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Lebanon says Israeli strike killed 3 media workers

Lebanon says Israeli strike killed 3 media workers
A car marked “Press” at the site of an Israeli airstrike that targeted an area where a number of journalists were located in the southern Lebanese village of Hasbaya. (AFP/File)
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Updated 25 October 2024

Lebanon says Israeli strike killed 3 media workers

Lebanon says Israeli strike killed 3 media workers
  • A cameraman and broadcast engineer from Al Mayadeen, along with video journalists from Al-Manar, were struck in an overnight attack
  • Lebanon’s Information Minister Ziad Makary accused Israel of intentionally targeting journalists, called them “war crime”

BEIRUT: Lebanon said an Israeli strike on a residence housing media workers killed two journalists and a broadcast engineer on Friday, in an attack the minister of information branded a “war crime.”
Pro-Iran Lebanese television channel Al Mayadeen said a cameraman and broadcast engineer were killed in the strike on a journalists’ residence in Hasbaya, south Lebanon.
Another TV outlet, Al-Manar, run by Hezbollah, said one of its video journalists was also killed in the strike on a bungalow located in a resort that several media organizations covering the Israel-Hezbollah war had rented out.
“The Israeli enemy waited for the journalists’ nighttime break to betray them in their sleep,” Information Minister Ziad Makary said in a post on X.
“This is an assassination, after monitoring and tracking, with prior planning and design, as there were 18 journalists there representing seven media institutions. This is a war crime.”
Journalists from other media organizations, including Lebanese broadcaster Al-Jadeed, Sky News Arabic and Al Jazeera English, were also resting nearby when the strike hit overnight.
Israel has not commented on the strike, which, according to Lebanon’s health ministry, also wounded three other people.
The area where the journalists were located is outside Hezbollah’s traditional strongholds.
Israel has been at war with Hezbollah in Lebanon since late last month, in a bid to secure its northern border after nearly a year of cross-border fire from the Iran-backed armed group.
Hezbollah began low-intensity strikes on Israel in support of its Palestinian ally Hamas following the October 7, 2023 attack on Israel, the deadliest in its history.
After nearly a year of war in Gaza sparked by the attack, Israel expanded its focus to Lebanon and last month launched a massive bombing campaign targeting mainly Hezbollah strongholds across the country, sending in ground troops on September 30.
The war in Lebanon has killed at least 1,580 people, according to an AFP tally of Lebanese health ministry figures.
Israel’s military on Friday said it had struck more than 200 militant targets in Lebanon over the past day.
It also announced the deaths of five soldiers in fighting in south Lebanon.

In Gaza, the civil defense agency said Israeli air strikes hit two homes at dawn on Friday in Khan Yunis, the Palestinian territory’s main southern city.
According to agency spokesman Mahmud Bassal, 14 were killed in a strike that hit the home of the Al-Fara family, and another six were killed in a separate raid.
In north Gaza, the Israeli military on Friday said dozens of militants were killed around Jabalia, in north Gaza, over the previous day.
Israel launched a major assault on north Gaza earlier this month, saying it aims to prevent Hamas from regrouping there.
The civil defense’s Bassal said “more than 770 people have been killed” in northern Gaza in the 19 days since the Israeli operation began there.
The war in Gaza began with Hamas’s October 7 attack on Israel, which resulted in the deaths of 1,206 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally of official Israeli figures.
The militants also took 251 people hostage, 97 of whom are still in Gaza, including 34 the Israeli military says are dead.
Israel’s retaliatory campaign in Gaza has killed 42,847 people, the majority civilians, according to data from the health ministry in the Hamas-run territory, data which the UN considers reliable.
Multiple bids to stop the war have failed, though Israel’s key backer the United States has voiced hope that the killing of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar last week could serve as an opening for a deal.
A senior Hamas official told AFP that a delegation from the group’s Doha-based leadership discussed “ideas and proposals” related to a Gaza truce with Egyptian officials in Cairo on Thursday.
“Hamas has expressed readiness to stop the fighting, but Israel must commit to a ceasefire, withdraw from the Gaza Strip, allow the return of displaced people, agree to a serious prisoner exchange deal and allow the entry of humanitarian aid into Gaza,” the official said.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he welcomed mediator Egypt’s readiness to reach a deal “for the release of the hostages” held by militants in Gaza.
Netanyahu directed the head of Israel’s Mossad spy agency to leave for Qatar on Sunday to “advance a series of initiatives that are on the agenda,” his office said.
Qatar, Egypt and the United States have long tried to mediate a ceasefire in the Gaza war.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken met with Qatar’s leaders in Doha on Thursday on his 11th trip to the region since the start of the Gaza war.
During the trip, which comes less than two weeks before US elections, Blinken said mediators would explore new options.
Israeli and US officials as well as some analysts said Sinwar had been a key obstacle to a deal which would release the hostages still held in Gaza.
Critics of Netanyahu, too, have regularly accused him of obstructing truce and hostage release negotiations.
An Israeli group representing families of hostages called on Netanyahu and Hamas to secure an agreement to free the remaining captives.
“Time is running out,” the Hostages and Missing Families Forum said.
On Thursday, hostage supporters marched outside Netanyahu’s Jerusalem residence demanding action for their release.
Blinken landed late Thursday in London, where a US official said he would meet on Friday with the foreign ministers of Jordan and the United Arab Emirates.


