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UN members demand end to 'unlawful' Israeli occupation of Palestinian territories

By - Sep 18,2024 - Last updated at Sep 18,2024

Palestinian Representative Ryad Mansour applauds the result of a vote during the emergency session on the legal consequences of Israel's actions in the Palestinian territories at United Nations Headquarters on Wednesday in New York (AFP photo)

United Nations, United States — UN member states formally demanded in a non-binding resolution Wednesday an end to the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian territories within 12 months and sanctions for non-compliance.

The text, which Israel said would fuel violence if adopted, is based on an advisory opinion from the International Court of Justice calling Israel's occupation since 1967 "unlawful."

There were 124 votes in favor, 14 against and a notable 43 abstentions.

Arab countries called the special session of the assembly just days before dozens of heads of state and government meet at the UN headquarters to address the kick off of this year's General Assembly session.

The resolution "demands that Israel brings to an end without delay its unlawful presence in the Occupied Palestinian Territory," and that this be done "no later than 12 months from the adoption."

The first draft text gave only six months.

"The idea is you want to use the pressure of the international community in the General Assembly and the pressure of the historic ruling by the ICJ to force Israel to change its behavior," said Palestinian Ambassador to the UN Riyad Mansour on Monday.

The resolution "demands" the withdrawal of Israeli forces from the Palestinian territories, a halt to new settlements, the return of seized land and property, and the possibility of return for displaced Palestinians.

It also calls on states "to take steps toward ceasing" arms provisions to Israel when there are "reasonable grounds to suspect that they may be used in the Occupied Palestinian Territory."

"The Palestinians want to live -- not survive. They want to be safe in their homes," said Mansour Tuesday ahead of the passage of the first resolution ever introduced by the Palestinians.

"How many more Palestinians need to be killed before change finally takes place to stop this inhumanity?"

The ICJ opinion was "a historic opinion as this was the first time the court examined the Israeli occupation as a whole," Mansour said.

The United States voted against the resolution.

Nine dead, 2,800 wounded as Lebanon's Hizbollah hit by pager blasts

By - Sep 17,2024 - Last updated at Sep 17,2024

Medics collect blood donations in Beirut's southern suburb on September 17, 2024, after explosions hit locations in several Hizbollah strongholds around Lebanon amid ongoing cross-border tensions between Israel and Hizbollah fighters (AFP photo)

BEIRUT — Hundreds of pagers used by Hizbollah  members exploded across Lebanon on Tuesday, killing at least nine people and wounding some 2,800 in blasts the Iran-backed militant group blamed on Israel.

There was no immediate comment from the Israeli military on the wave of explosions, which came just hours after Israel announced it was broadening the aims of the war sparked by Hamas's October 7 attacks to include its fight against Hizbollah along its border with Lebanon.

The sons of Hizbollah lawmakers Ali Ammar and Hassan Fadlallah were among the dead, a source close to the group told AFP, requesting anonymity to discuss sensitive matters.

The blasts "killed nine people, including a girl", Lebanese Health Minister Firass Abiad said in a casualty update.

He added that some "2,800 people were injured, about 200 of them critically" with injuries mostly reported to the face, hands and stomach.

The 10-year-old daughter of a Hizbollah member was killed in east Lebanon's Bekaa Valley when his pager exploded, the family and a source close to the group said.

Tehran's ambassador to Beirut was also wounded in a pager explosion but his injuries were not serious, Iranian state media reported.

In neighbouring Syria, 14 people were wounded "after pagers used by Hizbollah exploded", said a Britain-based war monitor, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

Hizbollah blamed Israel for the blasts and warned it would be punished.

"We hold the Israeli enemy fully responsible for this criminal aggression," the group said in a statement, adding that Israel "will certainly receive its just punishment for this sinful aggression".

The United States, Israel's top arms provider and close ally, was "not involved" and "not aware of this incident in advance", said State Department spokesman Matthew Miller.

The afternoon blasts hit Hizbollah strongholds across Lebanon and dealt a heavy blow to the group, which already had concerns about the security of its communications after losing several key commanders to targeted air strikes in recent months.

Hizbollah had instructed its members to avoid mobile phones after the Gaza war began and to rely instead on the group's own telecommunications system to prevent Israeli breaches.

