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Canada urges Israel to open land corridors for Gaza aid

Canada’s Foreign Minister Anita Anand arrives to address the 80th United Nations General Assembly at UN headquarters in New York City, US, September 29, 2025. (Reuters)
Canada’s Foreign Minister Anita Anand arrives to address the 80th United Nations General Assembly at UN headquarters in New York City, US, September 29, 2025. (Reuters)
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Updated 29 September 2025

Canada urges Israel to open land corridors for Gaza aid

Canada urges Israel to open land corridors for Gaza aid
  • Call follows Ottawa’s recognition of Palestine last week
  • FM condemns ‘Israel’s illegal expansion of West Bank settlements’ at UN General Assembly

NEW YORK: Canada on Monday called on Israel to open land corridors for unimpeded access to humanitarian aid at scale in Gaza.

Speaking at the UN General Assembly in New York, Canada’s Foreign Minister Anita Anand also called on Israel to protect the civilian population and health care facilities in the Palestinian enclave.

Canada recognized Palestine last week, marking a shift from its long-standing position that statehood should be the result of a negotiated settlement. 

The decision was announced alongside the UK and Australia, with Canada saying the two-state solution was no longer tenable without this action. 

“Canada recognizes the state of Palestine and offers our partnership in building the promise of a peaceful future,” Prime Minister Mark Carney wrote on X at the time.

Anand said last week’s recognition “reflects long-standing Canadian policy, based on the right of the Palestinian people to self-determination and our commitment to a two-state solution, a future where Israelis and Palestinians live side by side in peace and security.”

The two-state solution is eroding, “as is evident in Israel’s illegal expansion of West Bank settlements,” she added.

Canada has committed over $340 million in humanitarian aid to Gaza, and its military has participated in air drops, Anand said.

She expressed support for partners in the region “who continue their efforts to reach a ceasefire as soon as possible and to contribute to the political processes that must follow. Canada will participate in these processes in every way that we can.”

She added: “We’re committed to efforts to strengthen the capacity of the Palestinian Authority, working collaboratively with partners in the region.”

Anand condemned as “horrific” the Hamas attack on Israel of Oct. 7, 2023, and called the group an “impediment to peace.”

She added: “Canada calls on Hamas to lay down its weapons and to release all remaining hostages immediately. The scope of the humanitarian crisis in Gaza is catastrophic and requires urgent action.”


UK govt under pressure as Labour members vote to recognize Gaza genocide

UK govt under pressure as Labour members vote to recognize Gaza genocide
Updated 29 September 2025

UK govt under pressure as Labour members vote to recognize Gaza genocide

UK govt under pressure as Labour members vote to recognize Gaza genocide
  • Motion passed at party conference weeks after UN report said Israel committing genocide
  • London urged to ‘ban trade with illegal settlements’ and apply ‘comprehensive sanctions,’ including arms embargo

LONDON: The UK government is under pressure to accept that genocide is taking place in Gaza after members of the ruling Labour Party voted to approve an emergency motion at its conference in Liverpool.

It comes two weeks after a UN report said there are sufficient grounds to conclude that Israel has committed genocide in Gaza, and in the wake of the UK decision to recognize Palestine.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer has consistently said it is up to international courts to decide if genocide is taking place.

A case brought by South Africa against Israel is being heard by the International Court of Justice in The Hague.

In the conference motion, passed by a show of hands, delegates called on the UK government to “ban trade with illegal settlements in the occupied West Bank” and apply “comprehensive sanctions,” including an arms embargo. 

The general secretary of the Unison union, Christina McAnea, said: “This is genocide. But if we wait for this to be confirmed by a court, it will be too late, because it’s already happening as we sit here.”

A separate motion titled “Peace in the Middle East” — which urged the government to “fully suspend arms trade with Israel that could be used in the conflict” and “do everything in its power to secure an immediate ceasefire, the withdrawal of Israeli military forces from Gaza and the unrestricted provision of humanitarian assistance” — was not passed.

The government’s position was reiterated following the conference motion vote by Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy.

He said adhering to “the rules-based order” means “it must be for the ICJ with their judges and judiciary, and for the (International Criminal Court), to determine the issue of genocide in relation to the convention. It isn’t for politicians like me to do that.”

