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Syrian president hails Pope Francis for solidarity in ‘darkest moments’

A message board for the late Pope Francis is covered with writings from Catholic devotees outside St. Peter Parish in Quezon city, Philippines, Thursday, April 24, 2025. (AP)
A message board for the late Pope Francis is covered with writings from Catholic devotees outside St. Peter Parish in Quezon city, Philippines, Thursday, April 24, 2025. (AP)
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Updated 24 April 2025

Syrian president hails Pope Francis for solidarity in ‘darkest moments’

A message board for the late Pope Francis is covered with writings from Catholic devotees outside St. Peter Parish.
  • Sharaa said of Francis: “His calls transcended political boundaries, and his legacy of moral courage and solidarity will remain alive in the hearts of many people”

DAMASCUS: Syria’s interim President Ahmed Al-Sharaa paid tribute to Pope Francis, saying he had supported the Syrian people in “their darkest moments.”


The Argentine pontiff, who died on Monday aged 88, “supported the Syrian people in their darkest moments, constantly raising his voice against the violence and injustice they faced,” Sharaa said in a statement on Wednesday.


Syria’s civil war began in 2011 with a crackdown by president Bashar Assad on a pro-democracy movement.


By the time Assad was ousted in an offensive led by Sharaa on December 8, more than 500,000 people had been killed and more than half the population displaced.


Syria is home to a majority Sunni Muslim population, but also a sizeable Christian minority from several denominations, as well as other religious minorities.


Extending condolences to Catholics, Sharaa said of Francis: “His calls transcended political boundaries, and his legacy of moral courage and solidarity will remain alive in the hearts of many people in our country.”


Syria’s Christian community has shrunk from around one million before the war to under 300,000 due to waves of displacement and emigration.


The capital Damascus is home to one of the oldest Christian communities in the world but its Christian population dwindled to only about two percent, the Vatican said last year.


While the war began as a crackdown on peaceful protests, religion and ethnicity swiftly came into focus as groups battling each other became increasingly radicalized.


Syria’s Christian community generally either supported the government or sought to be neutral in the war, with Assad, himself from the minority Alawite sect, portraying himself as a protector of minorities.


Critics of Assad, however, accused him of using minority communities to prop himself up, and of meting out especially brutal punishment for any detained members of minority communities who dared to voice dissent.


Sharaa and the new government are under pressure from Western countries to ensure they are inclusive in their exercise of power.


Sharaa, now the president of Syria, was the former head of the country’s Al-Qaeda offshoot, a radical Sunni Muslim group widely proscribed as a terrorist organization.


Since Assad’s ouster, the most serious violence to hit Syria was a massacre on the Mediterranean coast in March, which according to a war monitor saw more than 1,700 people killed.


The victims were mostly members of the Alawite minority of ousted president Assad.


UN demands probe into Gaza aid flotilla ‘attacks’

UN demands probe into Gaza aid flotilla ‘attacks’
Updated 5 sec ago

UN demands probe into Gaza aid flotilla ‘attacks’

UN demands probe into Gaza aid flotilla ‘attacks’
  • “There must be an independent, impartial and thorough investigation ” on the Global Sumud Flotilla, Al-Kheetan said

GENEVA: The United Nations called Wednesday for an investigation into alleged drone “attacks” against a Gaza-bound aid flotilla, saying anyone responsible for the “violations” should be held accountable.


“There must be an independent, impartial and thorough investigation into the reported attacks and harassment by drones and other objects” on the Global Sumud Flotilla, which said a dozen explosions were heard around its ships late Tuesday, UN Human Rights Office spokesperson Thameen Al-Kheetan said in a statement.


