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In Lebanon, a family’s memories are detonated along with their village

In Lebanon, a family’s memories are detonated along with their village
The scene has been repeated across southern Lebanon since Israel invaded with the aim of pushing Hezbollah militants back from the border. (AP)
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Updated 30 October 2024

In Lebanon, a family’s memories are detonated along with their village

In Lebanon, a family’s memories are detonated along with their village
  • The scene has been repeated across southern Lebanon since Israel invaded with the aim of pushing Hezbollah militants back from the border

ARAMOUN: Ayman Jaber’s memories are rooted in every corner of Mhaibib, the village in southern Lebanon he refers to as his “habibti,” the Arabic word for “beloved.” The root of the village’s name means “the lover” or “the beloved.”
Reminiscing about his childhood sweetheart, the 45-year-old avionics technician talks about how the young pair would meet in a courtyard near his uncle’s house.
“I used to wait for her there to see her,” Jaber recalls with a smile. “Half of the village knew about us.”
The fond memory contrasts sharply with recent images of his hometown.
Mhaibib, perched on a hill close to the Israeli border, was leveled by a series of explosions on Oct. 16. The Israeli army released a video showing blasts ripping through the village in the Marjayoun province, razing dozens of homes to dust.
The scene has been repeated in villages across southern Lebanon since Israel launched its invasion a month ago with the stated goal of pushing Hezbollah militants back from the border. On Oct. 26, massive explosions in and around Odaisseh sparked an earthquake alert in northern Israel.
Israel says it wants to destroy a massive network of Hezbollah tunnels in the border area. But for the people who have been displaced, the attacks are also destroying a lifetime of memories.
Mhaibib had endured sporadic targeting since Hezbollah and Israeli forces began exchanging fire on Oct. 8 last year.
Jaber was living in Aramoun, just south of Beirut, before the war, and the rest of his family evacuated from Mhaibib after the border skirmishes ignited. Some of them left their possessions behind and sought refuge in Syria. Jaber’s father and two sisters, Zeinab and Fatima, moved in with him.
In the living room of their temporary home, the siblings sip Arabic coffee while their father chain-smokes.
“My father breaks my heart. He is 70 years old, frail and has been waiting for over a year to return to Mhaibib,” Zeinab said. “He left his five cows there. He keeps asking, ‘Do you think they’re still alive?’”
Mhaibib was a close-knit rural village, with about 70 historic stone homes lining its narrow streets. Families grew tobacco, wheat, mulukhiyah (jute mallow) and olives, planting them each spring and waking before dawn in the summer to harvest the crops.
The village was also known for an ancient shrine dedicated to Benjamin, the son of Jacob, an important figure in Judaism. In Islam, he is known as the prophet Benjamin Bin Yaacoub, believed to be the 12th son of prophet Yaacoub and the brother of prophet Yousef.
The shrine was damaged in the 2006 war between Israel and Hezbollah, then renovated. Pictures show the shrine enclosed in a golden cage adorned with intricate Arabic inscriptions beside an old stone mosque crowned by a minaret that overlooked the village. The mosque and the shrine are now gone.
Hisham Younes, who runs the environmental organization Green Southerners, says generations of southerners admired Mhaibib for its one-or two-story stone homes, some built by Jaber’s grandfather and his friends.
“Detonating an entire village is a form of collective punishment and war crime. What do they gain from destroying shrines, churches and old homes?” Younes asks.
Abdelmoe’m Shucair, the mayor of neighboring Mays el Jabal, told the Associated Press that the last few dozen families living in Mhaibib fled before the Israeli destruction began, as had residents of surrounding villages.
Jaber’s sisters attended school in Mays Al-Jabal. That school was also destroyed in a series of massive explosions.
After finishing her studies in Beirut, Zeinab worked in a pharmacy in the neighboring village of Blida. That pharmacy, too, is gone after the Israeli military detonated part of that village. Israeli forces even bulldozed their village cemetery where generations of family members are buried.
“I don’t belong to any political group,” Zeinab says. “Why did my home, my life, have to be taken from me?”
She says she can’t bring herself to watch the video of her village’s destruction. “When my brother played it, I ran from the room.”
To process what’s happening, Fatima says she closes her eyes and takes herself back to Mhaibib. She sees the sun setting, vividly painting the sky stretching over their family gatherings on the upstairs patio, framed by their mother’s flowers.
The family painstakingly expanded their home over a decade.
“It took us 10 years to add just one room,” Fatima said. “First, my dad laid the flooring, then the walls, the roof and the glass windows. My mom sold a year’s worth of homemade preserves to furnish it.” She paused. “And it was gone in an instant.”
In the midst of war, Zeinab married quietly. Now she’s six months pregnant. She had hoped to be back in Mhaibib in time for the delivery.
Her brother was born when Mhaibib and other villages in southern Lebanon were under Israeli occupation. Jaber remembers traveling from Beirut to Mhaibib, passing through Israeli checkpoints and a final crossing before entering the village.
“There were security checks and interrogations. The process used to take a full or half a day,” he says. And inside the village, they always felt like they were “under surveillance.”
His family also fled the village during the war with Israel in 2006, and when they returned they found their homes vandalized but still standing. An uncle and a grandmother were among those killed in the 34-day conflict, but a loquat tree the matriarch had planted next to their home endured.
This time, there is no home to return to and even the loquat tree is gone.
Jaber worries Israel will again set up a permanent presence in southern Lebanon and that he won’t be able to reconstruct the home he built over the last six years for himself, his wife and their two sons.
“When this war ends, we’ll go back,” Ayman says quietly. “We’ll pitch tents if we have to and stay until we rebuild our houses.”


