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7 Israeli troops are killed in a Gaza bombing as Palestinian officials say Israeli attacks kill 79

Update 7 Israeli troops are killed in a Gaza bombing as Palestinian officials say Israeli attacks kill 79
Over 860 Israeli soldiers have been killed since the Hamas attack on Oct. 7, 2023, including more than 400 during the fighting inside Gaza. (AFP file photo)
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Updated 25 June 2025

7 Israeli troops are killed in a Gaza bombing as Palestinian officials say Israeli attacks kill 79

7 Israeli troops are killed in a Gaza bombing as Palestinian officials say Israeli attacks kill 79
  • The army’s chief spokesman said the soldiers were attacked in Khan Younis
  • “Helicopters and rescue forces were sent to the spot. They made attempts to rescue the fighters, but without success,” he said

JERUSALEM: Israel on Wednesday reported one of its deadliest days in Gaza in months as its military said seven soldiers were killed when a Palestinian attacker attached a bomb to their armored vehicle, while health officials in the battered enclave said Israeli attacks killed 79 people over the past day.

The attack on the Israeli troops, which occurred on Tuesday, quickly drew the nation’s attention back to the grinding conflict with the Hamas militant group after nearly two weeks of war between Israel and Iran.

Among the 79 reported killed in Gaza were 33 people who died while trying to access aid. Palestinian witnesses and health officials say Israeli forces have repeatedly opened fire on crowds heading toward desperately needed food, killing hundreds in recent weeks.

The military says it has fired warning shots at people it said approached its forces in a suspicious manner.

Israel returns its attention to Gaza

Israel has been fighting in Gaza since the Hamas-led attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. US-led ceasefire efforts have repeatedly stalled.

Brig. Gen. Effie Defrin, the army’s chief spokesman, said the soldiers were attacked in the southern Gaza city of Khan Younis, where the army has operated on and off throughout much of the war.

“Helicopters and rescue forces were sent to the spot. They made attempts to rescue the fighters, but without success,” he said.

The army said another soldier was seriously wounded in a separate incident in Khan Younis. It gave no further details, but Hamas claimed on its Telegram channel it had ambushed Israeli soldiers taking cover inside a residential building.

Over 860 Israeli soldiers have been killed since the war began, including more than 400 during the fighting in Gaza.

The initial Hamas attack killed some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and took 251 others hostage. Some 50 hostages remain in captivity, at least 20 of whom are believed to still be alive.

Palestinians eager for a ceasefire of their own

With a fragile ceasefire holding between Israel and Iran, US President Donald Trump said there has been “great progress” in Gaza ceasefire talks, without elaborating.

“I think we’re going to have some very good news,” Trump told reporters at the NATO summit. He credited the US interference in the Israel-Iran war for progress on Gaza, saying that “I think that it helped a little bit, it showed a lot of power.”

Some Palestinians in Gaza City expressed frustration that the war has dragged on for nearly two years, while the conflict between Israel and Iran lasted 12 days before a fragile ceasefire.

“I live in a tent and now my tent is gone too and we’re living in suffering here. The war between Israel and Iran ended in less than two weeks and we’ve been dying for two years,” said Um Zidan, a woman displaced from northern Gaza.

Gaza health authorities had announced on Tuesday that the number of Palestinians killed in the war has risen above 56,000. Experts say Israel’s blockade and military campaign have driven the population to the brink of famine.

Mazen Al-Jomla, a displaced resident of Shati camp, questioned why war in the coastal enclave has stretched on, noting that Israel’s assault on Iran was based on accusations of possessing nuclear weapons.

“We have been suffering for two years; from horrors, destruction, martyrs and injured people,” he said. “What do they (Israel) have left here? There are no houses, trees, or rocks, or humans left. Everything was destroyed.”

First aid convoy in months reaches Gaza City

The war has triggered a spiraling humanitarian crisis in the territory, which only worsened when Israel cut off aid for weeks earlier this year. Israel is now letting a limited amount of goods into the territory, which aid groups say is too little.

On Wednesday, aid reached Gaza’s main city for the first time since March after deliveries were plagued by looting and coordination issues between aid agencies and the Israeli military.

People cheered as a convoy of aid trucks, some carrying flour, arrived.

Ahmad Nattat said he hoped regular aid deliveries would replace having to go to collection points by the American-led Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, which have been chaotic and fatal due to stampedes and gunfire.

“Instead of those young men putting their lives at risk to get flour if they’re lucky … there is aid now that could be fairly distributed among all the people,” he said, standing between tents and rubble of destroyed buildings. “I pray to God that it’s distributed quickly to people so everyone can have some aid.


