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Israel warns Syrian leader of ‘heavy price’ if security interests threatened

Israel warns Syrian leader of ‘heavy price’ if security interests threatened
This picture taken from Israel-annexed Golan Heights along the border with southern Syria shows smoke billowing above the Syrian village of Koayiah during Israeli bombardment, on March 25, 2025 (AFP)
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Updated 03 April 2025

Israel warns Syrian leader of ‘heavy price’ if security interests threatened

Israel warns Syrian leader of ‘heavy price’ if security interests threatened
  • The shelling near the city of Nawa came after an Israeli incursion
  • Syria local govt says Israeli bombardment kills 9 civilians

Damascus: Syria accused Israel on Thursday of mounting a deadly destabilization campaign after a wave of strikes hit military targets, including an airport, and ground incursions left 13 people dead.
Israel said it responded to fire from gunmen during an operation in southern Syria and warned interim President Ahmed Al-Sharaa that he would face severe consequences if its security was threatened.
Israel has carried out an extensive bombing campaign against Syrian military assets since Islamist-led rebels toppled longtime strongman Bashar Assad in November. It has also carried out ground incursions into southern Syria in a bid to keep the forces of the new government back from the border.
Authorities in the southern province of Daraa said nine civilians were killed and several wounded in Israeli shelling near the city of Nawa.
The provincial government said the bombardment came amid Israel’s deepest ground incursion into southern Syria so far.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the dead were local gunmen who were killed “while attempting to confront Israeli forces, following calls by the mosques in the area for jihad against the Israeli incursion.”
According to the Israeli military, its forces were conducting operations in the Tasil area, near Nawa, “seizing weapons and destroying terrorist infrastructure” when “several gunmen fired at our forces.”
They “responded by firing at them and eliminated several armed terrorists from the ground and from the air,” a spokesperson said. There were no Israeli casualties.
“The IDF (military) will not allow the existence of a military threat in Syria and will act against it,” the spokesperson added.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu demanded in February that southern Syria be completely demilitarised and said his government would not accept the presence of the forces of the new Islamist-led government near Israeli territory.
In December, Netanyahu ordered troops to enter the UN-patrolled buffer zone that separated Israeli and Syrian forces along the 1974 armistice line on the Golan Heights.

'Unjustified escalation'
On Wednesday, Israel hit targets across Syria including in the Damascus area.
The Syrian foreign ministry said the strikes resulted in the “near-total destruction” of a military airport in the central province of Hama and wounded dozens of civilians and soldiers.
“This unjustified escalation is a deliberate attempt to destabilize Syria and exacerbate the suffering of its people,” it said in a statement on Telegram.
Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz hit back with a warning to Sharaa in which he pointedly referred to the president by the nom de guerre he used as an Islamist rebel commander.
“I warn Syrian leader Jolani: If you allow hostile forces to enter Syria and threaten Israeli security interests, you will pay a heavy price,” he said.
“The air force’s activity yesterday near the airports in T4, Hama and the Damascus area sends a clear message and serves as a warning for the future,” he added..
The Israeli military said its forces “struck military capabilities that remained at the Syrian bases of Hama and T4, along with additional remaining military infrastructure sites in the area of Damascus.”
Israel has said it wants to prevent advanced weapons from falling into the hands of the new authorities, whom it considers jihadists.
Sharaa fought for Al-Qaeda in Iraq after the US-led invasion of 2003 and later set up a Syrian branch of the jihadist network before breaking off all ties.
The Syrian ministry said the Israeli strikes came as the country was trying to rebuild after 14 years of war, calling it a strategy to “normalize violence within the country.”
During a visit to Jerusalem last month, EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said that Israeli strikes on Syria were “unnecessary” and risked worsening the situation.


Slovenia says will ban weapons trade with Israel over Gaza conflict

Updated 48 sec ago

Slovenia says will ban weapons trade with Israel over Gaza conflict

Slovenia says will ban weapons trade with Israel over Gaza conflict
“Slovenia is the first European country to ban the import, export and transit of weapons to and from Israel,” the government said
It said it was moving ahead “independently” because the bloc was “unable to adopt concrete measures”

LJUBLJANA: Slovenia said Thursday that it will ban all weapons trade with Israel over the war in Gaza, in what it said is a first by an EU nation.

Slovenia’s government has frequently criticized Israel over the conflict, and last year moved to recognize a Palestinian state as part of efforts to end the fighting in Gaza as soon as possible.

“Slovenia is the first European country to ban the import, export and transit of weapons to and from Israel,” the government said in a statement late Thursday.

