Ƶ

Gaza rescuers say Israeli strikes kill 44

Gaza rescuers say Israeli strikes kill 44
Palestinian children stand near the site of an Israeli strike on a house, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip April 6, 2025. (Reuters)
Short Url
Updated 07 April 2025

Gaza rescuers say Israeli strikes kill 44

Gaza rescuers say Israeli strikes kill 44
  • A Hamas statement called the strike “a deliberate act of child killing” and a “confirmation of the sadistic and barbaric nature of the occupation and its fascist leaders”

GAZA CITY, Palestinian Territories: Gaza’s civil defense agency said Israeli strikes killed at least 44 people on Sunday as Israel’s prime minister vowed a “strong response” to a rare salvo of rockets fired from the Hamas-ruled territory.
Dozens of Palestinians have been killed almost daily since Israel resumed its military offensive in Gaza on March 18, ending a two-month ceasefire that had brought relative calm to the territory.
“The death toll as a result of Israeli air strikes since dawn today is at least 44, including 21 in Khan Yunis,” a city in the southern Gaza Strip, civil defense agency spokesman Mahmud Bassal told AFP.
One strike killed six people on Al-Nakheel Street in the Al-Tuffah neighborhood of Gaza City, where a group had gathered near a bakery, Bassal said.
Three children were among the dead, he said.
A Hamas statement called the strike “a deliberate act of child killing” and a “confirmation of the sadistic and barbaric nature of the occupation and its fascist leaders.”
AFP footage captured thick plumes of smoke rising from central and northern Gaza as Israeli forces bombarded areas of the besieged Palestinian territory.
A ceasefire brokered by the United States, Egypt and Qatar ended on March 18 as Israel resumed its offensive in response to the Hamas attacks of October 7, 2023.
Elsewhere Israel said it shot dead “one terrorist” in the West Bank for throwing rocks, with Palestinian officials claiming it was a 14-year-old boy with US citizenship.
Gaza has since endured a new wave of relentless strikes and artillery fire, with dozens of fatalities reported on a near-daily basis.
Efforts to revive the ceasefire and secure the release of the remaining hostages held in Gaza have so far failed.
The stalled efforts will be on the agenda during a meeting between Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and US President Donald Trump, set for Monday in Washington.
Netanyahu ordered a “strong response,” his office said, after the Israeli military reported about 10 “projectiles” had been fired from Gaza within minutes of each other on Sunday. Most were intercepted.
The Israeli offensive since 2023 has severely weakened Hamas, but the army has recorded 10 other rockets fired at Israel over the past two weeks.
Israeli police said debris fell in Ashkelon, near the Gaza border, and paramedics said one man had been wounded.
“The prime minister instructed to deliver a strong response and approved the continuation of the intensified IDF operations in Gaza against Hamas,” Netanyahu’s office said.
One Israeli strike on Sunday hit the home of the Abu Issa family in Deir el-Balah, killing women and children, according to witnesses.
“There were no wanted individuals in the house — even the men were at the mosque,” said Mohammad Al-Azaizeh, a resident.
“They were all civilians — children, women and girls. A missile tore through every floor, flattening the house. It felt like a nuclear bomb had hit us.”
AFP footage from another strike late on Saturday in Gaza City showed scenes of devastation at a hospital, where men and women mourned bodies wrapped in white shrouds.
“We heard the explosion and rushed to check on the children,” said Umm Haytham Al-Salakhi through tears, as she grieved a relative at Al-Ahli Hospital.
“I kept calling out for all our children.”
One sobbing man cradled a relative’s body, as dozens gathered to perform funeral prayers before the victims were taken for burial.
“They struck unarmed civilians while they slept,” said another resident, Mohammad Rahmi, who also lost a relative in the bombing.
Several men held the bodies of children wrapped in shrouds, while rescuers transported the wounded to the hospital, according to AFP images.
Some of the wounded, including children, were treated in the hospital’s corridor as relatives gathered nearby.
Scenes from a destroyed home revealed collapsed concrete slabs and twisted metal, as children sifted through the rubble in search of salvaged belongings.
Since Israel’s military resumed its offensive in Gaza last month, more than 1,330 people have been killed in the territory, according to the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry.
The war began after Palestinian militants attacked southern Israel on October 7, 2023, resulting in the deaths of 1,218 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.
The overall death toll since the war erupted now stands at 50,695, according to the Gaza health ministry.