Foreign journalists face uncertain future under Trump

Foreign journalists face uncertain future under Trump
Updated 57 sec ago

Foreign journalists face uncertain future under Trump

Foreign journalists face uncertain future under Trump
WASHINGTON: When US President Donald Trump berated an Australian reporter for asking an unpleasant question, his colleagues took that as a warning.
With the administration planning to slash correspondent visas and issuing not-so-veiled warnings, foreign journalists find themselves under pressure in the United States.
Earlier this week, a journalist from the Australian Broadcasting Corporation asked Trump about his business dealings while in office. Trump was visibly irritated.
“In my opinion, you are hurting Australia very much right now, and they want to get along with me,” Trump told the reporter, John Lyons. “Your leader is coming over to see me very soon. I’m gonna tell him about you. You set a very bad tone.”
The exchange was widely discussed in Washington media circles.
One foreign correspondent, who spoke to AFP on condition of anonymity, said Trump’s hostility toward the media was not concentrated on foreigners.
“When Trump insults a journalist, it doesn’t matter to him whether it’s a foreigner or not,” the correspondent said.
What worries the reporter much more is the administration’s plan to slash journalists’ visas to a renewable 240-day period, down from five years — or just 90 days for Chinese media workers.
“How am I supposed to rent a flat? To get a driver’s license? To put my kids in school with a 240-day visa?” the correspondent wondered, adding that it takes time to build a network of sources in the country.
“It’s going to be a nightmare.”

- Working ‘without fear’ -

Another journalist, a correspondent for a European media outlet, said that “the precariousness of foreign journalists doesn’t make them prime targets for this administration,” but “is part of a very worrying overall picture.”
The White House prefers journalists, wherever they come from, “who are committed to its stories or self-censor enough to normalize what’s happening,” the European correspondent said.
AFP contacted several foreign journalists for this article. Only a few responded, and each of them did only on condition of anonymity.
“The shortened timeframe for I-visa renewals creates a framework for possible editorial censorship in which the Trump administration can trade access for compliance in reporting,” Katherine Jacobsen with the Committee to Protect Journalism said in a statement.
Mike Balsamo, president of the Washington-based National Press Club echoed that view, adding that such actions could lead to reprisals against American journalists working abroad.
“A free press doesn’t stop at America’s borders. It depends on correspondents who can work here without fear their time will run out,” he wrote on X.
While the correspondents interviewed for this story did not notice any particular hostility from the White House itself toward them, they pointed out that political figures in Trump’s “Make America Great Again” (MAGA) movement have not hesitated to target foreign journalists.
A close associate of Donald Trump, former ambassador to Germany Richard Grenell, recently called for revoking the visa of a journalist from the German television channel ZDF.
“This radical Lefty German keeps calling for violence against people he politically disagrees with,” Grenell said on X, criticizing the journalist’s interview with influential White House adviser Stephen Miller. “He poses as a journalist in Washington, DC. His visa should be revoked. There is no place in America this type of inciter.”

- A warning to foreigners -

Following last week’s assassination of conservative influencer Charlie Kirk — a close associate of the American president — a senior official issued a broad warning to foreigners who are seen “praising, rationalizing, or making light of the event.”
“Feel free to bring such comments by foreigners to my attention,” Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau said on X.
But Trump’s return to power has not been bad news for all foreign media outlets. Some news organizations who are known for sharing views similar to Trump’s in their home countries have been embraced by the White House.
British television channel GB News, whose stars include far-right leader Nigel Farage, was recently welcomed into the Oval Office, and its journalist was given a coveted seat on the US presidential plane during Trump’s visit to the UK this week.
When Trump appeared in the press box, the journalist said that the channel’s viewers had asked if he wanted to “swap jobs” with Prime Minister Keir Starmer.

