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Israel’s top court delays decision on Sheikh Jarrah evictions

By - Aug 02,2021 - Last updated at Aug 02,2021

Palestinian residents of the Sheikh Jarrah neighbourhood attend a hearing at Israel’s supreme court in East Jerusalem on Monday (AFP photo)

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM — Israel’s supreme court delayed a decision on Monday in the case of Palestinian families facing expulsion by Israeli settlers in occupied East Jerusalem, an issue that exploded into armed conflict in May.

Palestinians said the offer was made that they remain in their properties in the Sheikh Jarrah neighbourhood as “protected tenants” who would recognise Israeli ownership of the homes and pay a symbolic annual rent, but they refused.

“They placed a lot of pressure on us to reach an agreement with the Israeli settlers in which we would be renting from the settler organisations,” said Muhammad Al Kurd, from one of four Palestinian families at the heart of the case.

“Of course this is rejected,” he said.

Justice Isaac Amit called for further documentation and said “we will publish a decision later”, but without setting a date.

Monday’s hearing was part of a years-long legal battle waged by Jewish Israeli organisations trying to reclaim property owned by Jews in occupied East Jerusalem prior to Israel’s founding in 1948.

Palestinian residents say Jordan granted them homes on the property after they were expelled from towns that became Israel.

Lawyer Sami Irshid, representing the Palestinians, insisted on Monday that his clients would reject the Jewish Israeli claims in any arrangement.

“We are willing to be listed as protected tenants while retaining our rights,” he said in court. “We will request recognition of the property rights the government of Jordan gave us.”

Ilan Shemer, representing the Jewish Israelis, said: “This arrangement will be an empty arrangement.”

The case has become an international cause, with dozens of people demonstrating outside the court on Monday.

 

11-day Gaza war 

 

Clashes in May over possible Sheikh Jarrah evictions spread to Jerusalem’s Al Aqsa Mosque compound, sparking an Israeli crackdown that escalated into an 11-day war between Israel and Palestinian militants in the Gaza Strip.

The families in Monday’s case appealed to the supreme court after two lower courts ruled that under Israeli property law, the homes in question belonged to the Jewish owners who purchased the plots before 1948.

In 1956, when occupied East Jerusalem was under Jordanian control, Amman leased plots of land to families in Sheikh Jarrah, and the UN agency for Palestinian refugees built homes for them.

Jordan promised to register the properties in their names, but did not complete the process before Israel captured East Jerusalem in 1967 and annexed it in a move never recognised by the international community.

In 1970, Israel enacted a law under which Jews could reclaim land in occupied East Jerusalem they lost in 1948, even if Palestinians by then already lived on it.

No such option exists for Palestinians who lost homes or land.

Jerusalem deputy mayor Arieh King, who supports the Jewish Israeli claims in the neighbourhood, decried the court’s delay.

“As long as the court drags this on, there is more room for Arabs to make riots,” King told AFP.

Instead, he said the court should rule the land is Jewish “and end of story”.

The Palestinians’ lawyer Irshid told AFP after the hearing “there is reason for optimism”.

Israeli anti-settlement group Ir Amim says that more than 1,000 Palestinians are at risk of losing their homes to Jewish settler groups and individuals in Sheikh Jarrah and the Silwan neighbourhood of occupied East Jerusalem.

 

South Sudan activists arrested after call for uprising

By - Aug 02,2021 - Last updated at Aug 02,2021

JUBA — Government security agents in South Sudan on Monday arrested at least two prominent activists who joined a call for a peaceful public uprising to seek political change, one of their colleagues said.

A coalition of civil society groups last week issued a declaration saying they have “had enough” after 10 years of independence marked by civil war, escalating insecurity, hunger and political instability.

Kuel Aguer Kuel, a former state governor, and renowned analyst Augustino Ting Mayai, were arrested in the capital Juba for signing the declaration, said Rajab Mohandis, another of the signatories.

The arrests came on the same day that hundreds of lawmakers were sworn in to a newly created national parliament, a key condition of a peace deal that ended South Sudan’s brutal civil war.

