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‘As soon as possible,’ says senior US envoy on timeline for disarming Hezbollah

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Updated 14 April 2025

‘As soon as possible,’ says senior US envoy on timeline for disarming Hezbollah

‘As soon as possible,’ says senior US envoy on timeline for disarming Hezbollah
  • Morgan Ortagus says Lebanese people must be ‘free from foreign influence, free from terrorism’
  • Envoy praises Lebanon’s new cabinet, describing ministers as ‘real patriots’ with clear vision for reforms

LONDON: Hezbollah and all militias in Lebanon must be disarmed “as soon as possible,” US Deputy Special Envoy for the Middle East Morgan Ortagus has told the Lebanese broadcaster LBCI.

Ortagus, who was , emphasized President Donald Trump’s firm position that only by disarming militant groups could the Lebanese people be “free from foreign influence, free from terrorism, free from the fears that have been so pervasive in society.”

Speaking during her second visit to Lebanon, where she has held “fantastic meetings” with President Joseph Aoun and Prime Minister Nawaf Salam, Ortagus also reiterated Washington’s continued support for Lebanon’s sovereignty, while stressing that disarmament remained a central pillar of any meaningful recovery.

“We, of course, always bring up disarming Hezbollah, but not just Hezbollah, all militias in this country,” Ortagus said.

“President Aoun said clearly in his inaugural speech that he wanted the state to have the monopoly of force, he wanted the state to be the one with the weapons. That is a position that we support,” she added.

When asked to outline a timeline on disarming the Iran-backed group, Ortagus said there was “not necessarily a timetable,” but that it should happen “as soon as possible.”

She continued that the US had been providing aid and assistance, training, funding, and equipment to the LAF (Lebanese Armed Forces) for decades.

“That’s a very important American priority. Now that we’re in this new era — where the LAF is really able, under President Aoun’s leadership, to exert more authority over the state — we want to help them move toward those goals. Those goals are real; they’re clear,” she said.

Ortagus, who served as spokesperson for the State Department during the first Trump administration, said she was “very encouraged” by Lebanon’s new cabinet, describing its ministers as “real patriots” with a clear vision for reforms. This was in stark contrast to what she described as the “depressing” conditions of the past decade.




Handout photo provided by Lebanese Presidency on April 5, 2025, shows Lebanon’s President Aoun (R) meeting with Ortagus (2nd-R) and members of her delegation at the Presidential Palace in Baabda. (AFP)

When asked whether Hezbollah could play a political role in Lebanon if disarmed, Ortagus responded by reframing the question in terms of broader US policy under Trump.

“I don’t come here as a US official representing the Trump administration to make demands: ‘You must do X, you must do Y.’ Rather, I encourage and say: If you want continued partnership with the United States, you have to meet certain goals and criteria,” she said.

“When I came here the first time, it was important to me that Nawaf Salam did not have Hezbollah represented among his ministers, just as important was that there not be corrupt ministers; corruption has eroded society’s confidence.

“If (Lebanon’s leaders) choose to work together and partner with the US government to disarm Hezbollah, to fulfil the cessation of hostilities, to end endemic corruption, we’re going to be a wonderful partner and friend. And there will be more of that to come.

“But if the government and the leaders choose to slow-walk that or not be part of that vision for Lebanon that we share, that’s a choice they can make. But they shouldn’t expect partnership if they’re not achieving these goals,” she added.

Addressing speculation over potential Lebanese normalization with Israel, Ortagus dismissed the issue as premature.

“I didn’t have a single conversation about that topic here in Lebanon. What we’re focused on now is implementing the cessation of hostilities. We’re focused on disarming Hezbollah. We’re focused on economic reforms,” she said. “You have to crawl before you run; we’re still at the crawling stage.”

On Lebanon’s deepening economic crisis, Ortagus said US support would hinge on reforms, echoing positions taken by the International Monetary Fund and World Bank.

“Lebanon must get off things like the FATF (Financial Action Task Force) gray list. It must move beyond a cash-based economy. It must return to having a sophisticated financial sector, the one Lebanon used to be known for,” she said.

Ortagus revealed she was struck by a billboard in Beirut that read “Make Lebanon Great Again,” saying she took a photo of it to show Trump.

“I loved that sign,” she said. “If you want to make Lebanon great again, you must implement these reforms. It’s tough, but Lebanon is in one of the worst financial conditions I’ve seen in the past 20 or 30 years.”

