Ƶ

Syria’s ports working normally as Ukraine looks to supply staple foods

Syrians buy bread in the town of Douma on the outskirts of the capital Damascus on December 15, 2024. (AFP)
Syrians buy bread in the town of Douma on the outskirts of the capital Damascus on December 15, 2024. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 16 December 2024

Syria’s ports working normally as Ukraine looks to supply staple foods

Syrians buy bread in the town of Douma on the outskirts of the capital Damascus on December 15, 2024. (AFP)
  • Ukrainian President Zelensky said on Saturday his government would set up mechanisms to deliver food to Syria together with international organizations

LONDON: Syria’s main ports are working normally after days of disruptions, maritime officials said on Monday, and Ukraine said it was in touch with the interim government about delivering staple foods.
President Bashar Assad was ousted on Dec. 8 by militant forces led by Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham. Since then, Israel has carried out airstrikes around Syria’s main port Latakia, and shipping sources also said ports had been short of workers.
On Monday, port official Hasan Jablawi told Reuters that Latakia was functioning normally and cargo ships that had been waiting for several days were unloading.
The Turkish-flagged Med Urla general cargo vessel was among the first ships to discharge and sail from Latakia on Monday, according to LSEG ship tracking data.
Shipping sources said Syria’s other main port Tartous was also operating, although there was a backlog to clear.
Russian and Syrian sources said on Friday that Russian wheat supplies to Syria had been suspended after two vessels carrying Russian wheat had failed to reach their destinations in Syria.
Russia, the world’s largest wheat exporter, had dominated wheat sales to Syria, according to shipping and trade sources, using complex financial and logistical arrangements to circumvent Western sanctions. Figures on Syria’s needs or stock levels were not readily available, however.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said on Saturday his government would set up mechanisms to deliver food to Syria together with international organizations and partners.
“We can help Syrians with Ukrainian wheat, flour, and oil,” he added in his daily wartime address on Sunday.
A Ukrainian industry source confirmed there was active communication with the Syrian administration over food shipments.