The Sudd Institute, an independent think tank involved in the coalition, has also been shut down and its Executive Director Abraham Awolich is among other activists also being sought by the authorities, Mohandis told AFP.

Awolich said in a separate statement on Twitter that he was on the run after the Sudd Institute was stormed and its staff arrested over Friday’s declaration by the People’s Coalition for Civil Action (PCCA).

But he said he would not be bowed.

“Our people are rising up to fire the dictators and murderers and I am proud to stand with them. The time has come to bring down the failed yet dangerous regime.”

The PCCA also remained defiant on Monday, saying in a statement it was intent on leading a non-violent “revolution” in the world’s newest country and to seek “regime change”.

It called for the resignation of both President Salva Kiir and his archfoe turned deputy Riek Machar, who remain uneasy bedfellows in the coalition government.

 

‘Bankrupt 

political system’ 

 

The 2018 ceasefire and power-sharing deal between Kiir and Machar was just the latest accord signed by the two men whose rivalry ignited the conflict that cost the lives of almost 400,000 people.

Their truce still largely holds but it is being sorely tested, as politicians bicker over power and promises for peace go unmet.

South Sudan has struggled with war, famine and chronic political and economic crisis since celebrating its hard-fought independence from Sudan 10 years ago in July.

The PCCA described the current regime as “a bankrupt political system that has become so dangerous and has subjected our people to immense suffering, death and brought upon them abject poverty and destitution”.

“The coalition is asking all the people of South Sudan to prepare for mass civil disobedience, strikes, sit-ins, protests and popular uprising to bring about change,” it said.

Earlier on Monday, 588 MPs — a mix of delegates from the ruling party and former rebel factions who signed the truce — took the oath of office in parliament in Juba.

The ceremony came nearly a year behind schedule and remains incomplete, with 62 MPs absent, some because of squabbles with the government over the power-sharing arrangement.

 

A year after the mushroom cloud, Lebanon still bleeds

By - Aug 01,2021 - Last updated at Aug 01,2021

Smoke billows from the burning grain silos at the port of Beirut following a massive explosion that hit the heart of the Lebanese capital on August 4, 2020 (AFP photo)

BEIRUT — On August 4, 2020, a fire at the Beirut Port ignited one of the largest non-nuclear explosions in history. It disfigured the city, took more than 200 lives and shattered Lebanon's psyche.

The blast was felt as far away as Cyprus, and the destruction is hard to fathom. But if one thing can outweigh what happened to Lebanon that day, it is what hasn't happened since.

Not one culprit has been put on trial, jailed or even identified. Families of the victims have received no visit, apology or explanation from those at the top.

The reforms demanded by donors who flew to the wounded country's rescue are a dead letter, and a new government promised last September has yet to materialise.

With a tailspinning economy, a health sector ravaged by COVID-19 and a future stunted by an intensifying brain drain, Lebanon was already well on its way to collapse before last August 4.

Yet, the cataclysmic blast that shocked the world and sowed the kind of devastation caused by wars and natural disasters did not mark the end of the free fall.

"We thought that was rock bottom. How could it get worse?" Rima Rantisi, a lecturer at the American University of Beirut, remembers of the immediate aftermath.

Shortly after 6:00 pm on that ill-fated Tuesday, hundreds of tonnes of poorly stored ammonium nitrate caught fire and caused what has been described as one of the largest ever non-nuclear explosions.

Footage of the fireball erupting above the port and the white blast mushroom soaring skywards and tearing through the city drew inevitable comparisons with Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

'Criminals and murderers'  

Whatever may have sparked the initial fire, it was the chain of irresponsibility and corruption that had allowed such hazardous material to be stored so near the city centre for six years that drew the public's fury.

“What became clear to me then, and which I have to remind myself of every day, is that the people who run the country are criminals and murderers, period,” says Rantisi.

The blast killed 214 people, wounded thousands and made tens of thousands homeless, at least temporarily.

“After the explosion, we understood this completely: As long as they are in power, nothing will get better,” Rantisi says.

