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Lebanon says Israeli attack kills 3 emergency workers

By - Sep 07,2024 - Last updated at Sep 07,2024

Smoke rises in the southern Lebanese Marjayoun plain after being hit by Israeli shelling on September 6, 2024, amid the ongoing cross-border clashes between Israeli troops and Hizbollah fighters (AFP photo)

BEIRUT, Lebanon — Lebanon's health ministry said three emergency personnel were killed on Saturday and two others wounded in an Israeli attack on a civil defence team putting out fires in south Lebanon.
 
"Israeli enemy targeting of a Lebanese civil defence team that was putting out fires sparked by the recent Israeli strikes in the village of Froun led to the martyrdom of three emergency responders," the health ministry said in a statement.
 
Two others were wounded, one of them critically, the statement said, adding however that the toll was provisional.
 
The health ministry "condemns this blatant Israeli attack that targeted a team from an official body of the Lebanese state", the statement said.
 
Lebanon's Iran-backed Hizbollah group has exchanged near daily cross-border fire with Israeli forces in support of ally Hamas since the Palestinian militant group's October 7 attack on Israel triggered war in the Gaza Strip.
 
The cross-border violence has killed at least 614 people in Lebanon, mostly fighters but also including at least 138 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.
 
On Saturday, Hizbollah announced a string of attacks on Israeli troops and positions near the border, including with Katyusha rockets, some in stated response to "Israeli enemy attacks" on south Lebanon.
 
Lebanon's National News Agency said Israel carried out air strikes and shelling on several areas of the country's south.
 
The Israeli military said it had identified "projectiles" crossing from Lebanon, intercepting some of them.
 
It said it struck "Hizbollah military infrastructure and a launcher" in the Qabrikha area of southern Lebanon, as well as striking the Aita Al Shaab and Kfarshuba areas.
 

Jordan denounces Israeli killing of American-Turkish activist, urges accountability

Family demands independent probe into 'Israeli military' killing of American

By - Sep 07,2024 - Last updated at Sep 07,2024

AMMAN — Jordan has condemned the Israeli occupation forces for killing US-Turkish activist Aysenur Ezgi Eygi, as a "crime that requires accountability for those responsible."
 
Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Sufian Qudah emphasised that the attack on a supporter of the Palestinian cause is part of the occupation’s ongoing violations against innocent civilians in Gaza and the occupied West Bank, according to a ministry statement. 
 
He noted that the crime reflects the extremist policies of the Israeli government, which "incite hatred, fuel extremism, and encourage settlers to target and kill Palestinians as well as those who stand in solidarity with Palestinians' legitimate rights."
 
Meanwhile, the family of Eygi, 26, was "shot in the head" while participating in a demonstration in Beita in the West Bank on Friday, the United Nations rights office said, as reported by AFP.
 
"Her presence in our lives was taken needlessly, unlawfully, and violently by the Israeli military," Eygi's family said in a statement.
 
"A US citizen, Aysenur was peacefully standing for justice when she was killed by a bullet that video shows came from an Israeli military shooter.
 
"We call on President [Joe] Biden, Vice President [Kamala] Harris, and Secretary of State (Antony) Blinken to order an independent investigation into the unlawful killing of a US citizen and to ensure full accountability for the guilty parties."
 
The Israeli military said its forces "responded with fire toward a main instigator of violent activity who hurled rocks at the forces and posed a threat to them" during the protest.
 
Eygi was a member of the International Solidarity Movement (ISM), a pro-Palestinian organisation, and was in Beita on Friday for a weekly demonstration against Israeli settlements, according to ISM.
 
The group on Saturday dismissed claims that ISM activists threw rocks at Israeli forces as "false" and said the demonstration was peaceful.
 
"Aysenur was more than 200 metres away from where the Israeli soldiers were, and there were no confrontations there at all in the minutes before she was shot," ISM said in a statement.
 