UN peacekeepers say Israeli drone crashed into their headquarters without inflicting casualties

UN peacekeepers say Israeli drone crashed into their headquarters without inflicting casualties
Updated 24 min 21 sec ago

UN peacekeepers say Israeli drone crashed into their headquarters without inflicting casualties

UN peacekeepers say Israeli drone crashed into their headquarters without inflicting casualties
  • UNIFIL said that its explosive ordnance disposal experts secured and neutralized the drone immediately
  • UNIFIL said the Israeli military “subsequently confirmed the drone belonged to them”

BEIRUT: An Israeli drone crashed into the headquarters of the UN peacekeeping force in southern Lebanon but didn’t cause any casualties, the force said in a statement Wednesday.
The force, known as UNIFIL, said that by flying drones over Lebanon Israel was violating a UN Security Council resolution that helped end the 14-month Israel-Hezbollah war. Resolution 1701, which was first approved in 2006 to end a previous round of fighting, calls for both sides to respect the other’s airspace.
UNIFIL said that its explosive ordnance disposal experts secured and neutralized the drone immediately after it hit the headquarters in the Lebanese border town of Naqoura on Tuesday afternoon. UNIFIL added that the drone was not armed but was equipped with a camera.
There was no immediate comment from the Israeli military.
UNIFIL said the Israeli military “subsequently confirmed the drone belonged to them.”
The peacekeeping force said that while peacekeepers are prepared to take action against threats to their safety, “this device fell on its own.”
The incident came two weeks after UNIFIL said Israeli drones dropped four grenades close to peacekeepers in southern Lebanon near the border with Israel as they were working to clear roadblocks. No one was hurt in the strike.
The most recent Israel-Hezbollah war killed more than 4,000 people in Lebanon, including hundreds of civilians, and caused an estimated $11 billion worth of destruction, according to the World Bank. In Israel, 127 people died, including 80 soldiers.
The war started when Hezbollah began firing rockets across the border on Oct. 8, 2023, a day after a deadly Hamas-led incursion into southern Israel sparked the war in Gaza. Israel responded with shelling and airstrikes in Lebanon, and the two sides became locked in an escalating conflict that became a full-blown war in late September 2024.


A mother stranded in Gaza City says she and her daughters are ‘waiting to die’

A mother stranded in Gaza City says she and her daughters are ‘waiting to die’
Updated 45 min 37 sec ago

A mother stranded in Gaza City says she and her daughters are ‘waiting to die’

A mother stranded in Gaza City says she and her daughters are ‘waiting to die’
  • Her husband is in an Israeli prison, and she and her young girls are among the hundreds of thousands of Palestinians still in Gaza City
  • “It feels like we’re just waiting to die, I don’t really care that much anymore,” Abu Hassira wrote over text

GAZA CITY: Explosions shake the walls of the dim basement in Gaza City where Noor Abu Hassira and her three daughters are sheltering.
They can’t see much through a small, raised window. But if the sounds of buzzing drones and booming airstrikes are any indication, Israeli forces are getting closer.
Abu Hassira is staying behind despite Israeli warnings to evacuate. She has debilitating leg injuries from an airstrike that destroyed her home at the start of the war and, like many in the devastated territory, she cannot come up with the $2,000 she says it would cost to move to southern Gaza and pitch a tent in a displacement camp.
While most Palestinians in Gaza City have fled south at some point in the 23-month long war, Abu Hassira has been largely bedridden — except for the 11 times she’s had to relocate within her city to keep safe from Israeli assaults.
Her husband is in an Israeli prison, and she and her young girls — Jouri, Maria and Maha — are among the hundreds of thousands of Palestinians still in Gaza City, which before the war had a million residents.
“It feels like we’re just waiting to die, I don’t really care that much anymore,” Abu Hassira wrote over text.
Israel says its offensive is aimed at destroying Hamas and freeing hostages taken during the attack that started the war. It says it is taking steps to mitigate harm to civilians.
If the Abu Hassira family could somehow make it to the south, their troubles would not be over.
“I’m afraid to live in a tent with my daughters. I’m afraid we will drown in the winter. I’m afraid of insects. How will we get water?” she said.
An airstrike destroyed their home

