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Gaza rescuers say 40 mostly displaced people killed in Israeli strikes

A wave of Israeli air strikes hit multiple encampments for displaced Palestinians across the territory, killing at least 25 people. (Reuters)
A wave of Israeli air strikes hit multiple encampments for displaced Palestinians across the territory, killing at least 25 people. (Reuters)
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Updated 17 April 2025

Gaza rescuers say 40 mostly displaced people killed in Israeli strikes

A wave of Israeli air strikes hit multiple encampments for displaced Palestinians across the territory, killing at least 25.
  • Survivors described a large explosion at densely packed Al-Mawasi safe zone that set multiple tents ablaze
  • Civil defense spokesman said Israeli strikes on two other encampments of displaced Gazans killed a further nine people

GAZA CITY: Gaza’s civil defense agency said Thursday that a rash of Israeli air strikes killed at least 40 people, most of them in encampments for displaced civilians, as Israel pressed its offensive in the Palestinian territory.
The Israeli military said it was looking into reports of the strikes, which came as Hamas officials reported that internal deliberations on the latest Israeli truce offer were nearly complete.
Civil defense spokesman Mahmud Bassal said two Israeli missiles hit several tents in the Al-Mawasi area of the southern city of Khan Yunis, resulting in at least 16 deaths, “most of them women and children, and 23 others were wounded.”
After Israel declared Al-Mawasi a safe zone in December 2023, tens of thousands of Palestinians flocked there seeking refuge from bombardment, but the area has since been hit by repeated Israeli strikes.
Survivors described a large explosion at the densely packed encampment that set multiple tents ablaze.
“We were sitting peacefully in the tent, under God’s protection, when we suddenly saw something red glowing — and then the tent exploded, and the surrounding tents caught fire,” Israa Abu Al-Rus told AFP.
“This is supposed to be a safe area in Al-Mawasi,” Abu Al-Rus said. “We fled the tent toward the sea and saw the tents burning.”
Bassal said that Israeli strikes on two other encampments of displaced Gazans killed a further nine people — seven in the northern town of Beit Lahia, and a father and son near Al-Mawasi.
Separately, the civil defense reported two more attacks on displaced people in Jabalia — one that killed at least seven members of the Asaliya family, and another that killed six people at a school being used as a shelter — as well as Israeli shelling in Gaza City that killed two.
The military later announced it had carried out a strike in Jabalia on what it said was a Hamas “command and control” center.
Israel said Wednesday that it had converted 30 percent of Gaza into a buffer zone in the widening offensive it resumed in March, ending a two-month ceasefire.
Defense Minister Israel Katz said this month that the military was leaving Gaza “smaller and more isolated.”
The United Nations said half a million Palestinians have been displaced since the offensive resumed, triggering what it has described as the most severe humanitarian crisis since the war began with Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attack on Israel.
The Israeli military said its air strikes had hit “approximately 1,200 terror targets” since March 18.
The leader of Qatar, which along with Egypt and the US helped mediate the January ceasefire deal, blamed Israel on Thursday for its collapse.
“As you know, we reached an agreement months ago, but unfortunately Israel did not abide by this agreement,” said Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani during a visit to Moscow.
Qatar would continue to “strive to bridge perspectives in order to reach an agreement that ends the suffering of the Palestinian people,” he added.
Acknowledging Qatar’s efforts, Russian President Vladimir Putin called the war in Gaza “a tragedy,” saying a long-term resolution was “connected to the establishment of two states,” Palestinian and Israeli.
Hamas accused Israel on Thursday of attempting to starve Gaza’s 2.4 million people after Katz said the day before that Israel would continue preventing aid from entering the territory.
“This is a public admission of committing a war crime, including the use of starvation as a weapon and the denial of basic necessities such as food, medicine, water, and fuel to innocent civilians for the seventh consecutive week,” the group said in a statement.
During an impasse over the future of the ceasefire, Israel halted the entry of aid on March 2, exacerbating the territory’s ongoing humanitarian crisis.
In parallel to the Gaza offensive, Hamas said Israel had proposed a new 45-day ceasefire through mediators that would include the release of dozens of hostages.
The proposal also called for Hamas to disarm to secure a complete end to the war, a demand the group rejects.
Two Hamas officials said Thursday that internal discussions on the truce proposal were nearly complete, with one telling AFP “the group will send its response to the mediators once they finish” — possibly on Thursday.
Israel’s renewed assault has so far killed at least 1,691 people in Gaza, the health ministry in the Hamas-run territory reported, bringing the overall toll since the war erupted to 51,065, most of them civilians.
Hamas’s October 2023 attack on Israel resulted in the deaths of 1,218 people, also mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.