Jordan will not assume military role in post-war Gaza, minister says

Jordan will not assume military role in post-war Gaza, minister says
Updated 6 sec ago

Jordan will not assume military role in post-war Gaza, minister says

Jordan will not assume military role in post-war Gaza, minister says

DUBAI: Jordan will not take part in any military deployment in the Gaza Strip or the occupied West Bank following the current conflict, Jordanian Minister of Government Communication Mohammad Momani said, according to remarks published by the Jordan Times.
Speaking on Jordan TV’s “60 Minutes,” Momani said the Kingdom’s focus will remain on humanitarian assistance aimed at easing what he described as large-scale suffering among Palestinians in Gaza.
He emphasized Jordan’s support for efforts that help Palestinians secure their “legitimate right” to an independent state.
“We will not have any military roles in Gaza and the West Bank,” Momani said, reiterating that Amman’s involvement will be limited to relief and diplomatic support.
His comments follow the announcement of a US-brokered Gaza peace agreement, which includes provisions for an international force to oversee security and enforce the ceasefire in the territory. 
In recent days US President Donald Trump has said multiple regional countries have expressed interest in being part of an international transitional force in the territory. 
Momani also criticized moves by Israeli legislators seeking to extend Israeli sovereignty over the occupied West Bank, calling the effort a “hostile policy.”
He noted international opposition to annexation plans and welcomed US statements signaling that Israel should not proceed.
Trump said the US will end its support for Israel if its parliament voted to pass a bill giving it sovereignty over the West Bank.
Israeli lawmakers recently granted preliminary approval to a bill to impose sovereignty on the territory, drawing condemnation from Jordan and 14 other Arab and Islamic states.


A bomb in Gaza’s rubble wounds twins who thought it was a toy

A bomb in Gaza’s rubble wounds twins who thought it was a toy
Updated 25 October 2025

A bomb in Gaza’s rubble wounds twins who thought it was a toy

A bomb in Gaza’s rubble wounds twins who thought it was a toy
  • The boy, Yahya, and his sister, Nabila, had discovered a round object while playing. One touch, and it went off

GAZA CITY: The Shorbasi family was sitting in their severely damaged house in Gaza City, enjoying the relative calm of the ceasefire. Then they heard an explosion and rushed outside to find their 6-year-old twins bleeding on the ground.

The boy, Yahya, and his sister, Nabila, had discovered a round object while playing. One touch, and it went off.

“It was like a toy,” their grandfather, Tawfiq Shorbasi, said of the unexploded ordnance, after the children were rushed to Shifa hospital on Friday. “It was extremely difficult.”

Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians are seizing the chance to return to what’s left of their homes under the ceasefire that began on Oct. 10. 

But the dangers are far from over as people, including children, sift through the rubble for what remains of their belongings, and for bodies unreachable until now.

Shorbasi said the family had returned home after the ceasefire took hold. Gaza City had been the focus of the final Israeli military offensive before the deal was reached between Israel and Hamas.

“We’ve just returned last week,” the grandfather said at Shifa hospital, fighting back tears. “Their lives have been ruined forever.”

The boy, Yahya, lay on a hospital bed with his right arm and leg wrapped in bandages. Nabila, now being treated at Patient’s Friends hospital, had a bandaged forehead.

Both children’s faces were freckled with tiny shrapnel wounds.

A British emergency physician and pediatrician working at one of the hospitals said the twins had life-threatening injuries, including a lost hand, a hole in the bowel, broken bones, and potential loss of a leg.

The children underwent emergency surgery, and their conditions have relatively stabilized, the doctor said. 