He added, though, that “it’s for the public to look at what they see and come to their own judgments,” and that in his previous role as foreign secretary, “I did see a clear risk that Israel was breaching international humanitarian law.”

Ben Jamal, director of the Palestine Solidarity Campaign, said: “This is a huge defeat for the government, with the Labour Party finally accepting that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza.

“This historic vote must now become government policy: imposing comprehensive sanctions on Israel and a full arms embargo.

“After almost two years of complicity in Israel’s genocide, the movement in solidarity with Palestine is turning the tide.

“People across this country are standing side by side with the Palestinian people demanding their liberation.

“If the government tries to ignore this momentous vote, it would not only be in denial of the facts, against public opinion, increasingly globally isolated, but also at war with its own party.”

The co-deputy leader of the Green Party, Mothin Ali, said: “Keir Starmer and his ministers must not waste another second in calling out this act of genocide, end immediately the supply of all arms to Israel and impose strict sanctions on the country.

“It is clear from today’s motion, passed by a majority of Labour members, that the conference would be the right time and place to do this.”

A report by the UN Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory said four of five genocidal acts defined in international law have taken place in Gaza since October 2023: killing members of a group, causing serious mental and bodily harm, deliberately inflicting conditions to destroy the group, and preventing births.

After the report’s release, the UK government said it “has not concluded that Israel is acting with that (genocidal) intent.”


Trump’s 20-point Gaza peace plan as released by White House

Trump’s 20-point Gaza peace plan as released by White House
Updated 29 September 2025

Trump’s 20-point Gaza peace plan as released by White House

Trump’s 20-point Gaza peace plan as released by White House
  • ‘Gaza will be governed under the temporary transitional governance of a technocratic’
  • ‘No one will be forced to leave Gaza, and those who wish to leave will be free to do so and free to return’
  • ‘Once all hostages are returned, Hamas members who commit to peaceful co-existence and to decommission their weapons will be given amnesty’
  • Trump will head and chair the “Board of Peace,” alongside former British prime minister Tony Blair, which will oversee the work of the Gaza transitional administration

WASHINGTON: After days of speculation, the White House on Monday released a 20-point plan for ending the nearly two-year war in Gaza, releasing hostages held by Hamas, and outlining the Palestinian territory’s future.
Speaking alongside President Donald Trump at the White House, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu gave cautious backing to the plan.

Here is the plan, as released by the White House:

1. Gaza will be a deradicalized terror-free zone that does not pose a threat to its neighbors.
2. Gaza will be redeveloped for the benefit of the people of Gaza, who have suffered more than enough.
3. If both sides agree to this proposal, the war will immediately end. Israeli forces will withdraw to the agreed upon line to prepare for a hostage release. During this time, all military operations, including aerial and artillery bombardment, will be suspended, and battle lines will remain frozen until conditions are met for the complete staged withdrawal.
4. Within 72 hours of Israel publicly accepting this agreement, all hostages, alive and deceased, will be returned.
5. Once all hostages are released, Israel will release 250 life sentence prisoners plus 1,700 Gazans who were detained after October 7th 2023, including all women and children detained in that context. For every Israeli hostage whose remains are released, Israel will release the remains of 15 deceased Gazans.
6. Once all hostages are returned, Hamas members who commit to peaceful co-existence and to decommission their weapons will be given amnesty. Members of Hamas who wish to leave Gaza will be provided safe passage to receiving countries.
7. Upon acceptance of this agreement, full aid will be immediately sent into the Gaza Strip. At a minimum, aid quantities will be consistent with what was included in the January 19, 2025, agreement regarding humanitarian aid, including rehabilitation of infrastructure (water, electricity, sewage), rehabilitation of hospitals and bakeries, and entry of necessary equipment to remove rubble and open roads.

