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Trump claims ceasefire between Iran and Israel after Iran’s missile attack on US base in Qatar

This frame grab take from AFPTV footage shows the remnants of an Iranian missile intercepted over Qatar, as it lies on a pavement near a fence on June 23, 2025. (AFP)
This frame grab take from AFPTV footage shows the remnants of an Iranian missile intercepted over Qatar, as it lies on a pavement near a fence on June 23, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 24 June 2025

Trump claims ceasefire between Iran and Israel after Iran’s missile attack on US base in Qatar

Trump claims ceasefire between Iran and Israel after Iran’s missile attack on US base in Qatar
  • Trump posted on Truth Social that the 24-hour phased-in ceasefire will begin about midnight Tuesday Eastern time. He said it would bring an “Official END” to the war
  • A senior White House official said Trump communicated directly with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to secure the ceasefire

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates: US President Donald Trump said that Israel and Iran had agreed to a “complete and total ceasefire” soon after Iran launched a limited missile attack Monday on a US military base in Qatar, retaliating for the American bombing of its nuclear sites. Iran said that as long as Israel stopped its attacks early Tuesday morning, it would halt theirs.
Israel did not immediately acknowledge any ceasefire, but there were no reports of Israeli strikes in Iran after 4 a.m. local. Heavy Israeli strikes continued in Tehran and other cities until shortly before that time.

“As of now, there is NO ‘agreement’ on any ceasefire or cessation of military operations,” Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi wrote in a post on X. “However, provided that the Israeli regime stops its illegal aggression against the Iranian people no later than 4 am Tehran time, we have no intention to continue our response afterwards.”
His message was posted at 4:16 a.m. Tehran time. Araghchi added: “The final decision on the cessation of our military operations will be made later.”
Trump posted on Truth Social that the 24-hour phased-in ceasefire will begin about midnight Tuesday Eastern time. He said it would bring an “Official END” to the war.




Iran targetted a US base in Qatar. (AFP)


The Israeli military declined to comment on Trump’s statement and the office of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment.
Speaking on Iranian state television, an overnight anchor repeatedly referred to a “Trump-claimed” ceasefire, without saying whether Tehran accepted it. The anchor noted: “Simultaneously with Trump’s claim of a ceasefire, the Zionist enemy targeted several points in the cities of Tehran, Urmia and Rasht, including a residential area in the capital.”
Israel’s military put out a warning earlier that District 6 in Tehran could be struck.
Early Tuesday, Iran, mirroring the language and maps of the Israeli military, put out a warning telling people in Ramat Gan it would target “military infrastructure” there.

HIGHLIGHT

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said on Tuesday that there was no ceasefire agreement with Israel as of now, but if it stopped its attacks then Tehran would also stop firing

Iran’s attack Monday indicated it was prepared to step back from escalating tensions in the volatile region. The US was warned by Iran in advance, and there were no casualties, said Trump, who dismissed the attack as a “very weak response.”
Qatar condemned the attack on Al Udeid Air Base as “a flagrant violation” of its sovereignty, airspace and international law. Qatar said it intercepted all but one missile, though it was not clear if that missile caused any damage.
Iran said the volley matched the number of bombs dropped by the United States on Iranian nuclear sites over the weekend. Iran also said it targeted the base because it was outside of populated areas.
Those comments, made immediately after the attack, suggested Iran wanted to de-escalate with the United States, something Trump himself said after the strikes early Sunday on Iran.
Qatar Maj. Gen. Shayeq Al Hajjri said 19 missiles were fired at the base that is home to the Combined Air Operations Center, which provides command and control of air power across the region, as well as the 379th Air Expeditionary Wing, the largest such wing in the world. Trump said 14 missiles were fired, 13 were knocked down and one was “set free” because it posed no threat.


Iran announced the attack on state television, with a caption calling it “a mighty and successful response” to “America’s aggression.”
Just before the explosions, Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian wrote on the social platform X: “We neither initiated the war nor seeking it. But we will not leave invasion to the great Iran without answer.”
Earlier reports that a missile was launched at a base housing American forces in Iraq were a false alarm, a senior US military official said. The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to comment publicly, said debris from a malfunctioning Iranian missile targeting Israel had triggered an alert of an impending attack on the Ain Assad base.
Israel expands war to include symbolic targets
On the 11th day of the conflict, Israel and Iran traded airstrikes that have become a reality for civilians in both countries since Israel started the war to target Tehran’s rapidly advancing nuclear program.
Iran struck Israel with a barrage of missiles and drones while Israel said it attacked “regime targets and government repression bodies in the heart of Tehran.”
But Israeli officials insisted they did not seek the overthrow of Iran’s government, their archenemy since the country’s 1979 Islamic Revolution.
The latest strikes unfolded only hours after Trump himself mentioned the possibility of regime change a day after inserting America into the war with its stealth-bomber strike on three Iranian nuclear sites.
“If the current Iranian Regime is unable to MAKE IRAN GREAT AGAIN, why wouldn’t there be a Regime change???” he asked on his Truth Social website.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt later described Trump as “simply raising a question.”