But concerns remain about their recovery because of Gaza’s vast lack of medicine and medical supplies, said Dr. Harriet, who declined to give her last name.

“Now it’s just a waiting game, so I hope that they both survive, but at this point, I can’t say, and this is a common recurrence,” she said.

Health workers call unexploded ordnance a major threat to Palestinians. 

Two other children, Yazan and Jude Nour, were wounded on Thursday while their family was inspecting their home in Gaza City, according to Shifa Hospital.

Gaza’s Health Ministry, which operates under the Hamas-run government, said five children were wounded by unexploded ordnance over the past week, including one in the southern city of Khan Younis.

“This is the death trap,” Dr. Harriet said. 

“We are talking about a ceasefire, but the killing has not stopped.”

Already over 68,500 Palestinians have died in the war, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, which doesn’t distinguish between civilians and combatants in its count. 

The ministry maintains detailed casualty records that are generally considered reliable by UN agencies and independent experts. Israel has disputed them without providing its own toll.

Luke Irving, head of the UN Mine Action Service, UNMAS, in the Palestinian territories, has warned that “explosive risk is incredibly high” as both aid workers and displaced Palestinians return to areas vacated by the Israeli military in Gaza. As of Oct. 7, UNMAS had documented at least 52 Palestinians killed and 267 others wounded by unexploded ordnance in Gaza since the war began. 

UNMAS, however, said the toll could be much higher.

Irving told a UN briefing last week that 560 unexploded ordnance items have been found during the current ceasefire, with many more under the rubble. 

Two years of war have left up to 60 million tons of debris across Gaza, he added.

In the coming weeks, additional international de-mining experts are expected to join efforts to collect unexploded ordnance in Gaza, he said.

“As expected, we’re now finding more items because we’re getting out more; the teams have more access,” he said.


Gaza risks ‘lost generation’ due to ruined schools

Gaza risks ‘lost generation’ due to ruined schools
Updated 25 October 2025

Gaza risks ‘lost generation’ due to ruined schools

Gaza risks ‘lost generation’ due to ruined schools
  • The ceasefire has allowed UNICEF and other education partners to get about one-sixth of children who should be in school into temporary “learning centers,” said Beigbeder

JERUSALEM: With Gaza’s education system shattered by two years of grueling war, UNICEF’s regional director says he fears for a “lost generation” of children wandering ruined streets with nothing to do.

“This is the third year that there has been no school,” Edouard Beigbeder, the UN agency’s regional director for the Middle East and North Africa, said in Jerusalem.

“If we don’t start a real transition for all children in February, we will enter a fourth year. And then we can talk about a lost generation.”

The destruction “is almost omnipresent wherever you go,” Beigbeder said.

“It is impossible to imagine 80 percent of a territory that is completely flattened out or destroyed,” he added.

The ceasefire has allowed UNICEF and other education partners to get about one-sixth of children who should be in school into temporary “learning centers,” said Beigbeder.

“They have three days of learning in reading, mathematics, and writing, but this is far from a formal education as we know it,” he added.

Beigbeder said that such learning centers consisted of metal structures covered with plastic sheeting or of tents.

He said there were sometimes chairs, cardboard boxes, or wooden planks serving as tables, and that children would write on salvaged slates or plastic boards.

“I’ve never seen everyone sitting properly,” he added, describing children on mats or carpets.

Despite the ceasefire, Beigbeder said the situation for Gaza’s education system was catastrophic, with 85 percent of schools destroyed or unusable.

Of the buildings still standing, many are being used as shelters for displaced people, he said, a situation compounded by the fact that many children and teachers are also on the move and seeking to provide for their own families.

Gaza’s school system was already overcrowded before the conflict, with half the pre-war population under the age of 18.

Of the schools managed by the West Bank-based Palestinian Authority alone, Beigbeder said that some 80 out of 300 needed renovation.

He said 142 had been destroyed, while 38 were “completely inaccessible” because they were located in the area to which Israeli troops had withdrawn under the ceasefire.

The UN agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, said on Oct. 18 that it was launching a “new e-learning school year” to reach 290,000 pupils.

On Friday, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio accused UNRWA of being a “subsidiary of Hamas” and said it would play no role in post-war Gaza.

Beigbeder said it was vital to put education “at the top of the agenda” and rebuild a sense of social cohesion for Gaza’s children, almost all of whom are traumatized and in need of psychological support.

UNICEF said one of the priorities was obtaining permission at border crossings to bring in materials to set up semi-permanent schools, as well as school supplies, which have been blocked as non-essential.