Displaced Palestinian children wave Palestinian national flags as they stand on the rubble of a destroyed building at the Bureij camp for refugees. (AFP)

8. Entry of distribution and aid in the Gaza Strip will proceed without interference from the two parties through the United Nations and its agencies, and the Red Crescent, in addition to other international institutions not associated in any manner with either party. Opening the Rafah crossing in both directions will be subject to the same mechanism implemented under the January 19, 2025 agreement.
9. Gaza will be governed under the temporary transitional governance of a technocratic, apolitical Palestinian committee, responsible for delivering the day-to-day running of public services and municipalities for the people in Gaza. This committee will be made up of qualified Palestinians and international experts, with oversight and supervision by a new international transitional body, the “Board of Peace,” which will be headed and chaired by President Donald J. Trump, with other members and heads of State to be announced, including Former Prime Minister Tony Blair. This body will set the framework and handle the funding for the redevelopment of Gaza until such time as the Palestinian Authority has completed its reform program, as outlined in various proposals, including President Trump’s peace plan in 2020 and the Saudi-French proposal, and can securely and effectively take back control of Gaza. This body will call on best international standards to create modern and efficient governance that serves the people of Gaza and is conducive to attracting investment.
10. A Trump economic development plan to rebuild and energize Gaza will be created by convening a panel of experts who have helped birth some of the thriving modern miracle cities in the Middle East. Many thoughtful investment proposals and exciting development ideas have been crafted by well-meaning international groups, and will be considered to synthesize the security and governance frameworks to attract and facilitate these investments that will create jobs, opportunity, and hope for future Gaza.
11. A special economic zone will be established with preferred tariff and access rates to be negotiated with participating countries.
12. No one will be forced to leave Gaza, and those who wish to leave will be free to do so and free to return. We will encourage people to stay and offer them the opportunity to build a better Gaza.

13. Hamas and other factions agree to not have any role in the governance of Gaza, directly, indirectly, or in any form. All military, terror, and offensive infrastructure, including tunnels and weapon production facilities, will be destroyed and not rebuilt. There will be a process of demilitarization of Gaza under the supervision of independent monitors, which will include placing weapons permanently beyond use through an agreed process of decommissioning, and supported by an internationally funded buy back and reintegration program all verified by the independent monitors. New Gaza will be fully committed to building a prosperous economy and to peaceful coexistence with their neighbors.

A demonstrator reacts during an anti-government protest organised in Tel Aviv calling for a ceasefire and for action to secure the hostages’ release, Sept. 27, 2025. (AFP)

14. A guarantee will be provided by regional partners to ensure that Hamas, and the factions, comply with their obligations and that New Gaza poses no threat to its neighbors or its people.
15. The United States will work with Arab and international partners to develop a temporary International Stabilization Force (ISF) to immediately deploy in Gaza. The ISF will train and provide support to vetted Palestinian police forces in Gaza, and will consult with Jordan and Egypt who have extensive experience in this field. This force will be the long-term internal security solution. The ISF will work with Israel and Egypt to help secure border areas, along with newly trained Palestinian police forces. It is critical to prevent munitions from entering Gaza and to facilitate the rapid and secure flow of goods to rebuild and revitalize Gaza. A deconfliction mechanism will be agreed upon by the parties.
16. Israel will not occupy or annex Gaza. As the ISF establishes control and stability, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) will withdraw based on standards, milestones, and timeframes linked to demilitarization that will be agreed upon between the IDF, ISF, the guarantors, and the Unites States, with the objective of a secure Gaza that no longer poses a threat to Israel, Egypt, or its citizens. Practically, the IDF will progressively hand over the Gaza territory it occupies to the ISF according to an agreement they will make with the transitional authority until they are withdrawn completely from Gaza, save for a security perimeter presence that will remain until Gaza is properly secure from any resurgent terror threat.
17. In the event Hamas delays or rejects this proposal, the above, including the scaled-up aid operation, will proceed in the terror-free areas handed over from the IDF to the ISF.
18. An interfaith dialogue process will be established based on the values of tolerance and peaceful co-existence to try and change mindsets and narratives of Palestinians and Israelis by emphasizing the benefits that can be derived from peace.
19. While Gaza re-development advances and when the PA reform program is faithfully carried out, the conditions may finally be in place for a credible pathway to Palestinian self-determination and statehood, which we recognize as the aspiration of the Palestinian people.
20. The United States will establish a dialogue between Israel and the Palestinians to agree on a political horizon for peaceful and prosperous co-existence.


