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Scuffles, insults as Israelis celebrate Jerusalem Day under shadow of Gaza war

Israeli law enforcement officers scuffle with Israelis, on Jerusalem Day, in Jerusalem, May 26, 2025. (Reuters)
Israeli law enforcement officers scuffle with Israelis, on Jerusalem Day, in Jerusalem, May 26, 2025. (Reuters)
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Updated 26 May 2025

Scuffles, insults as Israelis celebrate Jerusalem Day under shadow of Gaza war

Israeli law enforcement officers scuffle with Israelis, on Jerusalem Day, in Jerusalem, May 26, 2025. (Reuters)
  • Groups of Israeli youths were seen confronting Palestinian shopkeepers, passersby and schoolchildren
  • Some chanted “death to Arabs,” “may your village burn” and “Gaza belongs to us”

JERUSALEM: Crowds of Israelis streamed through Jerusalem’s Old City, where some scuffled with residents and hurled insults at Palestinians, as annual celebrations of Israel’s capture of east Jerusalem took place on Monday.
Jerusalem Day, as the celebrations are known, commemorates Israeli forces taking east Jerusalem during the 1967 Arab-Israeli war.
Israel considers all of Jerusalem, including the annexed Palestinian-majority east, its indivisible capital. The international community, however, does not recognize this, and Palestinians seek east Jerusalem as the capital of a future state.
Far-right Israeli minister Itamar Ben Gvir on Monday visited the Al-Aqsa mosque compound, known to Jews as the Temple Mount, to mark the occasion, which was being held for a second year under the shadow of the war in Gaza.
“I ascended to the Temple Mount for Jerusalem Day, and prayed for victory in the war” and the return of hostages held in Gaza, said the national security minister, whose past visits to the site have sparked anger among Palestinians and their supporters.
The Al-Aqsa mosque is Islam’s third-holiest site and a symbol of Palestinian national identity.
The Temple Mount is Judaism’s holiest place, though Jews are forbidden from praying there.
Every year, thousands of Israeli nationalists, many of them religious Jews, march through Jerusalem and its annexed Old City, including in predominantly Palestinian neighborhoods, waving Israeli flags, dancing and sometimes accosting residents.
The route ends at the Western Wall, the last remnant of the Second Temple destroyed by the Romans in 70 AD, the holiest site where Jews are allowed to pray.
“After so many years that the people of Israel were not here in Jerusalem and in the land of Israel, we arrived here and conquered Jerusalem, the Temple Mount and the Western Wall,” said 21-year-old Yeshiva student Yosef Azoulai. “So we celebrate this day in which we won over all our enemies.”
Groups of Israeli youths were seen confronting Palestinian shopkeepers, passersby and schoolchildren, as well as Israeli rights activists and police, at times spitting on people, lobbing insults and trying to force their way into houses.
Some chanted “death to Arabs,” “may your village burn” and “Gaza belongs to us,” drawing the occasional uncomfortable look from families making their way to the Western Wall.
As evening settled in, large crowds had congregated to celebrate at the holy site.
Authorities sometimes order Palestinian shops in the Old City to shut, though business owners this year said they had mostly closed down out of fear of harassment.
Outside the Old City, former Knesset member Moshe Feiglin was advertising his far-right political party Identity.
“Every nation and every religion has its capital... but for some reason, all the nations want a part of our one and only holy city,” he said.
“Jerusalem belongs to the Jews and only to the Jews,” he added.
This year’s Jerusalem Day comes amid renewed calls by some Israeli right-wing figures to annex more Palestinian territory as the war in Gaza rages.
On Monday, the Israeli army said three projectiles were launched from Gaza, two falling inside the territory and one intercepted.
In 2021, Hamas launched rockets toward Jerusalem as marchers approached the Old City, sparking a 12-day war in Gaza and outbreaks of violence in Israel between Israelis and Palestinians.
Israel banned the UN’s agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, from operating in east Jerusalem earlier this year over accusations it provided cover for Hamas militants, and on Monday, a group of Israelis forced their way into one its vacated compounds in the city.
“The group asserted they were ‘liberating’” the facility, UNWRA West Bank director Roland Friedrich said on X.
“The group brought flags and erected banners, seeking to claim the compound for the establishment of a new Israeli neighborhood. Israeli police, alerted to the scene, failed to protect the inviolability of the @UN premises.”
The police, who deployed in force, said that over the course of the day “officers have handled numerous cases of suspects involved in public disturbances.”
In the morning, peace activists handed out flowers to challenge what they saw as the main march’s divisive message.
Orly Likhovski of the Israel Religious Action Center said those taking part in the peace event were “not willing to accept that this day is marked by violence and racism,” adding they hoped to represent “a Jewish voice for a different kind of Jerusalem.”
Some Palestinians accepted the flowers, but one elderly man near Damascus Gate politely refused, saying: “Do you see what is happening in Gaza? I’m sorry, but I cannot accept.”
In a rare move, the Israeli cabinet met nearby in the predominantly Palestinian neighborhood of Silwan, home to an archaeological site known as the City of David — believed to mark the biblical location of Jerusalem.
At the meeting, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed to “keep Jerusalem united, whole, and under Israeli sovereignty.”
Since June 1967, Israeli settlement in the eastern part of the city — considered illegal under international law — has expanded, drawing regular international criticism.


