Ƶ

Netanyahu denounces report that Israeli soldiers have orders to shoot at Palestinians seeking aid

Update Netanyahu denounces report that Israeli soldiers have orders to shoot at Palestinians seeking aid
Palestinians carry humanitarian aid packages near the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation distribution center in Khan Younis. (AP)
Short Url
Updated 27 June 2025

Netanyahu denounces report that Israeli soldiers have orders to shoot at Palestinians seeking aid

Netanyahu denounces report that Israeli soldiers have orders to shoot at Palestinians seeking aid
  • Netanyahu and Katz called the report’s findings “malicious falsehoods designed to defame” the military
  • Palestinian witnesses say Israeli troops have opened fire at crowds on the roads heading toward the sites

JERUSALEM: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Israel Katz emphatically rejected a report in the left-leaning Israeli daily Haaretz on Friday, which claimed Israeli soldiers were ordered to shoot at Palestinians approaching aid sites inside Gaza.

They called the report’s findings “malicious falsehoods designed to defame” the military.

More than 500 Palestinians have been killed and hundreds more wounded while seeking food since the newly formed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation began distributing aid in the territory about a month ago, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry.

Palestinian witnesses say Israeli troops have opened fire at crowds on the roads heading toward the sites. Reacting to the Haaretz piece, Israel’s military confirmed that it was investigating incidents in which civilians had been harmed while approaching the sites. It rejected the article’s allegations “of deliberate fire toward civilians.”

The foundation, which is backed by an American private contractor, has been distributing food boxes at four locations, mainly in the far south of Gaza, for the past month.

“GHF is not aware of any of these incidents but these allegations are too grave to ignore and we therefore call on Israel to investigate them and transparently publish the results in a timely manner,” the group said in a social media post.

Palestinians trying to find food have frequently encountered chaos and violence on their way to and on arrival at the aid sites.

Tens of thousands are desperate for food after Israel imposed a 2 1/2 month siege on Gaza, blocking all food, water and medicine from entering the territory pending the setup of the GHF sites.

The bodies of eight people who died Friday had come to Shifa Hospital from a GHF site in Netzarim, although it was not immediately clear how they died, Dr. Mohamed Abu Selmyiha, the hospital’s director, told The Associated Press.

A GHF spokesperson challenged the report, saying they did not know of any incidents at or near their sites Friday.

Twenty other bodies his hospital received Friday came from airstrikes across north Gaza, he said.

Thousands of Palestinians walk for hours to reach the hubs, moving through Israeli military zones where witnesses say Israeli troops regularly open fire with heavy barrages to control the crowds. The Israeli military says it has only fired warning shots.

Mohammad Fawzi, a displaced man from Rafah, told the AP that he was only able to get empty boxes, not food, from the aid site in the Shakoush area in Rafah when he trekked there early Thursday morning.

“We’ve been shot at since 6 a.m. up until 10 a.m. just to get aid and only some people were able to receive it. There are martyrs and injured people. The situation is difficult,” he said.

The group Doctors Without Borders on Friday condemned the distribution system as “a slaughter masquerading as humanitarian aid” and called for it to be immediately shut down.

More than 6,000 people have been killed and more than 20,000 injured in Gaza since the ceasefire collapsed on March 18. Since the war began, more than 56,000 people have been killed and 132,000 injured, according to the health ministry.

The Gaza Health Ministry doesn’t distinguish between civilians and combatants, but has said that women and children make up more than half the 56,000 dead. Israel says it only targets militants and blames civilian deaths on Hamas, accusing the militants of hiding among civilians, because they operate in populated areas.

The Israel-Hamas war started following the Hamas-led attack in southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, when some 1,200 people were killed and around 250 taken hostage. About 50 of them still remain in captivity in Gaza.

The latest deaths include six people killed and 10 wounded in Israeli strikes on a group of citizens near the Martyrs Roundabout in the Bureij Camp in central Gaza Strip, officials at Awda Hospital in Nuseirat said Friday.

The United Nations chief meanwhile urged leaders to show “political courage” and agree to a ceasefire like the one forged between Israel and Iran.

Secretary-General António Guterres also urged a return to the UN’s long-tested distribution system for aid in Gaza, where he said Israeli military operations have created “a humanitarian crisis of horrific proportions..”

“The search for food must never be a death sentence,” Guterres stressed to UN reporters Friday.