Despair deepens for a Palestinian family forced to flee across Gaza yet again

Updated 22 sec ago

Despair deepens for a Palestinian family forced to flee across Gaza yet again

Despair deepens for a Palestinian family forced to flee across Gaza yet again
KHAN YOUNIS: Exhaustion, despair and anger are grinding away at Ne’man Abu Jarad. Once again, for the 11th time, he and his family have been forced to uproot and move across the Gaza Strip.
“It’s a renewal of the torture. We’re not being displaced, we’re dying,” Ne’man said last week as the family packed up their possessions and tents in Gaza City to escape escalating Israel bombardment ahead of a planned invasion of the city.
The next day, they unpacked in southern Gaza on barren former agricultural land outside the city of Khan Younis, unsure where they would now find food and water.
This has been the Abu Jarads’ life for nearly two years, since fleeing their home in the far north of Gaza days after Israel launched its onslaught in response to Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, attack. Like countless Palestinian families, they have fled the length of Gaza and back, forced to move every few months as Israel attacks each new shelter. The Associated Press has chronicled much of their journey.
During the ceasefire that began in January, they had a bittersweet return to their home, which was damaged but still standing. But within two months, Israel broke the ceasefire, and the Abu Jarads had to wrench themselves away.
With each move, Ne’man and his wife Majida try to preserve some stability for their six daughters and their 2-year-old granddaughter amid the misery of tent life. The youngest is 8-year-old Lana; the eldest is Balsam, in her 20s and married.
But the sense of futility is weighing heavier. No end is in sight and Ne’man fears it will get worse.
“What’s coming is dark,” he said. “We might be expelled (from Gaza). We might die … You feel like death is surrounding you. We just scurry from place to place, away from death.”
Uprooted yet again
“It gets worse for the girls. It’s hard on them to change every time they get used to something,” Majida said.
Since May, the family’s refuge had been a tent in Gaza City. It wasn’t easy, but at least they got to know the neighborhood and their neighbors and figured out where to get water and medical care.
Their daughters could see friends from before the war, who were also displaced nearby. Another family in a neighboring building let their daughter Sarah come use their Internet to study for online high school classes. The girls downloaded books onto their phones, to study or just to have something to do.
Food was more difficult, as Israeli restrictions on aid pushed Gaza City into famine. Ne’man joined hundreds of others waiting for aid trucks to enter from Israel. It was dangerous – Israeli troops regularly opened fire toward the crowds, and Ne’man saw people getting killed and wounded, Majida said. But he sometimes came back with food.
A few weeks ago, they found a school for Lana. “She was very excited. Her life would have some regularity,” Majida said.
But Israel had ordered the population to evacuate, preparing a new assault to seize Gaza City that it said aims to dismantle Hamas, free hostages and move toward taking security control of the strip. Bombardment came closer. One strike leveled an apartment tower a block away, sending shrapnel that pierced the Abu Jarads’ tent. Another destroyed a house across the street, killing members of the family sitting outside, Ne’man said.
Lana had only attended three days of classes. But it was time to go. Last Thursday, they joined a growing exodus of Palestinians fleeing south.
Stress tears at the family
Dressed in pink pajamas and leaning against her father in their new camp the next day, Lana described her best friends Sila and Joudi bidding her farewell as they left Gaza City. They hugged her and told her they loved her — and they were crying, Lana said.
“But I did not cry,” she added firmly. “I will not cry at all. I won’t be sad.”
Majida and Ne’man worry about Lana. Their other daughters had a grounding of normal lives. But Lana was only six when Israel’s campaign overturned their lives.
“She is gaining awareness in the middle of war, bombardment and life in the tents,” Majida said.
Lana can be stubborn and impatient.
“There’s things my sisters put up with that I don’t put up with,” Lana said. She can’t tolerate the discomforts of tent life. Having to use the makeshift bathroom upsets her. “Sitting and reading, I can’t get comfortable,” she said.
Over the months, everything pushes the family to a boil — boredom, lack of privacy, the daily toil of lugging water, gathering firewood, searching for food, cleaning the tent. Behind that lie darker thoughts: the feeling this could be their fate forever, the fear a strike could kill them.
Crammed together in the tent, the girls squabble and fight sometimes.
“We were a model family, understanding and loving,” Ne’man said. “I never imagined we’d reach this point. I get afraid the family will fragment from all the pressure.”
‘In a desert’
The latest move drained what little money they had — hundreds of dollars to buy a new tent and rent a truck to carry their belongings.
It also stripped them of everything that made life bearable. The new camp lies in a stretch of barren dirt and fields. There’s no market nearby, no schools. They have to walk 2 kilometers (1.2 miles) to get an Internet connection. They are surrounded by strangers.
“We’re living in a desert,” Ne’man said.
Friday morning, their daughters walked more than a kilometer (half mile) to catch up with a passing water truck. It ran out before they could fill all their plastic jugs.
The family spent the day clearing their spot of land, assembling their two tents — one for the family, one for Ne’man’s sister. As they worked, an Israeli strike rang out in the distance. They watched the black smoke rise over Khan Younis. Exhausted by the end of the day, Ne’man still had to dig a latrine and set up the bathroom.
The area had been a closed Israeli military zone until a few weeks ago, when Israel announced displaced could move there. An Israeli military position is not far away. They can see tanks moving in and out.
“It’s not safe here,” Ne’man said.
Majida tried to focus on practicalities.
If someday water trucks start coming closer, she said, the girls won’t have to walk as far and will grumble less. Once they set aside a corner for a kitchen, where they can cook and do washing, that will start creating a daily routine.
“The more details of daily life that are in place, the more comfortable we will feel,” Majida said.
“Things will get better,” she said again and again, without a trace of optimism in her voice.
They may have to move again
Four days later, on Tuesday, a voice message from Ne’man came to the AP.
“We’re sitting here unable to eat,” he said. They have almost no money to buy food. No aid is reaching them.
Worse, a man claiming to be the owner of the land had come, backed by armed men, and demanded they pay rent or leave. Ne’man can’t afford rent. He can’t afford the costs of moving, but may have no choice.
“Soon we’ll die of starvation,” he said. “Two years, all our energy has been drained, physically, mentally, financially. We can’t bear more than this.”