Calling the situation “devastating,” she warned that radical change was required to avoid collapse. “To rescue yourselves, you’ll need reforms, and some of them radical, to save the country.”

Ortagus also called for an overhaul of the traditional donor-aid approach to post-conflict reconstruction, advocating instead for increased private-sector investment and innovation.

“Our vision for Lebanon is not just as a donor country always asking for donations,” she told Mrad. “How do we think of a better way to rebuild southern Lebanon? We want people to have jobs. We want them to have hope for the future.”

Pointing to the regional devastation in Gaza, Syria, and Lebanon, she said the world must “look differently at these war-torn regions” and empower their youth to participate in shaping a more prosperous future.

Echos Of Civil War
50 years on, Lebanon remains hostage to sectarian rivalries

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Hundreds of hospital patients killed by RSF in El-Fasher, Sudan, UN and residents say

Hundreds of hospital patients killed by RSF in El-Fasher, Sudan, UN and residents say
Updated 54 min 21 sec ago

Hundreds of hospital patients killed by RSF in El-Fasher, Sudan, UN and residents say

Hundreds of hospital patients killed by RSF in El-Fasher, Sudan, UN and residents say
  • WHO says 460 patients and companions were reportedly killed at Saudi Maternity Hospital in the city
  • Witnesses who fled the violence decribe scenses 'like a killing field'

CAIRO: Sudan’s paramilitary forces killed hundreds of people including patients in a hospital after they seized El-Fasher city in the western Darfur region over the weekend, according to the UN, displaced residents and aid workers, who described harrowing details of atrocities.
Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, director general of the World Health Organization, said in a statement the 460 patients and companions were reportedly killed at Saudi Maternity Hospital in El-Fasher, the provincial capital of North Darfur. He said the WHO was “appalled and deeply shocked” by the reports.
The Sudan Doctors Network, a medical group tracking the war, said fighters from the Rapid Support Forces on Tuesday “cold-bloodedly killed everyone they found inside the Saudi Hospital, including patients, their companions, and anyone else present in the wards.”
Sudanese residents and aid workers described some of the atrocities carried out by the RSF, fighting since 2023 to take over Africa’s third largest nation, after they seized the army’s last stronghold in Darfur after over 500 days of siege.
“The Janjaweed showed no mercy for anyone,” said Umm Amena, a mother of four children who fled the city on Monday after two days, using a Sudanese term for the RSF.
RSF commander Gen. Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo on Wednesday acknowledged what he called “abuses” by his forces. In his first comments since the fall of El-Fasher, posted on the Telegram messaging app, he said an investigation was opened. He did not elaborate.
The RSF has been accused by the UN and rights groups of atrocities throughout the war, including a 2023 attack on another Darfur city, Geneina, where hundreds of people were killed.
“It was a like a killing field”
Amena was among three dozen people, mostly women and children, who were detained for a day by RSF fighters in an abandoned house close to the Saudi Hospital in El-Fasher.
The Associated Press spoke with Amena and four others who managed to flee El-Fasher and arrived exhausted and dehydrated early Tuesday in the nearby town of Tawila, around 60 kilometers (37 miles) west of el-Fasher, which already hosts over 650,000 displaced.
The UN migration agency said about 35,000 people have fled El-Fasher, mostly to rural areas around it, since Sunday.
UN refugee agency official Jacqueline Wilma Parlevliet said that the new arrivals told stories of widespread ethnic and politically motivated killings, including reports of people with disabilities shot dead because they were unable to flee, and others shot as they tried to escape.
Witnesses told the AP that RSF fighters — on foot, riding on camels, or in vehicles — went from house to house, beating and shooting at people, including women and children. Many died of gunshot wounds in the streets, some while trying to flee to safety, the witnesses said.
“It was a like a killing field,” Tajal-Rahman, a man in his late 50s, said over the phone from the outskirts of Tawila. “Bodies everywhere and people bleeding and no one to help them.”
Both Amena and Tajal-Rahman said that RSF fighters tortured and beat the detainees and shot at least four people on Monday who later died of wounds. They also sexually assaulted women and girls, they said.
Giulia Chiopris, a pediatrician at a hospital run by the Doctors Without Borders medical group in Tawila, said they received many patients since Oct. 18, suffering from injuries related to bombing or gunshots.
She said that the hospital also received a high number of malnourished children — many of them unaccompanied or orphaned — who were also severely dehydrated during the road journey from El-Fasher.
“They arrive here they are really exhausted,” she told the AP. “We are seeing a lot a lot of cases of trauma related to the last bombing and a huge number of orphans.”
She recalled receiving three siblings — the younger 40 days old and the older 4 years — on Monday night, whose family were killed in the city. They were brought to the hospital by strangers, she said.
Satellite imagery shows mass killings
In a report late Tuesday, the Yale School of Public Health’s Humanitarian Research Lab (HRL) said that RSF fighters continued to carry out mass killings since they took over El-Fasher.
The report, which relied on satellite imagery from Airbus, said it corroborated alleged executions and mass killing by the RSF around the Saudi Hospital, and at a detention center at the former Children’s Hospital in the eastern part of the city.
It also said that “systematic killings” took place in the vicinity of the eastern wall, which the RSF built outside the city earlier this year.
The HRL also reported what it said were targeted attacks by the RSF on health facilities, health workers, patients and humanitarian aid workers, which it said amount to war crimes.
“An unfathomable horror,” Simon Mane, a national director for the World Vision aid group, said. “Children are not just dying; they are being brutally robbed of their very existence, their hopes and futures cruelly wiped away. Their fate is a devastating moral failure.”
He warned of a catastrophe as mounting reports of atrocities were “now echoing the darkest chapters of this protracted crisis.”
Aid groups said hundreds were killed and hundreds detained since the RSF overran the city, but a death toll has been difficult to determine given a near communication blackout.
HRL said satellite imagery can’t show the true scale of the mass killings, and that “it is highly likely that any estimates of the total number of people who RSF has killed are undercounted.”
Before the latest bout of violence, some 1,850 civilians were killed in North Darfur, including 1,350 in El-Fasher, between Jan. 1 and Oct. 20 this year, according to UN spokesperson Farhan Aziz Haq.
Global outrage
Footage of the attacks triggered a wave of outrage around the world. France, Germany, the UK and the European Union all condemned the atrocities.
Mohamed Osman, Sudan researcher with Human Rights Watch, said that footage coming out of El-Fasher “reveals a horrifying truth: the Rapid Support Forces feel free to carry out mass atrocities with little fear of consequences.”
“The world needs to act to protect civilians from more heinous crimes,” he said.
Sen. Jim Risch, chairman of the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee, on Tuesday denounced the RSF attacks on the city, and called for it to be designated as a foreign terrorist organization.
“The RSF has waged terror and committed unspeakable atrocities, genocide among them, against the Sudanese people,” he wrote on X.