"Hundreds of Hizbollah members were injured by the simultaneous explosion of their pagers" in the group's strongholds in Beirut's southern suburbs, in south Lebanon and in the eastern Bekaa Valley, a Hizbollah  source said, requesting anonymity.

AFP journalists saw dozens of wounded being taken to hospital in Beirut and in the south, where dozens of ambulances rushed between the cities of Tyre and Sidon in both directions.

Education Minister Abbas Halabi announced the closure of schools and universities on Wednesday "in condemnation of the criminal act committed by the Israeli enemy".

- Israel expands war aims -

Earlier on Tuesday, Israel announced it was broadening the aims of the war sparked by the Hamas attacks to include its fight against Hizbollah  along its border with Lebanon.

To date, Israel's objectives have been to crush Hamas and bring home the hostages seized by Palestinian militants during the October 7 attacks that sparked the war.

"The political-security cabinet updated the goals of the war this evening, so that they include the following section: the safe return of the residents of the north to their homes," Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office said in a statement.

Since October, the unabating exchanges of fire between Israeli troops and Hamas ally Hizbollah in Lebanon have forced tens of thousands of people on both sides of the border to flee their homes.

Not formally declared as a war by Israel, the exchanges of fire between Israeli troops and Hizbollah have killed hundreds of mostly fighters in Lebanon, and dozens on the Israeli side.

On Monday, Israeli defence minister Yoav Gallant warned that failing a political solution, "military action" would be "the only way left to ensure the return of Israel's northern communities".

Hizbollah, which like Hamas is backed by Israel's regional arch-foe Iran, claimed a dozen attacks on Israeli positions on Monday and three more on Tuesday.

Before the wave of pager explosions, Israel said it killed three Hizbollah members in a strike on Lebanon on Tuesday.

"The possibility for an agreement is running out as Hizbollah continues to tie itself to Hamas," Gallant's office quoted him as telling visiting US envoy Amos Hochstein.

Netanyahu later told Hochstein he was seeking a "fundamental change" in the security situation on Israel's northern border.

Hizbollah deputy chief Naim Qassem said at the weekend that his group had "no intention of going to war", but that "there will be large losses on both sides" in the event of all-out conflict.

Israel warns time running out to halt battle with Hezbollah

By - Sep 16,2024 - Last updated at Sep 16,2024

Smoke billows from the site of an Israeli airstrike that targeted the southern Lebanese village of Houla on September 16, 2024 (AFP photo)

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM — Israel's defence minister told the United States that prospects for a halt in fighting with Hizbollah militants along the Lebanon border were dimming, his office said on Monday.
 
Yoav Gallant told his ally, Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin, in a call that "the possibility for an agreed framework in the northern arena is running out as Hezbollah continues to 'tie itself' to Hamas", an Israeli defence ministry statement said.
 
Lebanon's Iran-backed Hizbollah group has traded near-daily cross-border fire with Israeli forces since Palestinian militant group Hamas attacked Israel on October 7, sparking war in the Gaza Strip.
 
The violence has killed hundreds of mostly fighters in Lebanon, and dozens of civilians and soldiers on the Israeli side.
 
In Lebanon, most of the dead were fighters, while on the Israeli side, there were both fighters and civilians.
 
The fighting has also forced tens of thousands of people on both sides to flee their homes. 
 
While rounds of talks mediated by the United States, Qatar and Egypt have been held to try to secure a truce in Gaza, there has been no suggestion of any negotiations to halt the fighting between Hizbollah and Israel.
 
Hizbollah deputy chief Naim Qassem said Saturday his group has "no intention of going to war", but if Israel does "unleash" one "there will be large losses on both sides".
 
Israel and Hizbollah fought a month-long war in the summer of 2006 that killed more than 1,200 people in Lebanon, mostly civilians, as well as 160 Israelis, most of them soldiers.
 
The Israeli defence ministry statement on Monday said Gallant "reiterated Israel's commitment to the removal of Hizbollah presence in southern Lebanon, and to enabling the safe return of Israel's northern communities to their homes."
 
Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu addressed the crisis in the north on Sunday, vowing that "the existing situation will not continue".
 
"We will do everything necessary to return our residents safely to their homes," he said. 
 
After speaking with residents and authorities in the north, he said: "I hear the distress, I hear the cries.
 
