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‘No Eid’ for West Bank residents who lost sons in Israeli raids

A woman speaks with an Israeli army soldier standing outside an armoured vehicle at a cemetery in Jenin in the occupied West Bank early on June 6, 2025 on the first day of Eid al-Adha, the Muslim feast of sacrifice. (AFP)
A woman speaks with an Israeli army soldier standing outside an armoured vehicle at a cemetery in Jenin in the occupied West Bank early on June 6, 2025 on the first day of Eid al-Adha, the Muslim feast of sacrifice. (AFP)
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Updated 06 June 2025

‘No Eid’ for West Bank residents who lost sons in Israeli raids

‘No Eid’ for West Bank residents who lost sons in Israeli raids
  • An armored car arrived at the site shortly after, unloading soldiers to clear the cemetery of its mourners, who walked away solemnly without protest

JENIN: Abeer Ghazzawi had little time to visit her two sons’ graves for Eid Al-Adha before Israeli soldiers cleared the cemetery near the refugee camp in the occupied West Bank city of Jenin.
The Israeli army has conducted a months-long operation in the camp, which has forced Ghazzawi, along with thousands of other residents, from her home.
For Ghazzawi, the few precious minutes she spent at her sons’ graves still felt like a small victory.
“On the last Eid — Eid Al-Fitr, celebrating the end of Ramadan in March — they raided us. They even shot at us. But this Eid, there was no shooting, just that they kicked us out of the cemetery twice,” said the 48-year-old.
“We were able to visit our land, clean up around the graves, and pour rosewater and cologne on them,” she added.
As part of the Eid celebrations, families traditionally visit the graves of their loved ones.
In the Jenin camp cemetery, women and men had brought flowers for their deceased relatives, and many sat on the side of their loved ones’ graves as they remembered the dead, clearing away weeds and dust.
An armored car arrived at the site shortly after, unloading soldiers to clear the cemetery of its mourners, who walked away solemnly without protest.
Ghazzawi’s two sons, Mohammed and Basel, were killed in January 2024 in a Jenin hospital by undercover Israeli troops.
The Palestinian Islamic Jihad militant group claimed the two brothers as its fighters after their deaths.
Like Ghazzawi, many in Jenin mourned sons killed during one of the numerous Israeli operations that have targeted the city, a known bastion of Palestinian armed groups fighting Israel.
In the current months-long military operation in the north of the West Bank, which Israel has occupied since 1967, Israeli forces looking for militants have cleared three refugee camps and deployed tanks in Jenin.
Mohammed Abu Hjab, 51, went to the cemetery on the other side of the city to visit the grave of his son, killed in January by an Israeli strike that also killed five other people.
“There is no Eid. I lost my son — how can it be Eid for me?” he asked as he stood by the six small gravestones of the dead young men.


US accuses Sudanese militia of genocide, calls for use of ‘all tools’ to end country’s civil war

US accuses Sudanese militia of genocide, calls for use of ‘all tools’ to end country’s civil war
Updated 12 sec ago

US accuses Sudanese militia of genocide, calls for use of ‘all tools’ to end country’s civil war

US accuses Sudanese militia of genocide, calls for use of ‘all tools’ to end country’s civil war
  • UN envoy Dorothy Shea also condemns expulsion of senior World Food Programme officials by Sudan’s military government as famine looms in parts of country
  • Paramilitary Rapid Support Forces has ‘killed men and boys, even infants,’ ‘targeted women and children for rape’ and other ‘ethnically motivated’ crimes

NEW YORK CITY: The US on Thursday accused Sudan’s paramilitary Rapid Support Forces and allied militias of committing genocide in the besieged city of El-Fasher in North Darfur, as the UN continued to warn of escalating atrocities against civilians there.

“The Rapid Support Forces and allied militias have committed genocide,” the US deputy ambassador to the UN, Dorothy Shea, told a Security Council meeting on the situation in Sudan.

“They have systematically killed men and boys, even infants, and deliberately targeted women and children for rape and other forms of brutal sexual violence. These crimes are ethnically motivated.

“It is not enough for the RSF to make humanitarian commitments — they must implement them.”

RSF fighters were targeting civilians attempting to flee the fighting, and blocking humanitarian aid from reaching those trapped in the city, she added.

“The situation is both tragic and appalling. Those responsible should be held accountable, including through sanctions,” Shea said.

Describing the atrocities as “abhorrent,” Shea urged council members to update the list of sanctions imposed under the Darfur sanctions regime, which was established by the Security Council in 2005 and is known as the “1591 sanctions mechanism.”

“The council must use all tools at its disposal to facilitate peace,” she added.

