You are here

Region

Region section

Two jailed Yemeni YouTubers and producer pardoned by Houthis

By - Apr 04,2023 - Last updated at Apr 04,2023

SANAA — Two Yemeni YouTubers and a producer jailed by Houthi rebels for publishing videos critical of the Iran-backed insurgents have received pardons, according to the group's official media.

The trio, who were sentenced last month along with a third YouTuber, were pardoned by the Houthi's political leader, Mahdi Al Mashat, the SABA news agency said.

The Houthis, who follow an austere form of Shiite Islam, seized the capital Sanaa in 2014, prompting a Saudi-led military intervention and fighting that has devastated the country.

YouTubers Mustafa Al Mawmari and Ahmad Hajar had been sentenced by a Sanaa court to 18 months and 12 months respectively at a court, while producer Hammoud Al Mesbahi received a six-month term.

There was no mention of Ahmad Elaw, a third YouTuber sentenced alongside the trio in March, who was jailed for three years, the longest sentence.

In December, Hajar was the first of the group to be detained after he accused the Huthis of "robbing the Yemeni people", in a video watched around half-a-million times.

The group was charged with "spreading misinformation", "harming public interest", and "inciting the masses to commit acts of chaos", according to court documents seen by AFP when they were sentenced.

Each of them was also ordered to pay a fine of nearly $20,000, their lawyer said at the time.

Yemen's war has caused hundreds of thousands of deaths, both directly and indirectly, and pushed the nation to the brink of famine.

Meanwhile, the Houthis have increasingly limited individual liberties, including free speech and the movement of women in areas they control.

Court documents had said the YouTubers' influence was seen as "serving the aggression... against Yemen" by the Saudi-led coalition.

The four men were sentenced a day after Houthi-controlled media released videos of them renouncing their earlier criticisms, prompting a strong reaction from some Yemenis who suspected the statements were coerced.

Tunisia opposition demands clarity on president's 'absence'

By - Apr 04,2023 - Last updated at Apr 04,2023

TUNIS — Tunisia's main opposition coalition pressed the government on Monday to explain a days-long public "absence" of President Kais Saied, saying it had information that he was sick.

Saied, 65, has not appeared in public or held any meetings since March 22, according to posts on his Facebook page, the presidency's only official channel of communication.

The lack of statements or videos has sparked rumours over the state of Saied's health.

"We ask the government to address the Tunisian people and say if the president has health problems that have forced him to be absent," Ahmed Nejib Chebbi of the National Salvation Front (NSF) opposition coalition told journalists.

He said the NSF had been "informed from day one that President Saied was suffering from health problems, but did not react, as anyone can have a temporary health problem".

Chebbi said Prime Minister Najla Bouden would run Tunisia in the event of a temporary power vacuum, but that a permanent vacancy would present the country with a "great catastrophe" due to a legislative void.

Saied, who staged a dramatic power grab in July 2011 and has since ruled by decree, last year rammed through a constitution giving his office unlimited powers and neutering parliament.

Under the new document, were Saied to be incapacitated, the president of the Constitutional Court would run the country pending a new presidential election, but the court has not yet been created.

Chebbi said Saied’s health “concerns all Tunisians”, and that in the event he is incapacitated, Tunisia should hold “serious and open consultations so that the Tunisian people and the civil and political forces agree on a power transfer mechanism”.

 

Israeli forces kill two Palestinians in Nablus raid

By - Apr 04,2023 - Last updated at Apr 04,2023

Relatives mourn during the funeral of Palestinian Mohammed Abu Bakr, who was killed by Israeli troops during a raid in Nablus in the occupied West Bank, on Monday (AFP photo)

NABLUS, Palestinian Territories — Israeli occupation forces shot dead two Palestinians on Monday in a morning raid in the occupied West Bank, the Palestinian health ministry said, in what Israeli forces described as "counterterrorism activity".

"Two martyrs shot by the occupation [Israel] in Nablus," the ministry confirmed in a brief statement, without elaborating on their identities.

Israeli forces said it had carried out the raid to apprehend two individuals linked to a shooting attack in which two Israeli soldiers were injured last month in the West Bank town of Huwara.

"During the activity, a number of armed gunmen fired at the forces who responded with live fire. Hits were identified," the Israeli forces statement said, adding that two individuals were arrested.

