, not Hamas, must be the priority.”

All four of the group’s sites are in zones controlled by the Israeli military and have become flashpoints of desperation during their months of operation, with starving people scrambling for scarce aid. Hundreds have been killed by either gunfire or trampling.

The Israeli military says it has only fired warning shots at people who approach its forces, and GHF says its armed contractors have only used pepper spray or fired warning shots to prevent deadly crowding.

Witkoff’s visit comes a week after US officials walked away from ceasefire talks in Qatar, blaming Hamas and pledging to seek other ways to rescue Israeli hostages and make Gaza safe.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Thursday that Witkoff was sent to craft a plan to boost food and aid deliveries, while Trump wrote on social media that the fastest way to end the crisis would be for Hamas to surrender and release hostages.

Officials at Nasser Hospital in southern Gaza said they have received the bodies of 25 people, including 13 who were killed while trying to get aid, including near the site that US officials visited. GHF denied anyone was killed at their sites on Friday and said most recent incidents had taken place near United Nations aid convoys.

The remaining 12 were killed in airstrikes, the officials said. Israel’s military did not immediately comment.

Human Rights Watch: ‘Near impossible’

International organizations have said Gaza has been on the brink of famine for the past two years. The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, the leading international authority on food crises, said recent developments, including a complete blockade on aid for 2 1/2 months, mean the “worst-case scenario of famine is currently playing out in Gaza.”

Though the flow of aid has resumed, including via airdrops, the amount getting into Gaza remains far lower than what aid organizations say is needed. A security breakdown in the territory has made it nearly impossible to safely deliver food to starving Palestinians, much of the limited aid entering is hoarded and later sold at exorbitant prices.

At a Friday press conference in Gaza City, representatives of the territory’s influential tribes accused Israel of empowering factions that loot aid sites and implored Witkoff to stay several hours in Gaza to witness life firsthand.

“We want the American envoy to come and live among us in these tents where there is no water, no food and no light,” they said. “Our children are hungry in the streets.”

In a report issued Friday, Human Rights Watch called the current setup “a flawed, militarized aid distribution system that has turned aid distributions into regular bloodbaths.”

“It would be near impossible for Palestinians to follow the instructions issued by GHF, stay safe, and receive aid, particularly in the context of ongoing military operations, Israeli military sanctioned curfews, and frequent GHF messages saying that people should not travel to the sites before the distribution window opens,” the report said. It cited doctors, aid seekers and at least one security contractor.

Since the group’s operations began in late May, hundreds of Palestinians have been killed in shootings by Israeli soldiers while on roads heading to the sites, according to witnesses and health officials. The Israeli military has said its troops have only fired warning shots to control crowds.

Responding to the report, Israel’s military blamed Hamas for sabotaging the aid distribution system but said it was working to make the routes under its control safer for those traveling to aid sites. GHF did not immediately respond to questions about the report.

The group has never allowed journalists to visit their sites and Israel’s military has barred reporters from independently entering Gaza throughout the war.

International condemnations have mounted as such reports trickle out of Gaza, including from aid organizations that previously oversaw distribution.

A July 30 video published Thursday by the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs showed an aid convoy driving past a border crossing as gunfire ricocheted off the ground near where crowds congregated.

“We were met on the road by tens of thousands of hungry and desperate people who directly offloaded everything from the backs of our trucks,” said Olga Cherevko, an OCHA staff member.


Palestinian boy arrives in UK for vital medical treatment

Palestinian boy arrives in UK for vital medical treatment
Updated 01 August 2025

Palestinian boy arrives in UK for vital medical treatment

Palestinian boy arrives in UK for vital medical treatment
  • Majd Alshagnobi, 15, lost much of his face due to an Israeli shell in February 2024
  • Mother: ‘We’ve lost our home, we’ve lost our memories, we’ve lost our dreams. Nothing is left in Gaza’

LONDON: A 15-year-old Palestinian has spoken of his happiness after being taken to the UK for medical treatment from Gaza. 

Majd Alshagnobi suffered severe injuries in February 2024 after an Israeli tank shell exploded near him, causing him to lose much of his face, including all of his jaw and teeth.

His mother Islam told Sky News: “When Majd first got to the hospital, they thought he was dead because of the severities of the injuries on his face and leg, but when he raised his arm, they realized he was still alive.

“All the operating rooms were busy, so they carried out the operation in the kitchen to save him.

“It was very difficult for him to breathe, and they had to feed him through tubes and syringes through his nose. He really suffered.”

He was greeted with flowers, gifts and banners by well-wishers when he, his mother and two of his sisters arrived at London’s Heathrow Airport.

“Thank God I have the opportunity to receive treatment here … That’s the reason I’ve come, to get treatment,” he told Sky.

“Since I arrived, I’ve felt so much happier. We’ve been greeted in such a nice way, with gifts and things to help us.”

His mother said: “Right now my family in Gaza live in tents. We’ve lost our home, we’ve lost our memories, we’ve lost our dreams. Nothing is left in Gaza.

“My two children who are still in Gaza with their father, every day I wake up in fear that they’ve been killed. Anything could happen to them in Gaza.”

He is the third Gazan child to be medically evacuated to the UK since the outbreak of the war in October 2023, with the assistance of the Project Pure Hope charity.

So far, more than 5,000 children have been taken from Gaza for medical treatment abroad, most of them heading to Egypt and the Gulf.

Omar Din, co-founder of Project Pure Hope, said the UK government needs to do more to help children in Gaza in need of medical assistance. 

Last week, Prime Minister Keir Starmer said he was “accelerating efforts” to bring more to the UK.

“We’re hoping following the prime minister’s announcement last Friday, that in the coming days we’ll have some concrete actions,” Din said. “The more we wait, the more children die who we could be saving.

“We’ve done this privately because there was no other option available, but myself and members of my founding team have done lots of this work for Ukrainian refugees previously. There’s no reason we shouldn’t be doing that for Gazans.”