She also condemned the expulsion this week of two senior World Food Programme officials by Sudan’s army-led government, saying it further hampered relief efforts as famine looms in parts of the country.

Shea said ending the war in Sudan was a priority for President Donald Trump’s administration, and that Washington remains committed to working with partners to secure an “immediate humanitarian truce” and a return to civilian governance.

“A civilian-led, post-conflict governance process is necessary to counter violent extremists, prevent the spread of conflict and foster meaningful negotiations among the parties,” she said.

“Sudan’s future governance is for the Sudanese people to decide through a neutral, inclusive and transparent transition process.”

Her remarks came as the Security Council convened an emergency session to discuss the deteriorating situation in El-Fasher, where UN officials say mass killings, rapes and executions have been reported amid an RSF offensive that has left thousands dead and tens of thousands displaced.


UN Security Council condemns RSF assault on El-Fasher amid warnings of ‘blood on the sand’ in Sudan

UN Security Council condemns RSF assault on El-Fasher amid warnings of ‘blood on the sand’ in Sudan
Updated 19 min 30 sec ago

UN Security Council condemns RSF assault on El-Fasher amid warnings of ‘blood on the sand’ in Sudan

UN Security Council condemns RSF assault on El-Fasher amid warnings of ‘blood on the sand’ in Sudan
  • Top officials voice anger at ‘horrifying situation’ in the besieged city with ‘risk of mass atrocities alarmingly high’
  • ‘World has failed an entire generation of Sudanese children,’ says humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher

NEW YORK: The UN Security Council on Thursday expressed grave concern over what it described as a horrifying assault by Sudan’s Rapid Support Forces on the besieged city of El-Fasher, North Darfur, warning that atrocities against civilians risk spiraling into large-scale, ethnically motivated killings.

In a statement adopted by consensus, council members condemned the RSF attack and its “devastating impact on the civilian population,” recalling Resolution 2736 from 2024 which demands that the RSF lift its siege of the city and halt hostilities.

The council urged all sides to “protect civilians and abide by their obligations under international humanitarian law,” while stressing the need for “safe passage for those trying to flee the city.”

The statement called on all parties to “allow and facilitate safe and unhindered humanitarian access,” and reaffirmed the council’s opposition to any “parallel governing authority” in areas under RSF control. It also urged states to refrain from “external interference which seeks to foment conflict and instability.”

The Security Council’s message came as top UN officials described a catastrophic situation on the ground.

UN Humanitarian Chief Tom Fletcher told the council that after more than a year of siege, El-Fasher has “descended into an even darker hell.”

“Can anyone here say we did not know this was coming?” Fletcher asked, describing reports of mass executions, rapes, and mutilations by RSF fighters.

“We cannot hear the screams, but as we sit here today, the horror is continuing.”

He cited reports that nearly 500 people, including patients and their companions, were killed this week at the Saudi Maternity Hospital in the city, calling it “yet another example of the depravity with which this war has been fought.”

“Those who want to leave El-Fasher must be able to do so safely. Those who remain must be protected,” Fletcher said.

“There must be accountability for those carrying out the killing and the sexual violence. For those giving the orders. And those providing the weapons should consider their responsibility.”

He said the UN had been repeatedly blocked by the RSF from delivering food and medicine, even as “tens of thousands of terrified, starving civilians” fled on foot toward Tawila, itself overwhelmed with displaced people.

“This is not just a crisis of violence — it is a crisis of hunger,” he said.

“Famine is confirmed, and severe food insecurity is spreading. Blood on the sand. And Mr. President, blood on the hands.”

Fletcher condemned the expulsion of World Food Programme officials by Sudanese authorities, and warned that “humanitarians simply asking that we be allowed to do our jobs and save lives is not working.”

Assistant Secretary-General Martha Ama Akyaa Pobee told the council that El-Fasher had fallen to the RSF after more than 500 days under siege, with only “small pockets of resistance” remaining.

“The situation is simply horrifying,” Pobee said. “In the past week, the UN Human Rights Office has documented widespread and serious violations, including mass killings and summary executions during house-to-house searches and as civilians tried to flee.”

She said communications with the city had been severed, making it difficult to assess the full scale of casualties. “Despite commitments to protect civilians, the reality is that no one is safe in El-Fasher. There is no safe passage for civilians to leave the city.”

Pobee also cited reports of atrocities in North Kordofan, including the killing of 50 civilians and five Red Crescent volunteers in Bara after the RSF captured the town. “These acts are often ethnically motivated reprisals,” she said.

The UN political chief warned that the conflict’s territorial scope is widening, with drone strikes and fighting spreading across Kordofan, Blue Nile, Sennar, and Khartoum. “The risk of mass atrocities remains alarmingly high,” she said.