Israeli forces have carried out a number of deadly raids in the flashpoint city of Nablus in recent months with the emergence of a militant group dubbed the Lions' Den, which has been blamed for a number of attacks on Israeli targets.

In a Monday statement, the Lions' Den said its members were involved in "confronting the occupation forces' storming of the city of Nablus".

The raid came two days after a peak in violence that saw two killed in confrontations with Israeli forces, amid fears of escalation in the conflict during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

 

Moment of hope’: UN urges Yemen peace talks on truce anniversary

By - Apr 03,2023 - Last updated at Apr 03,2023

DUBAI — The United Nations’ Yemen envoy warned on Sunday the war-ravaged country faces a “critical time” and urged steps towards lasting peace, exactly a year since a truce has dramatically reduced fighting.

Swedish diplomat Hans Grundberg called the UN-brokered truce that took effect in April 2022 a “moment of hope” and said it was largely holding, despite lapsing in October.

“But the truce’s most significant promise is its potential to jumpstart an inclusive political process aimed at comprehensively and sustainably ending the conflict,” the UN secretary-general’s special envoy said in a statement.

Nearly a decade of war in Yemen has claimed hundreds of thousands of lives, both directly and indirectly, and set off one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises.

“There are still significant risks,” Grundberg said, calling to “protect the gains of the truce and to build on them towards more humanitarian relief, a nationwide ceasefire and a sustainable political settlement that meets the aspirations of Yemeni women and men”.

A landmark reconciliation deal announced last month between Iran and Saudi Arabia, the two regional powerhouses that back rival sides in Yemen’s war, added to the optimism that started last year with the truce.

Riyadh is leading a military coalition on behalf of the ousted Yemeni government while Tehran backs Houthi rebels, who seized control of the capital in 2014.

Amid renewed deadly fighting and warnings from the rebels, the UN envoy said: “The military, economic and rhetorical escalation of recent weeks is a reminder of the fragility of the truce’s achievements.”

He urged the government and the Houthis to “sit together and responsibly engage in serious dialogue” that would lead to “a peaceful resolution of the conflict”.

Yemen remains deeply fractured along regional, confessional and political lines, and riven with rival factions including Al Qaeda and the Islamic State group.

“At this critical time, any new temporary or partial arrangement needs to include a clear commitment from the parties that ensures it is a step on the course of a peaceful solution... in an inclusive political process,” Grundberg said.

“Moments like now are fleeting and precarious,” he warned.

“More than ever, now is the time for dialogue, compromises, and a demonstration of leadership and serious will to achieve peace.”

UN experts name S.Sudan officials for rights abuses

By - Apr 03,2023 - Last updated at Apr 03,2023

Woman walk past a UN tank. A UN peacekeeping force has been deployed in South Sudan since 2011 (AFP photo)

NAIROBI — A panel of UN rights experts on Monday named several high-ranking South Sudanese officials they say warrant criminal investigation and prosecution for their part in grave atrocities against civilians.

Top government and military leaders were identified in a new report by the UN Commission on Human Rights in South Sudan that details state responsibility for widespread murder, rape and sexual slavery.

The commission, which conducted a year-long investigation across six states in South Sudan, and released a partial summary of its findings in March, said none of those named in the final report had faced any accountability for their crimes.

“Over several years, our findings have consistently shown that impunity for serious crimes is a central driver of violence and misery faced by civilians in South Sudan,” commission chair Yasmin Sooka said.

“So we have taken the step of naming more of the individuals who warrant criminal investigation and prosecution for their role in gross human rights violations.”

The report identifies Joseph Monytuil, governor of Unity State, and Lit Gen. Thoi Chany Reat of the South Sudan People’s Defence Forces, in relation to state-sanctioned killings in Mayom County in August 2022.

Four captured rebel officers were summarily executed by government troops in killings that were captured on video and shared widely. Three were killed by firing squad and a fourth was burned alive in a hut.

The report also names Gordon Koang, the county commissioner of Koch, who was accused of leading horrific attacks on civilians in neighbouring Leer County between February and April 2022.

Other top-ranking officials in Warrap, Upper Nile, Jonglei and the Equatoria states were identified as warranting further scrutiny or investigation for their role in various abuses.

“The Commission found that while the Government of South Sudan has announced special investigation committees into several situations, not one has led to any form of accountability,” the panel said in a statement.

“Government and military personnel implicated in these serious crimes remain in office.”

The government has accused the commission of interfering in its national affairs and rejected past findings from the three-member panel.

