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Egypt’s foreign minister discusses Iran nuclear negotiations, Gaza with US envoy

Egypt’s foreign minister discusses Iran nuclear negotiations, Gaza with US envoy
Badr Abdelatty, Egypt’s minister of foreign affairs, and US Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff. (Screengrab/WAM)
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Updated 13 June 2025

Egypt’s foreign minister discusses Iran nuclear negotiations, Gaza with US envoy

Egypt’s foreign minister discusses Iran nuclear negotiations, Gaza with US envoy
  • Badr Abdelatty says US-Iran negotiations are an important opportunity to achieve calm in the region
  • Oman to host sixth round of negotiations between Iran and the US on Sunday

LONDON: Badr Abdelatty, Egypt’s minister of foreign affairs, emphasized the need to persist in negotiations between the US and Iran over Tehran’s nuclear program during a phone call with Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff.

Abdelatty said the negotiations are an important opportunity to achieve calm, avoid escalation, and prevent the region from sliding into greater instability, WAM, the Emirates News Agency, reported.

Oman will host the sixth round of negotiations between Iran and the US on Sunday, Oman’s foreign minister said on Thursday.

Abdelatty and Witkoff, the US president’s special envoy for the Middle East, on Thursday addressed Egyptian and US efforts to reach a ceasefire agreement in the Gaza Strip. They discussed the release of Israeli hostages and Palestinian prisoners, as well as the flow of humanitarian aid into the Palestinian coastal enclave, according to WAM.

The Egyptian foreign minister highlighted the need for a lasting resolution to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict that meets the region’s aspirations for peace and stability.


Violent clashes erupt in Morocco after days of protests

Violent clashes erupt in Morocco after days of protests
Updated 47 min 21 sec ago

Violent clashes erupt in Morocco after days of protests

Violent clashes erupt in Morocco after days of protests
  • GenZ 212 had put out the call for protests days before on the platform Discord, citing issues such as “health, education and the fight against corruption,” while professing its “love for the homeland”

RABAT: Violent clashes erupted in several Moroccan cities late Tuesday between youths and security forces, local media reported, after days of protests calling for reforms in the public health and education sectors.
Videos published by news outlets which AFP was unable to verify showed masked demonstrators in Inezgane, near Agadir, hurling stones at police, setting fires near a shopping center and damaging a local post office.
Similar scenes were reported in nearby Ait Amira, in central Morocco’s Beni Mellal and in Oujda in the northeast.
It remained unclear whether there were any injuries.
The youth-led protests were initiated by a collective known as “GenZ 212,” whose founders remain unknown.
In a statement posted late Tuesday on its Facebook page, the group expressed “regret over acts of rioting or vandalism that affected public or private property.”
It also urged participants to remain strictly peaceful and avoid any behavior that could “undermine the legitimacy of our just demands.”
The new protests marked the fourth consecutive day of demonstrations, though there were no reports of violence before today.
Moroccan prosecutors have said they will try 37 people for participating in the protests, one of their lawyers said.
“Thirty-four individuals will be prosecuted while free on bail, with their trial scheduled to begin on October 7, while three others will face prosecution in detention,” lawyer Souad Brahma told AFP, adding that the exact charges against them were not yet known.
More than 200 mainly young demonstrators have been arrested over the past three days in Rabat during gatherings that were dispersed by police, said the Moroccan Association for Human Rights (AMDH). Most were later released.
In Casablanca, the public prosecutor submitted a request Tuesday to open an investigation into 18 individuals for their alleged role in obstructing traffic during a protest over the weekend, Moroccan news agency MAP reported, adding that six minors were referred to a specialized court.
In a statement released Tuesday, Morocco’s governing coalition, composed of center-right and liberal parties, said it “listens to and understands the social demands” of these young people and was “ready to respond positively and responsibly.”
GenZ 212 had put out the call for protests days before on the platform Discord, citing issues such as “health, education and the fight against corruption,” while professing its “love for the homeland.”
The protests come at a time of popular discontent over Morocco’s social inequalities, which have disproportionately affected young people and women.
Recent reports of the deaths of eight pregnant women at a public hospital in Agadir have been a particular source of public outrage.