US issues new round of sanctions targeting Yemen’s Houthis

Protesters chant slogans during a rally denouncing Israel and the US and in support of Palestinians.
Protesters chant slogans during a rally denouncing Israel and the US and in support of Palestinians.
Updated 56 min 4 sec ago

US issues new round of sanctions targeting Yemen’s Houthis

Protesters chant slogans during a rally denouncing Israel and the US and in support of Palestinians.
  • US Treasury Department said in a statement it was issuing sanctions against 32 individuals and entities as well as four vessels

WASHINGTON: The United States imposed a fresh round of sanctions targeting Yemen’s Houthis on Thursday in what the Trump administration said was Washington’s largest such action aimed at the Iran-aligned group.
The US Treasury Department said in a statement it was issuing sanctions against 32 individuals and entities as well as four vessels in an effort to disrupt the Houthis’ fundraising, smuggling and attack operations.
Among the targets are several China-based companies that Treasury said helped transport military-grade components, as well as other companies that help arrange for dual-use goods to be shipped to the Houthis. The sanctions also target petroleum smugglers and Houthi-linked shipping companies, Treasury said.
The Houthis have disrupted commerce since late 2023 by launching hundreds of drone and missile attacks on vessels in the Red Sea, saying they were targeting ships linked to Israel in solidarity with Palestinians over Israel’s war in Gaza.
In May, President Donald Trump announced a surprise US ceasefire agreement with Houthis.


Hamas says attack against leaders in Doha won’t change Gaza ceasefire demands

Hamas says attack against leaders in Doha won’t change Gaza ceasefire demands
Updated 53 min 18 sec ago

Hamas says attack against leaders in Doha won’t change Gaza ceasefire demands

Hamas says attack against leaders in Doha won’t change Gaza ceasefire demands
  • Hamas official said strike targeted group’s negotiating delegation during discussions on new ceasefire proposal
  • Qatar has been hosting and mediating in negotiations aimed at securing a ceasefire in the Gaza war

DOHA: An Israeli attack that targeted Hamas leaders in Qatar this week would not change the Palestinian group’s terms for ending the war in Gaza, an official said on Thursday.

Israel attempted to kill the political leaders of Hamas with an airstrike on Doha on Tuesday, in what US officials described as a unilateral escalation that did not serve American or Israeli interests.

Hamas accused the US on Thursday of complicity in Israel’s deadly attack on its negotiators in Qatar, lambasting Israel for seeking to kill off Gaza truce talks as Doha buried the dead.

In a televised address, Hamas official Fawzi Barhoum said the strike targeted the group’s negotiating delegation while they were discussing a new ceasefire proposal delivered by the Qatari prime minister just a day earlier.

“At the moment of the terrorist attack, the negotiating delegation was in the process of discussing its response to the proposal,” he said.

“This crime was... an assassination of the entire negotiation process and a deliberate targeting of the role of our mediating brothers in Qatar and Egypt,” Barhoum added.

Qatar has been hosting and mediating in negotiations aimed at securing a ceasefire in the Gaza war.

Barhoum reaffirmed Hamas’s key demands: a full ceasefire, the withdrawal of Israeli forces from Gaza, a real prisoner-for-hostage exchange, humanitarian relief and reconstruction of the enclave.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is pushing for an all-or-nothing deal that would see all of the hostages released at once and Hamas surrendering.