It said it was moving ahead “independently” because the bloc was “unable to adopt concrete measures... due to internal disagreements and disunity.”

Amid the devastating war in Gaza, where “people... are dying because humanitarian aid is systematically denied them,” it was the “duty of every responsible state to take action, even if it means taking a step ahead of others,” the statement said.

It added that the government had not issued any permits for the export of military weapons and equipment to Israel since October 2023 because of the conflict.

Early in July, Slovenia — also in a EU first — banned two far-right Israeli ministers from entering the country.

It declared both Israelis “persona non grata,” accusing them of inciting “extreme violence and serious violations of the human rights of Palestinians” with “their genocidal statements.”

In June 2024, Slovenia’s parliament passed a decree recognizing Palestinian statehood, following in the steps of Ireland, Norway and Spain, in moves partly fueled by condemnation of Israel’s bombing of Gaza after the October 7, 2023 Hamas attacks on Israel.

Jordan welcomes Swedish court’s life sentence against Daesh terrorist over pilot’s killing

Jordan welcomes Swedish court’s life sentence against Daesh terrorist over pilot’s killing
Updated 36 min 51 sec ago

Jordan welcomes Swedish court’s life sentence against Daesh terrorist over pilot’s killing

Jordan welcomes Swedish court’s life sentence against Daesh terrorist over pilot’s killing
  • Osama Krayem was involved in the killing of Moaz Al-Kasasbeh, 26, who was burned alive in a cage after being captured in Syria in 2014
  • Govt spokesman said that Jordanians will always remember the tragic incident and that the ruling is a crucial step toward holding all accountable

LONDON: Jordan welcomed a Swedish court’s ruling on Thursday that sentenced a member of the Daesh terror group to life in prison for his involvement in the horrific killing of Jordanian Air Force pilot Lt. Moaz Al-Kasasbeh.

Osama Krayem was implicated in the killing of Al-Kasasbeh, 26, who was burned alive in a cage after being captured in 2014 following his plane’s crash in Syria during a mission against the Daesh group.

Mohammad Al-Momani, the Jordanian government’s spokesman, added that Jordan fully trusted the Swedish legal and judicial processes that resulted in the decision.

Al-Momani said that Jordanians will always remember the tragic incident and that the ruling is a crucial step toward holding all accountable.

Krayem, a Swedish citizen, is already incarcerated for his involvement in other terrorist attacks in Europe, specifically the Paris and Brussels attacks in 2015 and 2016.

The killing of Al-Kasasbeh shocked Jordanians after Daesh released a gruesome video showing him being burned alive in a cage. The Swedish court said that while the evidence indicated that another person ignited the fire that killed him, Krayem was also implicated in the murder.


White House says Trump envoy Witkoff to travel to Gaza on Friday

White House says Trump envoy Witkoff to travel to Gaza on Friday
Updated 31 July 2025

White House says Trump envoy Witkoff to travel to Gaza on Friday

White House says Trump envoy Witkoff to travel to Gaza on Friday
  • Leavitt told reporters the two officials will work on a plan to deliver more food

WASHINGTON: US special envoy Steve Witkoff and US ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee will travel to Gaza on Friday to inspect food aid delivery as Witkoff works on a final plan to speed deliveries to the enclave, the White House said on Thursday.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters the two officials will travel into Gaza to inspect the current food distribution sites and work on a plan to deliver more food there and meet with local Gazans to “hear firsthand about this dire situation on the ground.”


Lebanon’s UN refugee agency chief hopes at least 200,000 Syrian refugees return under new plan

Lebanon’s UN refugee agency chief hopes at least 200,000 Syrian refugees return under new plan
Updated 31 July 2025

Lebanon’s UN refugee agency chief hopes at least 200,000 Syrian refugees return under new plan

Lebanon’s UN refugee agency chief hopes at least 200,000 Syrian refugees return under new plan
  • 24 percent of the Syrian refugee community in Lebanon is now thinking or planning about going back home during the next 12 months
  • Syria’s uprising-turned-conflict displaced half of the country’s prewar population of 23 million over the last 14 years

