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Three killed in Israeli strikes on Syria airport

By - Sep 07,2022 - Last updated at Sep 07,2022

This handout file photo released by ImageSat International on September 2, shows a satellite image depicting the damage at Aleppo airport in northern Syria following several Israeli strikes on August 31 (AFP photo)

BEIRUT — Israeli air strikes have killed at least three people and damaged Aleppo airport in northern Syria for the second time in a week, a war monitor said Wednesday.

The strikes carried out on Tuesday evening caused damage to the main runway of Syria's second largest airport, taking it out of service, the state news agency SANA reported.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based group that monitors the conflict, said among the targets of the strikes was a warehouse in the airport compound used by Iran-affiliated militia.

"Three people were killed and five were wounded," the group said, adding that a total of six missiles were fired.

The identities and nationalities of those killed could not be immediately confirmed.

Israel rarely comments on the strikes it carries out against Iranian and allied targets in Syria.

Iranian forces and Shiite militia groups it controls have a significant military presence across Syria. 

Israeli strikes had already caused some damage to Aleppo airport on August 31.

Syria’s private Cham Wings airline announced shortly after Tuesday’s strikes that its flights to and from Aleppo would be re-routed to the capital Damascus, around 300 kilometres to the south.

Palestinian killed in Israel West Bank raid — Health ministry

'Tayeh, 21, killed by bullet to heart fired by occupation soldier'

By - Sep 07,2022 - Last updated at Sep 07,2022

The mother (centre) of Palestinian Yunis Ghasan Tayeh, 21, mourns during his funeral at the Al-Faraa refugee camp near Tubas in the occupied West Bank, on Wednesday (AFP photo)

RAMALLAH, Palestinian Territories — A Palestinian was killed during an Israeli raid in the occupied West Bank on Wednesday, the Palestinian health ministry said.

"Yunis Ghasan Tayeh, 21, was killed by a bullet to the heart fired by a soldier of the occupation in Al Faraa camp," between Jenin and Tubas, in an area that has seen repeated clashes in recent weeks.

The Israeli occupation forces claimed soldiers, who had entered the camp to arrest a wanted person, had come under fire and been attacked with an "explosive device".

Israel has carried out near nightly raids on Palestinian-administered towns and cities, that have sparked frequent clashes with residents.

On Tuesday, one Palestinian was killed and 16 wounded when Israeli troops entered Jenin to demolish the home of a Palestinian who allegedly carried out an attack in Tel Aviv in April.

Israeli forces kill Palestinian in West Bank raid

By - Sep 06,2022 - Last updated at Sep 06,2022

JENIN, Palestinian Territories — A Palestinian was killed and 16 wounded Tuesday when Israeli troops entered Jenin in the occupied West Bank to carry out a home demolition, the Palestinian health ministry said.

"The outcome of the Israeli aggression on Jenin at dawn today: A 29-year-old martyr and 16 wounded with bullets and shrapnel were admitted to hospitals," the ministry said.

Palestinian official news agency Wafa identified the dead man as Mohammed Musa Mohammed Sabaaneh, 29.

Sabaaneh's father, Musa Sabaaneh, told AFP that a soldier "inside a jeep fired a bullet" at his son.

"We were asleep and did not know the news. We received a call that my son was seriously injured," he said.

Thousands of mourners gathered in Jenin as Sabaaneh's body was paraded through the streets at his funeral. 

A petition by Hazem's family to prevent the demolition was rejected by Israel's supreme court on May 30.

Human rights activists say Israel's policy of demolishing the homes of suspected attackers amounts to collective punishment, as it can render non-combatants, including children, homeless.

'21 separatist fighters, 6 extremists dead in Yemen Al Qaeda attack'

By - Sep 06,2022 - Last updated at Sep 06,2022

ADEN — Twenty-one separatist fighters and six members of Al Qaeda's Yemen branch were killed on Tuesday in an attack by the extremist group in the country's south, government and security sources said.

Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) attacked positions held by the UAE-trained Security Belt group in Abyan governorate, in clashes that lasted about three hours, the sources told AFP.

The fighting "left 21 dead among the [Security Belt], including an officer, and six among the Al Qaeda combatants", a government official said on condition of anonymity.

Two security sources confirmed the death toll.

Yemen has been gripped by conflict since Iran-backed Houthi rebels took control of the capital Sanaa in 2014, triggering a Saudi-led military intervention in support of the beleaguered government the following year.

AQAP and militants loyal to the Daesh group have thrived in the chaos.

The fighting comes as the Houthis and forces supporting the ousted government observe a shaky ceasefire in the years-long civil war.

Riven by divisions, the groups opposing the Houthis, who originate from the north, include southern separatists who support the re-establishment of South Yemen.

The country was divided into North and South Yemen until 1990.