South Sudan achieved independence from Sudan in 2011 but collapsed into a civil war two years later that devastated the world’s newest country.

Close to 400,000 people died before a peace deal was signed in 2018 but core tenets of the agreement remain unfulfilled, and the country is riven by armed violence.

A promised tribunal led by the African Union to prosecute offenders and deliver justice for victims of war crimes has never eventuated.

Israeli strikes wound five Syrian soldiers — state media

By - Apr 02,2023 - Last updated at Apr 02,2023

This aerial view shows locals affected by the February 6 earthquake attending a mass iftar — the fast-breaking meal at sunset — in the town of Atareb in the rebel-held western countryside of Aleppo province on March 31 at the end of the fasting day during the holy month of Ramadan (AFP photo)

DAMASCUS — Five Syrian soldiers were wounded in the latest Israeli air strike on Syria, state news agency SANA reported Sunday, with Iran saying two Revolutionary Guards officers died in earlier attacks.

The strike early Sunday near the western Syrian city of Homs was Israel's third in recent days after the capital Damascus was targeted on the nights of March 30 and 31, according to the agency.

"The Israeli enemy carried out an air assault... targeting positions in the city of Homs and its province," SANA reported, citing a military source.

Syria's air defence intercepted several missiles, but five soldiers were wounded and some material damage was reported, SANA said.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based war monitor, said the strikes targeted several military positions of Syrian government forces and pro-Iran groups.

The monitor said explosions rocked the city and a fire broke out in a research centre, with ambulances heading to the scene of the attack.

Observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman told AFP that in addition to the five wounded Syrian soldiers, several Iran-affiliated fighters in the research centre had been killed in the strikes.

“An arms depot belonging to Lebanese Hizbollah forces in the military airport of Dabaa, in the south-western sector of Homs, was destroyed,” he added.

In the strikes on Friday, Israel launched “several missiles from the occupied Golan Heights” against positions near Damascus, Syrian state media said.

The observatory said those strikes had targeted a weapons and ammunition depot of the Syrian military and pro-Iran groups.

 

 ‘It will pay’ 

 

Sepahnews, the website of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, said on Friday that officer Milad Heidari had been killed.

On Sunday, the website reported that Meghdad Mahghani, a military adviser wounded in the same strike, had “attained the high rank of martyrdom”.

It added that “the crimes of the fake and criminal Zionist [Israeli] regime will not go unanswered, and it will pay”.

Iranian foreign ministry spokesman Nasser Kanani condemned that attack, saying on Sunday that the “blood of these high-ranking martyrs will not go to waste” and that Tehran “reserves its right to respond... at the appropriate time and place”.

Israel conducted several air strikes on Syria in March, according to the observatory, which has an extensive network of sources in the country.

While Israel rarely comments on the strikes it carries out on Syria, it has repeatedly said it will not allow its arch-foe Iran to extend its footprint in the war-torn country.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, speaking after the strike on Sunday, said: “We are exacting a high price from the regimes that support terrorism, beyond Israel’s borders. I suggest that our enemies not err.”

Israel has seen weeks of protests against a controversial judicial overhaul now frozen by the government, but Netanyahu said that domestic politics would not stop its military.

“Israel’s internal debate will not detract one iota from our determination, strength and ability to act against our enemies on all fronts, wherever and whenever necessary,” he added.

Last week, an Israeli missile strike destroyed a suspected arms depot used by Iran-backed militias at Syria’s Aleppo airport, the war monitor said.

On March 7, three people were killed in an Israeli strike on the same airport that put it out of service. It reopened three days later.

And in February, an Israeli air strike killed 15 people in a Damascus district that houses state security agencies, the observatory said at the time.

The Syrian war broke out in 2011 with the brutal repression of peaceful anti-government protests, and escalated into a deadly armed conflict that pulled in foreign powers and global extremists.

Some 500,000 people have been killed and around half of Syria’s pre-war population has been forced from their homes.

 

S.Sudanese troops join regional force in east DRC

By - Apr 02,2023 - Last updated at Apr 02,2023

GOMA, DRC — South Sudanese soldiers arrived in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) on Sunday, an AFP journalist saw, joining a regional military force in an area battered by the M23 rebellion.

At least 45 soldiers touched down in the city of Goma in the late morning, with further contingents expected to arrive at later dates.