UK plans tougher rules for migrants seeking to stay in country

British Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood attends the Labour Party’s annual conference in Liverpool. (Reuters)
British Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood attends the Labour Party’s annual conference in Liverpool. (Reuters)
Updated 29 September 2025

UK plans tougher rules for migrants seeking to stay in country

British Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood attends the Labour Party’s annual conference in Liverpool. (Reuters)
  • More than 100 organizations have combined forces to write to Mahmood, urging her “to end the scapegoating of migrants and performative policies that only cause harm”

LONDON: Britain’s home secretary proposed strict new rules for migrants seeking to settle in the UK, as the ruling Labour party bolstered its fight against the hard right at its annual conference.
Migrants looking to remain indefinitely will have to have a job, not claim benefits, and undertake volunteer community work under plans designed to claw back support among voters drawn to the anti-immigrant Reform UK party, whose popularity is soaring.
Confronting Reform, led by firebrand Nigel Farage, is the main theme of Labour’s four-day gathering in Liverpool, northwest England.
Currently, migrants with family in Britain who have lived there for five years qualify for “indefinite leave to remain” — permanent residence — as do those who have lived legally in the UK for 10 years on any visa.

BACKGROUND

The battle over immigration takes place against a challenging economic backdrop, with government finances constrained by persistent inflation and high borrowing costs.

Eligible applicants meeting these thresholds also earn the right to live, work, and study in the UK, as well as to apply for benefits and naturalize as British citizens.
But in a major policy shift, Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood was to tell the Labour conference that migrants would have to make social security contributions, claim no benefits, have a clean criminal record, and volunteer in their community in order to stay.
The government will consult on the changes later this year, according to a Labour Party press release.
The announcement comes shortly after Reform, which is currently leading in national polls, stated that it would eliminate “indefinite leave to remain” altogether, with migrants instead required to reapply for visas every five years.
This would apply to the hundreds of thousands of people who already have the right to remain.
“These measures draw a clear dividing line between the Labour government and Reform, whose recent announcement ... would force workers, who have been contributing to this country for decades, to leave their homes and families,” said the Labour Party statement.
Embattled Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Sunday called Reform’s plan “racist” and “immoral,” adding it would “tear the country apart.”
He is under pressure to convince elements of his center-left party that he is the right leader to take on Reform, and has urged the party to unite for the “fight of our lives” against Farage, a keen admirer of US President Donald Trump.
The battle over immigration takes place against a challenging economic backdrop, with government finances constrained by persistent inflation and high borrowing costs.
In her first speech to the Labour conference as home secretary, Mahmood will say that migrants should learn English to a high standard and that she will be a “tough” minister.
Mahmood, a qualified barrister who was born in Britain to parents of Pakistani descent, will warn party members that a failure to tackle irregular migration will mean that “working people will turn away from us ... and seek solace in the false promises” of Farage.
More than 100 organizations have combined forces to write to Mahmood, urging her “to end the scapegoating of migrants and performative policies that only cause harm.”
British and French authorities have struggled to stem a flow of migrants making the perilous journey by boat across the Channel to reach the UK.
Some 895 people arrived on UK shores on Saturday alone aboard 12 small boats, according to the British government, with a record 125 crammed onto just one boat.
But a number of fatalities over the weekend brought the death toll from illegal crossings to at least 27 since the beginning of the year, according to an AFP tally based on official data.
Some 32,000 people have managed to reach the UK coast so far this year.
Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves, facing a difficult budget next month, also addressed the conference on Monday, to “vow to invest in Britain’s renewal” and announce new plans to get young people into work.
Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper told the gathering the foreign policy choice at the next general election, due in 2029, would be between Labour and a “chaotic right-wing ideology.”

 


Islamic school in Indonesia collapses, killing student and injuring dozens

Rescue personnel carry an injured student during a search operation after a building collapsed at an Islamic boarding school.
Rescue personnel carry an injured student during a search operation after a building collapsed at an Islamic boarding school.
Updated 29 September 2025

Islamic school in Indonesia collapses, killing student and injuring dozens

Rescue personnel carry an injured student during a search operation after a building collapsed at an Islamic boarding school.
  • Police, soldiers and rescue workers dug into the debris through the night in attempts to locate at least three additional students believed trapped alive