Top UN Gaza investigator hopeful Israeli leaders will be prosecuted

Top UN Gaza investigator hopeful Israeli leaders will be prosecuted
Updated 18 September 2025

Top UN Gaza investigator hopeful Israeli leaders will be prosecuted

Top UN Gaza investigator hopeful Israeli leaders will be prosecuted
  • UN investigator Navi Pillay acknowledged that justice ‘is a slow process’

GENEVA: The UN investigator who this week accused Israel of committing genocide in Gaza said she sees parallels with the butchery in Rwanda, and that she hopes one day Israeli leaders will be put behind bars.
Navi Pillay, a South African former judge who headed the international tribunal for the 1994 Rwanda genocide and also served as UN human rights chief, acknowledged that justice “is a slow process.”
But as late South African anti-apartheid icon Nelson “Mandela said, it always seems impossible until it’s done,” she said in an interview.
“I consider it not impossible that there will be arrests and trials” in the future.
Pillay’s Independent International Commission of Inquiry (COI), which does not speak on behalf of the United Nations, issued a bombshell report on Tuesday concluding that “genocide is occurring in Gaza” – something Israel vehemently denies.
The investigators also concluded that Israeli President Isaac Herzog, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former defense minister Yoav Gallant have “incited the commission of genocide.”
Israel categorically rejected the findings and slammed the report as “distorted and false.”
But for Pillay, the parallels to Rwanda – where some 800,000 people, mostly ethnic Tutsis and moderate Hutus, were slaughtered – are clear.
As head of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, she says watching footage of civilians being killed and tortured had marked her “for life.”
“I see similarities” to what is happening in Gaza, she said, pointing to “the same kind of methods.”
While Tutsis were targeted in Rwanda’s genocide, she said “all the evidence (indicates) it is Palestinians as a group that is being targeted” in Gaza.
Israeli leaders, she said, had made statements, including calling Palestinians “animals,” which recalled the demonizing rhetoric used during the Rwanda genocide, when Tutsis were labelled as “cockroaches.”
In both cases, she said the target population is “dehumanized,” signaling that “it’s ok to kill them.”
‘Tܳپ’
The International Criminal Court has already issued arrest warrants for Netanyahu and Gallant for suspected war crimes.
Pillay said securing accountability would not be easy, highlighting that the ICC “does not have its own sheriff or police force to do the arrests.”
But she stressed that popular demand could bring about sudden change, as it had in her home country.
“I never thought apartheid will end in my lifetime,” she said.
Pillay, who rose through the ranks to become a judge in apartheid South Africa despite her Indian heritage, has a knack for handling difficult cases.
Her career has taken her from defending anti-apartheid activists and political prisoners in South Africa to the Rwanda tribunal, the ICC and on to serving as the UN’s top human rights official from 2008 to 2014.
The 83-year-old took on a particularly daunting mission four years ago when she agreed to chair the freshly-created COI tasked with investigating rights abuses in the occupied Palestinian territories and Israel.
Since then, she and her two co-commissioners have faced a barrage of accusations of bias and antisemitism, which they deny, and a recent social media campaign urging Washington to sanction them, as it has ICC judges, Palestinian NGOs and a UN expert focused on the situation in Gaza.
The pressure has been intense, but Pillay says the hardest thing for her team has been viewing video evidence from the ground.
“Watching those videos is just traumatic,” she said, pointing to images of “sexual violence of women (and abuse of) doctors who were stripped naked by the military.”
“It’s so painful” to watch.
Pillay said that going forward, the commission aims to draft a list of suspected perpetrators of abuses in Gaza, and also explore the suspected “complicity” of countries supporting Israel.
That work will meanwhile be left to her successor, since Pillay will be leaving the commission in November, citing her age and health concerns.
Before that, she said she had her visa ready to travel to New York to present her report to the UN General Assembly.
So far, she said, “I have heard nothing about that visa being withdrawn.”


