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France returns flag to Damascus embassy as new Syria authorities build contacts with West

Update The French national flag is raised at the French embassy in Damascus, after the ousting of Syria's Bashar Al-Assad. (Reuters)
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The French national flag is raised at the French embassy in Damascus, after the ousting of Syria's Bashar Al-Assad. (Reuters)
Update Ahmed Al-Sharaa (formerly known as Abu Mohammed Al-Golani), head of Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham (HTS) which led the lightning offensive that ousted president Bashar Al-Assad, posing for a picture with Stephen Hickey, director of the Middle East and North Africa department at Britain's Foreign office. (SANA/AFP)
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Ahmed Al-Sharaa (formerly known as Abu Mohammed Al-Golani), head of Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham (HTS) which led the lightning offensive that ousted president Bashar Al-Assad, posing for a picture with Stephen Hickey, director of the Middle East and North Africa department at Britain's Foreign office. (SANA/AFP)
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Updated 17 December 2024

France returns flag to Damascus embassy as new Syria authorities build contacts with West

France returns flag to Damascus embassy as new Syria authorities build contacts with West
  • UK sends team to meet Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham and its leader Ahmed Al-Sharaa
  • German diplomats also plan talks with representatives of HTS in Damascus

DAMASCUS: France raised its flag at its Damascus embassy on Tuesday for the first time in 12 years and European Union officials prepared to engage with the new Syrian leadership, a sign of the growing contacts after Bashar Assad was ousted as president.
Western states are gradually opening channels to the new authorities in Damascus led by Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham and its leader Ahmed Al-Sharaa, though they continue to designate the group as terrorists.
As well as France and Britain, which sent a team to meet Sharaa on Monday, Germany is also planning meetings with the new administration and the European Union said on Tuesday it will also establish contacts.
Nine days after Assad was ousted, the new prime minister installed by Sharaa’s Islamist HTS group said the government was grappling with very low currency reserves and called for sanctions imposed on the ousted government to be lifted.
Sharaa’s group was part of Al-Qaeda until he broke ties in 2016. It had been confined to a northwest corner of Syria for years until this month when the army melted away as it swept into Damascus.
France said its raising of the flag did not automatically mean it would reopen its embassy.
During his meeting with British officials, Sharaa, formerly known by his nom de guerre Abu Mohammed Al-Golani, called for countries to restore ties and lift sanctions on Syria to help refugees return home, Syria’s state news agency SANA reported.
SANA released photos of Sharaa sitting in a suit with an open shirt during the meeting with the British. Sharaa “spoke about the need to build a state of law and institutions, and establishing security,” SANA reported. “He also spoke about Britain’s important role internationally.”
Assad’s fall, a blow to Syria’s longstanding Russian and Iranian allies, could potentially open the way for Western states to reopen contacts with Damascus. But for now at least, that requires manoeuvring around both the terrorism designation imposed on HTS during its days as an Al-Qaeda affiliate and financial sanctions imposed on Damascus under Assad.
German diplomats are also planning talks with representatives of HTS in Damascus on Tuesday, the German foreign ministry said. A German foreign ministry spokesperson said the talks would focus on a transitional process for Syria and the protection of minorities.
“The possibilities of a diplomatic presence in Damascus are also being explored there,” the spokesperson added in a statement, reiterating that Berlin was monitoring HTS closely in light of its roots in Al-Qaeda ideology.
“As far as one can tell, they have acted prudently so far,” the spokesperson said.
Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan, whose country was the biggest backer of rebels during the civil war, said an inclusive administration was now needed in Damascus and called on the European Union to support the return of refugees.
In an interview with Al Jazeera Mubasher, the newly installed Prime Minister Mohammed Al-Bashir said the defense ministry would be restructured using former rebel factions and officers who defected from Assad’s army.
Syria has many ethnic and sectarian minority groups, some of whom have worried about how they might be treated under the rule of groups such as HTS with roots in Sunni Islamist militancy.
Asked what he would say to those worried about a single religious or political group dominating Syria, Bashir said: “Those who are afraid...of a religion trend or anything else don’t truly understand Islam, the forgiveness of Islam, the justice of Islam.”
“Syria is for all Syrians,” he said. “Everyone is a partner for us building the Syria of the future.”
Bashir, who formerly led an HTS-affiliated government in Idlib province, has said he will remain in office until March.
EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said on Monday the European Union should be ready to ease sanctions on Syria if the country’s new leadership takes “positive steps” to establish an inclusive government and respect women’s and minority rights.
UN humanitarian coordinator Tom Fletcher said he had also met Sharaa, posting on social media: “we have basis for ambitious scaling up of vital humanitarian support” for Syria.
The Syrian conflict, which spiralled out of a 2011 uprising against Assad’s repressive rule, drove millions of Syrians abroad as refugees, including around 1 million who went to Germany.