'Tragic' death 
 
In recent years, pro-Palestinian demonstrators have frequently held weekly protests against the Eviatar settlement outpost overlooking Beita, which is backed by far-right Israeli ministers.
 
During Friday's protest, Eygi was shot in the head, according to the UN rights office and Rafidia hospital where she was pronounced dead.
 
Turkey said she was killed by "Israeli occupation soldiers", with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan condemning the Israeli action as "barbaric".
 
Washington called it a "tragic" event and has pressed its close ally Israel to investigate.
 
But her family has demanded an independent probe.
 
"Given the circumstances of Aysenur's killing, an Israeli investigation is not adequate," her family said.
 
On Saturday, AFP footage showed Eygi's body, wrapped in a blue cloth, kept in a morgue next to the body of a teenage girl who was killed the previous day in a separate incident in the West Bank.
 
The Palestinian health ministry said the 23-year-old Palestinian girl was shot and killed by "occupation (Israel) bullets" in Qaryut, near Beita.
 
On Saturday, Nablus governor Ghassan Daghlas accused Israeli forces of killing the two.
 
"Both were killed by the same bullets....The same bullets," he said, referring to Israeli forces.
 
"We call out the international community to stop the insane war on Palestine. Bullets do not differentiate between activists and a Palestinian child," he said.
 
Eygi's family said she always advocated "an end to the violence against the people of Palestine".
 
Israeli settlements in the West Bank -- where about 490,000 people live -- are illegal under international law.
 
Since Hamas's October 7 attack on Israel which triggered the war in Gaza, Israeli troops or settlers have killed at least 662 Palestinians in the West Bank, according to the Palestinian health ministry.

Gaza civil defence says 3 killed in Israeli strike on school

By - Sep 07,2024 - Last updated at Sep 07,2024

GAZA STRIP, Palestinian Territories — Gaza's civil defence agency said an Israeli air strike targeting a school-turned-shelter for displaced Palestinians killed at least three people on Saturday, while the military reported it struck a Hamas command centre.
 
"Three martyrs and more than 20 wounded people were retrieved after an Israeli warplane fired two missiles at a prayer room and a classroom at the Amr Ibn al-Aas School, where refugees were sheltering in the Sheikh Radwan neighbourhood in northern Gaza City," Mahmud Bassal, spokesman for the civil defence agency, told AFP.
 
The Israeli military said it conducted a "precise strike" at the school.
 
The strike targeted "terrorists who were operating inside a Hamas command and control centre... embedded inside a compound that previously served as Amr Ibn al-Aas school," the military said in a statement.
 
A large crowd gathered outside the building in the aftermath of the strike, picking their way over rubble as emergency workers tried to help the wounded, AFPTV footage showed.
 
Displaced Gazan Abd Arooq said the school had served as a shelter for more than 2,000 people.
 
"We don't know where to go. We are in the street," he said. 
 
"There is no sanctity for mosques, schools or even the houses we live in."
 
In recent months, Israeli forces have struck several schools that were housing displaced Palestinians, many of them in Gaza City, saying the strikes targeted Hamas militants.
 
Tens of thousands of displaced people have sought refuge in schools since the war in Gaza, which entered its 12th month on Saturday, broke out following Hamas's attack on southern Israel on October 7.
 
Israel's retaliatory military offensive has so far killed at least 40,939 people, according to the health ministry in the Hamas-run Gaza Strip.
 
According to the United Nations human rights office, most of the dead are women and children.
 

Hamas says Netanyahu trying to 'thwart' Gaza truce

By - Sep 05,2024 - Last updated at Sep 05,2024

A child receives a vaccination for polio at a make-shift camp for people displaced by conflict in a school in Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip on September 5, 2024 (AFP photo)

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM — Hamas on Thursday accused Benjamin Netanyahu of trying to "thwart" a Gaza truce deal, after the Israeli premier said the Palestinian militant group has "rejected everything" in negotiations.