Israel repeatedly cut off supplies to the Gaza Strip during the war, exacerbating dire humanitarian conditions, with the UN saying it caused a famine in parts of the Palestinian territory.

The World Health Organization said Thursday there had been a slight improvement in the amount of aid going into Gaza since the ceasefire took hold — and no observable reduction in hunger.

“How can you rehabilitate classrooms if you don’t have cement? And above all, we need notebooks and books ... blackboards, the bare minimum,” said Beigbeder.

“Food is survival. Education is hope.”


Hundreds protest in Tunisia’s capital over worsening pollution crisis

Hundreds protest in Tunisia’s capital over worsening pollution crisis
Updated 25 October 2025

Hundreds protest in Tunisia’s capital over worsening pollution crisis

Hundreds protest in Tunisia’s capital over worsening pollution crisis
  • Residents of Gabes have reported rising rates of respiratory illnesses, osteoporosis and cancer
  • Protesters in Tunis carried banners and chanted slogans in solidarity with residents of Gabes, calling the response of authorities “repression“

TUNIS: Hundreds of Tunisians marched through the capital Tunis on Saturday to protest a severe environmental crisis caused by pollution from a state chemical plant in Gabes, as protests that began there widen outside the southern city.
The protest is the latest in a series of demonstrations that have underscored growing public frustration over the government’s handling of pollution and worsening state of public services, marking the biggest challenge to President Kais Saied since he seized all power in 2021.
Residents of Gabes have reported rising rates of respiratory illnesses, osteoporosis and cancer, which they blame on toxic gases from the state chemical group’s phosphate plants, which dump thousands of tons of waste into the sea daily.
The latest wave of protests in Gabes was triggered this month after dozens of schoolchildren suffered breathing difficulties caused by toxic fumes from a plant that converts phosphates into phosphoric acid and fertilizers.
Protesters in Tunis carried banners and chanted slogans in solidarity with residents of Gabes, calling the response of authorities “repression.” The government said it arrested people for violence.
“It’s that simple, the people of Gabes want to breathe,” Hani Faraj, a protester from the “Stop Pollution” campaign, told Reuters. “Gabes is dying slowly ... We will not remain silent. We will escalate our peaceful protests.”
Saied’s administration fears protests in the capital could spark unrest elsewhere in Tunisia, deepening pressure as it struggles with a prolonged economic downturn and political instability.
Saied has described the situation in Gabes as an “environmental assassination,” blaming criminal policy choices by a previous government.
In an effort to quell the protests, he has called for repairs to the industrial units to stop leaks as an immediate step. Health Minister Mustapha Ferjani said this week the government would build a cancer hospital in Gabes to deal with rising cases.
However, protesters have rejected the fixes as temporary, and are demanding the polluting facilities be permanently shut and relocated.
Environmental groups warn that tons of industrial waste are discharged daily into the sea at Chatt Essalam, severely damaging marine life. Local fishermen have reported a sharp decline in fish stocks over the past decade, threatening a vital source of income for many in the region.


Appeal date set for French sportswriter jailed in Algeria: lawyer

Appeal date set for French sportswriter jailed in Algeria: lawyer
Updated 25 October 2025

Appeal date set for French sportswriter jailed in Algeria: lawyer

Appeal date set for French sportswriter jailed in Algeria: lawyer
  • “The case of French journalist Christophe Gleizes is scheduled for December 3, 2025,” his lawyer said
  • Gleizes had traveled to Tizi Ouzou to write about the local football club Jeunesse Sportive de Kabylie

ALGIERS: The appeal trial of a French sports journalist jailed in Algeria on accusations of “glorifying terrorism” has been scheduled for December 3, his lawyer said Friday.
A contributor to the magazines So Foot and Society, Christophe Gleizes, 36, was sentenced in late June to seven years in prison.
“The case of French journalist Christophe Gleizes is scheduled for December 3, 2025, at the criminal appeal court in Tizi Ouzou,” 110 kilometers (70 miles) east of Algiers, his lawyer, Amirouche Bakouri, said on Facebook.
Gleizes had traveled to Tizi Ouzou to write about the local football club Jeunesse Sportive de Kabylie, named after Algeria’s Kabylia region, home to the Amazigh Kabyle people.
He is accused by the judiciary of having been in contact with a local football figure prominent in the Movement for the Self-Determination of Kabylie (MAK), designated a terrorist organization by the authorities in 2021.
The press freedom NGO Reporters Without Borders called on the appeal court to free Gleizes.
“Christophe is guilty only of practicing his profession as a sports journalist and loving Algerian football,” declared RSF Director-General Thierry Bruttin, according to an NGO statement.