Greta Thunberg among Gaza flotilla detainees to leave Israel

Greta Thunberg among Gaza flotilla detainees to leave Israel
Updated 06 October 2025

Greta Thunberg among Gaza flotilla detainees to leave Israel

Greta Thunberg among Gaza flotilla detainees to leave Israel
  • Those flying out of Israel on Monday include 28 French citizens, 27 Greeks, 15 Italians, and nine Swedes

ATHENS: Swedish activist Greta Thunberg will be among more than 70 people of different nationalities to leave Israel on Monday after they were seized aboard an intercepted Gaza aid flotilla.
Most, if not all, those being released from Israeli detention will be flown to Greece, where they will be able to get flights to their home countries, their respective governments said on Sunday.
Those flying out of Israel on Monday include 28 French citizens, 27 Greeks, 15 Italians, and nine Swedes.
Twenty-one Spaniards separately returned to Spain on Sunday from Israel.
The release still leaves several foreigners in Israeli custody, including 28 Spanish nationals.
All had been on board the 45-vessel Global Sumud Flotilla carrying activists and politicians, who had been aiming to get past an Israeli blockade to deliver aid to Gaza, where the United Nations says famine has taken hold.
Israel started intercepting the ships in international waters on Wednesday. An Israeli official said on Thursday that boats with more than 400 people on board had been prevented from reaching the Palestinian territory.
The Italian and Greek foreign ministries said their released nationals would on Monday fly from Israel to Athens. Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani said on X that the 15 Italians would have assistance for a subsequent transfer to Italy.
France’s foreign ministry said the 28 French citizens would be flown to Greece. They accounted for most of the 30 French nationals Israel seized aboard the flotilla.
The Swedish foreign ministry did not say where the Swedes would fly to, but Swedish media said they, too, could be put on the flight to Greece.

- ‘Treated like monkeys’ -

A first group of 26 Italians already left Israel on Saturday. But the last 15 had to wait for their judicial expulsion from the country as they refused to sign a form allowing their voluntary release.
Several of the Italians in the first group said after returning to their country that they were subjected to degrading treatment by the Israeli authorities.
Saverio Tommasi, a journalist for the online media site Fanpage, said he was hit in the back and on the head by his Israeli captors.
“We were treated like old monkeys in the worst circuses of the 1920s,” said Tommasi, cited by the Ansa press agency.
Sweden’s Foreign Minister Maria Malmer Stenergard told AFP that embassy staff in Tel Aviv had been able to visit the nine Swedes in detention.
“Late Sunday, the Israeli authorities informed us that they were set to authorize the Swedish citizens to leave Israel tomorrow (Monday) by plane,” she said.
One of the Spaniards who returned home on Sunday, Rafael Borrego, told reporters that those detained by Israel had suffered “repeated physical and mental abuse,” including receiving blows and being forced to the ground.


Trump urges Gaza peace negotiators to ‘move fast’

Trump urges Gaza peace negotiators to ‘move fast’
Updated 06 October 2025

Trump urges Gaza peace negotiators to ‘move fast’

Trump urges Gaza peace negotiators to ‘move fast’
  • I am told that the first phase should be completed this week, and I am asking everyone to MOVE FAST”

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump on Sunday urged Hamas and Israeli negotiators gathering in Egypt for crucial talks aimed at ending the war in Gaza to “move fast,” adding that there had been “very positive discussions” with the Palestinian armed group.
“There have been very positive discussions with Hamas, and Countries from all over the World (Arab, Muslim, and everyone else) this weekend, to release the Hostages, end the War in Gaza but, more importantly, finally have long sought PEACE in the Middle East,” he posted on his Truth Social platform.
“These talks have been very successful, and proceeding rapidly. The technical teams will again meet Monday, in Egypt, to work through and clarify the final details. I am told that the first phase should be completed this week, and I am asking everyone to MOVE FAST.”
 

 


Turkiye bans Oct 7 Robbie Williams concert over ‘safety concerns’

Turkish anti-riot police officers stand guard in Diyarbakir, on November 4, 2024. (AFP)
Turkish anti-riot police officers stand guard in Diyarbakir, on November 4, 2024. (AFP)
Updated 06 October 2025

Turkiye bans Oct 7 Robbie Williams concert over ‘safety concerns’

Turkish anti-riot police officers stand guard in Diyarbakir, on November 4, 2024. (AFP)
  • Several NGOs urged Turkish authorities to cancel the October 7 concert, and others including the Islamic Solidarity Platform had planned protests under the slogan “Zionist Robbie Williams, get out of Turkiye!“