The blame trading comes as Netanyahu faces pressure to seal a deal that would free remaining hostages, after Israeli authorities announced on Sunday the deaths of six whose bodies were recovered from a Gaza tunnel.

"We're trying to find some area to begin the negotiations," Netanyahu said Wednesday.

"They [Hamas] refuse to do that... [They said] there's nothing to talk about."

Netanyahu maintains that Israel must retain control over the Philadelphi Corridor along the Egypt-Gaza border to prevent weapons smuggling to Hamas, whose October 7 attack on Israel started the war.

Hamas is demanding a complete Israeli withdrawal from the area and on Thursday said Netanyahu's insistence on the border zone "aims to thwart reaching an agreement."

The Palestinian group says a new deal is unnecessary because they agreed months ago to a truce outlined by US President Joe Biden.

"We do not need new proposals," the group said on Telegram.

"We warn against falling into the trap of Netanyahu and his tricks, who uses negotiations to prolong the aggression against our people," the Hamas statement added.

US State Department spokesman Matthew Miller told reporters that Washington thinks "there are ways to address" the impasse.

Key mediator Qatar said on Tuesday that Israel's approach was "based on an attempt to falsify facts and mislead world public opinion by repeating lies".

Such moves "will ultimately lead to the demise of peace efforts," Qatar's foreign ministry said.

Israel's offensive in Gaza has so far killed at least 40,861 people, according to the health ministry in the Hamas-run territory.

Most of the dead are women and children, according to the UN rights office.

 Polio vaccination drive

Israel's bombardment of Gaza has left the territory in ruins, with the destruction of water and sanitation infrastructure blamed for the spread of disease.

As part of its campaign, the military has razed neighbourhoods and farms to expand a so-called buffer zone between Israel and Gaza.

Amnesty International said Thursday the policy "should be investigated as war crimes of wanton destruction and of collective punishment", an accusation the military did not comment on when contacted by AFP.

The humanitarian crisis has led to Gaza's first polio case in 25 years, prompting a massive vaccination effort launched Sunday with localised "humanitarian pauses" in fighting.

Nearly 200,000 children in central Gaza have received a first dose, the World Health Organization said, with a second stage set to get underway Thursday in the south before medics move north.

The campaign aims to fully vaccinate more than 640,000 children, with second doses due in about four weeks.

Palestinian medics report 5 killed as Israel raids West Bank's Tubas

By - Sep 05,2024 - Last updated at Sep 05,2024

A Palestinian man stands in a devastated street near tyres set ablaze by youths in Jenin in the occupied West Bank on September 4, 2024, during an ongoing Israeli military raid (AFP photo)

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM — Palestinian medics reported Thursday that five people were killed in a strike targeting a car in the occupied West Bank area of Tubas, as the Israeli military said it carried out raids.

"Five killed and [one] seriously wounded in a strike [on] a car in Tubas," the Palestinian Red Crescent Society said in a statement.

The Israeli military said its aircraft "conducted three targeted strikes on armed terrorists" in the Tubas area.

A large number of Israeli troops stormed the Faraa refugee camp in Tubas governorate, where explosions were heard, eyewitnesses told AFP.

Israel launched a massive offensive across the northern West Bank on August 28, fighting Palestinian militants and leaving widespread destruction. 

Israel has killed more than 30 Palestinians in the assault, the territory's health ministry says, including children and militants.

One Israeli soldier was killed in Jenin, where the majority of the Palestinian fatalities have taken place.

Israel has occupied the West Bank since 1967 and the military has ramped up its deadly raids in the territory since its war in Gaza against Hamas militants erupted on October 7.

Health ministry in Gaza says war death toll at 40,861

Netanyahu says Hamas 'rejected everything' in Gaza truce talks

By - Sep 04,2024 - Last updated at Sep 04,2024

Smoke billows during Israeli bombardment in Rafah on the southern Gaza Strip on February 6, 2024 amid ongoing battles between Israel and the Palestinian militant group Hamas (AFP photo)

GAZA STRIP, OCCUPIED JERUSALEM — The health ministry in Gaza said Wednesday that at least 40,861 people have been killed in the war between Israel and Palestinian militants, now nearing its 12th month.
 
