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Syrian leader seeks reset in Russia relations in Putin meeting

Update Syrian leader seeks reset in Russia relations in Putin meeting
Russian President Vladimir Putin and Syrian interim president Ahmed al-Sharaa shake hands during their meeting at the Grand Kremlin Palace in Moscow, Oct. 15, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 15 October 2025

Syrian leader seeks reset in Russia relations in Putin meeting

Syrian leader seeks reset in Russia relations in Putin meeting
  • Government official: ‘Sharaa will ask the Russian president to hand over all individuals who committed war crimes and are in Russia, most notably Bashar Assad’
  • Putin hailed “special relations” between the two countries that “have developed between our countries over many decades”

MOSCOW: Syrian President Ahmed Al-Sharaa said Wednesday he wanted to “redefine” relations with Moscow as Russian President Vladimir Putin hosted him in their first meeting since key Kremlin ally Bashar Assad was ousted last year.
In front of the television cameras, Putin greeted Sharaa warmly at the Kremlin, but behind closed doors the Syrian leader was expected to push for Moscow to extradite Assad, who fled there after being toppled.
The two were also expected to discuss the status of Russia’s prized military bases in Syria — the naval base in Tartus and air base at Hmeimim — the fate of which has been uncertain since the rebel takeover.
Russia was a key ally of Assad during the bloody 14-year Syrian civil war, providing vital military support that kept his forces in power.
He was ousted last December in an offensive led by Sharaa’s Islamist forces, fleeing to Russia, which has been sheltering him and his family for the past 10 months.
In remarks at the start of the meeting, Sharaa acknowledged the two countries’ historic ties but said he wanted a recalibration, as he brings Damascus in from isolation on the world stage.
“We are trying to restore and redefine in a new way the nature of these relations so there is independence for Syria, sovereign Syria, and also its territorial unity and integrity and its security stability,” Sharaa told Putin.

- Putin hails ‘special relations’ -

The Russian leader hailed “special relations” between the two countries that “have developed between our countries over many decades.”
Neither publicly mentioned Assad or the Russian bases, the main sticking points in the relationship.
Al-Sharaa said before the meeting: “We respect all previous agreements,” without elaborating.
After the meeting, which according to Russian state media lasted for more than two and a half hours, Moscow said it was ready to continue its role in Syria’s crude oil production.
“Russian companies have been working on Syria’s oilfields for a long time,” vice premier Alexander Novak was quoted as saying by state news agency TASS, adding that there were some new fields where Moscow was “ready to participate.”
Russia, which in 2015 started launching air strikes on rebel-held territory in Syria, also said it wanted to help rebuild the country, battered by the long war.
“Our companies are interested in the development of transport infrastructure and the restoration of energy systems” of Syria, Novak said.

- Assad asylum -

A Syrian government official told AFP before the meeting that Sharaa would request Putin hand over Assad, who Russia says it is protecting on “humanitarian grounds.”
The official, who requested anonymity as they were not allowed to brief the media, told AFP: “Sharaa will ask the Russian president to hand over all individuals who committed war crimes and are in Russia, most notably Bashar Assad.”
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov confirmed earlier this week the ousted leader was still living in Moscow.
“We have granted asylum to Bashar Assad and his family for purely humanitarian reasons. He has no issues residing in our capital,” Lavrov said at a forum on Monday.
Russia’s military support for Assad helped turn the tide of the Syrian civil war in his favor when it started intervening in 2015.
Russian warplanes rained air strikes on rebel-held areas of Syria including the northwest Idlib region, which was largely controlled by Sharaa’s Islamist group Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham (HTS) in the later years of the conflict.
During a government offensive launched in late 2019 to retake parts of the province, Moscow carried out hundreds of air strikes on the rebel bastion, causing casualties and widespread destruction, including to civilian infrastructure such as schools, hospitals, marketplaces and residential areas.
Moscow also sponsored so-called reconciliation deals between government forces and opposition factions in several parts of Syria that resulted in the evacuation of tens of thousands of civilians and fighters to Idlib.
HTS, of which Sharaa was a leader, was not one of them.
During the Syrian civil war, Russia in 2020 placed HTS on its list of recognized “terrorists.”