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Gulf ambassadors raise concern about safety of nuclear facilities amid Israel-Iran conflict

Gulf ambassadors raise concern about safety of nuclear facilities amid Israel-Iran conflict
Updated 11 sec ago

Gulf ambassadors raise concern about safety of nuclear facilities amid Israel-Iran conflict

Gulf ambassadors raise concern about safety of nuclear facilities amid Israel-Iran conflict

CAIRO: Gulf Cooperation Council ambassadors have expressed concerns to UN nuclear watchdog chief Rafael Grossi about the safety of nuclear facilities close to their countries amid the Israeli-Iranian crisis, Qatar state news agency reported on Saturday.
The ambassadors warned Grossi during a meeting in Vienna about the “dangerous repercussions” of targeting nuclear facilities.
The warning comes after the Israeli military said at one point on Thursday that it had struck the Russian-built Bushehr facility, but later said the comment had been made by mistake. Bushehr is Iran’s only operating nuclear power plant, which sits on the Gulf coast.
The potential consequences of an attack on the plant — contaminating the air and water — have long been a concern in the Gulf states.


Exiled former Tunisia leader sentenced to 22 years: reports

Exiled former Tunisia leader sentenced to 22 years: reports
Updated 41 min 49 sec ago

Exiled former Tunisia leader sentenced to 22 years: reports

Exiled former Tunisia leader sentenced to 22 years: reports

TUNIS: A Tunis court has sentenced exiled former president Moncef Marzouki in absentia to 22 years in prison for offenses related to “terrorism,” Tunisian media reported on Saturday.
Four other defendants, including his former adviser Imed Daimi and former head of the national bar association Abderrazak Kilani, were also handed the same sentence late Friday.
A staunch critic of President Kais Saied who has been living in France, Marzouki had already been sentenced in absentia to 12 years in prison in two separate cases, one involving “provoking disorder.”
The latest ruling came after a press conference held in Paris, during which he, along with Daimi and Kilani, sharply criticized state institutions and members of the Tunisian judiciary, reports said.
Marzouki, who served as Tunisia’s third president from 2011 to 2014, said in a statement the ruling was “surreal.”
He said it came as part of a “series of verdicts that have targeted some of Tunisia’s finest men and continue to provoke the world’s mockery.”
Tunisia emerged as the Arab world’s only democracy following the ousting of longtime ruler Zine El Abidine Ben Ali in 2011, after it kicked off the Arab Spring uprisings.
But since a sweeping power grab by Saied in July 2021 when he dissolved parliament and began ruling by decree, rights groups have warned of a sharp decline in Tunisian civil liberties.
In April, a mass trial saw around 40 public figures, mainly critics of the authorities, sentenced to long terms on charges including plotting against the state.
Other media figures and lawyers also critical of Saied have been prosecuted and detained under a law he enacted in 2022 to prohibit “spreading false news.”


Syrian security forces detain cousin of toppled leader Assad

Syrian security forces detain cousin of toppled leader Assad
Updated 48 min 48 sec ago

Syrian security forces detain cousin of toppled leader Assad

Syrian security forces detain cousin of toppled leader Assad

Syria’s security forces have detained Wassim Assad, a cousin of toppled leader Bashar Assad, state news agency SANA said on Saturday.
Wassim Assad was sanctioned by the United States in 2023 for leading a paramilitary force backing Assad’s army and for trafficking drugs including the amphetamine-like drug captagon.
Bashar Assad was toppled by an Islamist-led rebel insurgency in December and fled to Moscow. Most of his family members and inner circle either fled Syria or went underground.
Syria’s new security forces have been pursuing members of the former administration — mainly those involved in the feared security branches accused of rights abuses.
Rights groups have called for a fully-fledged transitional justice process to hold them to account.