The South Sudanese soldiers are part of the seven-nation East African Community (EAC) military force, which was created last June to stabilise eastern DRC.

Much of the region is plagued by dozens of armed groups, a legacy of regional wars that flared in the 1990s and 2000s.

In North Kivu province, M23 rebels have captured swathes of territory and advanced within several dozen kilometres of its capital Goma since reemerging from dormancy in late 2021.

The EAC force — which comprises Kenyan, Burundian and Ugandan troops as well as South Sudanese — is due to supervise a planned pull-back of M23 rebels.

“Welcome to Goma,” said Col. Jok Akech, an officer with the EAC force, addressing the new South Sudanese arrivals.

“Now you are in a different operational environment. You have to be ready.”

It is not yet clear how large the South Sudanese contingent will be, nor where it will deploy. In December, South Sudan said that it would send 750 soldiers to the DRC.

 

Failed initiatives 

 

The M23 first came to international prominence in 2012 when it captured Goma, before being driven out and going to ground.

But the Tutsi-led group reemerged from dormancy in late 2021, arguing that the government had ignored a promise to integrate its fighters into the army.

It then won a string of victories against the Congolese army and captured large chunks of North Kivu, triggering a humanitarian crisis as hundreds of thousands of people fled its advance.

Several regional initiatives intended to defuse the conflict have failed.

A ceasefire mediated by Angola was due to take effect on March 7, for example, but collapsed almost immediately.

March 30 was supposed to mark the end of the withdrawal of “all armed groups”, according to a timetable adopted in mid-February by the EAC.

The deadline was not respected.

The EAC force commander, Kenyan General Jeff Nyagah, told reporters on Friday that the planned M23 withdrawal would be “sequenced”.

 

‘Neutral force’ 

 

Although initially greeted with enthusiasm, many Congolese are increasingly critical of the EAC force because of dashed hopes that regional troops would take the fight directly to the M23.

On Sunday, the spokesman for the newly deployed Ugandan contingent Captain Kato Ahmad Hassan said the troops will be “neutral force and we will not fight the M23”.

M23 fighters are expected to withdraw from the areas occupied by the Ugandan military under the plan, he said.

The rebel group remains in control of substantial areas of North Kivu, and has almost completely surrounded Goma, which has Rwanda to its east and Lake Kivu to its south.

The DRC accuses its smaller neighbour Rwanda of backing the M23, something the United States, several other Western countries and independent UN experts agree with, but which Kigali denies.

Although there has been no major fighting between the Congolese army and the M23 for several weeks, fighting has with rival militias and insecurity remains rampant.

Fourteen people were killed in separate attacks in North Kivu over the weekend, in circumstances that remain unclear, according to residents, local officials and medical sources.

 

Algerian court jails journalist El Kadi for three years

By - Apr 02,2023 - Last updated at Apr 02,2023

ALGIERS — An Algerian court on Sunday sentenced prominent journalist Ihsane El Kadi to three years in prison for “foreign financing of his business” in a case denounced by rights groups.

El Kadi, one of the last independent media bosses in the North African nation as director of the Maghreb Emergent news website and Radio M, was handed a five-year sentence, two years of which are suspended.

The court in Algiers also ordered during the public sentencing the dissolution of the company Interface Medias, the publisher behind El Kadi’s two outlets, and the confiscation of its assets.

The company was also fined 10 million dinars (about $73,500), while El Kadi himself was handed a separate 700,000-dinar fine.

His lawyer, Abdelghani Badi, told AFP he would appeal the sentence, though the defence team had boycotted Sunday’s session over the “absence of just trial conditions”.

Following his remand in December, El Kadi was accused of “receiving sums of money and privileges from people and organisations inside the country and abroad in exchange for carrying out activities that could harm state security”.

He had faced up to seven years in prison in line with an article in Algeria’s penal code which criminalises anyone who receives “funds, a grant or otherwise... to carry out acts capable of undermining state security”.

 

‘Ruthless campaign’ 

 

In January, Amnesty International said the accusations against El Kadi were “trumped-up state security related offences”.

“El Kadi’s unjustified detention by the Algerian authorities... is yet another example of their ruthless campaign to silence voices of dissent through arbitrary detention and the closure of media outlets,” said Amnesty’s Amna Guellali.

Earlier that month, 16 international media figures including Russian journalist Dmitri Muratov, winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, called for his release and urged Algeria to lift “unacceptable” restrictions on his media outlets.