Musician Julia Sabra says she and her boyfriend are “still terrified of any sound” after moving back into their renovated home.

Another survivor, Shady Rizk, plans to emigrate.

“The trauma, it rips you up inside,” he says. “It’s like internal crying.”

The Lebanese have had little reprieve over the past two years.

In early 2020, coronavirus lockdowns snuffed out the last flickers of a protest movement that had kindled the ardent hope that Lebanon’s days of hereditary barons were numbered.

As financial disaster loomed, those in the know spirited their money abroad. The rest proved powerless against a crisis that stripped the Lebanese pound of 90 per cent of its value and trapped depositors’ dollars in banks.

“Before the blast, the economic collapse had started, as had the health crisis,” says Karlen Hitti Karam. Her husband, brother and cousin were firefighters killed in the port inferno.

“The same people caused all of this. We lost everything. Our lives stopped on August 4, 2020.”

On Wednesday, families of victims are organising a religious service at the port to mark the anniversary, while activists are planning anti-government demonstrations.

Ravaged cultural heritage  

The public was enraged by the lack of justice, and even foreign diplomats made no secret of their disgust.

The first judge tasked with investigating the blast summoned former ministers for interrogation and was removed as a result.

His successor’s attempt to do the same was met with fresh stalling tactics by parliamentarians last month.

Volunteer work and foreign funding have allowed for some renovation, but the worst-hit areas, which include some of Beirut’s cultural hotspots and heritage jewels, are a shadow of their former selves.

Among the buildings directly exposed to the blast was the state electricity company headquarters, its gutted shell now facing the ruins of the port — in complete darkness.

After defaulting on its debt last year, Lebanon can barely provide citizens with two hours of electricity a day, and cannot afford the fuel to power generators.

Some who donated money to help blast victims a year ago now find themselves recipients of food and cash handouts.

“We’re in a loop. Every day we wake up to something worse than the day before,” says Rantisi.

Health officials who turned off air conditioning in wards weeks ago despite the sweltering summer heat warn that life-saving equipment will soon follow.

Once known as the “Switzerland of the Middle East”, Lebanon now has all the trappings of a failed state. Those old enough to know often argue that the current crisis is tougher than the 1975-1990 civil war.

Power cuts don’t spare the international airport, where most arrivals these days are Iraqi tourists for whom Lebanon is suddenly affordable, or exiles returning with suitcases full of medicines.

Completely unlit at night and devoid of traffic lights, the roads during the day are still clogged with endless and chaotic queues at petrol stations.

“Everyone I know is having problems sleeping, is really struggling on a day-to-day basis, holding on to whatever they have left,” says Rantisi.

Waiting for dominoes 

Bernard Hage, best known by his moniker “Art of Boo”, has chronicled Lebanon’s shocking decline in hundreds of cartoons collected in a recently released book.

“Imagine a poorly equipped psychiatric hospital managed by madmen...” begins the back cover blurb.

“I really see it now as a dystopia, it’s the only word I have to describe Lebanon... It’s your worst nightmare and you have no control over it,” says Hage.

Humour is the last bastion against insanity for the young cartoonist, who argues that a 2019 protest banner introducing the Lebanese as “the happiest depressed people you’ll ever meet” is more relevant than ever.

Lebanon is rudderless, penniless and sleepless, but for both Rantisi and Hage, not completely hopeless.

The solidarity that sprouted in the explosion’s aftermath shows that the spirit of the 2019 uprising is still at work.

Candidates close to the protest movement have swept aside traditional parties in recent trade union elections, generating new expectations of legislative polls slated for next year.

“People will find hope in the small wins,” says Rantisi.

The anger over the state’s responsibility for the blast and the victims’ determination to ensure justice is served are also intact a year later.

Hage pins his hopes on local and international pressure combining for the investigation to put at least one member of Lebanon’s untouchables behind bars.

“If this port explosion is capable of taking just one of them down, it could be the start of a series,” he believes.

“I think it will be the first domino that will cause the rest of the system to fall. This is the crack in the wall. This topic, I think it’s our only chance.”

