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Aid worker missing after deadly attack on colleagues is held by Israel, ICRC says

Spokesperson for ICRC in Gaza confirmed it had received information that the PRCS paramedic Assad Al-Nsasrah was being held in an Israeli place of detention. (@PalestineRCS)
Spokesperson for ICRC in Gaza confirmed it had received information that the PRCS paramedic Assad Al-Nsasrah was being held in an Israeli place of detention. (@PalestineRCS)
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Updated 13 April 2025

Aid worker missing after deadly attack on colleagues is held by Israel, ICRC says

PRCS paramedic Assad Al-Nsasrah is being held in an Israeli place of detention. (@PalestineRCS)
  • PRCS demanded the immediate release of Nsasrah, who it said was “forcibly abducted” while carrying out humanitarian duties

CAIRO: A Palestinian Red Crescent staff member who went missing in late March when 15 humanitarian workers were killed by Israeli fire is being detained by Israeli authorities, the rescue service and the Red Cross said on Sunday.
Hisham Mhana, the spokesperson for the ICRC in Gaza, confirmed to Reuters that it had received information that the Palestine Red Crescent Society paramedic Assad Al-Nsasrah was being held in an Israeli place of detention.
“As per standard practice, we informed the families immediately. In this case, we also informed the Palestine Red Crescent Society as they have special standing as a partner of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement,” he said.
The Israeli army did not immediately comment.
Mhana said the ICRC has not been granted access to Nsasrah, who until Sunday had been declared missing, and also has not been able to visit any of the Palestinian detainees and prisoners in Israeli jails since October 7, 2023.
In a post on X, The PRCS demanded the immediate release of Nsasrah, who it said was “forcibly abducted” while carrying out humanitarian duties.
It added that Nsasrah and his colleagues came under heavy gunfire, which led to the killing of eight of them in a “grave violation” of international humanitarian law.
The bodies of 15 emergency and aid workers from the Red Crescent, the Civil Emergency Service and the UN were found buried in a mass grave in southern Gaza in March.
The UN and the Red Crescent accused Israeli forces of killing them after they were dispatched to respond to reports of injuries from Israeli airstrikes.
The Israeli military referred Reuters to its statement from Monday, in which it said that a thorough inquiry into the incident was still underway and that it would provide further details only once the investigation is complete.
It said that a preliminary inquiry indicated that “the troops opened fire due to a perceived threat following a previous encounter in the area, and that six of the individuals killed in the incident were identified as Hamas terrorists.”
The Israeli military has provided no evidence of how it determined that the six were Hamas militants, and the Islamist faction has rejected the accusation.
The only known survivor of the incident, PRCS paramedic Munther Abed, said soldiers had opened fire on clearly marked emergency response vehicles.


Qatar sets up field hospital, shelters for Afghan victims of earthquakes

Qatar sets up field hospital, shelters for Afghan victims of earthquakes
Updated 42 sec ago

Qatar sets up field hospital, shelters for Afghan victims of earthquakes

Qatar sets up field hospital, shelters for Afghan victims of earthquakes
  • The field hospital treated injured individuals and transferred critical cases to major medical facilities in nearby governorates
  • The eastern region of Afghanistan was shaken last week by three major earthquakes, resulting in 2,205 deaths and 3,640 injuries

LONDON: The Qatar International Search and Rescue Group from the Internal Security Force (Lekhwiya) established a temporary field hospital in eastern Afghanistan to provide medical support to those affected by the recent earthquakes.

The group said on Monday that the field hospital treated injured individuals and transferred critical cases to major medical facilities in nearby governorates. Additionally, the group set up tents to provide temporary shelters for families affected by the earthquakes, the Qatar News Agency reported.

The eastern region of Afghanistan was shaken last week by three major earthquakes and two powerful aftershocks, resulting in 2,205 deaths and 3,640 injuries, according to the Taliban administration. The earthquakes destroyed an estimated 6,700 homes in the provinces of Nangarhar and Kunar, which border Pakistan.