World leaders step up efforts behind the scenes at the UN to end the war in Sudan

Updated 19 sec ago

World leaders step up efforts behind the scenes at the UN to end the war in Sudan

World leaders step up efforts behind the scenes at the UN to end the war in Sudan
“For the first time since the war broke out more than two years ago, Sudan’s most influential outside powers agreed this month on a roadmap to end the war,” Boswell said
Diplomats seek a humanitarian truce and ceasefire

UNITED NATIONS: Behind the scenes at the annual gathering of world leaders at the United Nations, key countries and regional organizations have been coordinating efforts to try to end the horrific war in Sudan, which has created the most devastating humanitarian and displacement crisis in the world.
Alan Boswell, the International Crisis Group’s project director for the Horn of Africa, said this year’s high-level General Assembly meeting, which ends Monday, could be “make-or-break” for stopping the conflict.
“For the first time since the war broke out more than two years ago, Sudan’s most influential outside powers agreed this month on a roadmap to end the war,” he said in a statement. “Now comes the huge task of trying to convince Sudan’s warring parties to stop fighting.”
Sudan plunged into conflict in mid-April 2023, when long-simmering tensions between its rival military and paramilitary commanders broke out in the capital, Khartoum, and spread to western Darfur and much of the rest of the country.
At least 40,000 people have been killed, nearly 13 million displaced and many pushed to the brink of famine with over 24 million acutely food insecure, UN agencies say.
Diplomats seek a humanitarian truce and ceasefire
In a key development after a summer of discussions, the United States, Ƶ, Egypt and the United Arab Emirates issued a joint statement on Sept. 12 calling for a humanitarian truce for an initial three months to deliver desperately needed aid throughout Sudan followed by a permanent ceasefire.
Then, the four countries said, “an inclusive and transparent transition process should be launched and concluded within nine months to meet the aspirations of the Sudanese people toward smoothly establishing an independent, civilian-led government with broad-based legitimacy and accountability.”
The group, calling themselves the Quad, met Wednesday on the sidelines of the assembly to discuss implementation of their roadmap.
Another meeting also focused on de-escalating the war was convened Wednesday by the African Union, the European Union and the foreign ministers of Germany, France and the United Kingdom. Representatives of the Quad, a dozen other countries, the Arab League, the United Nations and the east Africa regional group IGAD also attended.
A statement issued by the AU, EU, France, Germany, UK, Denmark, Norway and Canada after the meeting urged the warring government and paramilitary Rapid Support Forces to resume direct negotiations to achieve a permanent ceasefire.
It welcomed the Sept. 12 statement by the Quad, and expressed support for efforts by the AU and the EU “to coordinate international and bilateral efforts to pressure all Sudanese parties toward a ceasefire, humanitarian action and political dialogue.”
The statement strongly condemned the military involvement of unnamed foreign countries and “non-state actors” and urged them to stop fueling the conflict.
RSF accused of crimes against civilians
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, in his “State of the World” speech at the opening of the global gathering Tuesday, made a similar appeal to all parties, including unnamed countries in the vast assembly chamber: “End the external support that is fueling this bloodshed. Push to protect civilians.”
“In Sudan, civilians are being slaughtered, starved, and silenced,” Guterres said. “Women and girls face unspeakable violence.”
The deputy prosecutor of the International Criminal Court said in July that the tribunal believes war crimes and crimes against humanity are taking place in Darfur, where the RSF controls all regional capitals except el-Fasher in North Darfur.
The RSF and their allies announced in late June they had formed a parallel government in areas the group controls. The UN Security Council rejected the plan, warning that a rival government threatens the country’s territorial integrity and risks further exacerbating the ongoing civil war.
Sudan’s Transitional Prime Minister Kamil El-Tayeb Idris accused the RSF of “systematic killing and torture and looting and rape and humiliation and the savage destruction of all the components of life,” part of its effort “to control Sudan, to plunder its wealth and to change the demographics of its population.”
Speaking to the assembly Thursday, he stressed the country’s sovereignty and said the government is committed to a Sudanese-developed roadmap including a ceasefire, “accompanied by the withdrawal of the terrorist Rapid Support militia from the areas and cities it occupies” including el-Fasher.
El-Tayeb said the civilian government he formed will engage in a national dialogue “that includes all political and societal forces to lay the groundwork for elections that are free and fair, and to engage positively with regional and international communities.”
Chad’s Prime Minister Allah Maye Halina told the General Assembly on Thursday that his country, which borders Darfur, is hosting over 2 million refugees from Sudan, 1.5 million of whom arrived since April 2023. He appealed to the international community to help support the refugees, saying more keep arriving.
“We are convinced that the current crisis in Sudan cannot be resolved through weapons, but rather through peaceful means, through inclusive inter-Sudanese dialogue,” he said, stressing that Chad is strictly neutral in the conflict and is available to contribute to any initiative to end the war.