Eight months before the war, Abu Hassira and her family moved into an apartment in Gaza City. She worked as a medical lab technician. Her husband, Raed, was a journalist for a media outlet suspected of links to Hamas. Abu Hassira said her husband was not a member of the militant group.
Jouri, their oldest, was in elementary school. Maria was about to start kindergarten. Maha was just a baby.
“We worked and saved for 10 years to have a comfortable, nice home — our dream house. Now it’s gone,” she said.
After Hamas-led militants attacked Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing 1,200 and abducting 251 people, Israel responded with heavy airstrikes across Gaza and a ground invasion. That December, the Abu Hassiras’ apartment building was struck.
The blast collapsed a concrete pillar that pinned Abu Hassira under the rubble, shattering her shoulders, back and legs and knocking her into a coma. Her daughters were also buried in the rubble, though all survived.
Israeli troops raided the hospital
Abu Hassira awoke at Shifa Hospital. Her daughter, Maria, lay beside her with a fractured skull.
Israeli forces had raided the hospital weeks earlier, accusing Hamas of sheltering there. Supplies were running low. It was packed with displaced families and doctors were preoccupied with a steady flow of casualties coming through the gates.
Her husband sent the other two girls to stay with an uncle so he could care for the mother and daughter at the hospital.
“He would change my diapers, my clothes,” Abu Hassira said. “I lay on my back for three months, and he took care of me, combed my hair, and bathed me.”
In March 2024, Israeli troops raided the hospital again, arresting scores of men, including Abu Hassira’s husband. He is now one of hundreds of Palestinian men Israel has rounded up during the war whose whereabouts and legal status remain unknown.
She hasn’t heard from him, but Addameer, a Palestinian legal aid group, said an attorney visited him in an Israeli prison last November. Israel’s prison service, Shin Bet intelligence agency and military declined to say why he was arrested or where he was being held.
“Maha was just over a year old when they took her father away,” Abu Hassira said. “She’s never once said the word ‘daddy.’”
She feared her daughters would die
Israel’s military said it killed some 200 militants over two weeks of fighting inside the sprawling Shifa hospital. The World Health Organization said 21 patients died during the siege. Israel denied harming civilians.
Abu Hassira, who said soldiers told her to leave, fled the incursion with a single bag, leaving her wheelchair and most of her clothes and food behind. The family spent the rest of the year moving from one place to another as Israel carried out raids in and around Gaza City.
“The hardest part is living at other people’s homes ... especially with small children, and everything is expensive. I had no clothes or belongings, so I had to use theirs,” she said.
In the fall of 2024, Israel largely sealed off northern Gaza, including Gaza City, launching major ground operations and heavily restricting humanitarian aid. Clean water was hard to find. They ate little more than bread. Jouri, her oldest, grew malnourished and sick.
“I felt weak, lonely, helpless,” Abu Hassira said. “I was terrified my daughters would die and I couldn’t do anything for them.”
A neighbor volunteered to take Jouri to a malnutrition program where the girl began to recover.
In January, a long-awaited ceasefire took hold, raising hopes that the war would wind down. Hundreds of thousands of people returned to Gaza City, Abu Hassira’s extended family was reunited, and Israel allowed humanitarian aid to flow in.
The war resumes
But Israel shattered the ceasefire in March, launching more airstrikes after halting imports of food, medicine and other goods — a complete blockade that would only be eased 2 ½ months later.
In Gaza City, families like the Abu Hassiras are often without food, which costs 10 times what it did before the war: a kilogram (2.2 pounds) of sugar around $180, a kilogram of flour around $60.
Over 65,000 Palestinians have been killed in the war, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, which doesn’t distinguish between civilians and combatants. The ministry is part of the Hamas-run government, but UN agencies and many independent experts view its figures as the most reliable estimate of casualties.
In August, international experts determined Gaza City was experiencing famine. Weeks later, Israel launched an offensive to occupy the city, saying it was needed to pressure Hamas into releasing 48 remaining hostages, around 20 of them believed by Israel to be alive.
Abu Hassira has seen the evacuation leaflets dropped by Israeli aircraft. Many of her neighbors have packed up and left.
But she can barely walk, and a truck ride south would cost around $900. A tent would cost around $1,100, she says, and who knows where they would put it. The Israeli-designated humanitarian zone largely consists of crowded camps and demolished buildings. Families who have moved to new grounds for the displaced have found them sparse and lawless, with armed gangs patrolling the area to demand rent.
For now, Abu Hassira says she and her daughters will remain in her parents’ basement in the once-upscale Rimal neighborhood, near the Mediterranean Sea. She says she can’t cook or wash, and spends her days sitting in a chair or lying down. She needs help to use the bathroom.
“I wish my daughters and I would die together before we are forced to leave,” she said. “We are exhausted.”