"The status quo will not continue. This requires a change in the balance of power on our northern border."
 
 

Israel says missile from Yemen fell in central Israel

By - Sep 15,2024 - Last updated at Sep 15,2024

First responders put out a fire in an open area in Lod near Tel Aviv, reportedly caused by a missile fired from Yemen on September 15, 2024. The Israeli military said a missile fired from Yemen crossed into central Israel on September 15, 2024, causing no injuries but again adding to regional tensions nearly a year into the Gaza war (AFP photo)

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM — The Israeli military said a missile fired from Yemen crossed into central Israel on Sunday, causing no injuries but again adding to regional tensions nearly a year into the Gaza war.
 
After the incident, AFP photographers saw firefighters putting out a brush fire near Lod, and saw broken glass at a train station in Modin. Both areas are southeast of Tel Aviv, Israel's commercial hub.
 
Yemen's Huthi rebels did not immediately claim the attack but are among Iran-backed groups around the Middle East that have been drawn into the conflict triggered by the October 7 attack by Hamas Palestinian fighters against Israel that triggered war in the Gaza Strip.
 
In July, the Huthis claimed a drone strike that penetrated Israel's air defences and killed a civilian in Tel Aviv, at least 1,800 kilometres from Yemen.
 
In a statement on Sunday, Israel's military said "a surface-to-surface missile was identified crossing into central Israel from the East and fell in an open area. No injuries were reported."
 
"The missile was fired from Yemen," it added later. 
 
The military said explosions "heard in the last few minutes" were from air-defence interceptors and the result of the interception was under review.
 
Yemen's Huthis have been launching attacks against Israel and its perceived interests in what they say is solidarity with Palestinians during the war between Israel and Hamas in the Gaza Strip. 
 
The rebels are part of the "axis of resistance", which also includes Tehran-aligned militant groups in Iraq, Syria and Lebanon.
 
Deadly shipping attacks 
 
Since November, the Huthis have carried out dozens of missile and drone strikes on shipping in the Gulf of Aden and the Red Sea, waterways vital to global trade.
 
Several Filipino sailors have been killed in the strikes which have led to American military retaliation against Huthi targets.
 
Huthi missiles last month hit a Greek-flagged tanker carrying more than a million barrels of crude, leaving it ablaze off the coast of the Yemeni port of Hodeida and threatening environmental disaster. 
 
A Greek defence ministry source on Saturday told AFP that a salvage operation was underway and the Sounion vessel was being towed northward under military escort.
 
After the Huthis' deadly July attack on Tel Aviv, Israeli warplanes bombed Huthi-controlled Hodeida in response, destroying much of the facility's fuel storage capacity and killing several people, according to the rebels.
 
It was Israel's first claimed strike in Yemen.
 
A rebel official vowed at the time to "meet escalation with escalation". A Huthi statement last month affirmed "once again that the Yemeni response is definitely coming".

Israel renews 'anti-Semitism' jibe against EU's Borrell after latest criticism

By - Sep 14,2024 - Last updated at Sep 14,2024

A Palestinian activist holding a national flag stands by as an Israeli army bulldozer moves during an ongoing raid on the Tulkarm camp for Palestinian refugees in the north of the occupied West Bank on September 12, 2024 (AFP photo)

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM — Israel's foreign minister again accused EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell of "anti-Semitism" Saturday after the top diplomat expressed outrage at the killing of UN staff in an Israeli strike in Gaza.
 
"Josep Borrell is an anti-Semite and Israel-hater who consistently tries to pass resolutions and sanctions against Israel in the EU, only to be blocked by most member states," foreign minister Israel Katz said in a statement.
 
On Thursday, Borrell said he was "outraged" by the killing of six employees from the UN Palestinian refugee agency (UNRWA) in an Israeli air strike on a school-turned-shelter in the Nuseirat area of central Gaza the day before.
 
The attack flattened part of the UN-run Al Jawni School on Wednesday, leaving only a pile of charred rebar and concrete.
 
Gaza's civil defence agency and the United Nations said at least 18 people, among them women and children, were killed in the strike, while the Israeli military said it had targeted Hamas fighters.
 
The military said it had killed nine militants, including three who were also UNRWA employees.
 