Due to the construction of dwellings mainly from dry masonry, stone, and timber, some families chose to stay outdoors as a precaution against aftershocks, as many others left without a home.

The South Asian nation of 42 million people has suffered since the 1980s from political turmoil, civil wars, a weak economy and shrinking aid.


Morocco earthquake survivors protest to demand housing aid

Morocco earthquake survivors protest to demand housing aid
Updated 8 min 7 sec ago

Morocco earthquake survivors protest to demand housing aid

Morocco earthquake survivors protest to demand housing aid
  • On September 8, 2023, a 6.8-magnitude earthquake razed tens of thousands of homes in central Morocco, including in the High Atlas mountain range, forcing families to sleep out in the open through the winter

RABAT: Survivors of Morocco’s 2023 earthquake that killed nearly 3,000 people rallied in Rabat on Monday, demanding their houses be rebuilt as part of the government’s reconstruction program.
Marking the disaster’s second anniversary, dozens of protesters gathered outside parliament in the Moroccan capital, protesting what they described as their “exclusion” from the reconstruction program.
Many held signs that read “No to exclusion, no to marginalization” and “A roof for every life, dignity has no price.”
Ibrahim Achkijou, 30, told AFP he was still living in a shipping container south of Marrakech, in what he described as a “big injustice.”
“We lost our home... but we were excluded from the aid without explanation,” he said.
Aicha Ouchane, who traveled with her mother from quake-hit Ouarzazate, about 500 kilometers (310 miles) south of Rabat, to join the protest, said they lived in a garage under “very harsh conditions.”
“They tell us we are not entitled to the aid, which is not normal,” she said.
On September 8, 2023, a 6.8-magnitude earthquake razed tens of thousands of homes in central Morocco, including in the High Atlas mountain range, forcing families to sleep out in the open through the winter.
Authorities had said it damaged some 55,000 houses.
So far, some 45,800 homes have been rebuilt in the provinces of Al Haouz, Chichaoua, Taroudant and Marrakech, according to the latest official tally, which did not include data on Ouarzazate and Azilal provinces.
Authorities say more than $465 million has so far been allocated for reconstruction and rehabilitation, alongside monthly allowances of $277 for affected families.
Following the earthquake, the Moroccan authorities announced a five-year reconstruction plan with an estimated budget of $11.7 billion.
 

 


Some tents enter Gaza but Red Cross says enclave needs many more

Palestinian women and a girl sit while others inspect the site of an overnight Israeli strike on a tent, in Gaza City.
Palestinian women and a girl sit while others inspect the site of an overnight Israeli strike on a tent, in Gaza City.
Updated 51 min 26 sec ago

Some tents enter Gaza but Red Cross says enclave needs many more

Palestinian women and a girl sit while others inspect the site of an overnight Israeli strike on a tent, in Gaza City.
  • In addition to the 300 tents, more than 1,500 are expected to be delivered in coming days, the Red Cross added
  • Hundreds of thousands of people desperately need new tents or tarpaulins after months of wear and tear on existing supplies, the Red Cross said