Dengue fever ravages Sudan as infrastructure battered by war

Dengue fever ravages Sudan as infrastructure battered by war
Updated 24 September 2025

Dengue fever ravages Sudan as infrastructure battered by war

Dengue fever ravages Sudan as infrastructure battered by war
  • As millions of people displaced by fighting return to their homes in Sudan while others continue to flee, the unusually high spread of diseases like dengue fever, cholera and malaria this year highlights the hidden costs of almost 30 months of war

KHARTOUM: Tens of thousands of Sudanese people have fallen victim to dengue fever and other diseases, Sudan’s health minister said, as seasonal rains further test infrastructure and hospitals devastated by conflict.
As millions of people displaced by fighting return to their homes in Sudan while others continue to flee, the unusually high spread of diseases like dengue fever, cholera and malaria this year highlights the hidden costs of almost 30 months of war.
The conflict between Sudan’s army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces has created the world’s worst humanitarian crisis and spread famine, and has shown no signs of slowing — although the army has recaptured the capital Khartoum and other parts of the country.
Exhausted patients lie under mosquito nets in packed wards in Omdurman Hospital as they receive intravenous paracetamol drips, the main treatment for the disease which can be fatal on second exposure.

TENS OF THOUSANDS OF CASES
More than 2,000 cases of dengue fever were recorded nationwide over the week ending on Tuesday, mostly in Khartoum, according to the Ministry of Health, but the minister said the real numbers falling ill were likely much higher.
“80 percent of cases are minor and do not reach the hospital so we expect it to be tens of thousands of cases in the past period across Sudan,” Haitham Mohamed Ibrahim told Reuters.
The mosquitoes that carry the disease thrive in stagnant water including inside homes. In Sudan, the rainy season has left pools of standing water across the country, while people have resorted to storing water at home after fighting in the capital has destroyed power grids and running water systems.
“The government isn’t doing anything, the rainwater is stagnant in the street, trash is everywhere and the mosquitoes are growing more and more each day,” said Salaheldin Altayib, a 65-year-old trader in Omdurman who said he and two other family members had fallen ill from dengue fever.

HIGH PREVALENCE OF MOSQUITOES
The minister said systems to spray insecticides had been damaged.
“The continuation of war for more than two years has had a direct impact on the environment, health, the build up of trash and waste, the destruction of water sources, has created a new reality ... of the high prevalence of mosquitoes,” he said.
While efforts to vaccinate the population and treat water have resulted in a relatively controlled cholera outbreak in the capital, the Darfur region has seen the disease peak, with 12,739 cases over the past four months, the World Health Organization said on Tuesday.
Some 61 percent are in the town of Tawila, which has sheltered hundreds of thousands of people fleeing the fighting in and around the city of Al-Fashir, the current epicenter of the violence.
Efforts are also under way to vaccinate people there, the WHO said.
Global aid cuts have hampered the ability to treat these diseases, Ibrahim said. Some $39 million is needed to treat the several concurrent epidemics, he said.
Current UN data shows Sudan’s donor-dependent health care appears to be less than a third funded.