Israel says it has evidence linking Iran to tanker attack

Iran rejects Israel's 'baseless accusations' over ship attack

By - Aug 01,2021 - Last updated at Aug 01,2021

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM — Prime Minister Naftali Bennett said on Sunday Israel had "evidence" Iran was behind the deadly tanker attack off Oman despite its denials, and warned his country could "send a message" in retaliation.

Bennett's statement came after Iran rejected Israel's "baseless accusations" it was responsible for the attack that killed two crewmen, and Tehran vowed to defend its interests after its arch-foe pushed for UN action against it.

"The intelligence evidence for this exists and we expect the international community will make it clear to the Iranian regime that they have made a serious mistake," the Israeli premier said at the weekly Cabinet meeting in remarks conveyed by his office.

"In any case, we know how to send a message to Iran in our own way."

The MT Mercer Street, managed by prominent Israeli billionaire Eyal Ofer, was struck Thursday off the Omani coast.

A British security guard and a Romanian crew member were killed in what the US military and the vessel's operator Zodiac Maritime said appeared to be a drone strike.

Earlier Sunday, Iran denied involvement in the attack, with foreign ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh saying Israel "must stop such baseless accusations", and noting "it is not their first time to direct such accusations at Iran".

“Iran will not hesitate for a moment to defend its... interests and national security,” Khatibzadeh added in a televised press conference.

In occupied Jerusalem, Bennett slammed Iran’s “cowardly” denial, saying he could “determine with absolute certainty that Iran carried out the attack against the ship”.

“Iran’s aggressive conduct is dangerous not only to Israel, but also harms global interests, freedom of navigation and international trade,” he said.

On Saturday, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken spoke to Israeli Foreign Minister Yair Lapid and agreed to work with other allies “to investigate the facts, provide support, and consider the appropriate next steps”, a State Department statement said.

Maritime industry analysts Dryad Global said the attack was the fifth against a ship connected to Israel since February.

The oil products tanker was travelling from Dar es Salaam in Tanzania to Fujairah in the United Arab Emirates with no cargo aboard when it was hit, Zodiac Maritime said.

In recent months, there have been several reported attacks on Iranian ships that Tehran has linked to Israel.

In March, Iran’s foreign ministry said it was “considering all options” in response to an attack on a cargo ship in the Mediterranean it blamed on Israel.

And in April, Tehran said its freighter Saviz was hit by an “explosion” in the Red Sea, after media reports said Israel had struck the ship.

The New York Times reported at the time that the Saviz had been targeted in an Israeli “retaliatory” attack after “Iran’s earlier strikes on Israeli ships”.

It came at a time of heightened tensions between the foes, with reports of a series of tit-for-tat strikes on shipping since early March.

In a report published in March that cited US and Middle East officials, the Wall Street Journal said Israel has targeted at least a dozen vessels bound for Syria, mostly carrying Iranian oil, since late 2019.

“The occupier regime knows that such [accusations] will not fix its problems. Whoever sows the wind reaps the whirlwind,” Khatibzadeh said.

Iran has also accused Israel of being behind sabotage attacks against its nuclear sites, and killing a number of its scientists.

The tanker strike comes as Tehran and world powers are engaged in talks in Vienna in an effort to return Washington to a 2015 nuclear deal and lift sanctions, and bring Iran back in compliance with nuclear commitments it waived in retaliation for sanctions.

The accord was strained when in 2018 former president Donald Trump withdrew the US unilaterally and reimposed sanctions.

Egypt army says 89 insurgents killed in restive Sinai

By - Aug 01,2021 - Last updated at Aug 01,2021

CAIRO — Egypt's military said on Sunday it has killed 89 suspected insurgents in operations in North Sinai, a region where an affiliate of the Daesh group has been active for nearly a decade.

"Amid ongoing efforts in pursuing and defeating terrorist elements... during the previous period, the armed forces... carried out operations that killed 89 dangerous takfiris... in northern Sinai," the army spokesperson said.

His statement, using the term "takfiri" to refer to extremist militants, did not specify a timeframe for the operations, but said the army had suffered eight casualties.