Nine dead as floods sweep northern Sudan: official

Nine dead as floods sweep northern Sudan: official
Updated 17 sec ago

Nine dead as floods sweep northern Sudan: official

Nine dead as floods sweep northern Sudan: official
  • Flash floods have killed nine people in Sudan, a civil defense official told AFP on Wednesday, after heavy seasonal rains triggered flooding and flattened homes in the Nile Valley
PORT SUDAN: Flash floods have killed nine people in Sudan, a civil defense official told AFP on Wednesday, after heavy seasonal rains triggered flooding and flattened homes in the Nile Valley.
The official said the deaths occurred when a torrential downpour struck the northern city of Al-Dammer, the capital of River Nile State, on Tuesday, with the floodwaters surrounding five neighborhoods and impeding access.
The rains also submerged parts of the main road between Atbara in northeastern Sudan and the capital Khartoum, about 300 kilometers (186 miles) to the south, cutting off traffic.
Sudan’s rainy season reaches its height in August, typically affecting the south and southeast of the country. But in recent years, rainfall has increasingly reached into the desert regions to the north, and as far as the border with Egypt.
In the eastern state of Gedaref, authorities also reported roughly 600 homes were damaged in the rains and more than 8,500 acres of farmland left underwater.
Emergency officials in the state warned villages had been left isolated by the floods with key roads severed, particularly in the towns of Gallabat and Qala Al-Nahl.
The area contains some of Sudan’s most important agricultural zones, producing staples such as sorghum, sesame and groundnuts.
Sudan’s meteorological authority issued an orange-level warning on Tuesday for Khartoum as well as the neighboring River Nile and White Nile states.
It cited a “high risk” of further heavy rain, strong winds and thunderstorms likely to cause rapid water surges and flooding.
Sudan has been struck by flooding amid a devastating war between the army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), now in its third year.
The conflict, which erupted in April 2023, has killed tens of thousands, displaced millions and ravaged vital infrastructure — creating what the United Nations calls the world’s largest displacement and hunger crisis.

Turkish police seize jewels and antiques worth $30M in raid at Istanbul’s historic Grand Bazaar

Turkish police seize jewels and antiques worth $30M in raid at Istanbul’s historic Grand Bazaar
Updated 19 min 30 sec ago

Turkish police seize jewels and antiques worth $30M in raid at Istanbul’s historic Grand Bazaar

Turkish police seize jewels and antiques worth $30M in raid at Istanbul’s historic Grand Bazaar
  • Turkish media report police in Istanbul have seized jewels and antiques worth an estimated $30 million from businesses in the city’s historic Grand Bazaar during an investigation into smuggled diamond
  • The operation was launched after 10 suspects were initially detained for smuggling gems into Turkiye, broadcaster CNN Turk and other outlets reported Wednesday

ISTANBUL: Police in Istanbul have seized jewels and antiques worth an estimated $30 million from businesses in the city’s historic Grand Bazaar during an investigation into smuggled diamonds, Turkish media reported Wednesday.
The operation was launched after 10 suspects were initially detained for smuggling gems into Turkiye, broadcaster CNN Turk and other outlets reported.
Acting on orders from the Istanbul Chief Public Prosecutor’s Office, police raided 23 businesses in the 15th-century covered marketplace, arresting a further 40 people.
Police confiscated some 135 pieces of jewelry, 1,132 ingots of precious metals and 267 historical artifacts with a value of 1.25 billion Turkish liras ($30.5 million), according to reports. Firearms and digital material were also seized.
The Grand Bazaar is one of the world’s most visited tourist sites and hosts thousands of small shops. It was established by Sultan Mehmet II shortly after he conquered the city from the Byzantine Empire.
Frequently described by tour guides as the world’s first shopping mall, the Grand Bazaar is no stranger to the attentions of law enforcement. In April, investigators raided a company dealing in foreign currency and precious metals over money-laundering claims.