Gaza civil defence says dozens killed in Israeli strikes

Gaza civil defence says dozens killed in Israeli strikes
Updated 24 September 2025

Gaza civil defence says dozens killed in Israeli strikes

Gaza civil defence says dozens killed in Israeli strikes
  • Gaza's civil defence agency said Israeli forces killed dozens of people across the Palestinian territory on Wednesday

GAZA CITY: Gaza's civil defence agency said Israeli forces killed dozens of people across the Palestinian territory on Wednesday, as the military pressed its assault on Gaza City from where hundreds of thousands have been forced to flee.
Israel has launched a major air and ground offensive on Gaza City in a bid to root out Hamas after nearly two years of war.
The United Nations estimated at the end of August that around one million people lived in Gaza City and its surroundings, where it has declared a famine.
The Israeli military says roughly 550,000 people have since fled the city and moved southward, while Gaza's civil defence agency -- a rescue force operating under Hamas authority -- puts the number at around 450,000.
Thaer Saqr, 39, told AFP on Wednesday he had left the Sheikh Radwan neighbourhood of Gaza City the day before to head southwards with his wife, children and sister.
"The tanks on the coastal road... opened fire on us, and my sister was killed," he said.
Saqr said he returned to Gaza City's Al-Shifa Hospital and "will not leave, even if they kill us all."
"I appeal to the world: help us. I say to Israel: you want us to evacuate, but how can we when we have no shekels, no transportation, and no place?"
The civil defence agency said that "hundreds of families" had been sleeping on the ground for days after fleeing from northern Gaza, unable to secure temporary shelter.
Pitiful sight
The civil defence said Israeli forces killed 40 people in attacks across the Gaza Strip on Wednesday, including 22 killed by three air strikes on a warehouse sheltering displaced people near the Firas market in Gaza City.
The agency's spokesman, Mahmud Bassal, said the dead included six women and nine children.
When asked for comment by AFP, the Israeli military said it was "looking into it."
Media restrictions in the territory and difficulties in accessing many areas mean AFP is unable to independently verify the details provided by the civil defence or the Israeli military.
AFP footage following the attack showed a scene of devastation, with Palestinians combing through large piles of rubble and warped metal as two men carried away a body wrapped in tattered blankets.
In the aftermath, sobbing women knelt over their loved ones, hugging their lifeless bodies wrapped in white shrouds.
At least six bodies were laid out on the ground, including two the size of children.
Mohammed Hajjaj, who lost his relatives, told AFP that "heavy bombing" hit the building while people were asleep.
"We came and found children and women torn apart. It was a pitiful sight."
Death was near
Israel launched its US-backed ground offensive on Gaza City earlier in September in a bid to seize the urban hub and crush Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas.
The military has told Palestinians to relocate to a "humanitarian area" in the coastal area of Al-Mawasi in the south, where it says aid, medical care and humanitarian infrastructure will be provided.
Israel first declared the area a safe zone early in the war, but has carried out repeated strikes on it since, saying it is targeting Hamas.
Mahmud al-Dreimly, 44, said he had gone with his family a day earlier to live in a tent in Gaza City's Al-Rimal neighbourhood.
"I saw tanks firing into the air and sometimes at people," he told AFP, adding: "I felt death was near".
Dreimly said he saw tanks in the Tel al-Hawa and Al-Sabra neighbourhoods, as well as on the outskirts of Al-Rimal.
The launch of the ground assault came as a UN probe accused Israel of committing "genocide" in the Gaza Strip.
Israel rejected the findings and slammed the probe as "distorted and false".
Over nearly two years, Israeli military operations have killed at least 65,419 Palestinians, mostly civilians, according to the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza, figures the UN considers reliable.