The army also said it destroyed 404 improvised explosive devices (IEDs), four explosive belts and 13 tunnels used by militants to infiltrate Egyptian territory.

Gruesome pictures of some of the slain suspected militants were published with the statement, along with a trove of confiscated weapons.

Egyptian forces have for years fought an insurgency in the Sinai Peninsula, led mainly by the local branch of the Daesh terror group.

Since February 2018, the authorities have been conducting a nationwide operation against Islamist militants, mainly focused on North Sinai and the country’s Western Desert.

Around 1060 suspected militants and dozens of security personnel have been killed in the Sinai, according to official figures.

No independently-sourced death toll is available as North Sinai is off-limits to journalists.

Three Hizbollah among 5 dead in Lebanon funeral ambush — security source

By - Aug 01,2021 - Last updated at Aug 01,2021

Lebanese soldiers are stationed in armoured vehicles as the army deploys amid clashes in the Khalde area, south of the capital, on Sunday (AFP photo)

BEIRUT — At least five people including three Hizbollah members were killed south of Beirut on Sunday when a funeral procession for a party member was ambushed, a Lebanese security source told AFP.

Several people were wounded in the exchange of fire in the Khalde area between members of the Lebanese Shiite group and Sunni residents, the source said.

The funeral was for a Hizbollah man killed the night before, the source added.

Hizbollah in a statement appealed to the army and security forces to arrest those behind the "ambush", which it said killed two people among the funeral procession.

A military source told AFP the army had deployed in force to the area and sent reinforcements.

The army said in a statement that soldiers would "open fire on all armed men on the streets of Khalde" and in response to any other shootings.

The state-run National News Agency said Hizbollah member Ali Shebli was killed at point-blank range at a wedding on Saturday night in Khalde, in an apparent revenge killing for the deaths of two people last year in the same area.

Prime Minister-designate Najib Mikati appealed for "restraint" and warned against confessional "discord".

Tensions between Sunnis and Shiites often run high in multiconfessional Lebanon.

The violence comes as Lebanon faces an economic crisis branded by the World Bank as one of the world's worst since the mid-19th century.

The country is grappling with soaring poverty, a plummeting currency and shortages of basic items from medicines to fuel.

It has been without a government for almost a year after the cabinet resigned in the wake of a catastrophic explosion at Beirut's port last August 4.

Lebanon has been mired in political instability since a nationwide protest movement broke out in late 2019, demanding an end to the system of confessional power-sharing that it said rewarded corruption and incompetence.

 

Two more Tunisia MPs critical of president arrested — party

By - Aug 01,2021 - Last updated at Aug 01,2021

TUNIS — Tunisian security forces have arrested two MPs of an Islamist party opposed to a power grab by President Kais Saied, their party said on Sunday.

Maher Zid and Mohamed Affes of Al Karama have been placed in provisional detention in connection with a military investigation, party head Seifeddine Makhlouf said on Facebook.

Their arrest late Saturday comes a day after the detention of an independent MP, Yassine Ayari.

Ayari was arrested for branding Saied's decision last Sunday to suspend parliament and sack the prime minister and other top officials as a "military coup".

Al Karama is linked to the Islamist-inspired Ennahdha Party, the main opponent of the president.

According to Makhlouf, a lawyer critical of the president, Zid and Affes are wanted for having allegedly insulted police officers in March who prevented a woman from boarding a plane at the airport.

Affes is a former ultra-conservative cleric while Zid is an ex-journalist and blogger sentenced to two years in jail for having insulted late president Beji Caid Essebsi.

Saied has justified his actions, dismissing accusations that he had staged a "coup".

He said he acted within the constitution which allows the head of state to take unspecified exceptional measures in the even of an "imminent threat".

On Friday, he stressed he "hates dictatorship" and that there was "nothing to fear" concerning freedoms and rights in Tunisia.

Saied has also declared a crackdown on corruption, accusing 460 businessmen of embezzlement.

The latest arrests come as the United States called on Tunisia to swiftly return to its "democratic path".