SIDOARJO, Indonesia: A building under construction at an Islamic boarding school in Indonesia collapsed on dozens of praying students Monday, killing at least one student, injuring dozens and burying others in the rubble, officials said.
Police, soldiers and rescue workers dug into the debris through the night in attempts to locate at least three additional students believed trapped alive at Al Khoziny Islamic Boarding School in the East Java town of Sidoarjo. Rescuers also said they saw additional bodies, indicating the death toll was likely to rise.
The students were performing afternoon prayers in a building that was undergoing an unauthorized expansion when it suddenly collapsed on top of them, provincial police spokesperson Jules Abraham Abast said.
One male student was killed and 83 other students were injured and taken to two nearby hospitals, some of them in critical condition, officials said.
Most of the victims were male, because female students were praying separately in another part of the building and managed to escape, survivors said. Residents, teachers and administrators assisted injured students, many with head injuries and broken bones.
Authorities launched an investigation into the cause of the building’s collapse.
Abast said the old prayer hall was originally only two stories, but had been renovated by adding two more floors without a permit to build a new structure.
“The old building’s foundation was apparently unable to support two floors of concrete and collapsed during the pouring process,” Abast said.
Television reports showed dozens of rescue workers, police and soldiers desperately digging through steel reinforced concrete debris in search of survivors in overnight rescue operations, supported by heavy equipment.
Families of the students gathered near the collapsed building, anxiously awaiting news of their children. Relatives wailed as they watched rescuers pull a dusty, injured student from a buried hall.
Heavy slabs of concrete and other rubble and unstable parts of the building hampered search and rescue efforts, said Nanang Sigit, who led the effort. Three students were believed to be trapped alive under the rubble.
“We have been running oxygen and water to those still trapped under the debris and keeping them alive while we work hard to get them out,” Sigit said. He added that rescuers saw several bodies scattered under the rubble, but that they focused on saving those who were still alive.


Denmark stops short of recognizing Palestine at UN General Assembly

Denmark stops short of recognizing Palestine at UN General Assembly
Updated 29 September 2025

Denmark stops short of recognizing Palestine at UN General Assembly

Denmark stops short of recognizing Palestine at UN General Assembly
  • Ambassador Christina Markus Lassen: ‘What’s going on in Gaza has nothing to do with self-defense’
  • ‘The keys to recognition of a Palestinian state can no longer lie in the hands of the Israeli government’

LONDON: Denmark on Monday called for an end to the Gaza war and expressed readiness to “build on” the two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, while stopping short of recognizing Palestinian statehood.

Denmark is the only Scandinavian country that has yet to recognize Palestine.

Christina Markus Lassen, the Danish permanent representative to the UN, told the General Assembly: “The keys to recognition of a Palestinian state can no longer lie in the hands of the Israeli government. The Palestinians themselves must become masters of their own destiny.”

Nine countries recognized Palestinian statehood in September: the UK, Canada, Australia, Portugal, France, Monaco, Luxembourg, Malta, and most recently San Marino.

“Israel has a right to self-defense, but what’s going on in Gaza right now has nothing to do with self-defense,” Lassen said.

“A man-made famine is spreading. Thousands of civilians are being killed. The humanitarian catastrophe is of unbearable scale. It must be brought to an end immediately ... The war in Gaza needs to stop.”

Copenhagen has been a traditional supporter of Israel, and Danish officials have refrained from depicting what is happening in Gaza as a genocide, a term that several EU and UN officials have used recently.

The two-state solution remains the only solution to lasting peace for two peoples, both deserving of security, both deserving of dignity

Christina Markus Lassen

However, pressure is mounting on the Danish government to use its current presidency of the EU to push Israel to end the war and comply with international humanitarian law.

AkademikerPension, a primary Danish teachers’ pension fund valued at $24 billion, divested its investments in Israel last week.

It is the second Scandinavian fund to do so, following Norway’s sovereign wealth fund — the world’s largest — which withdrew investments in Israeli companies in August.

Lassen said last week’s UN conference on the two-state solution, co-chaired by Ƶ and France, has “clearly demonstrated that the momentum is growing,” and “Denmark is prepared to build on” the initiative.

“The two-state solution remains the only solution to lasting peace for two peoples, both deserving of security, both deserving of dignity,” she added. “We’re witnessing a renewed energy and enthusiasm for peace based on the two-state solution.”

Lassen called for reforming the UN, and endorsed calls for the expansion of the Security Council to improve its effectiveness, noting that “the costs of inaction are felt across the world” in conflicts in Gaza, Haiti, Sudan, Myanmar, the Sahel region and Afghanistan.

“The UN is as essential as ever. Without the UN, the world would be in a much worse state,” she said.