BEIRUT: The UN refugee agency’s representative in Lebanon said Thursday he hopes that at least 200,000 Syrian refugees return from Lebanon by the end of the year under a new government-backed return plan.
Before former President Bashar Assad was ousted in a lightning insurgent offensive in December, only about 1 percent of the Syrian refugees in Lebanon said they were planning to return, UNHCR’s outgoing Lebanon Representative Ivo Freijsen said.
“That has now changed ... 24 percent of the Syrian refugee community in Lebanon is now thinking or planning about going back during the next 12 months. So that’s a very positive shift,” Freijsen told The Associated Press in an interview.
Syria’s uprising-turned-conflict displaced half of the country’s prewar population of 23 million over the last 14 years. Lebanon hosted an estimated 1.5 million refugees, making up roughly a quarter of Lebanon’s six million people at one point. Officials estimate that at least 1 million refugees are still in the country today.
Scaling up a new return plan
The UNHCR had said for years that Syria was not yet safe for return, despite mounting pressure from Lebanese authorities since the country plunged into an economic crisis in 2019.
That policy has changed since the Assad dynasty’s decades-long autocratic rule came to an end. Many of the refugees in Lebanon had fled because they were political opponents of Assad or to avoid forced conscription into his army.
Freijsen said that the agency was able to confirm at least 120,000 Syrian refugees leaving Lebanon since Assad’s fall without any help from UN groups or charities.
“But we now have this scheme available, and we hope to be able to scale up,” Freijsen said. “Collectively, we have now made it as easy as possible for Syrians to go back to Syria, to their home country.”
Under the plan, the UNHCR and International Organization for Migration will provide $100 for each family member and transportation by bus, while the Lebanese authorities would waive any outstanding fees or fines that they owe for violating residency requirements.
Once they cross the border, the UN agencies will help the returning refugees secure missing documents, offer legal and mental health support, and some aid.
At least 17,000 Syrians have signed up so far, with most opting to take their own vehicles. Freijsen observed a small test run on Tuesday of 72 Syrians leaving by bus through Lebanon’s Masnaa border crossing with Syria. He said about a quarter of surveyed Syrian refugees want to return or plan to do so in the next year, a surge from almost none less than a year ago.
“We have a most ambitious target, objective and hope, of 400,000 (returns) by the end of this year. Again that’s most optimistic,” he said. “But if we get a final figure by the year between 200,000 and 400,000, that would be very positive.”
Syria’s economy still far from recovered
The UN estimates it will cost hundreds of billions of dollars to rebuild Syria and make its economy viable again, when 90 percent of its population lives in poverty. A new administration led by interim President Ahmad Al-Sharaa has restored diplomatic ties with Arab Gulf nations and Western nations. US President Donald Trump recently announced that Washington would lift sanctions from Syria, which swiftly paved the way for large business deals with Turkiye, Qatar, Ƶ.
But Syria will need time for its economy to bounce back, and its new authorities are still struggling with exerting their authority across the entire country as they try to reach a settlement with various groups. UN agencies have also faced massive budget cuts which have scaled down the size of their teams and the amount of aid they can give. All that could hamper the sustainability of refugees returning home, Freijsen warned.
“People are prepared to go back with lots of issues and struggle and issues to overcome, provided that they can also earn a living. And that is still difficult,” said Freijsen.


Lebanese president vows to disarm Hezbollah, calls for constructive dialogue

Lebanese president vows to disarm Hezbollah, calls for constructive dialogue
Updated 31 July 2025

Lebanese president vows to disarm Hezbollah, calls for constructive dialogue

Lebanese president vows to disarm Hezbollah, calls for constructive dialogue
  • Stop the suicide before it’s too late,’ Aoun tells Hezbollah
  • Military remains Lebanon’s best defense, president says in Army Day address

BEIRUT: Lebanese President Joseph Aoun, addressing Hezbollah and its allies on Thursday, called for a return to state legitimacy as the foundation of national resilience.

In a speech, Aoun demanded the disarmament of Hezbollah and extension of the Lebanese state’s authority over all its territory.

Addressing the militant group on Army Day, he said: “To those who have confronted aggression, and to their honorable national community, your reliance should be only on the Lebanese state. Otherwise, your sacrifices will be in vain, and the state, or what remains of its institutions, will collapse.”

The Lebanese president stressed the precarious moment the country faces, describing the region as suspended between chaos and opportunity. 

Lebanon is grappling with a years-long economic crisis and a fragile sectarian political system that have further eroded the state’s ability to exercise its authority.

For Lebanon, Aoun said, the choice is between a return to stability, or total collapse.

Detailing recent negotiations with the US, Aoun revealed that Lebanon has made substantial amendments to draft proposals on Hezbollah’s disarmament, which will be presented to the Council of Ministers early next week as part of efforts to implement the fragile November 2024 ceasefire agreement with Israel.

Lebanon has demanded an immediate cessation of Israeli hostilities, including assassinations, a full Israeli withdrawal behind the internationally recognized borders, the release of Lebanese prisoners, and the full implementation of Lebanese state authority over all its territory in exchange for the disarmament of all armed groups, including Hezbollah, and the transfer of their resources to the Lebanese Army.