Pope demands end to ‘collective punishment’ and forced displacement of Palestinians in Gaza

Pope demands end to ‘collective punishment’ and forced displacement of Palestinians in Gaza
Updated 51 min 45 sec ago

Pope demands end to ‘collective punishment’ and forced displacement of Palestinians in Gaza

Pope demands end to ‘collective punishment’ and forced displacement of Palestinians in Gaza
  • Pope Leo also called for the release of hostages taken by Hamas in southern Israel — 50 of them remain in Gaza — and for both sides and international powers to end the war “which has caused so much terror, destruction and death”

ROME: Pope Leo XIV demanded Wednesday that Israel stop the “collective punishment” and forced displacement of Palestinians in Gaza as he pleaded for an immediate and permanent ceasefire in the besieged territory amid preparations by Israel for a new military offensive.
Leo was interrupted twice by applause as he read aloud his latest appeal for an end to the 22-month war during his weekly general audience attended by thousands of people in the Vatican’s auditorium.
History’s first American pope also called for the release of hostages taken by Hamas in southern Israel — 50 of them remain in Gaza — and for both sides and international powers to end the war “which has caused so much terror, destruction and death.”
“I beg for a permanent ceasefire to be reached, the safe entry of humanitarian aid to be facilitated and humanitarian law to be fully respected,” Leo said. He cited international law requiring the obligation to protect civilians and “the prohibition of collective punishment, indiscriminate use of force and the forced displacement of the population.”
Palestinians in Gaza are bracing for an expanded offensive promised by Israel in some of the territory’s most populated areas including Gaza City, where famine has been documented and declared.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said Israel will launch its Gaza City offensive while simultaneously pursuing a ceasefire, though Israel has yet to send a negotiating team to discuss a proposal on the table. He has said the offensive is the best way to weaken Hamas and return hostages, but hostages’ families and their supporters have pushed back, saying it will further endanger them.
Hamas took 251 hostages on Oct. 7, 2023, in the attack that also killed about 1,200 people and triggered the war. Most hostages have been released during previous ceasefires or other deals. Israel has rescued eight hostages alive. Of the 50 still in Gaza, Israeli officials believe around 20 are still alive.
Leo drew attention to a joint statement by the Latin and Greek Orthodox patriarchs of Jerusalem, who announced that the priests and nuns in the two Christian churches in Gaza City would stay put, despite Israeli evacuation orders ahead of the Gaza City offensive. They said the people sheltering in the churches were too weak and malnourished to move and that doing so would be a “death sentence.”
The Holy Family Catholic church and the Saint Porphyrius Orthodox church have sheltered hundreds of Palestinian civilians during the war, including elderly people, women and children as well as people with disabilities. Pope Francis, even during his final days in the hospital, stayed in daily touch with the parish priest of Holy Family to offer his solidarity and support to the people there, cared for by the nuns of Mother Teresa’s Sisters of Charity religious order.
In their joint statement, Catholic Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa and Orthodox Patriarch Theophilos III noted that just last weekend, Leo issued a strong statement about the rights of people to remain in their homelands and not be forced to move.
“All peoples, even the smallest and weakest, must be respected by the powerful in their identity and rights, especially the right to live in their own lands; and no one can force them into exile,” Leo said in comments Saturday to a group of forced refugees from the Indian Ocean archipelago Chagos that were clearly destined for a broader audience.
Netanyahu has said Gaza’s population should be relocated to other countries through what his government has described as voluntary emigration. Rights groups have objected, and Palestinians fear that even if they leave temporarily to escape the war, Israel will never allow them to return.


US envoy cuts short south Lebanon visit amid protests: state media

US envoy cuts short south Lebanon visit amid protests: state media
Updated 27 August 2025

US envoy cuts short south Lebanon visit amid protests: state media

US envoy cuts short south Lebanon visit amid protests: state media

EL KHIAM: Lebanese state media said US envoy Tom Barrack cut short a visit to the south on Wednesday amid protests in two planned stops against US pressure to disarm Hezbollah.
The official National News Agency (NNA) reported that Barrack arrived by helicopter at a Lebanese army barracks in Marjayoun near the border, with soldiers deploying in the area.
The news agency later reported that the envoy had canceled planned stops in nearby Khiam, which was pummelled by Israel during its latest hostilities with Hezbollah, and in the coastal city of Tyre.
A spokesperson told AFP the US embassy did not comment on officials’ schedules for security reasons.
An AFP correspondent in Khiam saw a group of residents, some waving Hezbollah flags or holding pictures of fighters killed in the conflict, demonstrating against Barrack.
Some were standing on a Star of David that had been drawn on the road in blue, near the words in Arabic “America is the great Satan,” and “Barak is animal” written in English.
The last was a reference to comments by the US envoy at a Beirut press conference on Tuesday which sparked an outcry in Lebanon.
Barak told journalists to “act civilized,” adding: “The moment that this starts becoming chaotic, like animalistic, we’re gone.”
Bilal Kashmar, an official from the southern municipalities union, said dozens of people had demonstrated in Tyre on Wednesday against Barak’s expected visit and Washington’s “biased policies.”
Under heavy US pressure and amid fears of expanded Israeli military action, Lebanon’s government tasked the army this month with drawing up a plan to disarm Hezbollah by year end.
The Iran-backed group, which enjoys strong support in the south, was left badly weakened by more than a year of hostilities, including two months of open war, with Israel that largely ended with a November ceasefire.
Fellow US envoy Morgan Ortagus said in Beirut on Tuesday that the Lebanese government needed to implement its decision to disarm Hezbollah, adding that Israel would respond in kind.
Hezbollah insists that Israel must complete its withdrawal from Lebanon and halt its continuing strikes before the future of the group’s weapons can be discussed.