The toll includes 42 deaths in the previous 24 hours, according to ministry figures, which also list 94,398 people as wounded in the Gaza Strip since the war began when Hamas militants attacked Israel on October 7.
 
Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Wednesday that Hamas had rejected all elements of a proposal for a ceasefire in Gaza that would help facilitate the release of hostages.
 
"Hamas has rejected everything... I hope that changes because I want those hostages out," Netanyahu told a news conference, casting doubt on the possibility of a breakthrough one day after the State Department said it was "time to finalise that deal".
 
"We're trying to find some area to begin the negotiations," Netanyahu said. 
 
"They [Hamas] refuse to do that... ]They said] there's nothing to talk about."
 
Netanyahu has come under added domestic and international pressure to seal a deal that would free Israeli hostages after authorities announced on Sunday the deaths of six whose bodies were recovered from a tunnel in southern Gaza.
 
On Monday, Netanyahu said Israeli forces would retain control over the Philadelphi Corridor along the Egypt-Gaza border, vowing "not to give in to pressure" over the issue.
 
Hamas, whose unprecedented October 7 attack on southern Israel started the war, is demanding a complete Israeli withdrawal from the area as part of the stalled talks mediated by the United States, Qatar and Egypt.
 
At Wednesday's news conference, Netanyahu reiterated his position on the Philadelphi Corridor but also insisted it was not the sole sticking point.
 
US President Joe Biden said this week he did not think Netanyahu was working hard enough to free the hostages. 
 

US says 'time to finalise' Gaza deal after hostage deaths

WHO says it surpassed early polio vaccination targets in Gaza

By - Sep 03,2024 - Last updated at Sep 03,2024

A health worker administers the Polio vaccine to a baby in Zawayda in the central Gaza Strip on September 1, 2024, amid the ongoing Israeli war against the Palestinian territory (AFP photo)

WASHINGTON/GENEVA — The United States on Tuesday called for urgency and flexibility to finalise an agreement between Israel and Hamas for a truce in Gaza, after the recent deaths of six hostages.
 
"There are dozens of hostages still remaining in Gaza, still waiting for a deal that will bring them home. It is time to finalise that deal," State Department spokesman Matthew Miller told reporters.
 
"The people of Israel cannot afford to wait any longer. The Palestinian people, who are also suffering the terrible effects of this war, cannot afford to wait any longer. The world cannot afford to wait any longer," Miller said.
 
Miller said that the United States will work "over the coming days" with mediators Egypt and Qatar "to push for a final agreement."
 
One key sticking point has been Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's insistence that Israeli troops remain at the border between Gaza and Egypt.
 
"We are opposed to the long-term presence of IDF troops in Gaza," Miller said, referring to the Israel Defense Forces.
 
"Finalizing an agreement will require both sides to show flexibility. It will require that both sides look for reasons to get to yes rather than reasons to say no."
 
Pressure has been growing on Israel with Britain's new Labour government on Monday saying it would stop some arms exports to Israel due to the "clear risk" they could be used in a serious breach of international humanitarian law.
 
Britain informed the United States, a close ally of both countries, before it made the decision, Miller said.
 
"It's not that we disagree with the UK position, it's that the UK makes an assessment based on their legal framework," Miller said.
 
"We make an assessment based on our own legal frameworks," he said, adding that the United States was still reviewing incidents.
 
The State Department in May said it did not have enough evidence to block shipments of weapons but that it was "reasonable to assess" that Israel has used arms in ways inconsistent with standards on humanitarian law.
 
The United States provides about $3 billion in weapons to Israel each year.
 
Meanwhile, WHO said on Tuesday that its emergency polio vaccination campaign in Gaza has reached more children than expected, with 161,000 receiving their initial dose in the first two days. 
 
The World Health Organisation added that the first round of the vaccination drive would take another 10 days.
 