 

Century on, political fights rage over Turkey’s dogs

Sep 06,2022 - Last updated at Sep 06,2022

Dogs have a special place in the culture of Muslim-majority Turkey (AFP photo)

ISTANBUL — Ubiquitous and iconic, Istanbul’s street dogs have been swept up in a political storm involving President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and an app that helped get them killed.

The sheer number of stray animals — dogs and cats both — darting between people and lounging on public squares jumps out at most visitors to Turkey’s ancient cultural capital.

They could well be descendants of the dogs glorified in the first grainy photos of the city, in which they roam in packs near landmarks such as the Hagia Sophia and Blue Mosque.

This is no accident, according to Ekrem Isin, a researcher who wrote “The Four-Legged Municipality: The Street Dogs of Istanbul”.

“We are a society that coexists with animals. Actually it’s an eastern tradition. Every neighbourhood has its dogs and people who take care of them,” he said in an interview.

In some Islamic cultures, the faithful see dogs as innocent creatures that will speak on judgement day and open the believers’ way to heaven.

But until then, they are viewed as unclean and best kept out on the streets.

“So although our people loved dogs, they did not take them home but fed them on the street,” Isin said.

It has been a love-hate affair of late that, like most things in the painfully polarised country, has taken on a political life of its own.

 

Erdogan casts blame 

 

Late last year, a four-year-old girl was attacked and seriously injured by a pair of pit bulls in Gaziantep, a large city in the southeast.

The pitbulls were pets rather than strays but Erdogan seized on the incident, declaring: “Stray animals belong in shelters, not the streets.”

The seemingly innocuous comment was in fact a jibe aimed at his great rival, Istanbul mayor Ekrem Imamoglu.

Politically ambitious and media savvy, Imamoglu beat Erdogan’s ally in highly controversial polls in 2019, handing the city the Turkish leader himself once headed to the secular opposition CHP Party.

Two months before the girl’s mauling, Imamoglu had launched one of his many social media campaigns — this one featuring the travels of a stray called Boji on Istanbul’s trains and ferries.

Erdogan’s message was clear — the government was trying to make the streets safe of dogs let loose by the opposition.

CHP’s deputy leader Ali Oztunc, who oversees animal welfare, accused the government of failing to give opposition-led cities enough funding to neuter and shelter strays.

“It acts as if [cities] should take care of their own business,” Oztunc told AFP.

 

‘Heart-rending wails’ 

 

The arguments grew more urgent with the emergence of an app called Havrita — made up of the words “woof” and “map” in Turkish — which allowed users to report the exact location of strays.

Dogs began dying in droves after Havrita’s launch in May.

“We began to hear more about poisoning cases or mass killings,” said lawyer Gulsaniye Ekmekci of the Istanbul Bar’s Animal Rights Commission.

This month, an Ankara court sided with Havrita’s critics, blocking access to both its website and the app.

“We cannot solve the problem by killing animals,” Ekmekci said.

Istanbul has tried eliminating its dogs before.

In 1910, the Ottomans exiled 80,000 strays to a deserted island in the Sea of Marmara as part of a modernisation drive aimed at giving the empire’s then-capital a more European feel.

“There wasn’t a drop of water to drink and the dogs killed each other out of hunger and thirst,” wrote French novelist and navy officer Pierre Loti, who frequented Istanbul at the time.

“Whenever a boat passed near the island, all of them would run to the shore and you could hear heart-rending wails.”

 

Settling scores 

 

Director Serge Avedikian, whose “Barking Island” about the experiment won the Short Film Palme d’Or in Cannes in 2010, thinks dogs have once more become victims of politics.

“A century later, dogs are again being used as scapegoats,” Avedikian told AFP.

“Since there’s no dialogue in society and no agreement on hardly any issue, they settle scores through dogs,” he said.

But Volkan Koc, founder of the Patilikoy shelter in the modern Turkish capital Ankara, takes a more optimistic view.

“Europeans have solved this problem by sterilising dogs and offering them up for adoption,” he said.

“We may be behind on this but our people have good hearts. We will never let a minority harm animals.”

Around 730 children dead in Somalia nutrition centres— UN

By - Sep 06,2022 - Last updated at Sep 06,2022

GENEVA — Around 730 children have died in nutrition centres across Somalia since January, the United Nations said on Tuesday, warning the true figure could be much higher, with the country nearing famine.

Millions of people are at risk of starvation across the Horn of Africa, which is in the grip of the worst drought in four decades after four failed rainy seasons wiped out livestock and crops.

“Malnutrition has reached an unprecedented level,” said Wafaa Saeed, the Somalia representative for the UN children’s agency UNICEF.

“Around 730 children are reported to have died in nutrition centres across the country” between January and July, she told reporters in Geneva via video-link from Mogadishu.

“This is less than 1 per cent of the children who were admitted, cured and discharged. But we also feel that this number could be more, as many deaths of children go unreported.”