Hamas said five of its members had been killed in the attack, including the son of Hamas’s exiled Gaza chief and top negotiator Khalil Al-Hayya.

The attack on Doha drew condemnation from regional powers including Ƶ and the United Arab Emirates, as well as the European Union, and risks derailing US-backed efforts to broker a truce and end the nearly two-year-old conflict.


Lebanese president urges US, France to pressure Israel amid push to disarm Hezbollah

Lebanese president urges US, France to pressure Israel amid push to disarm Hezbollah
Updated 11 September 2025

Lebanese president urges US, France to pressure Israel amid push to disarm Hezbollah

Lebanese president urges US, France to pressure Israel amid push to disarm Hezbollah
  • French envoy Le Drian visits Lebanon as Paris prepares two international aid conferences
  • Israel targets special needs school in escalation of attacks in the south

BEIRUT: Lebanese President Joseph Aoun on Wednesday urged the United States and France to pressure Israel to halt its attacks on Lebanon as the Lebanese army begins rolling out a security plan to disarm Hezbollah and other armed groups.

His statements came during a meeting with French envoy Jean-Yves Le Drian who arrived in Beirut from Ƶ for talks with senior Lebanese officials on the country’s plan to disarm Hezbollah amid escalated Israeli attacks. The meeting also comes as France prepares to host two international aid conferences to support Lebanon’s army and economic reconstruction efforts.

In a statement, Aoun affirmed that the security plan that the Lebanese army has started implementing south of the Litani region to restrict weapons to the state aims to remove all armed groups from the Lebanese and Palestinian sides.

“However, the ongoing Israeli occupation of several Lebanese territories and its refusal to respond to international calls to stop its attacks are preventing the army from completing its deployment up to the international borders,” he added.

Aoun told to Le Drian that “any French or American pressure on Israel to respond to the will of the international community to halt its hostilities would help the Lebanese army complete the security plan.”

He said that the army would continue its work across all territories and borders, setting up barriers and checkpoints under strict orders to confiscate weapons and ammunition from all parties.

According to his media office, Aoun reiterated his gratitude to France for its role in renewing the UNIFIL mandate, noting that the extension for one year and four months as an operational force, and for a full year as a start to the withdrawal from the south, “allows for an organized departure process and gives the Lebanese army sufficient time to strengthen its capabilities, especially if the Israelis withdraw and cease their attacks.”

He thanked French President Emmanuel Macron for his efforts to hold the two international conferences, affirming that Lebanon “is moving forward with economic and financial reforms based on a firm national conviction, and not only in response to the international community demands.”

Aoun noted that holding two conferences to support the army and reconstruction is a vital step, because it establishes the appropriate security environment for economic recovery.

 He said that “solidarity among the Lebanese is unwavering and that political differences are natural in democratic systems.”

The Lebanese government will finalize the draft law on the fiscal gap this month, to be referred to parliament following the approval of the banking secrecy and banking reorganization laws, Aoun said. The step, he added, paves the way for the economic recovery process.

 Le Drian conveyed France’s continued support for Lebanon.

According to the media office of the Presidential Palace, the French envoy briefed Aoun on the outcomes of his calls in Ƶ and commended the steps taken by Lebanon in the Council of Ministers regarding the decision to restrict weapons and assign the army to develop a plan to implement the restriction of weapons.

The French envoy also praised the economic reforms undertaken by Lebanon, which he called “positive signs that enhance the chances of increasing international support for Lebanon.”

During his visit, Le Drian also met with Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri and Prime Minister Nawaf Salam.

His talks centered on two main issues: whether conditions are now favorable for a French-led conference in support of Lebanon to move the idea forward from discussion to implementation. The second concerned the renewal of UNIFIL’s mandate, which was approved by the Security Council at the end of last month, with France acting as the council’s “penholder” on the matter.