Pakistan eyes economic, trade integration with African markets in growth push

Pakistan eyes economic, trade integration with African markets in growth push
Updated 22 min 31 sec ago

Pakistan eyes economic, trade integration with African markets in growth push

Pakistan eyes economic, trade integration with African markets in growth push
  • The Trade Development Authority of Pakistan will hold a single-country exhibition in Ethiopia next month
  • A Pakistani minister earlier proposed a logistics corridor linking China to Africa through Pakistan’s Gwadar

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan is seeking economic and trade integration with markets in African countries in a push for sustainable economic growth, Pakistani state media reported on Sunday, citing a senior foreign ministry official.

Ambassador Hamid Asghar Khan, an additional secretary at the Pakistani foreign ministry, said this at a roundtable, “Pakistan Africa Connectivity – Engage Africa Policy of Pakistan,” with African envoys serving in Islamabad, according to the Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) news agency.

The event was attended by Senator Mushahid Hussain Syed, president of the Pakistan Africa Institute for Development Research (PAIDAR), ambassadors, high commissioners, and deputy heads of mission of African Embassies.

The envoys shared the present status of cooperation between their countries and Pakistan as well as pointed out gaps and suggested measures to enhance the level of trade between the sides.

“Additional Secretary MOFA, Mr. Hamid Asghar Khan took note of the proposals and assured the envoys of every possible effort to do whatever is needful,” the APP report said.

“Khan expressed his mind and vision on how to increase connectivity and cooperation with African countries implementing the engage Africa policy of Pakistan.”

Pakistan, currently bolstered by a $7 billion International Monetary Fund (IMF) program, is making rigorous efforts to boost trade, connectivity and foreign investment to ensure a sustainable economic recovery following a prolonged economic meltdown.

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has directed enhanced engagement with Africa, especially in trade, investment and commercial ties, according to the report.

In this regard, the Trade Development Authority of Pakistan (TDAP) shall be holding a single-country exhibition in Ethiopia, in conjunction with the foreign ministry and the Pakistani embassy in Addis Ababa on October 16-18, with participation of over 100 Pakistani exhibitors.

Ambassador Khan highlighted air connectivity between Pakistan and Ethiopia as a direct link with Africa.

“Africa is the continent of today with a population of 1.6 billion and 54 countries,” he said. “Pakistani trade with Africa has potential of much more than USD5.4 billion per annum only.”

Earlier this month, Pakistan’s Maritime Affairs Minister Junaid Anwar Chaudhry also proposed a multi-tier logistics corridor linking China to Africa through Pakistan’s southwestern Gwadar port, amid Pakistan’s efforts to establish itself as a transit trade hub.

During his visit to Beijing, Chaudhry met representatives of the Chinese shipping and logistics hub, Tianjin Dongjiang Comprehensive Free Trade Zone. The maritime affairs ministry said the discussions revolved around ship financing and leasing opportunities.

“Chaudhry invited Dongjiang firms to invest in bonded warehouses, cold chain facilities and bulk cargo handling in Gwadar, and proposed developing a China–Gwadar–Africa logistics corridor,” the maritime affairs ministry said.


KSrelief concludes surgery project for burns and disfigurement in Port Sudan

KSrelief concludes surgery project for burns and disfigurement in Port Sudan
Updated 17 min 50 sec ago

KSrelief concludes surgery project for burns and disfigurement in Port Sudan

KSrelief concludes surgery project for burns and disfigurement in Port Sudan
  • 17 volunteers from various medical specialties participated in the initiative 
  • Team performed 92 specialized surgeries and gave training to 40 Sudanese medics

PORT SUDAN: Ƶ's King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Center (KSrelief) has concluded its volunteer plastic surgery medical project in Port Sudan, Sudan, offering treatment to patients with burns and disfigurements.
Seventeen volunteers from various medical specialties in the Kingdom participated in the initiative, which ran from September 13 to 20, according to the Saudi Press Agency (SPA).
The team performed 92 specialized surgeries, all of which were successful, and trained 40 Sudanese medical personnel, the report said.
The project was part of Ƶ’s ongoing voluntary medical initiatives through KSrelief, aimed at assisting needy and affected communities around the world.

A young Sudanese receives treatment at a hospital in Port Sudan during the KSrelief medical mission. (SPA)

Since it establishment as Ƶ's main humanitarian aid group in 2015, KSrelief has delivered 172 aid projects to 33 nations on across the world, with Yemen as the largest beneficiary.
The other major beneficiaries were Syria, Palestine, Somalia, Pakistan and Sudan.
KSrelief worked in partnership with 98 humanitarian partners in carrying out projects on food security, shelter, camp coordination and management, education, protection, early recovery, health, nutrition, water and sanitation, emergency communications, logistics and coordination and other vital support for a variety of humanitarian operations.