El Kadi was sentenced in June to six months in prison but remained at liberty at the time as a warrant was not issued for his arrest.

Paris-based media watchdog Reporters Without Borders, known by its French acronym RSF, previously launched a petition demanding El Kadi’s release that was signed by more than 10,000 people

Algeria ranks 134th out of 180 countries on RSF’s 2022 World Press Freedom Index.

Also in January, the Human Rights League, the International Federation for Human Rights  and the World Organisation Against Torture criticised what they said was a constant attack on freedoms in Algeria since 2019 — the year protests unseated longtime president Abdelaziz Bouteflika.

The groups accused the authorities of trying to crack down on the Hirak protest movement, pointing to El Kadi’s imprisonment and the closure of the Algerian League for the Defence of Human Rights as examples.

“The deterioration of the human rights situation in Algeria is more concerning than ever,” the three groups said in a statement at the time.

 

Iran orders arrest of women 'attacked for not wearing hijab'

By - Apr 02,2023 - Last updated at Apr 02,2023

TEHRAN — Iranian authorities ordered the arrest of two women, the judiciary said on Saturday, after a viral video appeared to show them being attacked by a man for not wearing the hijab.

Video footage widely shared on social media in Iran appeared to show the two female customers, who were not wearing the mandatory hijab or headscarf, in a shop being assaulted by a man after a verbal altercation.

The footage shows the man pouring a bucket of what appears to be yogurt on the two women's heads before he is confronted by the shopkeeper.

Authorities issued an arrest warrant against the man "on charges of committing an insulting act and disturbance of order", the judiciary's Mizan Online website reported.

But it added arrest warrants were also issued for the two women for "committing a forbidden act" by removing their headscarves.

"Necessary notices have been issued to the owner of the shop where this happened in order to comply with legal and Sharia principles according to the regulations," it added.

It comes after the death in custody of Iranian Kurd Mahsa Amini in September sparked months of protests after the 22-year-old’s arrest for an alleged breach of the strict dress code for women.

Hundreds of people were killed, including dozens of security personnel, and thousands arrested in connection with what Iranian officials described as “riots” fomented by Israel and the West.

On Saturday, Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi reiterated calls affirming that Iranian women should wear the hijab as a “religious necessity”.

“Hijab is a legal matter and adherence to it is obligatory,” he said.

In late March, the head of the judiciary Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejei said “removing hijab amounts to enmity towards values and people who commit such abnormality will be punished”.

Huge crowds in Jerusalem for second Friday of Ramadan

250,000 people prayed at Islam's third holiest site

By - Apr 02,2023 - Last updated at Apr 02,2023

Palestinians perform the second Friday prayer of the Muslim holy fasting month of Ramadan in front of the Dome of the Rock Mosque at Al Aqsa Mosque Complex in Jerusalem on Friday (AFP photo)

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM — Thousands of Muslims packed Jerusalem's Al Aqsa Mosque compound on the second Friday of Ramadan, for prayers that saw no clashes with the Israeli security forces, an AFP journalist reported.

The Jordanian body which administers the mosque compound in Israeli-occupied East Jerusalem said that 250,000 people prayed at Islam's third holiest site.

In past years, the Old City was the setting for violence during Ramadan, but no major incidents were reported on Friday.

The Israeli-Palestinian conflict had seen an upsurge of violence since the beginning of the year, raising fears of a flare-up during Ramadan. But the past 10 days since the start of the holy fasting month have seen a relative lull in violence.

Israel has been allowing Palestinians from the occupied West Bank to enter Jerusalem for Ramadan prayers, with COGAT, the Israeli defence ministry body responsible for civil affairs in the Palestinian territories, saying over 70,000 people crossed on Friday.

Posting images on Twitter of worshippers crowded at Israeli checkpoints en route to Jerusalem, Palestinian civil affairs minister, Hussein Al Sheikh, blasted the "strict and humiliating measures".

The Israeli forces meanwhile announced the crossings from Gaza and the West Bank would be closed from Wednesday evening to Saturday night due to the Jewish festival of Passover.

Palestinians from the West Bank will be able to cross on Friday for Ramadan prayers.

The crossings will be closed again on April 11 and 12, the end of Passover, the army said, adding that exceptions may be allowed on humanitarian or medical grounds.

Pages

Pages



Newsletter

Get top stories and blog posts emailed to you each day.

PDF