With Gaza lying in ruins and the majority of its 2.4 million residents forced to flee their homes due to Israel's military assault -- often taking refuge in cramped and unsanitary conditions -- disease has spread.
 
After the first confirmed polio case in 25 years, a massive vaccination effort began on Sunday, with localised "humanitarian pauses" in fighting.
 
The campaign aims to fully vaccinate more than 640,000 children in the besieged territory, devastated by almost 11 months of war.
 
Mainly affecting children under five, polio can cause deformities, paralysis and in some cases death.
 
Rik Peeperkorn, the WHO's representative for the Palestinian territories, said it was vital to reach at least 90-percent coverage to avoid the spread of the disease both within Gaza's borders and beyond.
 
The campaign began in the central part of the densely populated Gaza Strip, where the WHO initially expected to vaccinate 156,500 children under the age of 10.
 
"Our target for the central zone was an underestimation," Peeperkorn said, adding this was probably due to more people being crowded into the area than anticipated.
 
He said the vaccination drive was expected to shift to southern Gaza on Thursday, with the aim of immunising some 340,000 children there.
 
It would then move to the north of the strip, where around 150,000 will be vaccinated.
 
"We still have 10 days to go at least" for the whole first portion of the campaign, Peeperkorn said, and the rollout of the necessary second dose would begin in four weeks' time. 
 
 'Extremely concerned' 
 
As he related his visit to a health centre handing out the vaccine, Peeperkorn said he was "not even so surprised" the campaign had gotten off to a good start.
 
"There were so many -- the fathers, mothers -- bringing their children in, and children really proud and happy that they got vaccinated."
 
He pointed to Gaza's "high vaccination acceptance" with pre-war routine vaccine coverage of between 90 and 95 percent, "which is actually much better than a lot of high income countries."
 
But the WHO representative warned the agency was "extremely concerned" by Gaza's wider health situation.
 
With only 16 of 36 hospitals operational, the strip has seen a "huge increase in infectious diseases".
 
"We've seen more than a million, mainly children, diagnosed with acute respiratory infection," Peeperkorn said, adding that more than 600,000 children had suffered from diarrhoea.
 
While polio vaccinations are best carried out in house-to-house campaigns, Peeperkorn said that those are impossible in Gaza as "there's very few houses left and people are everywhere".

Israel presses West Bank raids that Palestinians say killed 27

By - Sep 03,2024 - Last updated at Sep 03,2024

A Palestinian activist lifts a national flag and flashes the victory sign as Israeli armoured vehicles including a bulldozer drive on a street during a raid in Tulkarem on September 3, 2024, amid a large-scale military offensive launched a week earlier in the occupied West Bank (AFP photo)

 

JENIN, Palestinian Territories — Israeli forces were operating Tuesday in the northern West Bank, nearly a week into military raids in the occupied territory that the Palestinian health ministry said killed at least 27.

An Israeli air strike overnight in Tulkarem killed a 15-year-old Palestinian, said a hospital source in the city.

In total, "there are 30 martyrs and about 130 wounded in the West Bank since Wednesday," when the Israeli military launched a series of coordinated raids, the Palestinian health ministry said in a statement.

The toll includes three deaths in the Hebron area in the southern West Bank, in incidents unrelated to the raids in the north.

An AFP correspondent said the streets were empty and shops were closed in Jenin on Tuesday, with Israeli armoured vehicles and army bulldozers as well as ambulances among the few vehicles on the roads.

The correspondent said paved streets had been overturned by Israeli bulldozers in several areas, which the army says is a way to detonate explosive devices hidden under roads.

The Jenin city council said that 70 per cent of roads and streets have been destroyed since the start of the raid.

Surging violence 

In Tulkarem, near Jenin, the Israeli military said on Monday night that its aircraft struck a Palestinian militant cell "that shot at security forces during the counter-terrorism operation".