Pobee reiterated the secretary-general’s call for an immediate ceasefire and cautioned against foreign meddling.

“External support is enabling the conflict. Weapons and fighters continue to flow into Sudan,” she said, urging states with influence over the warring parties to press for de-escalation.

Fletcher ended his address with a stark warning about the world’s moral failure to stop atrocities reminiscent of Darfur’s darkest days.

“What is unfolding in El-Fasher recalls the horrors Darfur was subjected to 20 years ago,” he said. “But somehow today we are seeing a very different global reaction — one of indifference, resignation, a shrugging of shoulders.”

He addressed the council: “Where is our diplomacy? Where are our values? Where is our conscience?

“The world has failed an entire generation of Sudan’s children,” Fletcher said. “If this council does not act now, it will own that failure.”


Turkiye’s Erdogan to Merz: does Germany not see Israeli genocide in Gaza?

Turkiye’s Erdogan to Merz: does Germany not see Israeli genocide in Gaza?
Updated 30 October 2025

Turkiye’s Erdogan to Merz: does Germany not see Israeli genocide in Gaza?

Turkiye’s Erdogan to Merz: does Germany not see Israeli genocide in Gaza?
  • Erdogan said Israel had nuclear and other weapons with which it was using and threatening Gaza
  • “Does Germany not see these?” he said

ANKARA: Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan slammed Germany over what he said was its ignorance of Israel’s “genocide,” famine and attacks in Gaza, at a joint news conference with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz in Ankara on Thursday.
Erdogan said Israel had nuclear and other weapons with which it was using and threatening Gaza, adding Palestinian militant group Hamas had none of those. He said Israel had once again attacked Gaza in recent days despite a ceasefire in the enclave.
“Does Germany not see these?” he said, adding it was Turkiye, Germany and other countries’ humanitarian duty to end the famine and massacres in Gaza.

Asked about the jailing of Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu, Erdogan said that nobody can trample on laws regardless of their position, and added that the judiciary is managing the legal process as needed.
Imamoglu has been in prison since March pending trial on corruption charges that he and his main opposition party deny.


Israeli strikes pound Gaza, Hamas hands over 2 dead hostages

Israeli strikes pound Gaza, Hamas hands over 2 dead hostages
Updated 30 October 2025

Israeli strikes pound Gaza, Hamas hands over 2 dead hostages

Israeli strikes pound Gaza, Hamas hands over 2 dead hostages
  • Planes bomb areas east of Khan Younis Thursday while tanks shell near Gaza City
  • Health officials say 46 children killed by Israeli attacks on previous days

CAIRO/GAZA: Israeli planes and tanks pounded areas in eastern Gaza on Thursday, Palestinian residents and witnesses said, a day after Israel said it remained committed to a US-backed ceasefire despite launching more lethal bombardments in the territory.
Witnesses said Israeli planes carried out 10 airstrikes in areas east of Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, while tanks shelled areas east of Gaza City in the north. No injuries or deaths were reported.
The Israeli military said it carried out “precise” strikes against “terrorist infrastructure that posed a threat to the troops” in the areas, which Israel still occupies.
The strikes were the latest test of the fragile ceasefire that came into effect on October 10 in the conflict between Israel and Hamas.

Opinion

This section contains relevant reference points, placed in (Opinion field)

“We’re scared that another war will break out, because we don’t want a war. We’ve suffered two years of displacement. We don’t know where to go or where to come,” said a displaced man, Fathi Al-Najjar, in Khan Younis in southern Gaza.
At the tent encampment where Najjar spoke, girls and boys were filling plastic bottles with water from metal containers placed on the side of the street, and women cooked food for their families using clay-made firewood ovens.

Return of deceased hostages

Under the ceasefire accord, Hamas released all living hostages in return for nearly 2,000 Palestinian prisoners and wartime detainees, while Israel pulled back its troops and agreed to halt its offensive.
Hamas also agreed to hand over the remains of all 28 dead hostages. 

Smoke billowing during an Israeli strike on Gaza Thursday. (AFP)

The militant group handed over two more bodies it said were of deceased Israeli hostages on Thursday.

The office of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that the two bodies had been received by Israeli forces via the Red Cross in Gaza and will be transported into Israel for identification.

Hamas agreed to hand over the remains of all 28 dead hostages in exchange for 360 Palestinian militants killed in the war. Up to Thursday it had handed over 15 bodies.
The recovery and handover of bodies of hostages in Gaza has been one of the obstacles to US President Donald Trump’s Gaza plan, with Israel claiming that Hamas has been delaying the handover, an accusation Hamas denies.
From Tuesday into Wednesday, Israel retaliated for the death of an Israeli soldier with bombardments that Gaza health authorities said killed 104 people.
Witnesses in Gaza said they did not see strikes on Thursday outside of the area Israel controls.