EU ready to impose sanctions over Lebanon crisis

By - Aug 01,2021 - Last updated at Aug 01,2021

In this file photo taken on August 05, 2020 an aerial view shows the massive damage at Beirut Port's grain silos and the area around it, one day after a massive explosion hit the heart of the Lebanese capital (AFP photo)

BRUSSELS — The European Union said on Friday it was ready to impose sanctions on Lebanon's ruling elite over the political crisis wracking the country, after adopting a legal framework for such measures.

The crisis has left Lebanon without a functioning government since the last one resigned after a massive explosion killed dozens and destroyed swathes of Beirut in August 2020.

The country has plunged into what the World Bank described as one of the worst economic crises since the 1850s, and political players continue to squabble.

"This framework provides for the possibility of imposing sanctions against persons and entities who are responsible for undermining democracy or the rule of law in Lebanon," the EU said in a statement.

The bloc's 27 member states must still vote unanimously for the list of people and entities to be sanctioned.

The United States welcomed the EU's steps to use a "powerful tool to promote accountability on a global scale", Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said in a statement.

“Sanctions are intended, among other things, to compel changes in behaviour and promote accountability for corrupt actors and leaders,” they added, saying they were ready to cooperate with the EU on Lebanon.

On Monday, Lebanese lawmakers tasked ex-premier and billionaire Najib Mikati with forming a government, days after fellow veteran politician Saad Hariri threw in the towel.

EU sanctions would target people obstructing this process, the statement read.

They “consist of a travel ban to the EU and an asset freeze for persons, and an asset freeze for entities”, it said.

“In addition, EU persons and entities are forbidden from making funds available to those listed.”

The EU could also sanction people “obstructing or undermining the implementation of plans approved by Lebanese authorities and supported by relevant international actors, including the EU, to improve accountability and good governance in the public sector or the implementation of critical economic reforms.”

Israel pushes for UN action against Iran over deadly ship attack

By - Aug 01,2021 - Last updated at Aug 01,2021

This handout photo courtesy of US navy and made available on July 24, shows (left to right) French navy frigate FS Languedoc (D653), aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan (CVN 76), and guided-missile destroyer USS Halsey (DDG 97) steaming in formation in the Arabian Sea (AFP photo)

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM — Israel is pressing for international action against Iran over a deadly attack on a ship managed by an Israeli billionaire, branding Tehran an "exporter of terrorism" after the likely drone strike.

The MT Mercer Street tanker was struck on Thursday in the northern Indian Ocean, killing two crew members, in what the United States said was a drone-style attack.

There has been no claim of responsibility for the strike, but maritime industry analysts Dryad Global said, "This latest attack has the hallmarks of the ongoing Israel/Iran 'shadow war'."

On Friday Israeli Foreign Minister Yair Lapid said he has ordered the nation's diplomats to push for UN action against "Iranian terrorism".

"I've instructed the embassies in Washington, London and the UN to work with their interlocutors in government and the relevant delegations in the UN headquarters in New York," Lapid said on Twitter.

"Iran is not just an Israeli problem, but an exporter of terrorism, destruction and instability that are hurting us all," he said.

Lapid said he had also spoken to his British counterpart Dominic Raab, stressing "the need to respond severely to the attack on the ship in which a British citizen was killed".

Zodiac Maritime, the tanker's London-based operator owned by Israeli billionaire Eyal Ofer, said a Romanian national also died in the attack.

The Mercer Street, an oil products tanker, was travelling from Dar es Salaam in Tanzania to Fujairah in the United Arab Emirates with no cargo aboard when it was struck, Zodiac Maritime said.

 

No 'wider escalation' 

 

The US military said early indications "clearly point" to a drone strike on the Mercer Street, a Japanese-owned tanker flying a Liberian flag.

Iran's Arabic-language Al Alam state TV channel, citing "informed regional sources", said the attack was a "response to a recent Israeli attack" targeting an airport in central Syria where Iran is backing the regime.

Israeli retired Brigadier General Shlomo Brom said the attack appeared to copy elements of a reported Israeli exploding drone strike on a centrifuge manufacturing site in Iran in June.