Syrian authorities arrest two prominent Assad-era gang leaders in Homs

Syrian authorities arrest two prominent Assad-era gang leaders in Homs
Updated 29 October 2025

Syrian authorities arrest two prominent Assad-era gang leaders in Homs

Syrian authorities arrest two prominent Assad-era gang leaders in Homs
  • Former Assad regime relied on militarized criminal gangs to suppress civilian uprisings, alongside official forces and paramilitary groups
  • The Maroufs are accused of serious offences against civilians in Homs under previous regime

LONDON: Syrian authorities announced the arrest of two prominent gang leaders in the northern region of Homs, who are accused of crimes against civilians during Bashar Assad’s regime.

The ministry of interior said on Wednesday that forces from the counter-terrorism branch and the directorate of internal security had captured Faisal Ahmed Marouf and his son, Ahmed Faisal Marouf, in the eastern province of Homs Governorate, in western Syria.

The former Assad regime, which fell in December last year, relied on militarized criminal gangs known as Shabiha to suppress civilian uprisings, alongside official forces and paramilitary groups, including the Iran-backed Hezbollah.

The ministry said that the Maroufs are accused of involvement in grave violations against Syrian civilians in Homs during the rule of the bygone regime.

“Investigations revealed that the criminals held leadership positions in groups responsible for killings, armed robberies, and unlawful arrests against people in peaceful areas and Abu Hakfa during the rule of the defunct regime,” the ministry of interior announced on Telegram.

Last week, Syrian authorities arrested a former military official accused of executing detainees at Saydnaya prison during the former regime.

Since December, the new government in Damascus has arrested several suspects, including Assad-era army officers, for crimes committed against Syrians during the country’s civil conflict.