She said some 1.5 million children — nearly half aged under five — are at risk of acute malnutrition.

Among those, 385,000 will need treatment for severe acute malnutrition, Saeed said.

 

Brink of famine 

 

The UN on warned Monday that Somalia was on the brink of famine for the second time in just over a decade, and that time was running out to save lives in the drought-stricken country.

Seed said the drought had triggered a water and sanitation crisis, because many of the water sources had dried up.

“Many of those have also dried out because of overuse, and we have around 4.5 million people who need emergency water supplies,” she said.

That figure is expected to rise as the drought worsens and, according to UNICEF, as the price of water has increased by between 55 per cent and 85 per cent since January.

“No matter how much food a malnourished child eats, if he or she doesn’t get clean water then they won’t be able to recover,” said Saeed.

UNICEF is particularly concerned because history shows that when levels of severe acute malnutrition in children combine with deadly disease outbreaks, child mortality rises dramatically.

“We are really very much concerned about this because we are also seeing increase in outbreak of acute watery diarrhoea,” Saeed said.

“There are more than 8,400 cases this year and around 13,000 cases of measles. And the cases of measles this year alone are more than what has been reported in 2020 and 2021 combined.”

Humanitarian agencies have been ringing alarm bells for months and say the situation across the Horn of Africa — including Kenya and Ethiopia — is likely to deteriorate with a likely fifth failed rainy season in the offing.

In Somalia alone, about 7.8 million people or half the population face crisis hunger levels, UN agencies say.

Around 1 million have fled their homes on a desperate quest for food and water.

 

Iran says it insists on ‘four topics’ in nuclear talks

By - Sep 06,2022 - Last updated at Sep 06,2022

TEHRAN — Iran said on Tuesday that, in its protracted talks with major powers to restore its tattered 2015 nuclear deal, it is insisting on resolving “four topics”.

The four points, addressed by the government spokesman, relate to US assurances a new deal will hold, relief from punishing sanctions, and to the UN monitoring of Iranian sites.

“As Iran’s president [Ebrahim Raisi] has said, we have pursued and will pursue four topics in the negotiations,” the spokesman, Ali Bahadori-Jahromi, told a press briefing.

On the first point, he said that “the guarantees must be reassuring”, referring mainly to Tehran’s demand that future US administrations won’t scrap the deal again, as Donald Trump’s did in 2018.

“Objective and practical verification should be foreseen in the deal,” he added, to ensure that sanctions are lifted not just on paper, and that international companies can return to Iran and operate freely.

Bahadori-Jahromi also said the “removal of sanctions should be meaningful and sustainable” as oil-rich Iran hopes to truly reap the economic benefits of sanctions relief.

And the spokesman stressed that “political claims about the safeguard issues should be closed”, referring to Iran’s claim a UN nuclear watchdog probe into unexplained nuclear particles found at various Iranian research sites is “political” and must end before a new deal is implemented.

The original nuclear deal promised Iran relief from crippling sanctions in return for guarantees it would not obtain a nuclear weapon, a goal Iran has always denied pursuing.

Trump withdrew the United States from the agreement in 2018 and reimposed heavy economic sanctions on Iran, prompting the Islamic republic to roll back on its commitments.

 

Iran says hopes for sanction relief to export gas to Europe

By - Sep 06,2022 - Last updated at Sep 06,2022

TEHRAN — Iran said on Monday it hopes to see US sanctions eased or lifted to allow it to sell natural gas to Europe, easing the continent's shortfall as Russian energy exports are restricted.

"Given Europe's energy supply problems triggered by the Ukraine crisis, Iran could provide Europe's energy needs if sanctions against it are lifted," said foreign ministry's spokesman Nasser Kanani.

Iran is engaged in talks with world powers to revive its 2015 nuclear deal which the United States unilaterally abandoned in 2018, with Tehran pushing for the lifting of US economic sanctions.

"We hope an agreement will be reached to let Iran play a more efficient role, with the aim of providing the energy needed for countries around the world and for European countries," Kanani told a weekly news conference.

Iran has the world's second largest natural gas reserves, after Russia, but lacks the infrastructure to increase exports, which are currently limited to Iraq and Turkey.

Iran and the six other parties to the 2015 nuclear accord, Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the United States, have been negotiating a return to the agreement.

It gave Iran sanctions relief in exchange for curbs on its nuclear programme to guarantee that Tehran can not develop a nuclear weapon,  something it has always denied seeking.

 

Israel army says 'high possibility' Israeli soldier killed Shireen Abu Akleh

Abu Akleh was wearing a bulletproof vest marked 'Press'

By - Sep 06,2022 - Last updated at Sep 06,2022

This handout file photo obtained from a former colleague of Al Jazeera's slain veteran TV journalist Shireen Abu Akleh, shows her reporting from Jerusalem on June 12, 2021 (AFP photo)

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM — The Israeli occupation army said on Monday there was a "high possibility" that Palestinian-American reporter Shireen Abu Akleh was shot dead by an Israeli soldier who mistook her for a militant.