Turkiye’s Erdogan says Israel attacks aimed to sabotage Iran nuclear talks

Turkiye’s Erdogan says Israel attacks aimed to sabotage Iran nuclear talks
Updated 17 min 29 sec ago

Turkiye’s Erdogan says Israel attacks aimed to sabotage Iran nuclear talks

Turkiye’s Erdogan says Israel attacks aimed to sabotage Iran nuclear talks
  • Around 40 diplomats are slated to join the weekend gathering of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation

ANKARA: Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan said on Saturday that Israel’s attacks on Iran right before a new round of nuclear talks with the United States aimed to sabotage the negotiations, and it showed Israel did not want to resolve issues through diplomacy.

Speaking at a foreign ministers’ meeting of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation in Istanbul, Erdogan urged countries with influence over Israel not to listen to its “poison” and to seek a solution to the fighting via dialogue without allowing a wider conflict.

He also called on Muslim countries to increase their efforts to impose punitive measures against Israel on the basis of international law and United Nations’ resolutions.

Iran’s foreign minister Abbas Araghchi earlier arrived in Istanbul on Saturday, Tasnim news agency reported, for a meeting with diplomats to discuss Tehran’s escalating conflict with Israel.

Around 40 diplomats were expected to join the weekend gathering of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), as Israel and Iran continue to exchange missile strikes.

“The Foreign Minister arrived in Istanbul this morning to participate in the Organization of Islamic Cooperation Foreign Ministers’ meeting,” Tasnim reported.

Araghchi met with his counterparts from Britain, France and Germany in Geneva on Friday.

“At this meeting, at the suggestion of Iran, the issue of the Zionist regime’s attack on our country will be specifically addressed,” said Araghchi, according to the news agency.

Israel began its assault in the early hours of June 13, saying Iran was on the verge of developing nuclear weapons, triggering an immediate retaliation from Tehran in the worst-ever confrontation between the two arch-rivals.

Earlier on Friday, Araghchi said Tehran was ready to “consider diplomacy” again only if Israel’s “aggression is stopped.”

The ministers are expected to release a statement following their meeting, the Turkish state news agency Anadolu said.


UN urges more support to speed up Syria refugee returns

UN urges more support to speed up Syria refugee returns
Updated 21 June 2025

UN urges more support to speed up Syria refugee returns

UN urges more support to speed up Syria refugee returns
  • According to UNHCR, some 13.5 million Syrians remain displaced internally or abroad
  • Wide scale destruction, including to basic infrastructure, remains a major barrier to returns

DAMASCUS: UN refugee agency chief Filippo Grandi has urged more international support for Syria to speed up reconstruction and enable further refugee returns after some 14 years of civil war.
“I am here also to really make an appeal to the international community to provide more help, more assistance to the Syrian government in this big challenge of recovery of the country,” Grandi told reporters on Friday on the sidelines of a visit to Damascus.
Syrians who had been displaced internally or fled abroad have begun gradually returning home since the December overthrow of longtime ruler Bashar Assad, whose brutal repression of peaceful anti-government protests in 2011 triggered war.
But the wide-scale destruction, including to basic infrastructure, remains a major barrier to returns.
Grandi said over two million people had returned to their areas of origin, including around 1.5 million internally displaced people, while some 600,000 others have come back from neighboring countries including Lebanon, Jordan and Turkiye.
“Two million of course is only a fraction of the very big number of Syrian refugees and displaced, but it is a very big figure,” he said.
According to UNHCR, some 13.5 million Syrians remain displaced internally or abroad.
Syria’s conflict displaced around half the pre-war population, with many internally displaced people seeking refuge in camps in the northwest.
Grandi said that after Assad’s toppling, the main obstacle to returns was “a lack of services, lack of housing, lack of work,” adding that his agency was working with Syrian authorities and governments in the region “to help people go back.”
He said he discussed the importance of the sustainability of returns with Syrian Foreign Minister Asaad Al-Shaibani, including ensuring “that people don’t move again because they don’t have a house or they don’t have a job or they don’t have electricity” or other services such as health.
Sustainable returns “can only happen if there is recovery, reconstruction in Syria, not just for the returnees, for all Syrians,” he said.
He added that he also discussed with Shaibani how to “encourage donors to give more resources for this sustainability.”
With the recent lifting of Western sanctions, the new Syrian authorities hope for international support to launch reconstruction, which the UN estimates could cost more than $400 billion.