Lebanon ex central bank chief posts record bail: judicial official to AFP

Lebanon ex central bank chief posts record bail: judicial official to AFP
Updated 18 min 45 sec ago

Lebanon ex central bank chief posts record bail: judicial official to AFP

Lebanon ex central bank chief posts record bail: judicial official to AFP
  • Salameh was arrested in September last year and indicted in April for allegedly embezzling $44 million from the central bank
  • He posted more than $14 million in bail Friday after a year in detention over embezzlement allegations, paving the way for his release, a judicial official told AFP

BEIRUT: Lebanon’s former central bank governor Riad Salameh posted more than $14 million in bail Friday after a year in detention over embezzlement allegations, paving the way for his release, a judicial official told AFP.
Salameh, 75, who headed the central bank for three decades, has faced numerous accusations including embezzlement, money laundering and tax evasion in separate probes in Lebanon and abroad.
He has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing.
He was arrested in September last year and indicted in April for allegedly embezzling $44 million from the central bank.
But last month, the judiciary agreed to release Salameh on bail of more than $20 million and with a one-year travel ban, and on Thursday reduced the bail figure upon the request of Salameh’s legal team.
Salameh’s lawyer “paid the bail of $14 million plus five billion Lebanese pounds” (around $55,000) — the highest amount in Lebanese judicial history — and the judge signed the documentation authorizing his release, a judicial official told AFP on condition of anonymity.
The former central bank chief will be released “in the next few hours once legal procedures have been completed,” the official added, noting the travel ban came into effect upon the bail payment.
Salameh has been held in a medical facility near Beirut in recent months due to his deteriorating health.
He had been expected to be automatically released in early September when his detention order expired without trial, a judicial official had told AFP last month.
The judiciary had already issued orders for his release in two other cases in July.
Salameh is widely viewed as a key culprit in Lebanon’s economic crash, which the World Bank has called one of the worst in recent history, but has defended his legacy, insisting he is a “scapegoat.”
He left office at the end of July 2023 and has repeatedly denied the allegations against him, saying his wealth comes from private investment and his previous work at US investment firm Merrill Lynch.


Tehran, Moscow sign $25bn deal to build nuclear plants in Iran: state media

Tehran, Moscow sign $25bn deal to build nuclear plants in Iran: state media
Updated 14 min 44 sec ago

Tehran, Moscow sign $25bn deal to build nuclear plants in Iran: state media

Tehran, Moscow sign $25bn deal to build nuclear plants in Iran: state media
  • Iran and Russia signed a $25 billion deal to build nuclear power plants in the Islamic republic, Iranian state media reported Friday, just hours ahead of the likely return of sweeping UN sanctions

TEHRAN: Iran and Russia signed a $25 billion deal to build nuclear power plants in the Islamic republic, Iranian state media reported Friday, just hours ahead of the likely return of sweeping UN sanctions on Iran.
“A deal for the construction of four nuclear power plants with a value of $25 billion in Sirik, Hormozgan was signed between the Iran Hormoz company and Rosatom,” state television said.
Iran has just one operational nuclear power plant in Bushehr in the south, with a capacity of 1,000 megawatts — just a fraction of the country’s energy needs.
According to state news agency IRNA, each plant will have a capacity of 1,255 megawatts, though no details were provided on the timeline.
The move comes as so-called snapback sanctions triggered by the European parties to a landmark 2015 nuclear deal with Iran are set to return by the end of Saturday.
Britain, France and Germany triggered the sanctions last month, accusing of Iran of failing to adhere to its commitments under the agreement.
At a Security Council session on Friday, China and Russia put forward a draft resolution to allow another half year for talks, but it is unlikely to garner enough support to pass.
Western countries have long accused Iran of seeking an atomic bomb — a charge Tehran vehemently denies, defending its right to a civilian nuclear program.
The United States in 2018 unilaterally pulled out of the nuclear accord with Iran, prompting Tehran to begin walking back its commitments.
Talks between Washington and Tehran to strike a new deal were underway, before being derailed by unprecedented Israeli strikes on Iran in June that began a 12-day war briefly joined by the United States.
Iran had previously signed with Russia a nuclear energy deal in 1993 allowing for the construction of the Bushehr plant, after Germany had abandoned it in the wake of the Islamic revolution of 1979.