Israeli NGO raises alarm over jailed Gaza hospital chief’s health

Updated 7 sec ago

Israeli NGO raises alarm over jailed Gaza hospital chief’s health

Israeli NGO raises alarm over jailed Gaza hospital chief’s health
PHRI said Hossam Abu Safiyeh, head of Kamal Adwan Hospital until last year, was being kept in “harsh detention conditions” without legal proceedings
Its lawyer visited him Thursday at Ofer prison reporting that he had lost around 25 kilograms since his arrest due to insufficient food

JERUSALEM: An Israeli rights group said Thursday a prominent Gaza doctor and hospital director held in an Israeli jail has faced harsh mistreatment and medical neglect, warning his health is deteriorating.
Physicians for Human Rights-Israel (PHRI) said Hossam Abu Safiyeh, head of Kamal Adwan Hospital until last year, was being kept in “harsh detention conditions” without legal proceedings.
Abu Safiyeh was detained after Israeli troops raided his hospital in December 2024.
The army later said he was suspected of “being a Hamas operative,” but has informed him of no charges, according to the group.
PHRI said its lawyer visited him Thursday at Ofer prison, north of Jerusalem in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, reporting that he had lost around 25 kilograms (55 pounds) since his arrest due to insufficient food.
The group also said he had been subjected to violence during cell searches and was denied treatment for scabies despite repeated requests.
Human rights groups have repeatedly warned of difficult conditions in Israeli jails including scabies outbreaks. Several NGOs petitioned Israel’s supreme court last year seeking to stop the spread of the contagious skin condition in jails.
PHRI further said that since March, Abu Safiyeh “has not been brought before a judge, has not been interrogated, and has received no information about the grounds for his detention.”
Israel’s prison service did not respond to an AFP request for comment.
The World Health Organization (WHO) has previously called for the “immediate release” of the hospital director.
Rights group Amnesty International had echoed the call, saying Abu Safiyeh had been the “voice of Gaza’s decimated health sector.”
In August 2025, the WHO said it had documented 720 attacks on health care in Gaza since the start of the war in October 2023.
It said that at least 1,580 health workers were killed and an unknown number detained by Israel.

Palestinian president warns against plans for ‘Greater Israel’

Palestinian president warns against plans for ‘Greater Israel’
Updated 46 min 9 sec ago

Palestinian president warns against plans for ‘Greater Israel’

Palestinian president warns against plans for ‘Greater Israel’
  • ‘We want to live in freedom, security and peace, like all other people on Earth,’ Mahmoud Abbas tells UN
  • He thanks Ƶ, France for diplomatic efforts in support of two-state solution

LONDON: Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas called for an end to the war in Gaza and condemned Israel’s “expansionary plans,” in a virtual address to the UN General Assembly on Thursday.

He demanded “intervention” to stop Israel’s war in Gaza and settler violence in the West Bank, warning that plans for a “Greater Israel” would encroach upon the territory of other Arab states.

Gaza is “a war of genocide, destruction, starvation, and displacement,” Abbas said, adding that more than 220,000 Palestinians — the majority of them women, children and the elderly — have been killed or injured in the enclave since October 2023.

He accused Israel of starving more than 2 million people, and of destroying 80 percent of Gaza’s buildings.

“What Israel is carrying out isn’t merely an aggression. It’s a war crime and a crime against humanity that’s both documented and monitored,” he said.

“And it will be recorded in history books and the pages of international conscience as one of the most horrific chapters of humanitarian tragedy in the 20th and 21st centuries.”

Abbas said Israel’s settlement plans in the West Bank, including the E1 project, would make a two-state solution unviable and contravene international law and several UN Security Council resolutions. 

He noted the unchecked, violent behavior of settlers in the West Bank, saying: “They burn homes and fields. They uproot trees and attack villages, and attack unarmed Palestinian civilians. In fact, they kill them in broad daylight under the protection of the Israeli occupation army.”

Abbas cited recent remarks by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu about a “Greater Israel,” and the recent Israeli strikes in Qatar, as reasons for concern for the broader Arab world, calling them “an escalation that’s a grave and a blatant violation of international law, which requires a decisive intervention and deterring procedures and measures.”

He was equally unequivocal in condemning the Hamas attack on Israel of Oct. 7, 2023, demanding the immediate release of all remaining hostages in Gaza and the disarming of the group.

“These actions don’t represent the Palestinian people, nor do they represent their just struggle for freedom and independence,” he said.