UNRWA said six of its staff were killed in two Israeli strikes on the school.
 
It was the deadliest single incident for the agency in more than 11 months of war and drew international condemnation.
 
Katz has repeatedly levelled accusations of "anti-Semitism" against the European Union foreign policy chief, who has consistently spoken out against perceived Israeli abuses in Gaza and the West Bank. 
 
Borrell said the Nuseirat strike showed a "disregard of the basic principles" of international humanitarian law.
 
On Saturday, Katz retorted: "There's a difference between legitimate criticism... and the anti-Semitic, hate-filled campaign Borrell is leading against Israel -- reminiscent of history's worst anti-Semites."
 
UNRWA has said at least 220 members of the agency's staff have been killed in the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza, which was triggered by Hamas's unprecedented attack on southern Israel on October 7. 
 
On Friday, UNRWA announced one of its employees was killed during an Israeli raid in the occupied West Bank, the first such death in the territory in more than a decade. 
 
UNRWA has more than 30,000 employees in the Palestinian territories and elsewhere. 
 
It has been in crisis since Israel accused a dozen of its employees of being involved in the October 7 attack. 
 
The UN immediately fired the implicated staff members, and a probe found some "neutrality related issues" but stressed Israel had not provided evidence for its main allegations.
 

Monitor says Israel strike in Syria kills 2 Hezbollah-linked operatives

By - Sep 12,2024 - Last updated at Sep 12,2024

BEIRUT, Lebanon — A war monitor said an Israeli strike Thursday in the Syrian-controlled Golan Heights killed two people working with Lebanon's Hezbollah, days after major raids elsewhere in the country.
 
Syria's official news agency SANA reported that "two citizens were martyred due to an Israeli drone attack that targeted a civilian vehicle with a missile" on the Damascus-Quneitra road, in Quneitra province.
 
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights war monitor said those killed were an operative who "worked with Lebanon's Hizbollah and was responsible for recruiting Syrians in the area... and transporting weapons".
 
His "assistant" was also killed, added the Britain-based Observatory, which relies on a network of sources inside Syria.
 
A local security source told AFP that "two charred bodies were removed" from the targeted vehicle.
 
The Israeli army has yet to comment on the strike.
 
Israel seized much of the Golan Heights from Syria in 1967 and later annexed it in a move largely unrecognised by the international community.
 
Thursday's strike came days after raids blamed on Israel killed 18 people in the central province of Hama, according to Syrian authorities.
 
The Observatory said those strikes killed 27 people, including six civilians, and targeted a "scientific research area" and other sites in the province's Masyaf area.
 
Israel declined to comment on those reported strikes.
 
Israeli authorities rarely comment on individual strikes in Syria, but have repeatedly said they will not allow arch-enemy Iran to expand its presence there.
 
Israeli raids on Syria surged after Hamas's October 7 attack then eased somewhat after an April 1 strike blamed on Israel hit the Iranian consular building in Damascus, prompting Iran's first-ever direct attack against Israel.
 

Lebanon health ministry says three killed in Israeli strikes

By - Sep 12,2024 - Last updated at Sep 12,2024

A shell fired from Israel explodes over the southern Lebanese border village of Khiam on September 11, 2024 (AFP photo)

BEIRUT, Lebanon — The Lebanese health ministry said a child was among three people killed in an Israeli strike in the south on Thursday, amid ongoing exchanges of fire between Israel and Hizbollah.
 
Lebanon's Iran-backed Hizbollah group has been trading near-daily cross-border fire with Israeli since Palestinian militant group Hamas attacked Israel on October 7, triggering war in the Gaza Strip.
 
The Lebanese health ministry said an "Israeli enemy strike" hit the village of Kfarjouz near Nabatieh, some 10 kilometres from the border with Israel.
 
The strike killed "three people, among them a child, and wounded three others", the ministry said, without providing further details.
 
A source close to Hizbollah confirmed that one of dead was "a fighter in Hizbollah" and the two others were "civilians".
 
Lebanon's state-run National News Agency said the strike "targeted two motorcycles on the Nabatieh-Kfarjouz road", adding that a passing car was also hit.
 
Earlier Thursday, Hizbollah said it launched a number of attacks on military positions in northern Israel, some with drones.
 