ISTANBUL: Turkish authorities have banned a Robbie Williams concert scheduled for October 7 in Istanbul over “safety concerns” following several calls for protest, a source from the city governor’s office told AFP Sunday.
The concert would have occurred on the anniversary of the devastating Hamas-led attacks in Israel that triggered war in Gaza and a global protest movement against it.
The organizing company announced the concert’s cancelation “in line with a decision made by the Istanbul governor’s office,” adding that ticket refunds would be processed shortly through the platform where they were purchased.
Speaking to AFP, the source from the governor’s office cited “safety concerns” without elaborating further.
The British singer Williams, whose wife is Jewish, performed in Israel in 2015 and 2023 despite calls from pro-Palestinian activists to boycott the country.
Several NGOs urged Turkish authorities to cancel the October 7 concert, and others including the Islamic Solidarity Platform had planned protests under the slogan “Zionist Robbie Williams, get out of Turkiye!“
“I am extremely sorry that I will not be able to perform in Istanbul next week,” the 51-year-old announced on his Instagram story.
“City authorities have canceled the show, in the interests of public safety,” he said.
“The last thing I would ever want to do is to jeopardize the safety of my fans — their safety and security come first.”
In September, Turkish authorities banned an Enrico Macias concert in Istanbul after calls to protest the French singer’s pro-Israel views.
The 86-year-old singer told AFP at the time that he had performed in Turkiye for 60 years and was “deeply surprised and saddened not to be able to see my audience, with whom I have always shared values of peace and fraternity.”
 

 


Hamas chief negotiator Khalil Al-Hayya arrives in Egypt ahead of talks: statement

Hamas chief negotiator Khalil Al-Hayya arrives in Egypt ahead of talks: statement
Updated 06 October 2025

Hamas chief negotiator Khalil Al-Hayya arrives in Egypt ahead of talks: statement

Hamas chief negotiator Khalil Al-Hayya arrives in Egypt ahead of talks: statement
  • Khalil Al-Hayya broke his silence earlier on Sunday with a pre-recorded TV appearance that aired in Qatar
  • Both Hamas and Israel have responded positively to US President Donald Trump’s roadmap for Gaza

CAIRO: Hamas’s top negotiator Khalil Al-Hayya arrived in Egypt on Sunday at the head of a delegation, the Palestinian movement said, set to engage in indirect talks with Israel for a hostage-prisoner exchange and a ceasefire in Gaza.
The meetings set to take place Monday in the Egyptian resort town of Sharm Al-Sheikh will be Hayya’s first since Israel targeted him and other Hamas leaders in strikes on Doha last month.
He broke his silence earlier on Sunday with a pre-recorded TV appearance that aired in Qatar, which had mediated successive rounds of talks along with Egypt and the United States.
The Palestinian movement said the delegation led by Hayya arrived in Egypt “to begin negotiations on mechanisms for a ceasefire, the withdrawal of occupation forces and a prisoner exchange.”
Both Hamas and Israel have responded positively to US President Donald Trump’s roadmap for an end to the fighting and the release of captives in Gaza in exchange for Palestinians held in Israeli jails, though the details remain to be ironed out.
The Israeli delegation will depart for Sharm El-Sheikh on Monday, according to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office.
Trump has sent two emissaries to help finalize the deal: his special envoy Steve Witkoff, and his son-in-law Jared Kushner.
Hayya had made no mention of the talks or a possible ceasefire in his address Sunday, in which he mourned his son and five others who were killed in the Doha strike.
Hamas’s top officials are believed to have survived the targeted strike on Doha, which killed six people and sparked a wave of criticism, along with a rebuke from US President Donald Trump and an apology to Qatar from Netanyahu.


Jordan, Syria carry out first anti-narcotics operation since Assad regime’s collapse

Jordan, Syria carry out first anti-narcotics operation since Assad regime’s collapse
Updated 05 October 2025

Jordan, Syria carry out first anti-narcotics operation since Assad regime’s collapse

Jordan, Syria carry out first anti-narcotics operation since Assad regime’s collapse
  • The operation was the result of months of field coordination and intelligence sharing
  • It is the first joint Jordanian and Syrian crackdown on drugs since the collapse of the Assad regime in December 2024

LONDON: Jordanian and Syrian anti-narcotics authorities have cracked down on drug networks in a cross-border coordination effort, foiling several smuggling attempts and seizing large quantities of toxic substances.

The Anti-Narcotics Departments of Jordan and Syria announced in a joint statement on Sunday that their forces have foiled seven smuggling attempts along the Jordanian-Syrian border and seized nearly one million narcotic pills that were intended for illegal distribution across the Middle East.

It is the first major operation between the two countries’ anti-narcotics authorities since the collapse of the Assad regime in December 2024, which has been accused of profiting from the production and trafficking of drugs, specifically the Captagon pill.

Jordanian and Syrian authorities said that the joint operation was the result of months of field coordination and intelligence sharing, which led to the dismantling of organized criminal networks that posed a direct threat to the security of both countries.

Authorities arrested multiple individuals involved in criminal activities in both Jordan and Syria, disrupting their plans to manufacture, smuggle, and distribute illegal drugs, according to the Petra news agency.

The anti-narcotics departments of Jordan and Syria reaffirmed their commitment to ongoing security and intelligence cooperation to combat drug trafficking and smuggling across the region.

They reaffirmed their determination to protect society from the dangers of narcotics and their destabilizing effects on regional security, the Petra added.

The operation follows a Jordanian-Syrian agreement in January to establish a joint security committee aimed at securing their border, combating arms and drug smuggling, and preventing the resurgence of the terror group Daesh.