Israel ups pressure on Gaza City as Trump eyes post-war plan

Israel ups pressure on Gaza City as Trump eyes post-war plan
Updated 27 August 2025

Israel ups pressure on Gaza City as Trump eyes post-war plan

Israel ups pressure on Gaza City as Trump eyes post-war plan
  • Israel is under mounting pressure both at home and abroad to end its almost two-year campaign in Gaza
  • A spokesman for the Israeli military said Wednesday the evacuation of Gaza City was “inevitable"

GAZA: The Israeli military pressed operations around Gaza City on Wednesday, as President Donald Trump prepared to host a White House meeting on post-war plans for the shattered Palestinian territory.
Israel is under mounting pressure both at home and abroad to end its almost two-year campaign in Gaza, where the military is preparing to conquer the territory’s largest city and the United Nations has declared a famine.

A spokesman for the Israeli military said Wednesday the evacuation of Gaza City was “inevitable” as the army prepares to conquer the Palestinian territory’s largest city.
“The evacuation of Gaza City is inevitable, and therefore, every family that relocates to the south will receive the most generous humanitarian aid, which is currently being worked on,” the military’s Arabic-language spokesman Avichay Adraee posted on X.
Mediators have circulated a draft ceasefire and hostage release deal which has been accepted by Palestinian militant group Hamas. But Israel has yet to give an official response.
On the ground, the Israeli military said its troops were “operating on the outskirts of Gaza City to locate and dismantle terror infrastructure sites above and below ground.”
Residents of the Zeitoun neighborhood of the city spoke of heavy Israeli bombardment overnight.
“Warplanes struck several times, and drones fired throughout the night,” Tala Al-Khatib, 29, told AFP by telephone.
“Several homes in Zeitoun were blown up. We are still in our house — some neighbors have fled, while others remain. But wherever you flee, death follows you,” she said.
Abdel Hamid Al-Sayfi, 62, said he hadn’t gone outdoors since Tuesday afternoon.
“Whoever steps outside is fired upon by the drones,” he told AFP by telephone.
“My phone battery is about to die, and once it does, we will lose all contact. Our fate is unknown.”
Defense Minister Israel Katz vowed on Friday to destroy Gaza City if Hamas does not agree to end the war on Israel’s terms.
It came after the defense ministry approved the military’s plan to seize the city and authorized the call-up of roughly 60,000 reservists.
It also came as the United Nations officially declared a famine in Gaza governorate, including Gaza City, that it blamed on “systematic obstruction of aid” by Israel.
As pressure builds on Israel to wrap up its offensive, Donald Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff said the US president would host top officials at the White House on Wednesday to thrash out a detailed plan for post-war Gaza.
“We’ve got a large meeting in the White House tomorrow, chaired by the president, and it’s a very comprehensive plan we’re putting together on the next day,” Witkoff said on Fox News, without offering more details.
Trump stunned the world earlier this year when he suggested the United States should take control of the Gaza Strip, clear out its inhabitants and redevelop it as seaside real estate.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu praised the proposal, which sparked an outcry in Europe and the Arab world.

HOSTAGE PROTESTS
As Israel’s security cabinet convened on Tuesday evening, tens of thousands of protesters massed in commercial hub Tel Aviv to demand an end to the war and a deal to return the hostages.
Afterwards, Netanyahu declined to be drawn on what had been decided. “But I will say one thing: it started in Gaza and it will end in Gaza. We will not leave those monsters there,” he said.
Netanyahu last week ordered immediate talks aimed at securing the release of all remaining captives, while also doubling down on the plan to seize Gaza City.
That came days after Hamas said it had accepted the latest ceasefire proposal put forward by mediators, which would see the staggered release of hostages over an initial 60-day period in exchange for Palestinian prisoners held by Israel.
In Doha on Tuesday, Qatari foreign ministry spokesman Majed Al-Ansari told a regular news conference that mediators were still “waiting for an answer” from Israel.
The war was sparked by Hamas’s October 2023 attack, which resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli figures.
Out of 251 hostages seized during the attack, 49 are still held in Gaza, including 27 the Israeli military says are dead.
Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed at least 62,819 Palestinians, most of them civilians, according to figures from the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza that the United Nations considers reliable.