 


Yemen’s Houthis take responsibility for attack on Dutch cargo ship

Yemen’s Houthis take responsibility for attack on Dutch cargo ship
Updated 29 min 45 sec ago

Yemen’s Houthis take responsibility for attack on Dutch cargo ship

Yemen’s Houthis take responsibility for attack on Dutch cargo ship
  • The cargo ship MV Minervagracht was hit by a projectile on Monday, wounding two people and sparking a fire, its owner said
  • The rebels have launched missile and drone attacks on over 100 ships and on Israel in response to the war in Gaza, saying they were acting in solidarity with the Palestinians

SANAA: Yemen’s Houthi rebels claimed responsibility on Wednesday for an attack on a Dutch cargo ship this week in the busy shipping lane of the Gulf of Aden.
The Iran-backed group, which holds swathes of territory in Yemen including the capital Sanaa, has said the attacks on commercial shipping are in support of Palestinians during the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza.
The cargo ship MV Minervagracht was hit by a projectile on Monday, wounding two people and sparking a fire, its owner said.
It was targeted “because its owner company violated the decision to ban entry to the ports of occupied Palestine,” the rebel group said in a statement carried by the Houthi-run Saba news agency.
British maritime security company Ambrey said the ship had previously been targeted on September 23 “while en route to Djibouti.”
The Houthis have also launched frequent missile and drone attacks on Israel, which has retaliated with strikes in Yemen.
Israeli strikes on Sanaa killed at least nine people on Thursday, a day after the rebels launched a drone attack on southern Israel.
 

 


Yemen’s Houthis say they will target US oil firms with sanctions

Yemen’s Houthis say they will target US oil firms with sanctions
Updated 8 sec ago

Yemen’s Houthis say they will target US oil firms with sanctions

Yemen’s Houthis say they will target US oil firms with sanctions
  • The Houthis since 2023 have launched numerous assaults on vessels in the Red Sea that they deem to be linked with Israel in what they say is solidarity with Palestinians over Israel’s war on Gaza
  • The Houthis on Monday claimed responsibility for attacking a Dutch cargo ship in the Gulf of Aden with a cruise missile, injuring two crew and leaving the vessel ablaze and adrift

LOS ANGELES: Yemen’s Houthis will target US oil majors including ExxonMobil and Chevron with sanctions, a body affiliated with the Iran-backed militia said on Tuesday.
The Sanaa-based Humanitarian Operations Coordination Center (HOCC), a body set up last year to liaise between Houthi forces and commercial shipping operators, sanctioned 13 US companies, nine executives and two vessels, HOCC said.
The sanctions are in retaliation for US sanctions imposed on the Houthis this year despite a truce agreement with the Trump administration in which the Yemeni group agreed to stop attacking US-linked ships in the Red Sea and the wider Gulf of Aden, HOCC said.
Exxon declined comment and Chevron did not immediately comment.
“It remains unclear whether these sanctions signal that the Houthis will begin targeting vessels linked to the sanctioned organizations, companies, and individuals — a move that would risk violating the ceasefire agreement with the Trump administration, facilitated by Oman,” independent Middle East analyst Mohammed Albasha said in a LinkedIn post on Tuesday.
The Houthis since 2023 have launched numerous assaults on vessels in the Red Sea that they deem to be linked with Israel in what they say is solidarity with Palestinians over Israel’s war on Gaza.
That campaign has had little effect on vital oil tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, which is located between Oman and Iran and connects the Arabian Gulf with the Gulf of Oman and the Arabian Sea, according to the US Energy Information Administration.
The Houthis have occasionally attacked ships in the Gulf of Aden, which connects the Red Sea and the Arabian Sea.
The Houthis on Monday claimed responsibility for attacking a Dutch cargo ship in the Gulf of Aden with a cruise missile, injuring two crew and leaving the vessel ablaze and adrift.
Last year, the US imported about 500,000 barrels per day of crude and condensate from Gulf countries through the Strait of Hormuz, according to the EIA. That represents about 7 percent of total US crude oil and condensate imports — the lowest level in nearly 40 years due to increased domestic production and Canadian imports, the agency said.
Albasha, founder of US-based Risk Advisory Basha Report, told Reuters the move is unlikely to affect the oil market, since most of the trade in the region is handled by Chinese, Russian, Iranian, and other Gulf companies that the Houthis want to keep on good terms with.
“This looks like a media stunt, a way to save face and reassure their people in light of mounting US sanctions and Israeli strikes that have been hurting their economy,” he said.
To that end, the HOCC statement also included this line: “The ultimate goal of the sanctions is not punishment in itself, but to bring about positive behavioral change.” 