Women and children killed

Israel says the soldier was killed in an attack by gunmen on territory within the so-called “yellow line” to which its troops withdrew under the ceasefire. Hamas has rejected the accusation.
The Israeli military issued a list of 26 militants it said it had targeted during the bombardment earlier this week, including one it said was a Hamas commander who participated in the October 7, 2023 assault on Israel that ignited the war.
The Hamas-run Gaza government media office said Israel’s list was part of a “systematic campaign of misinformation” to cover up “crimes against civilians in Gaza.”
The Gaza health ministry said 46 children and 20 women were among the 104 people killed in the airstrikes.
Sources close to international efforts to sustain the ceasefire said US and regional mediators swiftly intervened to restore calm as Israel and Hamas traded blame.

Strikes raise doubts in Gaza

People in the Gaza Strip, most of which had been reduced to wasteland, feared the tenuous truce would fall apart, saying that the last two days, in which they were deprived of sleep, felt like a revival of the two-year war.
“The situation is extremely difficult. The war is still ongoing, and we have no hope that it will end, because of the conditions we are witnessing in the life we are living,” said Mohammed Al-Sheikh.
The war has displaced most of Gaza’s more than two million people, some of them several times. Many haven’t yet returned to their areas, fearing they could soon be displaced once again.
Gaza health authorities say 68,000 people are confirmed killed in the Israeli campaign and thousands more are missing. Israel launched the war after Hamas-led fighters attacked southern Israel, killing 1,200 people and bringing 251 hostages back to Gaza, according to Israeli tallies.


Teenager dies during ultra-Orthodox protest in Jerusalem

Teenager dies during ultra-Orthodox protest in Jerusalem
Updated 30 October 2025

Teenager dies during ultra-Orthodox protest in Jerusalem

Teenager dies during ultra-Orthodox protest in Jerusalem
  • The vast crowd were protesting against the absence of a law guaranteeing their right
  • Carrying placards denouncing conscription, demonstrators marched along main roads leading into Jerusalem

JERUSALEM: A mass ultra-Orthodox Jewish rally against military conscription turned deadly in Jerusalem on Thursday, when a teenage boy fell to his death during the demonstration which had shut down the main entrance to the city.
Packed crowds of mostly men clogged the roads around the Route 1 highway leading into Jerusalem. Israeli media estimated that around 200,000 people flocked to the rally.
Photos showed some had climbed atop roofs of buildings, a gas station and onto cranes. The Israeli ambulance service said a 15-year-old fell to his death and police said they had opened an investigation into the incident.
Military exemptions a hot-button issue in Israel
The debate over mandatory military service, and those who are exempt from it, has long caused tensions within Israel’s deeply divided society and has placed Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu under increasing political strain over the past year.
Ultra-Orthodox seminary students have long been exempt from mandatory military service. Many Israelis fume at what they see as an unfair burden carried by the mainstream who serve.
That frustration only intensified during wars over the past two years that exacted the highest Israeli military death toll in decades as fighting stretched from the Gaza Strip to Lebanon, Syria, Yemen and Iran.
This has added fuel to an already explosive debate over a new conscription bill that lies at the center of a crisis rattling Netanyahu’s coalition, which took power in late 2022 for a four-year term.
Ultra-Orthodox Jewish leaders say full-time devotion to the study of holy scriptures is sacrosanct and fear their young men will drift away from religious life if they are drafted into the military.
Right now, people who refuse to go to the army are taken to military prison,” said Shmuel Orbach, a protester, “It’s not so bad. But we are a Jewish country. You cannot fight against Judaism in a Jewish country, it does not work.”
Struggle to pass new conscription bill 
But last year the Supreme Court ordered an end to the exemption. Parliament has been struggling to draft a new conscription bill, which has so far failed to meet both the ultra-Orthodox demands and those of a stretched military. Two long-time loyal political allies, ultra-Orthodox Jewish parties Shas and United Torah Judaism (UTJ), quit Netanyahu’s coalition government in July in a dispute over the new military draft legislation. Their exit left Netanyahu with an increasingly splintered coalition whose far-right members are unhappy about Israel’s ceasefire deal with Gaza’s dominant Palestinian militant group Hamas, brokered by the United States.
The door has been left open for the ultra-Orthodox parties to rejoin the coalition should the dispute be resolved.
But reaching an accommodation acceptable to ultra-Orthodox political leaders may alienate many other Israelis as the country heads into an election year, and risks being shot down by the Supreme Court.
Surveys over the past two years have consistently predicted Netanyahu’s coalition would lose the next ballot.