Meanwhile, the Israeli army continued its almost daily attacks on Lebanon. On Wednesday, warplanes launched strikes on the eastern mountain range, targeting areas between Janta and Qousaya near the Syrian border.

Israeli forces also targeted a motorcyclist between the southern towns of Ain Baal and Bazouriye, killing Wassim Saeed Jabai, a resident of Hanawieh originally from Aaitat. Hezbollah later announced his death.

Intense Israeli airstrikes also hit the town of Ansar.

The Israeli army claimed on its official radio that it targeted “a site for the production and storage of strategic weapons for Hezbollah in the Bekaa Valley in Lebanon.”

Israeli forces controlling Lebanese border areas blew up a building belonging to a school for people with special needs on the outskirts of Ayta ash-Shaab, a border town.

Hezbollah Secretary-General Sheikh Naim Qassem, who opposes handing over the party’s weapons to the Lebanese army, cited “the ongoing Israeli aggression against Lebanon,” when criticizing the government in a speech on Wednesday.

“How can this government claim to uphold sovereignty and represent the Lebanese people, yet stab the resistance in the back? Why does it seek to abandon Lebanon’s source of strength when it has no alternative means of defense?” he said.

Qassem argued that the US had “abandoned the guarantee it gave concerning Israel’s withdrawal from positions it occupies in the south,” accusing it of seeking to bring Lebanon under control as part of the so-called Greater Israel project.

He said that “the ongoing role of the resistance is in everyone’s interest,” calling for dialogue and consensus: “Let’s engage in dialogue and reach an agreement, don’t let the enemies exploit our divisions,” he concluded.


Norway says it believes Libya coast guard fired upon migrant vessel

Norway says it believes Libya coast guard fired upon migrant vessel
Updated 11 September 2025

Norway says it believes Libya coast guard fired upon migrant vessel

Norway says it believes Libya coast guard fired upon migrant vessel
  • Norway said Libyan authorities must implement measures to prevent similar incidents from happening again

OSLO: Norway’s foreign ministry said on Thursday that it believes a Libyan coast guard vessel on August 24 fired upon a Norwegian-flagged ship, the MV Ocean Viking, which conducts migrant rescue missions in the Mediterranean.
The incident had put the vessel, crew and others on board at risk, the Norwegian foreign ministry said in a statement.
“The Ministry of Foreign Affairs has requested that the incident be investigated to determine what happened, and that Libyan authorities implement measures to prevent similar incidents from happening again,” Norway said.


UAE president visits Oman to strengthen bilateral ties, condemn Israeli attack

UAE president visits Oman to strengthen bilateral ties, condemn Israeli attack
Updated 11 September 2025

UAE president visits Oman to strengthen bilateral ties, condemn Israeli attack

UAE president visits Oman to strengthen bilateral ties, condemn Israeli attack

DUBAI: UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al-Nahyan visited Oman on Thursday, meeting with Sultan Haitham bin Tariq to discuss bilateral cooperation, and regional developments, including the recent Israeli attacks on Qatari territory.

The leaders held talks at Qasr Al Hosn in Salalah, and reviewed the growing cooperation across political, economic, social, and cultural fields, emphasizing the shared commitment to further strengthen Gulf integration and support the progress of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC).

Both leaders condemned the Israeli strikes on Qatar, describing them as a violation of sovereignty, a breach of international law, and a threat to regional stability. They reaffirmed solidarity with Qatar and pledged support for measures taken to protect its security and citizens.

Sheikh Mohamed highlighted the enduring UAE-Oman relationship, tracing its roots to the late Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al-Nahyan and Sultan Qaboos bin Said, whose efforts laid the foundation for strong ties between the two nations.

Anwar Gargash, Diplomatic Advisor to the president of the UAE, said that Israel’s recent attacks on Qatar highlight the region’s volatile environment and that the UAE president was embarking on a Gulf tour to strengthen coordination, enhance cooperation, and reinforce the concept of a “shared destiny” among Gulf nations.