 

Israel, Brom told AFP, “started developing drones and is among the first [countries] to develop the concept of a kamikaze”.

“The Iranians are imitating us and adopting the same techniques,” said Brom, now a senior research fellow at Israel’s Institute for National Security Studies.

Iran’s strike marked “a certain escalation but aimed at avoiding a full-scale war”, he said.

“They are not interested in a wider escalation, just as we are not interested in a wider escalation,” Brom added.

In June, Iran said it had foiled a sabotage attack on an atomic energy agency building near the city of Karaj west of Tehran.

But aerial photographs obtained by private Israeli intelligence firm The Intel Lab revealed damage to the site.

 

Nuclear talks 

 

Several unmanned Iranian drones appear to have carried out the attack on the Mercer Street, crashing into living quarters under the ship’s command centre, The New York Times reported, citing anonymous Israeli officials.

A statement from the US military’s Central Command said on Friday that its naval forces answered a distress call after the attack.

“US navy personnel are on the Mercer Street, assisting the vessel’s crew,” it said.

“US navy explosives experts are aboard to ensure there is no additional danger to the crew, and are prepared to support an investigation into the attack,” it added.

By Friday afternoon, Zodiac Maritime said the ship was “sailing under the control of her crew” to a safe location under the protection of a US naval escort.

The strike on the tanker comes as European powers meet with Iran in an effort to shore up a 2015 agreement to curtail the Islamic republic’s nuclear programme in exchange for lifting sanctions.

The accord was strained when in 2018 former US President Donald Trump withdrew the US unilaterally and reimposed sanctions.

Negotiations in Vienna, where the US is indirectly taking part, have stalled ahead of next week’s inauguration of newly elected ultra-conservative Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi.

Dryad Global said the attack was the fifth against a ship connected to Israel since February. Two ships tied to Iran were attacked in that period, the firm said.

Talks under way to end fighting in Syria's Daraa — monitor

By - Aug 01,2021 - Last updated at Aug 01,2021

BEIRUT — Ceasefire negotiations have started in Syria's southern province of Daraa after the deadliest flareup in three years killed 28 people, including 11 civilians, a war monitor said on Friday.

The clashes on Thursday between government forces and rebel fighters marked one of the deadliest days of fighting in Syria in recent months.

They posed a fresh challenge to a Moscow-brokered truce that allowed rebels to stay in Daraa province after it was taken by the government in 2018.

On Friday, the two sides exchanged tit-for-tat machine gunfire but refrained from escalating attacks following talks to stop the fighting, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

The negotiations between the Syrian army, security officials and a committee of Daraa residents formed in the wake of the clashes, came under pressure from Russia and it remains to be seen whether a ceasefire deal was reached, the monitor said.

Thursday's exchange started when the army launched a ground assault backed by artillery on Daraa Al Balad, a southern district of the provincial capital that is considered a hub for former rebel groups, the observatory said.

In response, rebel fighters launched a broad counterattack, seizing several government positions across the province and capturing more than 40 troops and militiamen, it added.

The violence killed 28 people, including eight government fighters and nine gunmen affiliated with opposition groups.

Shelling by the army of several parts of Daraa also killed 11 civilians, including several children.

The observatory said the clashes were the fiercest and most extensive to hit Daraa since it came under governemnt control.

Russian-backed Syrian troops and allied forces recaptured Daraa from rebels in 2018, a symbolic blow to the anti-government uprising born in the city in 2011.

Many former rebels stayed on in Daraa, spurning evacuation under a Moscow-brokered deal. Some joined the army, others have remained in control of parts of the province.

State institutions have since returned but the army has still not deployed province-wide and tit-for-tat bombings and assassinations have become routine.

In March, gunmen in Daraa killed 21 Syrian soldiers in a bus ambush.

The soldiers were en route to Al Mzairib district in the rural west of the province to arrest a former rebel commander when they came under fire.

The war in Syria has killed nearly 500,000 people and displaced millions since it started in 2011.

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