He also called for $1 billion annually for 10 years from friendly countries to support Lebanese security forces.

Beirut plans to hold an international donor conference for postwar reconstruction efforts next autumn.

Aoun urged loyalty to victims of the Israel-Hezbollah war and “to the cause they gave their lives for,” calling for an end to the bloodshed and destruction.

The nation “should stop this path of self-destruction, especially when wars become senseless, pointless, and prolonged for the benefit of others,” he urged.

Aoun announced plans to deploy over 4,500 additional troops south of the Litani River, where forces, as confirmed by the international military oversight committee, have successfully collected and destroyed weapons and established state authority in non-occupied areas, despite Israel’s failure to honor its commitments to the ceasefire.

Israel was meant to pull all of its troops out of Lebanon, but has kept them in five areas it deems strategic.

The president called for constructive dialogue on weapons monopolization, emphasizing that political differences must remain within bounds of mutual respect and legitimate competition under the constitution.

“This is a decisive moment that cannot tolerate provocation from any quarter or destructive political maneuvering. Whether the threats are security or economic in nature, no single faction will be immune from their consequences,” he warned.

Aoun’s comments came ahead of Tuesday’s high-stakes Cabinet meeting, with the state’s monopoly on arms on the agenda.

Hezbollah Secretary-General Sheikh Naim Qassem preemptively rejected any disarmament discussion Wednesday night. “Our arsenal is non-negotiable,” he declared, characterizing such demands as an attempt to “dismantle Lebanon’s defensive capabilities.”

Prime Minister Nawaf Salam pushed back against claims of provocation, noting that all parliamentary blocs — including Hezbollah and Amal — had previously endorsed the government’s commitment to the state’s monopoly on weapons.

Adding to regional complications, Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich made provocative remarks on Wednesday, asserting that Israeli forces would maintain their grip on five strategic positions seized during recent ground operations in southern Lebanon.

Beirut rejected this, voicing concerns that Israel will indefinitely occupy the elevated positions regardless of Lebanese compliance with its ceasefire obligations.

Among Lebanon’s demands in the response to the US proposal was the demarcation and consolidation of the land and maritime borders with Syria with the assistance of the US, France, Ƶ, and specialized teams at the UN; the resolution of the Syrian refugee issue; the fight against smuggling and drugs; and support for alternative agriculture and industries.

“We are tired of fighting others’ wars on our soil, of risking everything on uncertain bets and reckless adventures,” Aoun said.

“It’s time to stop making excuses for the ambitions of those who exploit our divisions and fears. At times, some of us have confronted these threats alone, outside the framework of the state, hoping, sometimes with good intentions, that the state is too weak to resist, that the enemy is within us, or that other allies will fight our battles for us. All these illusions have now been shattered,” he stated.

Underscoring the toll the conflict has taken on Lebanon, Aoun emphasized that only state-held arms can ensure national security and unity, urging full support and unity behind the Lebanese Armed Forces.

“Nothing is safer in the face of aggression than the weapons of the Lebanese Army — an institution backed by a state rooted in justice, institutions, and the public interest,” he said. “We must all rally behind the Army, whose weapons are the strongest, leadership the most trusted, and soldiers the most resilient.”

Speaking at the Defense Ministry after laying a wreath at the Army Martyrs’ Monument, Aoun outlined the challenges facing Lebanon since the November 2024 ceasefire.

He detailed thousands of Israeli violations, killing hundreds and preventing residents from returning to their homes, while praising the Lebanese Army’s resilience despite suffering casualties in implementing ceasefire terms with limited resources.

“Together, we seek to rebuild a state that safeguards all citizens,” Aoun said, “one where no group relies on outside powers, arms, foreign alliances, external backing, or changing geopolitical dynamics for strength. Rather, our collective power should come from national unity, mutual agreement, and our armed forces.”

In a second appeal to Hezbollah, Aoun said: “You possess too much honor to jeopardize our nation-building efforts, and too much dignity to give enemies justification for continued aggression while we remain trapped in tragedy and self-destruction.”

He warned that delays in disarmament “would be willingly forfeiting international and Arab backing while sacrificing our national unity — an outcome neither you nor we desire.”

The president also addressed Lebanon’s efforts to reconnect with Arab nations and the broader international community, welcoming a Saudi proposal to accelerate border stabilization measures along the Lebanese-Syrian frontier.

“Lebanon remains committed to fostering strong relationships with Syria, our neighbor, for our mutual benefit,” he said.