‘No amnesty!’ Brazilians protest against bid to pardon Bolsonaro

‘No amnesty!’ Brazilians protest against bid to pardon Bolsonaro
Updated 58 min 43 sec ago

‘No amnesty!’ Brazilians protest against bid to pardon Bolsonaro

‘No amnesty!’ Brazilians protest against bid to pardon Bolsonaro
  • The conservative-majority Congress had fast-tracked an amnesty bill that could include the far-right leader
  • Bolsonaro was convicted of plotting to bar Lula from taking office, a plan that failed due to a lack of support from military top brass

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil: Tens of thousands of Brazilians protested Sunday against “shameless” lawmakers seeking an amnesty that could benefit former president Jair Bolsonaro, while pushing to shield themselves from criminal charges.
Bolsonaro was sentenced last week to 27 years in jail for plotting a coup, and within days, the conservative-majority Congress had fast-tracked an amnesty bill that could include the far-right leader.
“No amnesty,” crowds roared in dozens of Brazilian cities, holding up signs and wearing stickers reading “Shameless Congress.”
Protesters were also outraged by what they dubbed the “Banditry Bill” passed this week. The law would require Congress to vote by secret ballot to give the go-ahead for one its own to be charged or arrested.
“This protection they seek is to camouflage corruption, impunity,” said Giovana Araujo, 27, a psychology student clad in a blue bikini top in the sweltering heat at a “musical protest” on Rio de Janeiro’s Copacabana beach.
Iconic octogenarians of Brazilian music, Caetano Veloso, Gilberto Gil, and Chico Buarque, took to a truck-mounted stage alongside palm trees to sing resistance songs from Brazil’s dictatorship era.
Tens of thousands sang along as a blow-up doll of Bolsonaro wearing black-and-white prison stripes bobbed next to one of US President Donald Trump, who has punished Brazil with tariffs in retaliation for the prosecution of his ally.
Veloso, 83, said musicians “could not fail to respond to the horrors that have been creeping in around us.”
The artists “were literally boycotted during the military dictatorship, and seeing them here is synonymous with resistance,” said Araujo, describing their appearance as “revolutionary.”
“Once again, artists are mobilizing the people to demand justice in this country,” said Yasmin Aimee Coelho Pessoa, a 20-year-old sociology student, with gold glitter around her eyes.

‘Choking point’ 

In the megalopolis Sao Paulo, protesters unfurled a giant Brazilian flag, in response to a US flag displayed at a pro-Bolsonaro march earlier this month.
The Political Debate Monitor at the University of Sao Paulo estimated crowds of 42,000 in the economic heartland, and a similar figure in Rio de Janeiro — the biggest turnout for the left since President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva was re-elected in 2022.
Lula’s razor-thin victory set off a series of political crises that still reverberate in Brazil today.
Bolsonaro was convicted of plotting to bar Lula from taking office, in a plan that judges said only failed due to a lack of support from military top brass.
Congress is pushing to offer amnesty to 700 of his supporters who were convicted of storming government buildings a week after Lula took office in January 2023, a bill that could include a pardon for Bolsonaro.
Further stoking public anger, lawmakers passed the bill to boost their immunity, citing the need for protection against judicial overreach.
“The left is reorganizing in the face of all these atrocities. And I feel like we’ve reached that choking point — it’s stuck in our throats, ready to come out as a scream,” said Henrique Marques, a 42-year-old environmental engineer, who was among thousands protesting in the capital Brasilia.
Several deputies took to social media to apologize for voting for the controversial “Shielding Bill” saying they had faced pressure to do so in a fragmented parliament.
One state deputy, Pedro Campos, said he had voted for the bill to “prevent the boycott of important agendas” for the government of President Lula.
Both bills face an uphill battle in the Senate. Lula has vowed to veto the amnesty bill.
He also said the “Shielding Bill” was not the kind of “serious matter” that lawmakers should be dealing with.
 