GENEVA: The Red Cross said on Monday it has distributed over 300 tents to displacement camps in southern Gaza in recent days but warned that the current supply of shelter materials to the enclave falls far short of urgent needs on the ground.
In addition to the 300 tents, more than 1,500 are expected to be delivered in coming days, the Red Cross added, but said hundreds of thousands of people desperately need new tents or tarpaulins after months of wear and tear on existing supplies.
“Many displaced families are living in appalling conditions — some among the rubble of their destroyed homes, others in makeshift tents constructed from tarpaulins and scrap metal,” Sarah Davies, a spokesperson for the International Committee of the Red Cross, told Reuters.
The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs told Reuters separately that humanitarian groups had sent “a limited number of tents” into Gaza in recent weeks, but many more were needed.
Over 1.3 million Gazans currently lack tents, according to the United Nations, and further displacement is anticipated as Israel conducts a major assault on Gaza City, where hundreds of thousands of residents are living among the ruins.
COGAT, the Israeli defense agency that deals with humanitarian issues, told Reuters that 5,000 tents had entered Gaza since restrictions on shelter materials were lifted near the end of August.
Aid organizations say Israel effectively blocked deliveries of materials for shelter for nearly six months, and despite the lifting of the restriction last month, international NGOs such as CARE International, ShelterBox, and the Norwegian Refugee Council reported on Monday they have yet to receive authorization to deliver such materials.
COGAT said: “Every organization that wants to enter tents is absolutely allowed to do so.”
The International Organization for Migration told Reuters it still has about 35,000 tents as well as half a million tarpaulins waiting in Jordan pending customs clearance.
“It’s frustrating. We need political solutions and then you can remove things like customs clearance and then we can move quicker,” said Karl Baker, Regional Crisis Coordinator and head of IOM Gaza Response.
Israel’s assault has reduced much of the enclave to rubble and caused a humanitarian catastrophe. More than 64,000 Palestinians have been confirmed killed, according to health officials in Gaza.
The war began with an assault by Hamas-led fighters on southern Israel in 2023. The attackers killed 1,200 people and took more than 250 hostages to Gaza, according to Israeli tallies.


How Sudan’s ruinous conflict turned it into Captagon’s suspected new frontier

How Sudan’s ruinous conflict turned it into Captagon’s suspected new frontier
Updated 35 min 46 sec ago

How Sudan’s ruinous conflict turned it into Captagon’s suspected new frontier

How Sudan’s ruinous conflict turned it into Captagon’s suspected new frontier
  • Reported discovery of a factory capable of producing 100,000 pills an hour revealed how war has fueled a booming drug economy
  • With Assad’s fall, traffickers may be shifting south to exploit Sudan’s chaos to supply Gulf markets with “poor man’s cocaine”

DUBAI: Less than a year after Syria’s new president, Ahmad Al-Sharaa, declared an end to the country’s reign as the world’s biggest Captagon exporter, a new hub for the drug production and trafficking is emerging in northeast Africa: war-torn Sudan, raising fears that Arab Gulf states could once again become the primary target of traffickers.

Over the past decade, the region has struggled to curb the flow of the amphetamine-style pills flooding Gulf markets in an illicit trade fueled by Bashar Assad’s regime, which turned Captagon production into a lifeline against international sanctions with the support of its now-weakened ally Hezbollah in Lebanon.

A customs agent checks boxes of oranges in Lebanon. (AFP/File)

By June, six months after the fall of Assad’s government, Syria’s new authorities announced the dismantling of all Captagon production facilities and the seizure of about 200 million pills, declaring an end to a narco-economy which was worth an estimated $5.7 billion in 2021.

However, a new hub was already emerging in Sudan, a country torn apart since April 2023 by fighting between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the paramilitary group, Rapid Support Forces (RSF), with conditions similar to that which existed in Syria at the height of its Captagon boom.

Dubbed “poor man’s cocaine,” Captagon is a cheaply produced, highly addictive amphetamine that has spread among militias and terrorist groups, including Daesh in Syria, and partygoers in the Middle East for its ability to heighten concentration, boost physical endurance, induce euphoria and suppress hunger.

In February, Sudan’s authorities seized a factory near Al-Jaili oil refinery in once RSF-controlled north Khartoum Bahri, housing a machine that produced 100,000 Captagon pills per hour and raw material to manufacture 700 million pills.

“A large portion of the drugs produced had been consumed by RSF fighters to boost their power and stamina in battle, while others were smuggled to neighboring regions inside Sudan and abroad by foreign mercenaries to their home countries,” a Sudanese officer told reporters at the abandoned factory site in February.

“The site also contained modern machines that had not yet been put into production.” 

Dubbed the largest lab bust in the country’s history, the operation showed how Captagon manufacturing had surged from a 7,200-pill-per-hour facility uncovered in 2023 among the three major production sites exposed during the war, according to a report published by the Washington-based think tank New Lines Institute last month. 