Syria nets $28bn in investments this year, president tells FII

Syria nets $28bn in investments this year, president tells FII
Updated 29 October 2025

Syria nets $28bn in investments this year, president tells FII

Syria nets $28bn in investments this year, president tells FII
  • Ahmad Al-Sharaa tells session in Riyadh he wants to rebuild Syria by investments
  • Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman attended the talk

RIYADH: Syria has attracted overseas investment totaling around $28 billion so far this year, President Ahmad Al-Sharaa said on Wednesday at the Future Investment Initiative (FII) in Riyadh.
Sharaa said in a session attended by ֱ’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman that Syrian laws have been amended to allow foreign investors to transfer funds out of the country.
“We want to rebuild Syria via investments,” Al-Sharaa said, adding the world can benefit from it as a “trade corridor.”
Al-Sharaa led opposition fighters to overthrow Bashar Al-Assad late last year, bringing an end to 14 years of civil war.
Al-Sharaa has conducted a series of foreign trips as his transitional government seeks to re-establish Syria’s ties with world powers that shunned Damascus during Assad’s rule.
In May, Riyadh hosted a historic meeting between Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Al-Sharaa and US President Donald Trump, who praised Al-Sharaa and said Washington would lift all sanctions on Syria to help give the country a chance to rebuild.
Despite Trump’s pledge and widespread exemptions now granted to Syria, the toughest sanctions — known as the Caesar sanctions — require a repeal from the US Congress.
US lawmakers have been divided on the issue, but are expected to make a decision by the end of the year.
While Syria has already drawn international interest in major development projects, a full repeal is expected to trigger increased appetite for investments.
In August, Syria signed 12 investment deals worth $14 billion, including infrastructure, transportation and real estate projects aimed at reviving the war-damaged economy.
A World Bank report predicted the cost of Syria’s reconstruction at $216 billion, saying the figure was a “conservative best estimate.”


Libya’s Sirte Co. restarts methanol II plant after more than 7 years, NOC says

Libya’s Sirte Co. restarts methanol II plant after more than 7 years, NOC says
Updated 29 October 2025

Libya’s Sirte Co. restarts methanol II plant after more than 7 years, NOC says

Libya’s Sirte Co. restarts methanol II plant after more than 7 years, NOC says
  • The plant can produce 670 metric tons of methanol a day
  • Sirte is a subsidiary of NOC

TRIPOLI: Libya’s Sirte Oil and Gas Company has restarted its second methanol plant after more than seven years, the country’s National Oil Corp. (NOC) said in a statement on Wednesday.
The plant can produce 670 metric tons of methanol a day, an oil sector source told Reuters by phone.
Sirte is a subsidiary of NOC. Its first methanol plant, which was reopened in 2023 after years of shutdown, has a production capacity of 600 metric tons a day, according to the NOC website.
NOC said the second plant’s resumption was a “significant step” that enhances Sirte’s production capabilities and diversifies its products.
It added that the company’s oil production has reached 114,000 barrels per day.


Egyptian and Sudanese foreign ministers discuss security developments in El-Fasher

Egyptian and Sudanese foreign ministers discuss security developments in El-Fasher
Updated 29 October 2025

Egyptian and Sudanese foreign ministers discuss security developments in El-Fasher

Egyptian and Sudanese foreign ministers discuss security developments in El-Fasher
  • Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty highlighted that Sudan’s security is crucial for the region’s overall stability
  • The paramilitary Rapid Support Forces have recently captured the key city of El-Fasher, which the EU has accused of targeting civilians

LONDON: Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty discussed recent developments in the Sudanese city of El-Fasher, focusing on humanitarian and security issues, with his Sudanese counterpart Mohieddin Salem on Wednesday.

Abdelatty emphasized Egypt’s strong support for the Sudanese people and its commitment to achieving stability and peace in Sudan. He noted Egypt’s active role in efforts to secure a ceasefire and establish a humanitarian truce to provide assistance and reduce civilian suffering.

He highlighted that Sudan’s security is crucial for the region’s overall stability, and Egypt is committed to Sudan’s unity, sovereignty and stability.

The paramilitary Rapid Support Forces have recently captured El-Fasher, the capital city of North Darfur, which the EU has accused of targeting civilians and aid workers in the region. The RSF has been engaged in a deadly conflict with the army since April 2023.

The two ministers also discussed commercial and investment cooperation, as well as infrastructure rehabilitation. Egypt is prepared to enhance support in the electricity, water, health and education sectors for the Sudanese people, Abdelatty said.

The meeting highlighted water security, focusing on the need for unity between the two Nile estuary countries and full compliance with international law in the eastern Nile basin.