At Charlie Kirk memorial, Trump rallies MAGA against political opponents

At Charlie Kirk memorial, Trump rallies MAGA against political opponents
Updated 22 September 2025

At Charlie Kirk memorial, Trump rallies MAGA against political opponents

At Charlie Kirk memorial, Trump rallies MAGA against political opponents
  • Kirk’s friends and fellow conservatives praised him as an inspirational Christian who founded a political movement they promised to nurture
  • Wife offered forgiveness to the 22-year-old man who has been charged with Kirk’s murder

GLENDALE, Arizona: President Donald Trump hailed slain conservative activist Charlie Kirk as a “martyr for American freedom” on Sunday and vowed at his memorial service to carry on his work, while again accusing what he called the “radical left” for Kirk’s murder.
“The violence comes largely from the left,” Trump said without citing any evidence, in remarks that downplayed political violence from the right and often turned starkly partisan in contrast to the more solemn tone that most other speakers adopted.
Trump has been blaming the left for the deadly shooting before a suspect was even detained. His messaging reflected the dual nature of Kirk’s memorial, which had the feel of a religious revival mixed with a “Make America Great Again” rally.
The memorial, organized by Kirk’s conservative youth advocacy organization Turning Point USA, drew tens of thousands of mourners dressed in red, white and blue who filled State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona.
Kirk’s friends and fellow conservatives praised him as an inspirational Christian who founded a political movement they promised to nurture.
His wife, Erika, who has taken the helm of Turning Point, delivered an emotional tribute to her late husband, looking up at the heavens and mouthing, “I love you,” before speaking about his devotion to Christianity, his family and his activism. The Kirks have two young children.
“I want all of you to know, while Charlie died far too early, he was also ready to die,” she said. “He left this world without regrets. He did 100 percent of what he could every day.”

 

She also offered forgiveness to the 22-year-old man who has been charged with Kirk’s murder, citing the Bible’s account that Jesus Christ urged his followers to forgive his tormentors while on the cross.
“My husband Charlie wanted to save young men, just like the one who took his life,” she said, before adding tearfully, as the crowd applauded solemnly.
Some political figures cast Kirk’s death as a pivotal moment in the conservative movement, exhorting followers to finish the work he began in sometimes aggressive language.
“We will carry Charlie and Erika in our heart every single day, and fight that much harder because of what you did to us,” Stephen Miller, the powerful White House adviser, said in a fiery speech. “You have no idea the dragon you have awakened. You have no idea how determined we will be to save this civilization, to save the West, to save the republic.”

Vice president, other Cabinet members speak
The memorial featured a number of leading Christian rock artists, giving it the air at times of a megachurch Sunday service. As music filled the arena, some men and women closed their eyes and swayed with their arms in the air, tears rolling down their cheeks.
The arena, which normally has a capacity of 63,000, appeared completely full. Crowds of people, many wearing MAGA attire, arrived before dawn to secure seats inside the stadium, where they encountered metal detectors amid tight security.
Other speakers included Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, more evidence of Kirk’s political influence.
Vice President JD Vance credited Kirk with helping get Trump elected last year by mobilizing young voters.
“Our whole administration is here, but not just because we love Charlie as a friend, even though we did, but because we know we wouldn’t be here without him,” Vance said.

 

Trump’s speech was the most openly divisive, repeatedly attacking the “radical left” and leaning into campaign-style grievances. While some speakers, including Miller, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, and conservative influencer Jack Posobiec, veered into politics, most kept their remarks focused on honoring Kirk without assigning blame.
At one point, the president contrasted Kirk’s support for public debate — he often challenged students with opposing views to “prove me wrong” at college events — with his own scorched-earth politics.
“He did not hate his opponents,” Trump said. That’s where I disagreed with Charlie. I hate my opponents.”
Following his speech, Trump brought Erika Kirk onstage, who embraced him as “America the Beautiful” played over the stadium speakers.

 

 

Rising fears of violence
Kirk, 31, was killed with a single bullet as he answered an audience member’s question at a campus event in Utah. A 22-year-old Utah technical college student has been charged with Kirk’s murder. Investigators are still probing for a motive, which remains unclear. They have been scrutinizing his alleged texts to a friend and messages engraved into four bullet casings. Experts have said they could reference left- or right-leaning groups.
Civil rights groups criticized Kirk for rhetoric, pointing to numerous examples they described as racist, anti-immigrant, transphobic and misogynistic. His backers say he was a defender of conservative values and a champion of free speech.
His death has raised fears about the growing frequency of US political violence across the ideological spectrum, while also deepening partisan divides.
Trump’s speech on Sunday is unlikely to quell fears from critics that he intends to use Kirk’s murder to intensify a crackdown on his political opponents.
During her remarks, Gabbard tied Kirk’s killing to what she described as a historical pattern in which “political fanatics” eventually turn to violence to defend their ideals.
“They kill and terrorize their opponents, hoping to silence them,” she said. “But in this evil that we have experienced — that Charlie faced — their flawed ideology is exposed, because by trying to silence Charlie, his voice is now louder than ever.” Last week, Walt Disney’s ABC network pulled late-night talk-show host Jimmy Kimmel off the air after Trump’s head of the Federal Communications Commission threatened the network over comments Kimmel made about Kirk’s death that some conservatives found offensive.