Israel to defund national awards after film about Palestinian boy wins

Israel to defund national awards after film about Palestinian boy wins
Updated 18 September 2025

Israel to defund national awards after film about Palestinian boy wins

Israel to defund national awards after film about Palestinian boy wins
  • Culture minister slams Ophir Awards as ‘pathetic ceremony’ after film about a 12-year-old Palestinian boy won a top prize
  • ‘The Sea,’ directed and written by filmmaker Shai Carmeli-Pollak, is poised to be Israel’s entry for the best international film Oscar

LONDON: Israeli Culture Minister Miki Zohar intends to end funding for the country’s national film awards starting in 2026, after a film featuring the story of a Palestinian boy won the best feature film prize.

Zohar, who recently described the Oscar-winning documentary “No Other Land” as a “sabotage” against Israel, said on Wednesday that the Ophir Awards held in Tel Aviv was a “pathetic ceremony” after “The Sea,” a film about a 12-year-old Palestinian boy, won the prize.

“There is no greater slap in the face of Israeli citizens than the embarrassing and detached annual Ophir awards ceremony. Starting with the 2026 budget, this pathetic ceremony will no longer be funded by taxpayers’ money,” he said on X.

He added: “Under my watch, Israeli citizens will not pay from their pockets for a ceremony that spits in the faces of our heroic soldiers.”

Israeli rights groups are investigating whether the Culture Ministry has the authority to withdraw funding from the Ophir Awards, which members of the Israeli Academy of Film and Television vote on.

“The Sea,” directed and written by Israeli filmmaker Shai Carmeli-Pollak, is poised to be the country’s entry for the best international film Oscar. Baher Agbariya is a producer of the film and one of the 1.6 million Arab citizens of Israel, representing 20 percent of the population. He thanked the Israel Film Fund for supporting the film.

“The Sea” follows a Palestinian boy whose school trip to Tel Aviv’s beach is blocked at the border, prompting him to embark on a dangerous journey to sneak into Israel. Mohammad Gazawi, 13, who stars as Khaled, won the Ophir for best actor, while co-star Khalifa Natour received the award for best supporting actor.

Assaf Amir, chair of the Israeli Academy of Film and Television, said that “the selection of ‘The Sea’ is a powerful and resounding response” to the culture minister’s statement and to the recent boycott calls from the international film community.

Last week, more than 3,000 actors and directors signed a pledge to boycott Israeli film institutions, which they said are “implicated in genocide and apartheid against the Palestinian people” in Gaza and the West Bank. Signatories include filmmakers Yorgos Lanthimos, Ava DuVernay, Asif Kapadia, Boots Riley and Joshua Oppenheimer, among others.

Workers in the Israeli film industry criticized the boycott as “deeply troubling,” while Paramount, a Hollywood studio, said it “does not promote better understanding or advance the cause of peace.”


Old diseases and preventable death cast a shadow over Syrian public health 

Old diseases and preventable death cast a shadow over Syrian public health 
Updated 18 September 2025

Old diseases and preventable death cast a shadow over Syrian public health 

Old diseases and preventable death cast a shadow over Syrian public health 
  • Fourteen years of war and neglect have contributed to the return of tuberculosis and cholera across the country
  • Fall of Assad creates room for reform, but fragile medical infrastructure and scarce funding make outlook gloomy

LONDON: The collapse of Bashar Assad’s regime has led to a sharp rise in preventable diseases that festered during the 14-year war in Syria, with new research warning of a tuberculosis resurgence and a cholera outbreak amid fresh displacement in some regions and a broken health system.

In northwest Syria, more than 2,500 TB patients were identified between 2019 and 2025, including 47 cases of multidrug-resistant TB, according to the World Health Organization.

Similar gaps in TB care have plagued the Democratic Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria, where diagnostics and treatment programs launched in 2018 collapsed after the Daesh attack on the Hasakah prison in January 2022.