The Israeli military said "approximately 15 projectiles" were identified crossing from Lebanon into Israeli territory but some were intercepted and no casualties were reported.
 
The cross-border violence since early October has killed some 622 people in Lebanon, mostly fighters but also including at least 142 civilians, according to an AFP tally.
 
On the Israeli side, including in the annexed Golan Heights, authorities have announced the deaths of at least 24 soldiers and 26 civilians.
 

UN decries 'staggering' economic devastation across Gaza, West Bank

By - Sep 12,2024 - Last updated at Sep 12,2024

GENEVA — Israel's war against Hamas has decimated Gaza's economy, shrinking it to less than one-sixth of its 2022 level, amid an "alarming decline" in the West Bank, the UN said Thursday.
 
Since the war erupted in the Gaza Strip more than 11 months ago, the United Nations said economic devastation has taken place at a "staggering scale".
 
"Production processes have been disrupted or decimated, income sources have disappeared, poverty has intensified and expanded, neighbourhoods have been eradicated and communities and towns have been ruined," the UN Trade and Development agency (UNCTAD) said in a new report.
 
The war erupted after Hamas's October 7 attack inside Israel, which resulted in the deaths of 1,205 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures, which includes hostages killed in captivity. 
 
Israel's retaliation has killed at least 41,118 people in Gaza, according to the territory's health ministry. The UN rights office says most of the dead are women and children.
 
And the Palestinian territory has been left in ruins.
 
 'Decades' 
 
Mutasim Elagraa, who coordinates UNCTAD's Palestinian assistance programme, said it remained unclear how much it would cost to rebuild.
 
"But the evidence we have now (indicates) it will be high tens of billions or maybe even more," he told reporters in Geneva.
 
"It will take decades to bring Gaza back to where it was in October 2023."
 
Already by early 2024, UNCTAD said up to 96 per cent of Gaza's agricultural assets, including farms, orchards, irrigation systems, machinery and storage facilities, had been "decimated". 
 
This had crippled food production capacity and worsened the already towering levels of food insecurity in the besieged Palestinian territory, it said.
 
A full 82 per cent of businesses in Gaza had also been damaged or destroyed.
 
In the last quarter of 2023 alone, Gaza's gross domestic product (GDP) plummeted 81 percent, leading to a 22-percent contraction for the entire year, the report found. 
 
"By mid-2024, Gaza's economy had shrunk to less than one-sixth of its 2022 level," UNCTAD said.
 
Spiralling violence in the West Bank has meanwhile sparked a "rapid and alarming economic decline" there as well, the agency warned, pointing out that GDP there had contracted 19 percent in the final quarter of 2023.
 
Since October 7, Israeli troops or settlers have killed at least 662 Palestinians in the West Bank, according to the Palestinian health ministry.
 
Thursday's report said factors like settlement expansions, land confiscation, demolition of Palestinian structures, increased settler violence had displaced West Bank communities and severely impacted economic activities.
 
A full 80 percent of businesses in East Jerusalem Old City have either partially or completely ceased operations, UNCTAD said.
 
 79% unemployment 
 
Labour market conditions across the Palestinian territories have also worsened dramatically since October 7.
 
In the West Bank, the report showed that 96 per cent of businesses decreased activity, and over 42 percent reduced their workforce.
 
In all, 306,000 jobs have been lost, pushing the West Bank's unemployment rates from nearly 13 percent before the war to 32 percent.
 
In Gaza, meanwhile, a full two-thirds of pre-war jobs -- around 201,000 positions -- had been lost by January this year, the report showed.
 
Unemployment in the besieged territory reached 79 percent in the final quarter of 2023, up from 46 percent in the previous quarter, it said.
 
Even before the war, poverty was already widespread.
 
And now "poverty affects nearly the entire population of Gaza and is rising rapidly in the West Bank", UNCTAD said.
 

Deadly Israeli strike on Gaza school draws global condemnation

By - Sep 12,2024 - Last updated at Sep 12,2024

Palestinian women react at the site of an Israeli strike in the Shejaiya suburb east of Gaza City on September 12, 2024, amid the ongoing Israeli war against the Strip (AFP photo)

GAZA STRIP, Palestinian Territories — Israel faced international condemnation Thursday after a strike killed 18 people at a school-turned-shelter for displaced Palestinians in war-torn Gaza, where the Israeli military said it targeted Hamas militants.
 