Lebanon says Israeli strikes kill one and wound seven

Lebanon says Israeli strikes kill one and wound seven
Updated 17 October 2025

Lebanon says Israeli strikes kill one and wound seven

Lebanon says Israeli strikes kill one and wound seven
  • Israel has repeatedly bombed Lebanon despite a November ceasefire, which followed more than a year of hostilities with the Iran-backed militant group that culminated in two months of open war

BEIRUT, Lebanon: Lebanon’s health ministry said Thursday that Israeli strikes in the south had killed one person and wounded seven, while the Israeli military said it had targeted Hezbollah and its allies.
Lebanese President Joseph Aoun, however, insisted Israel’s strikes targeted “civilian facilities,” condemning what he said was a breach of a ceasefire negotiated last year.
“The repeated Israeli aggression comes as part of a systematic policy aimed at destroying productive infrastructure, hindering economic recovery, and undermining national stability under false security pretexts,” Aoun said.
Israel has repeatedly bombed Lebanon despite a November ceasefire, which followed more than a year of hostilities with the Iran-backed militant group that culminated in two months of open war.
The Lebanese health ministry, which earlier said six people had been wounded, said one person was killed in a strike in the eastern town of Shmistar.
One person was wounded in Bnaafoul, in the Saida district and six in Ansar, in Nabatieh district, it added.
An Israeli army statement said it had “struck Hezbollah terrorist infrastructure... in the Mazraat Sinai area in southern Lebanon.”
It also said it had struck facilities used by Green Without Borders, an NGO under US sanctions that Israel considers to have “operated under a civilian cover to conceal the presence of Hezbollah in the border area with Israel.”


UN rejects Houthi espionage allegations as ‘disturbing’ and dangerous, urges release of detained staff

UN rejects Houthi espionage allegations as ‘disturbing’ and dangerous, urges release of detained staff
Updated 17 October 2025

UN rejects Houthi espionage allegations as ‘disturbing’ and dangerous, urges release of detained staff

UN rejects Houthi espionage allegations as ‘disturbing’ and dangerous, urges release of detained staff
  • Spokesman Stephane Dujarric says calling aid workers ‘spies’ or ‘terrorists’ endangers UN staff lives everywhere and is unacceptable

NEW YORK: The United Nations has on Thursday rejected accusations by Yemen's Houthi authorities that UN staff were involved in espionage, calling the claims "extremely disturbing" and warning they put lives at risk.

“We categorically reject any and all accusations that UN personnel or UN operations in Yemen were involved in any form of espionage or in any activities that were not consistent with our humanitarian mandate,” said Stéphane Dujarric, spokesperson for UN Secretary-General António Guterres.

“Accusations, calling UN staff spies or, as we’ve seen in other contexts, calling them terrorists — all that does is it puts the lives of UN staff everywhere at risk, and it's unacceptable.”

Dujarric's comments came in response to a wave of detentions by Houthi authorities targeting UN and NGO workers in Yemen. At least 53 UN staff members remain arbitrarily detained, some held incommunicado for years, according to the UN.

The Houthi rebels have in recent weeks accused the UN of spying for the United States and Israel, exhibiting political bias, and failing to condemn Israeli military actions. These allegations emerged after an Israeli airstrike in September killed several senior Houthi officials in Sanaa.

Following the strike, Houthi officials claimed that some of the detained UN employees were engaged in espionage, and that diplomatic immunity “should not be a cover” for such activities.

In a statement from its Houthi-run foreign ministry, the group claimed the UN’s silence on the Israeli attack demonstrated “double standards” and alleged complicity.

Dujarric pushed back strongly against those narratives, insisting the UN’s presence in Yemen was solely humanitarian. “The work that we do in Yemen and we do everywhere where we do humanitarian work is guided by our basic principles of humanity, impartiality, neutrality and independence,” he said. “The reason our humanitarian colleagues are in Yemen is to help the Yemeni people.”