Official figures under Assad consistently painted a far rosier picture. Before his overthrow on Dec. 8 in an offensive spearheaded by rebels now in power in Damascus, Syria’s Health Ministry said TB rates had dropped from about 21 per 100,000 people in 2010 to 17 per 100,000 in 2023.

Syrian Kurds collect and sort clothes in the northeastern city of Qamishli on December 7, 2024, to distribute to people displaced from towns in the Aleppo countryside. (AFP file photo)

A report in Science Direct, by mostly Syrian doctors, published on July 1 suggests that the real toll is far higher, citing chronic underdiagnosis, underreporting and the exclusion of non-regime areas.

With Assad gone, opportunities for better disease surveillance are emerging, but uncertainty prevails.

“The transition has opened space to knit Syria’s fragmented surveillance into a single, more accountable system,” Anas Barbour, the Syria country representative of the US-based NGO MedGlobal, told Arab News.

“Previously parallel early-warning streams are being integrated, and community-based reporting is expanding in places that were hard to reach.”

Still, he cautioned, capacity is fragile. “Some facilities were damaged, many health workers have been displaced, and access can change quickly,” he said. “Partners are sustaining early-warning coverage while the national system is rebuilt.”

Those concerns were echoed by Dr. Aula Abbara, an infectious disease consultant in London and co-founder of the Syria Public Health Network.

According to her, the fate of Syria’s two existing surveillance systems — the Early Warning and Response Network (EWARN) and the Early Warning and Response System (EWARS) — “remains uncertain as a process of merger occurs.”

WHO early warning experts assess Syria’s early warning disease surveillance system (Photo courtesy of WHO)

“The two systems are quite different in operation and effectiveness, and now, some months later, there is a process of merging these two systems,” Abbara told Arab News. 

The existence of two parallel surveillance systems reflects the broader fragmentation of Syria’s health infrastructure. Dr. Yaser Ferruh, who heads the communicable diseases department at the health ministry, explained that while both programs used the same approach, each had distinct features.

EWARS, launched with the WHO’s support, operated through the official framework and grew to cover more than 1,800 health centers, providing broad nationwide data.

“This program was built within the official institutional framework and was distinguished by its wide geographic coverage and a large number of reporting health centers, which in recent years exceeded 1,800 centers,” Ferruh told Arab News. “This allowed it to provide comprehensive nationwide data.”

EWARN, by contrast, was run by the Assistant Coordination Unit with international backing and focused on opposition-held areas. It was “more flexible in the field, reaching local communities under difficult conditions,” Ferruh said.

“It was also characterized by rapid reporting and higher timeliness, as its reports were submitted faster and with higher compliance than EWARS.”

A medic gives the cholera vaccination to a child during a vaccination campaign in the town of Maaret Misrin in the rebel-held northern part of the northwestern Idlib province on March 7, 2023. (AFP)

He said that “the number of cases reported through EWARN was much higher, particularly in densely populated areas in northern Syria.”

While both played critical roles in tracking polio, cholera and influenza outbreaks, operating in parallel also created duplication, inconsistent definitions and difficulties in unifying data, Ferruh said.

Efforts were now underway to merge the two into a single national system, he said.

The Science Direct study, titled “Tuberculosis: The Insidious Threat that Compromises Health in Post-Assad Syria,” concluded that years of war left the health system fractured under competing authorities, producing gaps in access to care.

The toll remains visible. Since 2011, about half of hospitals and most clinics have been damaged or destroyed. By March, the WHO said only 57 percent of hospitals and 37 percent of primary health centers were fully functional, while 70 percent of health workers had fled the country.

A medic treats a baby brought by his mother at a recently-opened medical center for Cholera cases in the Syrian town of Darkush, on the outskirts of the rebel-held northwestern province of Idlib, on October 22, 2022. (AFP)

Even those still operating struggle with shortages of supplies, outdated equipment and crumbling infrastructure. Many hospitals function at minimal capacity or face closure due to lack of funding. In the northwest and northeast, 246 facilities are at risk of shutting down without new resources.