The attack flattened part of the UN-run Al Jawni school in Nuseirat on Wednesday, leaving only a charred heap of rebar and concrete.
 
"For the fifth time, Israeli forces bombed the UNRWA-run Al Jawni School, killing 18 citizens," Gaza civil defence spokesperson Mahmud Bassal wrote on Telegram, referring to the UN agency for Palestinian refugees.
 
UNRWA later said six of its staff had been killed in two Israeli strikes on the school and its surroundings, calling it the highest death toll among its team in a single incident.
 
"Among those killed was the manager of the UNRWA shelter and other team members providing assistance to displaced people," it said on X. "Schools and other civilian infrastructure must be protected at all times, they are not a target."
 
UN chief Antonio Guterres branded the strike "totally unacceptable".
 
His condemnation was echoed by Israeli ally Germany, which said "humanitarian aid workers must never be victims of rockets".
 
Jordan and the European Union also criticised the attack, while Israel's main backer the United States called on it to protect humanitarian sites.
 
EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said he was "outraged" by the deaths and that the strikes showed a "disregard of the basic principles" of international humanitarian law.
 
US Secretary of State Blinken said: "We need to see humanitarian sites protected, and that's something that we continue to raise with Israel".
 
Israeli military spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Nadav Shoshani said UNRWA had not provided the names of its killed workers, "despite repeated requests".
 
He said a military inquiry found that "a significant number of the names [of the dead] that have appeared in the media and on social networks are Hamas terrorist operatives".
 
In response, UNRWA spokeswoman Juliette Touma said the agency was "not aware of any such requests", that it provided Israel each year with a list of its staff and that it "called repeatedly" on Israel and Palestinian militants "to never use civilian facilities for military or fighting purposes".
 
She said the agency was "not in a position to determine" if the school had been used by Hamas for military purposes, but UNRWA had "repeatedly called for independent investigations" into "these very serious claims".
 
"a legitimate target" as it was used by Hamas to launch attacks.
 
UNRWA, which coordinates nearly all aid into Gaza, has been in crisis since Israel accused a dozen of its 30,000 employees of being involved in the October 7 Hamas attacks that sparked the war.
 
The UN immediately fired the implicated staff members, and a probe found some "neutrality related issues" but stressed Israel had not provided evidence for its chief allegations.
 
 'Going through hell' 
 
Survivors of the strike scrambled to recover bodies and belongings from the rubble, saying they had to step over "shredded limbs". 
 
"I can hardly stand up," a man holding a plastic bag of human remains told AFP.
 
"We've been going through hell for 340 days now, what we've seen over these days, we haven't even seen it in Hollywood movies, now we're seeing it in Gaza."
 
UNRWA head Philippe Lazzarini said after the school strike that at least 220 members of the agency's staff had been killed in the war.
 
"Endless & senseless killing, day after day," he posted on X.
 
"Humanitarian staff, premises & operations have been blatantly & unabatedly disregarded since the beginning of the war."
 
Across Gaza, many school buildings have been repurposed to shelter displaced families, with the vast majority of the territory's 2.4 million people repeatedly uprooted by the war.
 
No truce breakthrough 
 
In Gaza City, civil defence spokesman Bassal said two strikes in the Zeitun neighbourhood killed seven people -- including two children.
 
Later, he said two people were killed in the Jabalia camp. Medical sources said five people were killed in strikes on the Khan Yunis area.
 
The bloodshed shows no signs of abating despite months of ceasefire negotiations mediated by Qatar, Egypt and the United States. 
 
A Hamas delegation met Qatari and Egyptian mediators in Doha on Wednesday, the Palestinian Islamists said, though there was no indication of a breakthrough.
 
Israel's retaliation has killed at least 41,118 people in Gaza, according to the territory's health ministry. The UN rights office says most of the dead are women and children.
 

Iran president visits Iraq on first foreign trip

By - Sep 12,2024 - Last updated at Sep 12,2024

A photo shows Iran's President Masoud Pezeshkian (left) meeting with Shiite Muslim cleric Ammar Al Hakim (centre) and Iraq's Prime Minister Mohamed Shia Al Sudani, in Baghdad on Wednesday (AFP photo)

BAGHDAD — Iran's new president, Masoud Pezeshkian, arrived in neighbouring Iraq on Wednesday as he moves to deepen already close ties on his first foreign visit since taking office.

"Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al Sudani welcomes the president of the Islamic Republic of Iran, Masoud Pezeshkian," the Iraqi premier's office said in a brief statement alongside a picture of the two men shaking hands on the tarmac at Baghdad airport.

Pezeshkian has vowed to make relations with neighbouring countries a priority as he seeks to ease Iran's international isolation and mitigate the impact of US-led sanctions on its economy.

His visit comes after Western powers on Tuesday announced fresh sanctions on Iran for supplying Russia with short-range missiles for use against Ukraine.

Iranian foreign ministry spokesman Nasser Kanani warned Britain, France and Germany that they "will face the appropriate and proportionate action" for the "hostile" move.

The visit also comes amid turmoil in the Middle East sparked by the war in Gaza, which has drawn in Iran-backed armed groups around the region and complicated Baghdad's ties with Washington.

Hours before Pezeshkian's arrival, an explosion rocked a base at the airport used by a US-led anti-jihadist coalition, Iraqi security officials said.

A spokesperson for the Iranian-backed Ketaeb Hezbollah (Hizbollah Brigades) in Iraq said the Tuesday night "attack" aimed to "disrupt the Iranian president's visit".

Ties between Iran and Iraq, both Shiite-majority countries, have grown closer since the US-led invasion of 2003 toppled the Sunni-dominated regime of Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein.

"Iraq is one of our friends, brothers and Muslim countries," Pezeshkian said before leaving Iran, according to footage aired on Iranian state television.

"And for this reason, we will go to this country as the first trip," he added.

Pezeshkian has previously linked shoring up ties to sanctions pressure.

"Relations with neighbouring countries... can neutralise a significant amount of pressure of the sanctions," he said last month.

Iran has suffered years of crippling Western sanctions, especially after its arch-foe the United States, under then-president Donald Trump, unilaterally abandoned a landmark nuclear deal between the Islamic republic and major powers in 2018.

Pezeshkian, who took office in late July, has made the top diplomat who negotiated the 2015 deal, Mohammad Javad Zarif, his vice president for strategic affairs as part of his bid for a more open Iran.

Key trade partners 

Iran has become one of Iraq's leading trade partners, and wields considerable political influence in Baghdad, where its Iraqi allies dominate parliament and the current government.

Every year, millions of Iranian pilgrims travel to Iraq's Shiite holy cities of Najaf and Karbala, and Pezeshkian will also visit the shrines there during his visit.

Non-oil trade between Iran and Iraq stood at nearly $5 billion over the five months from March 2024, Iranian media reported.

Iran also exports millions of cubic metres of gas a day to Iraq to fuel its power plants, under a regularly renewed waiver from US sanctions.

Iraq is billions of dollars in arrears on its payments for the imports, which cover 30 percent of its electricity needs.

In September last year, the two countries started construction of their first rail link -- a 32-kilometre (20-mile) line between Iraq's southern port city of Basra and the Shalamcheh border crossing, where it will join up with the Iranian rail network.

US troop drawdown 

Washington still has around 2,500 troops in Iraq and 900 in neighbouring Syria as part of an international coalition against the Daesh group.

Last winter, US-led coalition forces in both Iraq and Syria were targeted dozens of times with drones and rocket fire as violence related to the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza has drawn in Iran-backed armed groups across the Middle East.

The barrage of attacks triggered retaliatory US air strikes in both countries.

On Sunday, Iraqi Defence Minister Thabet Al Abbassi told pan-Arab television channel Al Hadath that the US-led coalition would pull out of most of Iraq by September 2025 and the Kurdish autonomous region by September 2026.

Despite months of talks, the target dates have yet to be agreed between Baghdad and Washington.

Pezeshkian will also travel to the Kurdish regional capital Arbil for talks with Kurdish officials, Iran's official IRNA news agency said.

In March last year, Tehran signed a security agreement with the federal government in Baghdad after launching air strikes against bases of Iranian Kurdish rebel groups in the autonomous region.

They have since agreed to disarm the rebels and remove them from border areas.

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