The wreckage of cars lie on the remains of the Shambat Bridge, which connects Omdurman and Bahri in Sudan. (AFP/File)

The report noted a sharp rise in both the scale and sophistication of Captagon production since Sudan’s war began, drawing parallels with the conditions that once fueled Syria’s drug industry and warning that Sudan is emerging as a new manufacturing hub.

With weak governance, fragile security institutions, widespread corruption, porous borders and strategic access to Red Sea shipping routes and Arab Gulf consumer markets, Sudan offers traffickers the ideal environment for illicit production.

Experts warn that Captagon revenues could empower militias and warlords — particularly the RSF — to fund their battles and prolong Sudan’s war in ways reminiscent of Syria, with accelerated production posing fresh dangers for the wider region.

Caroline Rose, a Captagon expert at New Lines Institute, said the scale of recent seizures in Sudan shows how quickly criminal networks are adapting in the post-Assad era by establishing alternative manufacturing hubs even without firm evidence of direct links to Syria’s once-vast narco-economy.

“Some of the packaging material for Captagon found in the Sudanese laboratory seizure in February was routed back to a Syrian veterinary company in Damascus though the company’s legitimacy has been debated,” Rose told Arab News.

She reported that several Syrian Interior Ministry officials confirmed at the annual New Lines Institute Captagon Trade Conference last month that Assad regime-aligned criminal actors like Amr Al-Sheikh expanded operations into Africa with aims to exploit Sudan’s civil war for manufacturing and trafficking.

FASTFACTS

• Sudan’s strategic proximity to traditional Captagon-producing countries in the Levant proves its value in the drug trade.

• The UAE and ֱ foiled a bid to smuggle 89,760 Captagon pills inside clothing buttons in a joint operation on Aug. 31.

The institute was unable to identify from where the precursor chemicals used to make the drug came. “It is possible that precursor materials are either being routed from Syria into Libya, or potentially by the Red Sea from major pharmaceutical hubs like India,” Rose told Arab News.

Fenethylline — the core component of Captagon, a codrug of amphetamine and theophylline — is said to be easy to manufacture with household chemicals and commercially available solvents, making the drug both cheap to produce and difficult to control.

While most Sudanese seizures have revealed little about a shipment’s origin or destination, one case logged in the New Lines Comprehensive Captagon Seizure Database on April 4, 2024, identified Kuwait as a transit country.

“This could mean that the consignment was either sent to Sudan from Kuwait to satisfy local demand (meaning it is a destination market), or that criminal actors sought to re-transit the consignment through Sudan and back to Gulf destination markets,” Rose told Arab News.

An Iraqi official inspects bags of captagon pills in Baghdad. (AFP/File)

 

Rose pointed to a high possibility that the large majority of Captagon produced in and transited through Sudan is destined for proven consumer markets in the Gulf Cooperation Council region. ֱ has long been targeted by Captagon traffickers because of its young demographic and extensive borders with Jordan and Iraq.

During Assad days, Captagon pills were usually smuggled from Syria and Lebanon to Jordan, and trafficked from there to the Gulf countries. Some shipments were transported by air and sea routes with the pills hidden in or among products.

ֱ alone recorded the confiscation of 700 million pills from 2014-2022.

However, recent seizures in the Gulf show the Captagon threat is far from over after Assad’s fall — only shifting to new sites and more complex smuggling routes.

The region has struggled to curb the flow of the amphetamine-style pills flooding Gulf markets in an illicit trade fueled by Bashar Assad’s regime. (AFP)

On Aug. 31, the UAE and ֱ foiled a bid to smuggle 89,760 Captagon pills worth $1.1 million hidden inside clothing buttons in a joint operation. Earlier that month, Saudi authorities seized a truck loaded with 406,395 pills concealed in sheep wool at Haditha port.

In July, Saudi security authorities arrested eight people for attempting to smuggle 300,000 pills through Jeddah Islamic Port, hidden inside vehicle parts.