Those conditions, coupled with poverty, malnutrition, unsafe water, poor sanitation and overcrowding, have contributed to the return not only of TB but also cholera — especially among displaced people, detainees and rural communities, according to the Science Direct study.

Between August and December last year, 1,444 suspected cholera cases and seven deaths were reported in Syria, according to the WHO, with the highest caseloads in Latakia, Hasakah, Aleppo and displacement sites such as Al-Hol camp in the northeast.

“Cholera came roaring back because the basics of safe water and sanitation are still broken,” Barbour said. “Drought, damaged water networks, population displacement and over-stretched camps mean families often rely on unsafe water. Warmer months add risk.”

Years of war have devastated water infrastructure. About two-thirds of facilities are damaged or destroyed, according to Fanack Water. 

IN NUMBERS:

• 2,500-plus tuberculosis patients in northwest Syria from 2019 to 2025.

• 1,444-plus suspected cholera cases in Syria from August to December 2024.

(Source: WHO)

The International Committee of the Red Cross said that before 2010, more than 90 percent of Syrians had reliable access to safe water; by 2021, only half of systems functioned properly. In Deir Ezzor, water pumping capacity fell 90 percent during sieges and airstrikes, a 2015 Bellingcat investigation found. 

Compounding the problem is a worsening drought crisis this year, with experts warning that the country’s entire water cycle is collapsing. A new Mercy Corps report found rainfall has shrunk nearly 28 percent nationwide and more than 30 percent in regions such as Deraa, Idlib, and Aleppo.

Groundwater reserves are severely depleted, with baseflow down 80 percent across the country and over 90 percent in some areas.

A general view shows a puddle of contaminated water at a camp for internally displaced people in the town of Sarmada, in Syria's northwestern Idlib province on September 25, 2022. Cholera is generally contracted from contaminated food or water and spreads in residential areas that lack proper sewerage networks or mains drinking water. (AFP)

Abbara agrees that the cholera resurgence was driven mainly by “extensive damage and interruption to WASH (water, sanitation and hygiene) infrastructure — both deliberate and indirect.”

She said “contaminated rivers also spread the disease through crops and communities, while delays in oral cholera vaccine requests (by the former Ministry of Health) and procurement led to delayed distribution to some geographies during the 2022 outbreak, leaving many with delays to protection.”

A severe cholera outbreak was declared in Syria on Sept. 10, 2022, and spread through all 14 governorates, with reports of tens of thousands of cases of suspected acute watery diarrhoea, according to the WHO.

The delays in oral cholera vaccine reaching all populations in Syria in 2022 and 2023 were partly because the Syrian Ministry of Health requested certain controls at the time, according to July 2023 research published in the National Library of Medicine.

A cholera-infected woman receives treatment at a hospital in Syria's northern city of Aleppo on September 11, 2022.  (AFP)

Global shortages compounded the problem. In October 2022, health agencies switched from a two-dose to a single-dose vaccination strategy to stretch limited supply. Even so, health facilities were quickly overwhelmed.

Barbour emphasized that while vaccines help blunt outbreaks, “they can’t substitute for reliable chlorination, sewage management and hygiene services.”

Abbara agreed that for cholera, “the mainstay is improving water and sanitation, particularly as returnees come home.”

For now, humanitarian aid sustains much of Syria’s medical care, especially outside Damascus’s reach. But agencies warn that severe funding shortfalls threaten to push the fragile system closer to collapse.

“Since the fall of the regime, there is grave underfunding, impacting the hiring of experienced staff, and uncertainty across the country,” Abbara said.

She added that urgent TB intervention requires better diagnostics, active case finding in vulnerable populations such as detainees, and expanded staff training.

Volunteers from the Syrian Arab Red Crescent tend to a woman suffering from tuberculosis in an ambulance in Douma on the third night of evacuations from the besieged rebel enclave of eastern Ghouta on the outskirts of the capital Damascus late on December 28, 2017. (AFP)

MedGlobal’s cholera response includes rapid case detection, treatment units, oral rehydration points, water chlorination, hygiene kits and risk communication in camps and host communities.