The UN has repeatedly condemned the detentions and raids on its premises in Houthi-held areas, and Secretary-General Guterres has called for the immediate and unconditional release of all UN personnel, NGO workers, and detained diplomatic staff. Human Rights Watch has also criticized the arrests, stating that no credible evidence has been presented to support the espionage allegations, and warning that such actions are obstructing critical aid operations in the war-torn country.

The Houthis’ accusations have drawn wider scrutiny of their treatment of aid workers and engagement with international agencies. In September, they accused UN Special Envoy Hans Grundberg of “political complicity” for condemning the detentions while allegedly ignoring what they termed Israeli “aggression” in Yemen.

Despite the criticism, the UN maintains that its operations remain grounded in neutrality. “We will continue to call for the end to the arbitrary detention of our colleagues,” Dujarric said. “They need to be released, alongside the NGO workers and those from diplomatic missions.”

Yemen’s conflict, which escalated in 2015 after the Houthis seized the capital Sanaa, has triggered one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises. UN-led efforts to broker peace have repeatedly stalled amid growing regional instability.

 


Jordan’s crown prince commends UK prime minister for official recognition of Palestinian statehood

Jordan’s crown prince commends UK prime minister for official recognition of Palestinian statehood
Updated 16 October 2025

Jordan’s crown prince commends UK prime minister for official recognition of Palestinian statehood

Jordan’s crown prince commends UK prime minister for official recognition of Palestinian statehood
  • Crown Prince Hussein and Keir Starmer discuss latest developments in the Middle East during meeting at 10 Downing Street on Thursday
  • Crown prince emphasizes need for full implementation of Gaza ceasefire deal between Hamas and Israel, and unrestricted deliveries of humanitarian aid to territory

LONDON: Crown Prince Hussein of Jordan praised UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Thursday for the British government’s recent decision to officially recognize Palestinian statehood.

During their meeting at No. 10 Downing Street, the crown prince stressed the need to support the Palestinian people in their efforts to secure their rights and establish an independent state.

Regarding the latest developments in Gaza, the crown prince highlighted the need to ensure full implementation of the ceasefire deal between Hamas and Israel, as well as unrestricted deliveries of humanitarian aid to the territory.

Starmer and Crown Prince Hussein also discussed the latest developments in the wider Middle East, and the latter called for joint efforts to restore regional stability to be stepped up, the Jordan News Agency reported.

The UK government announced its recognition of the State of Palestine in the run-up to the UN General Assembly in September. Several other Western countries took a similar step around that time, including France, Canada and Australia.

Jordan’s ambassador to the UK, Manar Dabbas; the director of the Office of the Crown Prince, Zaid Baqain; and the UK’s national security adviser, Jonathan Powell, also attended the meeting.


Tunisian aid workers go on trial for helping migrants

Tunisian aid workers go on trial for helping migrants
Updated 16 October 2025

Tunisian aid workers go on trial for helping migrants

Tunisian aid workers go on trial for helping migrants
  • Tunisian and international rights groups condemned the trial, saying it criminalized helping refugees and migrants
  • The defense team requested the trial be postponed and that a testimony from the UNHCR be heard