A medical source at the Tulkarem government hospital told AFP on Tuesday that a 15-year-old teenager was killed in the strike that also wounded his father and four others.

The Palestinian Red Crescent said its teams handled several shrapnel injuries in Tulkarem, including one of its paramedics.

On Tuesday Israeli military vehicles including bulldozers were seen on the streets of Tulkarem, where roads have also been damaged or destroyed, said an AFP journalist.

One man, holding a Palestinian flag, was standing defiantly in front of the bulldozers.

In a separate incident further south, Israeli forces entered the Birzeit University campus near Ramallah before dawn on Tuesday, confiscating property from the student council, the institution said in a statement.

Violence in the Palestinian territory has surged since Hamas's October 7 attack triggered war in the Gaza Strip, which is separated from the West Bank by Israeli territory.

Israeli troops or settlers have killed at least 637 Palestinians in the West Bank since the start of the Gaza war, according to the UN figures from last week.

Six dead as ship sinks off Kuwait — Iranian media

By - Sep 03,2024 - Last updated at Sep 03,2024

TEHRAN — Six crew members have died after an Iranian merchant ship capsized in Kuwaiti waters, Iran's official news agency IRNA reported on Tuesday.

"The Arabakhtar I ship, whose six crew members were of Indian and Iranian nationality, sank on Sunday," Nasser Passandeh, head of Iran's port and maritime navigation authority, was quoted by IRNA as saying.

The report did not say what caused the Sunday incident, and an Iranian official said search operations were still ongoing to locate three of the victims' bodies.

Three bodies had been retrieved in a joint effort between Iran and Kuwait, Passandeh said.

 

Libya people-trafficking kingpin assassinated: media

By - Sep 02,2024 - Last updated at Sep 02,2024

Libya’s Maj Abd al-Rahman Milad (AFP photo)

TRIPOLI — A former head of Libya's coastguard, who was known as a key trafficker of people and fuel, was killed by unknown assailants, local media has reported.
 
Major Abd al-Rahman Milad, also known as Al-Bidja, was killed Sunday in the town of Sayyad, 25 kilometres (15 miles) west of the capital Tripoli, near the Janzour Naval Academy that he commanded, officials told local media.
 
Images circulated on news websites and social media showing a bullet-riddled white four-wheel drive on the side of a road, with the body of a man inside it.
 
Media outlets did not offer any details on the assailants' identities, political affiliations or motivations.
 
Milad, 34, had gained notoriety as a local kingpin in smuggling operations, trafficking everything from migrants to petrol.
 
Libyan authorities arrested him in October 2020, before he was released the following April and later named as the head of a unit of the coastguard tasked with combatting illegal migration.
 
An Interpol red notice was issued against him in June 2018 following a UN Security Council decision sanctioning six heads of migrant trafficking networks in Libya.
 
Abdallah Allafi, of Libya's Presidential Council, vowed in a Facebook post that the perpetrators would "not escape divine punishment".
 
Allafi hails from Zawiya to the west of Tripoli, and serves as the deputy head of the Presidential Council, a body that brings together the three main regions of the war-torn North African country.
 
Libya has been wracked by divisions and conflict since the 2011 NATO-backed overthrow of former president Moamer Kadhafi, with two rival administrations vying for power in the country's east and west.
 
Khalid al-Mishri, who is also from Zawiya and heads the High Council of State, called for an investigation into the death of a "man who has always played a mediating role between rival factions" in Zawiya.
 
Mishri's election as the head of the High Council of State , a Senate-like body based in Tripoli , was contested by outgoing chief Mohamad Takala.
 
Amid the chaos that has gripped Libya over the past decade, the country has become a key launching pad for migrants mostly travelling from sub-Saharan African countries to seek better lives in Europe.
 
Zawiya, 45 kilometres west of Tripoli, has been both a departure point for migrants, as well as lying close to a major oil refinery, placing it at the heart of trafficking operations.
 
The refinery is controlled by armed groups who often clash, resulting in civilian deaths.
 

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