For TB, its efforts range from community screening and GeneXpert testing to contact tracing, nutritional support, and referral of multidrug-resistant cases for oral regimens.

“Across both, MedGlobal’s aim is to support the MoH and local health directorates, strengthening public services, filling critical gaps and ensuring that emergency actions ladder up to a stronger national system,” Barbour said.

But “access and security constraints” remain the biggest obstacles to delivering care in conflict-affected areas. “Attacks on healthcare — when they occur — undermine trust and push patients away from services,” he said.

The insecurity of life in a volatile political environment also complicates care. Insurgencies, sectarian clashes and sporadic attacks stretch across many regions, while recent violence in Suweida and the coastal governorates again resulted in damage to medical infrastructure. 

Sectarian clashes have disrupted efforts to contain Syria's resurgent diseases, say officials. (AFP)

Equally disruptive, Barbour said, “are the day-to-day realities: electricity and internet outages that stall labs and surveillance, supply chain and permitting delays, and chronic underfunding that threatens continuity of care just as needs rise.”

Frequent and widespread electricity and internet failures disrupt the functioning of hospital labs, surveillance systems and health information flows needed for disease monitoring and emergency response, the WHO reported in March.

Supply chains for medicines, equipment and other essentials are fragile, strained by damaged transport links, local permitting delays and competition for scarce resources throughout Syria and the wider region. 

As Syria moves through its post-Assad transition, its shattered health system faces the twofold challenge of containing resurgent diseases while rebuilding defenses to stop their return.

The survival of new surveillance efforts, aid programs and fragile facilities under the strain of conflict, displacement and underfunding will decide whether preventable illnesses fade or persist.
 

 


Egypt says 3,000-year-old gold bracelet missing from museum

Egypt says 3,000-year-old gold bracelet missing from museum
Updated 17 September 2025

Egypt says 3,000-year-old gold bracelet missing from museum

Egypt says 3,000-year-old gold bracelet missing from museum

CAIRO: A 3,000-year-old gold bracelet has gone missing from a restoration laboratory of Cairo’s Egyptian Museum, the country’s antiquities ministry said.
The bracelet, described as a golden band adorned with “spherical lapis lazuli beads,” dates to the reign of Amenemope, a pharaoh of Egypt’s 21st Dynasty .
The ministry, in its statement issued late Tuesday, did not specify when the piece was last seen.
Egyptian media outlets said the loss was detected in recent days during an inventory check ahead of the “Treasures of the Pharaohs” exhibition scheduled in Rome at the end of October.
An internal probe has been opened, and antiquities units across all Egyptian airports, seaports and land border crossings nationwide have been alerted, the ministry said.
The case was not announced immediately to allow investigations to proceed, and a full inventory of the lab’s contents was underway, it added.
The ministry did not respond to an AFP request for comment.
According to Jean Guillaume Olette-Pelletier, an Egyptologist, the bracelet was discovered in Tanis, in the eastern Nile delta, during archaeological excavations in the tomb of King Psusennes I, where Amenemope had been reburied after the plundering of his original tomb.
“It’s not the most beautiful, but scientifically it’s one of the most interesting” objects, the expert, who has worked in Tanis, told AFP.
He said the bracelet had a fairly simple design but was made of a gold alloy designed to resist deformation. While gold represented the “flesh of the gods,” he said, lapis lazuli, imported from what is now Afghanistan, evoked their hair, he said.
The Egyptian Museum in Tahrir Square houses more than 170,000 artefacts, including the famed gold funerary mask of King Amenemope.
The disappearance comes just weeks before the scheduled November 1 inauguration of the long-awaited Grand Egyptian Museum.
One of the museum’s most iconic collections — the treasures of King Tutankhamun’s tomb — is being prepared for transfer ahead of the opening, which is being positioned as a major cultural milestone under President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi’s government.
In 2021, Egypt staged a high-profile parade transferring 22 royal mummies, including Ramses II and Queen Hatshepsut, to the National Museum of Egyptian Civilization in Old Cairo — part of a broader effort to boost Egypt’s museum infrastructure and tourism appeal.