TUNIS: Six aid workers from a group that helps migrants and refugees went on trial in Tunisia Thursday accused of assisting irregular migration into the country, a key transit point for those seeking to reach Europe.
The accused work for the Tunisian Refugee Council (TRC), an aid organization that partnered with the UN refugee agency, UNHCR, to screen asylum applications in Tunisia.
Migration is a sensitive issue in Tunisia, which saw a series of racially motivated attacks after President Kais Saied warned in 2023 that “hordes of illegal migrants,” many from sub-Saharan Africa, posed a demographic threat to the Arab-majority country.
Tunisian and international rights groups condemned the trial, saying it criminalized helping refugees and migrants.
The defendants include TRC head Mustapha Djemali, an 81-year-old Tunisian-Swiss national, and project manager Abderrazek Krimi, both of whom have been detained for more than a year and a half pending trial.
Four other employees were charged in the case but have not been held in custody.
They are all charged with “sheltering” migrants and “facilitating illegal entry” into Tunisia, according to a lawyer.
The defense team requested the trial be postponed and that a testimony from the UNHCR be heard, lawyer Mounira Ayari told AFP.
She said the defense also requested a provisional release for Djemali and Krimi, as their pre-trial detention had already exceeded the 14-month legal limit.
But the court later rejected that request and adjourned the trial until November 24, the lawyer added.
She said Djemali “suffers from serious health issues.”
His daughter, Yusra, said he could barely stand, adding: “It’s hard to see him like this.”
The family said initial fraud and money-laundering charges against Djemali had been dropped.
The defendants were arrested in May 2024 along with about a dozen humanitarian workers, including members of French group Terre d’Asile and anti-racist organization Mnemty, who are awaiting trial.
Djemali and Krimi “were arrested solely for their legitimate humanitarian work,” said Antonia Mulvey, who heads the Geneva-based Legal Action Worldwide.
She called the trial “arbitrary” and a “violation of Tunisia’s international obligations.”


Palestinian PM pitches $65 billion five-year plan to rebuild Gaza

Palestinian PM pitches $65 billion five-year plan to rebuild Gaza
Updated 16 October 2025

Palestinian PM pitches $65 billion five-year plan to rebuild Gaza

Palestinian PM pitches $65 billion five-year plan to rebuild Gaza
  • Mohammed Mustafa addresses UN heads of agency, and diplomatic heads of mission from his office in Ramallah

RAMALLAH: The Palestinian Authority’s prime minister met on Thursday with UN and diplomatic officials to present a plan for Gaza’s reconstruction, despite uncertainties over his government’s role in the war-shattered territory’s future.

“I would like to believe that 12 months from now, the Palestinian Authority will be fully operational in Gaza,” Mohammed Mustafa said.

Mustafa said the Palestinian Authority had crafted a five-year plan for Gaza that would unfold over three phases and require $65 billion across 18 sectors, including housing, education, governance, and more.

The authority has not had a role in Gaza’s governance since Hamas seized control of the territory in 2007, though it still provides some services in the territory.

The Gaza peace plan set out by US President Donald Trump does not rule out a Palestinian state. Also, it suggests allowing a role for the Palestinian Authority once it has completed a set of reforms.

The plan builds on what was agreed at a summit of Arab countries in Cairo in March 2025, and Mustafa said that “police training programs initiated with Egypt and Jordan are already underway.”

“Our vision is clear,” Mustafa told an assembly of Palestinian ministers, UN heads of agency, and diplomatic heads of mission from his office in Ramallah, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

“Gaza shall be rebuilt as an open, connected and thriving part of the state of Palestine,” Mustafa said.

He also said that technical discussions were ongoing with the EU over “secure crossing operations, customs systems, and integrated policing units.”

The EU is one of the largest donors to the PA.

Above all, the post-war reconstruction plan aims to make way for a single Palestinian government.

The process will “reinforce the political and territorial unity between Gaza and the West Bank, and contribute to restoring a credible governance framework for the state of Palestine,” said Mustafa.

His remarks came as International Monetary Fund Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva urged all parties to continue moving toward sustained peace following a ceasefire in Gaza, saying it would benefit the entire region. 

Georgieva, speaking during the annual meetings of the IMF and World Bank in Washington, said on Thursday she was relieved when the recent ceasefire was reached for the sake of all the people affected by the two-year war in the Palestinian enclave.

She said lowered tensions would be good news for the economies of Egypt and Jordan, where the IMF has programs, and Lebanon and Syria, which have asked for help and support from the global lender. 

“It is important because everybody concerned encourages this direction of sustaining a lasting peace, and yes, it would benefit the region,” she said. 

“There will be a peace dividend for everybody.”