 


Tony Blair: former UK premier central to Trump’s Gaza plan

Tony Blair: former UK premier central to Trump’s Gaza plan
Updated 30 September 2025

Tony Blair: former UK premier central to Trump’s Gaza plan

Tony Blair: former UK premier central to Trump’s Gaza plan
  • Critics argue he achieved little as envoy and that he is ill-suited to play peacemaker, as he is reviled by many Arabs and discredited in Britain for joining the US-led invasion of Iraq
  • “To bring a foreign person to run the Palestinian affairs in Gaza is absolutely unacceptable, especially with the reputation that Mr. Blair has”

LONDON: Tony Blair, Britain’s former prime minister whose legacy was heavily tarnished by the 2003 war in Iraq, has long been a contentious figure in the Middle East and beyond.
His potentially leading role in Donald Trump’s peace plan for Gaza will likely do little to change that.
Blair, 72, who is set to sit on the board of a proposed international transitional authority in the Palestinian territory, is credited with crafting the US leader’s plan alongside Trump’s son-in-law and adviser Jared Kushner.
Blair brings a wealth of experience after spending eight years as the envoy for the Middle East Quartet of the European Union, United Nations, United States and Russia.
Savvy and confident, he will be seen as bringing heft to any leadership role in Gaza.
Critics argue he achieved little as envoy and that he is ill-suited to play peacemaker, as he is reviled by many Arabs and discredited in Britain for joining the US-led invasion of Iraq.
“His reputation, of course, is mired by his involvement in the Iraq war,” Sanam Vakil, Middle East program director at the Chatham House think tank, told AFP.
But “he is trusted by leaders in the Gulf ... (who) see him as a potential bridge-builder candidate,” she added.
In Gaza, Hani Saad, 41, who lives in a tent at a school for displaced people in the Shujaiya neighborhood of Gaza City, told AFP the main thing was to “end the fighting.”
“You know Blair is known for lying and only serving Israel and his own interests,” he said, but added he was “welcome” if he can end the conflict.
Hiam Wafi, 30, who lives 
near Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, said the UK politician would be “acceptable to Israel, the US and the international community.”
“He has relationships with other countries and can mobilize political and financial support.”
Blair, a skilled communicator, has maintained an informal regional role through his institute and consultancy roles.
He contributed to the 2020 historic Abraham Accords brokered during the first Trump presidency, which normalized relations between Israel and the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Morocco, according to his office.
Israel appears to welcome his possible new role, with Blair said to enjoy a good rapport with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
“He has always had a corner of his heart devoted to the unfinished project of calming down this conflict,” Ehud Barak, former Israeli premier, told the Washington Post.
The Palestinians seem less enthusiastic.
“That is the most horrible idea,” Mustafa Barghuti, head of the Palestinian National Initiative, told CNN.
“To bring a foreign person to run the Palestinian affairs in Gaza is absolutely unacceptable, especially with the reputation that Mr. Blair has.”
Francesca Albanese, the UN special rapporteur on rights in the Palestinian territories, was equally blunt.
“Tony Blair? Hell no,” she posted on X. “Shall we meet in The Hague perhaps?” she added, referring to the International Criminal Court.
Blair has remained unapologetic about joining the 2003 invasion, which triggered accusations he was “a poodle” of then US president George W. Bush.
But he has expressed regret about intelligence failures and lack of post-war planning.
“At least you could say we were removing a despot and trying to introduce democracy,” he told AFP in a 2023 interview.

‘Pdzٱٲ’

A youthful Blair first became a lawmaker for center-left Labour in 1983. Within 11 years he was spearheading reform as leader.
He became prime minister in 1997 — the first of three general election wins, an unprecedented feat for Labour — and, at 43, Britain’s youngest premier since 1812.
During his 10-year tenure, Blair oversaw a period of prosperity, enacted key constitutional changes and expanded gay rights.
He also secured a historic peace accord in Northern Ireland.
But his political fortunes shifted in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks.
One million people protested in London against invading Iraq, and his domestic reputation eroded further after the evidence for the war proved flawed.
He was ousted from office in 2007 after an internal power battle.
But Blair, a committed Christian, remained a globe-trotting statesman. He set up a foundation to support inter-faith dialogue and counter extremism.
He has also worked with governments in developing nations, although his lucrative consultancy work has drawn criticism.

 


Israeli government approves appointment of new head of Shin Bet

Israeli government approves appointment of new head of Shin Bet
Updated 30 September 2025

Israeli government approves appointment of new head of Shin Bet

Israeli government approves appointment of new head of Shin Bet
  • Netanyahu announced Zini’s appointment in May
  • Zini, who was appointed for a five-year term, will assume duties on October 5.

TEL AVIV: The Israeli government on Tuesday unanimously approved the appointment of Major General David Zini as the new head of the domestic intelligence service Shin Bet, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said.
Netanyahu announced Zini’s appointment in May. Zini, who was appointed for a five-year term, will assume duties on October 5.
Zini replaces Ronen Bar, who stepped down in June, announcing his resignation in April after Netanyahu had said that he was sacking him.
Israel’s Supreme Court later ruled that decision as “illegal and contrary to law,” according to Israeli media.
The Shin Bet, which handles counter-terrorism investigations, has been at the center of a growing political battle pitting Netanyahu’s right-wing coalition government against an array of critics ranging from members of the security establishment to families of hostages in Gaza.