In a report in “Foreign Policy” in January, Rose and Matthew Zweig, senior policy director at FDD Action, warned that the fall of Assad only complicates the Captagon trade as criminal actors will deploy their work elsewhere.

“Without production hubs in Syria, Captagon criminal agents are no longer tied down and can now stretch their operations beyond Syria to destinations unknown,” they wrote.

They reported that criminal actors have already established Captagon production and trafficking sites in Lebanon, Iraq, Turkiye and Kuwait to be close to consumption markets in the Gulf region and beyond.

The problem was compounded by the survival of technical know-how, since many smugglers and distributors evaded arrest after Syria’s crackdown, according to a June report by the New Lines Institute.

Sudan’s strategic proximity to traditional Captagon-producing countries in the Levant helps explain the country’s value in the drug trade, according to analysts.

Rose said that while Sudan is unlikely to become a full-fledged narco-state, its rise as a hub could destabilize the region by filling regional supply gaps left after the closure of Syria’s major Captagon labs and stockpiles.

Iraqi officials confiscated 44,000 captagon tablets in the northern province of Nineve. (AFP/File)

“By helping fill some of this gap, Sudanese criminal actors will be able to keep Captagon prices low, while exploiting and potentially exacerbating the civil war’s effects,” Rose told Arab News.

She added: “Even with small-scale production and proximity to Gulf destination markets across the Red Sea, Captagon revenues could very well enrich warring factions to raise funds for recruitment, equipment and operations.” 

Last month, Sudanese authorities seized 4.5 million Captagon pills in two separate operations in Shendi, in River Nile state, in what the official news agency (SUNA) called “the largest shipment of Captagon in the country’s history.” The drugs were reportedly hidden inside a truck concealed on a farm, intended for internal smuggling across the River Nile state.

Authorities said a “foreign criminal network” behind the shipment was arrested, reporting that local forces had rejected bribes offered in exchange for letting the shipments pass.

The seizure confirmed various reports of widespread corruption and bribery among police officers inside Sudan that might have facilitated Captagon smuggling in collaboration with militia and foreign mercenaries. Militia members were also reported to use the drug to stay alert, gain physical stamina and beat hunger in the famine-ravaged country.

Smoke plumes billow from a fire at a lumber warehouse in southern Khartoum during fighting between the army and the RSF. (AFP/File)

To date, neither the SAF nor the RSF has issued a public denial in response to allegations of involvement in Captagon production or smuggling.

Rose said to curb the threat of Captagon in the Middle East, regional players must exchange as much information and intelligence to identify the spillover of the drug’s trafficking and production outside Syria, particularly into Africa.

“It’s key that the new Syrian Interior Ministry conducts investigations into how regime-aligned actors began to establish operations and partnerships in Sudan, Iraq, Libya, and other countries, which could support the trade’s growth in the post-Assad era,” she said.

 


Israeli army says four soldiers killed in north Gaza

Israeli army says four soldiers killed in north Gaza
Updated 08 September 2025

Israeli army says four soldiers killed in north Gaza

Israeli army says four soldiers killed in north Gaza
  • Another soldier was moderately injured in the exchange of fire that ensued, the army said
  • 468 Israeli soldiers have been killed in Gaza since October 2023

JERUSALEM: Palestinian militants killed four Israeli soldiers on Monday after lobbing an explosive device into their tank, the Israeli military said.
“Around 6:00 in the morning (0300 GMT), a squad of three terrorists arrived at the IDF (Israeli military) post near Sheikh Radwan in northern Gaza,” it said in a statement.
“The terrorists threw an explosive device into an IDF tank — the device detonated, killing the four IDF soldiers who were in the tank at the time.”
Another soldier was moderately injured in the exchange of fire that ensued, the military said, adding that “hits were identified” on two of the three militants who carried out the assault.
Only three of the dead soldiers were named, while the name of the fourth has not yet been cleared for publication.
According to an AFP toll based on data from the Israeli military, 468 soldiers have been killed since the start of the military’s ground offensive in Gaza on October 27, 2023.