Cash strapped Palestinian Authority welcomes foreign fund pledges

Cash strapped Palestinian Authority welcomes foreign fund pledges
Updated 26 September 2025

Cash strapped Palestinian Authority welcomes foreign fund pledges

Cash strapped Palestinian Authority welcomes foreign fund pledges
  • Donor countries including Ƶ, Germany and Spain pledged at least $170 million to finance the budget of the Ramallah-based PA in New York on Thursday, according to Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Mustafa’s office
  • The announcement came as world leaders gathered for the UN General Assembly, with a recent string of recognitions of the State of Palestine by countries including France and Britain

RAMALLAH: The Palestinian Authority welcomed on Friday foreign fund pledges it said would help it keep government services going while Israel withholds tax revenues it collects on its behalf.
Donor countries including Ƶ, Germany and Spain pledged at least $170 million to finance the budget of the Ramallah-based PA in New York on Thursday, according to Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Mustafa’s office.
The announcement came as world leaders gathered for the UN General Assembly, with a recent string of recognitions of the State of Palestine by countries including France and Britain.
Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas, who on Thursday addressed the General Assembly by video, rejected any future role for Hamas in Palestinian governance.
Since Hamas seized total control of Gaza in 2007, the PA has had no leadership role there.
The PA had sought $400 million a month for six months, and the prime minister’s spokesman Mohammad Abu Al-Rob told AFP it was unclear whether the pledged funds would be renewed.
The PA has long been in fiscal crisis, but its finances were further hit by the war in Gaza, with Israel withholding tax revenue meant for the PA.
In the West Bank, services provided by the PA have deteriorated in recent months, with Israel stopping tax revenue transfers amounting to 68 percent of the authority’s budget, according to Abu Al-Rob.
“Who can continue working while losing 60 percent? Which country can continue offering services?” he said.
Because of the cuts, schools in the West Bank opened late this year, and were still only opening three days a week, he added.
The cuts have also “reduced work to the lowest limit for emergency cases and operations,” while also hitting medicine stocks, he said.

- ‘Economic strangulation’ -

Palestinians living in poverty were also affected, Abu Al-Rob said, with their numbers rising by over 150 percent since the start of the Gaza war, and with cash assistance not paid out in over two months.
An increase in the number of Israeli checkpoints in the West Bank, and a reduction in work permits for West Bank Palestinians seeking work inside Israel have had a drastic impact.
The Palestinian economy is largely governed by the 1994 Paris Protocol, which granted sole control over the territories’ borders to Israel, and with it the right to collect import duties and value-added tax for the PA.
Israel says that some of the money it withholds is meant to pay back costs such as electricity it sells to Palestinians.
But Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, who stopped all payments to the PA four months ago, has said he would pursue the collapse of the Palestinian government through “economic strangulation” to prevent the creation of a Palestinian state.


Fire and building collapse in Egypt’s Nile Delta kills 8, injures 29

Fire and building collapse in Egypt’s Nile Delta kills 8, injures 29
Updated 26 September 2025

Fire and building collapse in Egypt’s Nile Delta kills 8, injures 29

Fire and building collapse in Egypt’s Nile Delta kills 8, injures 29

CAIRO: A building in Egypt’s Nile Delta partially collapsed following a fire that broke out Friday at dawn, killing at least eight people and injuring 29 others, according to officials.
An electrical short circuit caused a boiler to explode and a fire to break out on the second floor of a dye business in el-Mahalla city, which is known for textile manufacturing, in Gharbia province. That led to the partial collapse of the building, said the governor’s media office in a statement.
Gov. Ashraf Al-Gendy, who visited the site, said in a statement that emergency response crews fully contained the fire and removing destroyed parts of the building, but rescuers are still trying to pull out three people from under the rubble. Their conditions are unclear.
The labor ministry said in a statement that some members of the civil defense personnel died while extinguishing the fire. One of the injured is in intensive care, eight are still in the hospital and the others have been treated and released, according to the governor’s office.
In July, a fire engulfed the main telecom company building in downtown Cairo, injuring at least 14 people and prompting a temporary outage of Internet and mobile phone services.