“We’ve affirmed, and will continue to affirm, that the Gaza Strip is an integral part of the state of Palestine, and that we’re ready to bear full responsibility for governance and security there. 

“Hamas won’t have a role to play in governance. Hamas and the other factions will have to hand over their weapons to the Palestinian Authority as part of a process to build the institutions of one state, one law and one legal security forces. We reiterate that we don’t want an armed state.”

Abbas added that though the Palestinian people “are still living the tragedies of the Israeli aggression and occupation,” progress is being made on an independent Palestinian state following high-level diplomatic efforts led by Ƶ and France at a meeting on Sept. 22. 

He thanked the two countries for their efforts, as well as a raft of other governments that have recently recognized Palestinian statehood or announced plans to do so, including the UK, Canada, Australia, Belgium, Portugal and others. “Our people won’t forget this noble position,” Abbas said.

“We highly appreciate all the peoples and organizations around the world who protested in support of the rights of the Palestinian people to freedom and independence, and to stop the war, destruction and starvation,” he said.

“We reject confusing the solidarity with the Palestinian cause and the issue of antisemitism, which is something that we reject based on our values and principles.”

Abbas reaffirmed the need for aid to be allowed to flow freely into Gaza through the UN, an end to the Israeli occupation of Palestinian lands, the release of prisoners on both sides, and an end to aggression at religious sites.

He said it is essential that the people of Gaza not be displaced from their land, that Israel release confiscated taxes to help in the reconstruction of the Occupied Territories, and called for support for the PA to hold nationwide elections within a year of the end of hostilities.

“We want a modern and democratic state that abides by international law, the rule of law and multilateralism, and the peaceful transition of power,” he added.

“We declare that we’re ready to work with US President Donald Trump, and with the Kingdom of Ƶ and France, the UN, and all partners to implement the peace plan that was approved in the conference that was held on Sept. 22.”

Abbas said: “Peace can’t be achieved if justice isn’t achieved, and there can be no justice if Palestine isn’t freed.

“We want to live in freedom, security and peace — like all other people on Earth — in an independent sovereign state on the borders of 1967 with East Jerusalem as our capital, in security and peace with our neighbors.

“We want a modern civilian state that’s free of violence, weapons and extremism, one that respects law, human rights and invests in people, development, technology and education, not in wars and conflict.”

He added: “Palestine is ours. Jerusalem is the jewel of our heart and our eternal capital. We won’t leave our homeland. We won’t leave our lands. Our people will remain rooted like the olive trees, firm as the rocks.

“We’ll rise from under the rubble to rebuild, and to send from our blessed and holy land the messages of hope and the sound of truth and right, and build the bridges of a just peace for the people of our region and the entire world.”


Yemen calls for international coalition to end Houthi rule

Yemen calls for international coalition to end Houthi rule
Updated 25 September 2025

Yemen calls for international coalition to end Houthi rule

Yemen calls for international coalition to end Houthi rule
  • ‘They’re an active terrorist organization,’ head of Presidential Leadership Council tells UN
  • Rashad Mohammed Al-Alimi lauds Ƶ, UAE for helping prevent Yemen’s collapse

LONDON: The head of Yemen’s Presidential Leadership Council on Thursday urged the international community to form a decisive alliance to restore security, stability and state institutions in his country, which risks becoming a permanent hub for transnational terrorism.

Speaking at the UN General Assembly’s 80th session, Rashad Mohammed Al-Alimi described what was happening Yemen not just as an internal crisis but “a test of the credibility of the international system,” citing the Houthis’ decade-long control and their use of starvation and maritime routes as tools of coercion.

“The Houthis are no longer a remote rebel group,” he said. “They’re an active terrorist organization armed with advanced Iranian weaponry, from ballistic missiles and drones to naval mines and cluster munitions.”

Al-Alimi highlighted the Houthis’ destabilizing activity regionally, including drug trafficking and experimentation with military technologies, framing them as part of “a project to redraw the map of Iranian influence in the region.” 

He warned that tolerating the group could “leave the Red Sea permanently hostage to this terrorism.”

He called for immediate action, while stressing that Yemen’s legitimate and internationally recognized government stands ready for an inclusive peace.

But he said the world has to act collectively and decisively to “impose peace” and liberate the country from militia control.

Al-Alimi also paid tribute to Ƶ and the UAE, noting their role in preventing Yemen’s collapse and providing economic support amid severe financing constraints. 

“They’ve presented a model of strategic partnership based on development, and the world should adopt this model, not merely observe it,” he said.