"There is a high possibility that Ms Abu Akleh was accidentally hit by the army gunfire that was fired towards suspects identified as armed Palestinian gunmen," said the army's final investigation report into her May 11 death.

The acknowledgement comes after months in which the occupation army insisted it was impossible to determine the source of the deadly shot the killed the celebrated Al Jazeera journalist in the occupied West Bank, saying it could have been militant fire.

Abu Akleh was wearing a bulletproof vest marked "Press" and a helmet when she was shot in the head during the Israeli army operation on May 11.

The Abu Akleh family on Monday said that Israel had "refused to take responsibility for the murder" of the journalist, in a press release issued in the wake of the Israeli army's investigation report.

"We remain deeply hurt, frustrated and disappointed," the family said, calling for a "credible" US investigation.

The Palestinian Authority accused Israel of intentionally killing the reporter in the Jenin refugee camp, in the northern West Bank, whereas Israel has insisted that even if a soldier fired the fatal shot it was not deliberate.

 

'Call for accountability' 

 

On Monday, the senior army officer told reporters that the Israeli soldiers were under heavy fire and aimed to hit Abu Akleh because they had mistaken her for a Palestinian militant.

"When they fired in her direction they didn't know she was a journalist, it was a mistake, they thought they were firing at terrorists shooting at them," the officer said.

"He's sorry about it and I'm sorry about it too," the officer said of the soldier who shot in the direction of Abu Akleh.

"He didn't do it on purpose, it's totally clear," he added.

A United Nations investigation concluded in June that there was "no evidence of activity by armed Palestinians close by" when Abu Akleh was shot.

The United States on July 4 said she was likely shot by Israeli fire but that there was no evidence her killing was intentional and that the bullet was too damaged for a conclusive finding.

The US statement outraged Abu Akleh's family and Palestinian leaders who accused Washington of failing to seek accountability from Israel over the killing of the journalist, who also held US citizenship.

“We are continuing to call for accountability and for justice for Shireen,” Lina Abu Akleh, the journalist’s niece, said in Washington after meeting US Secretary of State Antony Blinken.

In May, Israel’s military advocate had said there was no suspicion of criminal activity since the event took place in an active combat zone.

The military advocate said on Monday that the circumstances of the incident “do not raise the suspicion of a crime having been committed which would justify the opening of a criminal investigation”.

 

Jailed Iranian filmmakers vow to keep creating

By - Sep 04,2022 - Last updated at Sep 04,2022

VENICE — Two jailed Iranian filmmakers have issued a defiant challenge to authorities in Iran, vowing in a message to fellow cineastes at the Venice Film Festival that they will not stop creating.

Mohammad Rasoulof and Jafar Panahi — whose film "Khers Nist" (No Bears) is in competition for Venice's top Golden Lion prize — have both been behind bars since July amid a crackdown on dissident voices in all sectors of society.

Rasoulof, 50, was arrested after having launched a petition from directors and actors urging security forces to lay down their arms in the face of a wave of protests. His anti-capital-punishment movie "There is No Evil" won the Golden Bear at the Berlin film festival in 2020.

Fellow prize-winning director Panahi, 62, was detained while seeking information about Rasoulof's whereabouts and told he had to serve a six-year sentence previously handed out.

A third filmmaker, Mostafa Aleahmad, was also arrested and jailed in July.

In the statement issued Sunday by festival organisers, the directors said that as members of Iran's independent cinema movement with a calling to create, "those in power see us as criminals".

"The history of Iranian cinema witnesses the constant and active presence of independent directors who have struggled to push back censorship and to ensure the survival of this art," the directors wrote.

"While on this path, some were banned from making films, others were forced into exile or reduced to isolation. And yet, the hope of creating again is a reason for existence," said the statement.

"No matter where, when, or under what circumstances, an independent filmmaker is either creating or thinking about creation. We are filmmakers, independent ones."

Panahi has won a slew of awards at international festivals for films critiquing modern Iran, including the top prize in Berlin for "Taxi" in 2015, and best screenplay at Cannes for his film "Three Faces" in 2018.

He was arrested in 2010 following his support for anti-government protests and later convicted of "propaganda against the system". The six-year sentence he is now serving relates to that conviction.

The current repression in Iran, which comes one year into the rule of President Ebrahim Raisi, the ultra-conservative former judiciary chief, is not only targeted at artists.

Regime critics from a wide range of sectors have been arrested, from trade union activists, to campaigners against the enforced wearing of the headscarf for women, to religious minorities.

International film festivals, including Venice and Cannes, have called for the filmmakers' release.

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