Al-Alimi reaffirmed Yemen’s support for the Palestinian Authority and the two-state solution, urging other UN member states to recognize Palestine and defend its people’s dignity amid the war in Gaza. 

He condemned the exploitation of the cause by militias and their backers, which he said has only brought isolation and devastation.

Concluding his address, Al-Alimi framed his country’s struggle as a global issue. “Leaving Yemen prey to extortion and terrorism opens the door to more victims and strikes at the credibility of this institution and its founding principles,” he said.


Somalia reaffirms fight against terrorism, calls for peace in Palestine

Somalia reaffirms fight against terrorism, calls for peace in Palestine
Updated 25 September 2025

Somalia reaffirms fight against terrorism, calls for peace in Palestine

Somalia reaffirms fight against terrorism, calls for peace in Palestine
  • President expresses ‘deep concern’ for Palestinian suffering, demands ‘urgent actions’
  • ‘At home, we’re bravely fighting the last remaining pockets of international terrorism,’ he tells UN

LONDON: Somalia’s president emphasized on Thursday his country’s commitment to eradicating terrorism, and working collectively to achieve a “just and lasting” peace in Palestine and the broader Middle East.

Speaking at the UN General Assembly, Hassan Sheikh Mohamud lamented that “instead of seeking to strengthen existing and future partnerships and enhancing social solidarity,” countries worldwide are increasingly engaged in “adverse competition and increasing governance uncertainty.”

He added: “We’re witnessing the unapologetic rise of national might to settle disputes. This is a truly dark and dangerous path that threatens the hard-won, rules-based international order.”

Mohamud voiced Somalia’s “deep concern” over the suffering of the Palestinian people, adding: “The ongoing violence, displacement and deprivation in the Occupied Territories, including Gaza, demand urgent actions.”

He called for a ceasefire in Gaza, unhindered humanitarian access, and a renewed commitment to the two-state solution “as the only viable path for a just and lasting peace in the Middle East today.”

Drawing on his country’s own history of overcoming conflict, Mohamud said: “Somalia is evidence that multilateralism and global solidarity can make the world a better, safer and progressive place.”

Recent reports revealed that the Boston Consulting Group modeled plans to relocate Palestinians from Gaza to Somalia, acting on behalf of Israeli businessmen seeking to redevelop the enclave. Somalia has firmly rejected any such proposal.

Turning to his country’s fight against terrorism, Mohamud said: “At home, we’re bravely fighting the last remaining pockets of international terrorism while building a strong and sustainable national security architecture.

“We’re working closely with all our valuable international partners in defeating the violence, extremism, ideology, falsehoods and illicit financial systems that facilitate global terrorism.”

Underscoring the critical need for international cooperation to address the escalating climate crisis, Mohamud said: “Climate change is elevating havoc across the world, with the most vulnerable countries suffering systemic and consecutive methodological and socioeconomic shocks.”

He added that his government has implemented a series of initiatives to both support climate transition and protect people and the ecosystem, but that such efforts come at a cost for public services such as education and healthcare.

“Nations on the front line like Somalia can’t be left to face this crisis alone, unsupported by the dominant global financial architecture, which isn’t fit for the purpose in this age of great challenge.”


Syria and Jordan strengthen freight ties with logistics agreement

Syria and Jordan strengthen freight ties with logistics agreement
Updated 25 September 2025

Syria and Jordan strengthen freight ties with logistics agreement

Syria and Jordan strengthen freight ties with logistics agreement
  • Presidents of the Jordanian Logistics Association and the Syrian Federation of International Freight Forwarders sign agreement
  • The deal aims to enhance freight operations, strengthen financial resilience in shipping, and reduce operational losses

LONDON: Jordan and Syria signed a memorandum of understanding on Thursday to enhance regional logistics and trade.

The agreement lays the groundwork for coordination between the Jordanian Logistics Association and the Syrian Federation of International Freight Forwarders.

It will be reviewed every six months to ensure progress and strengthen the partnership between Jordan and Syria’s logistics sectors, according to Petra news agency.

JLA Vice President Nizar Saleh and Mohammed Saleh Kaishour, the president of SFIFF, who both signed the agreement, said that it aims to support national logistics goals in both countries, Petra added.

The agreement focuses on enhancing freight operations, strengthening financial resilience in the shipping industry, overseeing logistics providers, and reducing operational losses.

It addresses legal challenges in the industry and emphasizes training and skills development, with both sides agreeing to provide voluntary dispute resolution and mediation for member companies, Petra reported.

The agreement facilitates business transactions through certified members, thereby reducing commercial disputes and providing a platform for expert exchanges and collaboration on innovation and best practices within the industry, Petra reported.