A US Marine watches as Iranian-US demonstrators gather to call for regime change in Iran, as US President Donald Trump announced a cease-fire between Israel and Iran, in Los Angeles. (AFP)


The US strikes over the weekend prompted fears of a wider regional conflict. Iran said the US had crossed “a very big red line” with its risky gambit to strike with missiles and 30,000-pound bunker-buster bombs.
Israel aims to wind down the war in the coming days, but that will depend on the Iranians, an Israeli official said on condition of anonymity to discuss high-level internal deliberations. The official spoke before Trump’s announcement about a ceasefire.
Israel’s preferred outcome is for Iran to agree to a ceasefire and reenter negotiations with the US over its nuclear program, the official said. But Israel is prepared for the possibility of an extended low-intensity war of attrition or period of “quiet for quiet,” in which it would closely monitor Iran’s activities and strike if it identifies new threats.
Tehran strikes open new chapter of war
Before the ceasefire announcement, the Israeli military warned Iranians it would continue to attack military sites around Tehran as its focus shifted to include symbolic targets. The military issued the warning on the social platform X, though Iranians are struggling to access the outside world due to an Internet shutdown.
In Tehran, Israel hit the headquarters of the military force that suppressed recent protests and blew open a gate at Evin prison. That facility is known for holding political activists. Iranian state television shared black-and-white surveillance footage of the strike at the facility known for holding dual nationals and Westerners often used by Iran as bargaining chips in negotiations with the West.
Evin also has specialized units for political prisoners run by the paramilitary, all-volunteer Revolutionary Guard, which answers only to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. The facility is the target of both US and European Union sanctions.
There were no immediate reports of casualties in Iran or significant damage.




The price of oil tumbled. (AP)


Iranian state television aired footage it said was shot inside Evin, with prisoners under control. However, the Washington-based Abdorrahman Boroumand Center for Human Rights in Iran said many families of detainees “have expressed deep concern about the safety and condition of their loved ones” in the prison.
According to an Israeli official familiar with the government’s strategy, Israel is targeting these sites to put pressure on the Iranian administration but is not actively seeking to topple it. The official spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss internal government deliberations.
The Israeli military also confirmed it struck roads around Iran’s Fordo enrichment facility to obstruct access to the site. The underground site was one of those hit in Sunday’s attack by the United States. The Israeli military did not elaborate.
In Vienna, the head of the United Nations nuclear watchdog said he expected there to be heavy damage at the Fordo facility following Sunday’s US airstrike there with sophisticated bunker-buster bombs.
Several Iranian officials, including Atomic Energy Organization of Iran spokesman Behrouz Kamalvandi, have claimed Iran removed nuclear material from targeted sites ahead of time.
Iran presses on attacking Israel
Iran said its Monday attacks targeted the Israeli cities of Haifa and Tel Aviv, according to Iranian state television.




Global airlines had been suspended or reduced flights in the Middle East as the conflict between Israel and Iran raged. (AFP)


Explosions were also heard in Jerusalem, possibly from air defense systems in action, and Israel’s Magen David Adom emergency rescue service said there had been no reports of injuries.
In Israel, at least 24 people have been killed and more than 1,000 wounded in the war. Israeli strikes on Iran have killed at least 974 people and wounded 3,458 others, according to the Washington-based group Human Rights Activists.
The group, which has provided detailed casualty figures from Iranian unrest such as the protests surrounding the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, said of those killed, it identified 387 civilians and 268 security force personnel.
The US has evacuated some 250 American citizens and their immediate family members from Israel by government, military and charter flights that began over the weekend, a State Department official said.
There are roughly 700,000 American citizens, most of them dual US-Israeli citizens, believed to be in Israel.
Russian President Vladimir Putin, who leads one of Iran’s closest allies, said Monday after meeting in Moscow with the Iranian foreign minister that they had explored “how we can get out of today’s situation.”
Putin called the Israeli and American attacks on Iran an “absolutely unprovoked aggression.”


Pope Leo raises ‘tragic situation in Gaza’ in meeting with Israeli president

Pope Leo raises ‘tragic situation in Gaza’ in meeting with Israeli president
Updated 3 sec ago

Pope Leo raises ‘tragic situation in Gaza’ in meeting with Israeli president

Pope Leo raises ‘tragic situation in Gaza’ in meeting with Israeli president
VATICAN CITY: Pope Leo discussed the “tragic situation in Gaza” during a meeting on Thursday with Israeli President Isaac Herzog and called for negotiations toward the release of remaining hostages and a permanent ceasefire in the Palestinian enclave, the Vatican said.
“A prompt resumption of negotiations was hoped for ... to secure the release of all hostages, urgently achieve a permanent ceasefire, facilitate the safe entry of humanitarian aid into the most affected areas, and ensure full respect for humanitarian law,” said the statement.
Herzog earlier thanked Leo for the meeting in a post on X, and said he had received a “warm welcome” at the Vatican. The Vatican did not immediately release further details about the meeting.

Seven dead after migrant boat stranded in Med: NGO

Seven dead after migrant boat stranded in Med: NGO
Updated 3 min 10 sec ago

Seven dead after migrant boat stranded in Med: NGO

Seven dead after migrant boat stranded in Med: NGO
  • The survivors, the majority of them Sudanese, had been at sea for six days
  • The boat left Libya on August 27 but became stranded in international waters between Tunisia and Malta.

ROME: Seven people were lost at sea and 41 others were brought to Italy’s Lampedusa island after a migrant boat got into difficulty in the Mediterranean, German NGO Sea-Watch said Wednesday.
The survivors, the majority of them Sudanese, had been at sea for six days before landing on Lampedusa late Tuesday. They were rescued by Sea-Watch’s ship Aurora after refusing help from the Tunisian authorities, the NGO said.
According to the testimony of those on board, the boat left Libya on August 27 but became stranded in international waters between Tunisia and Malta.
Seven people were lost in the water.


Tunisian authorities ordered a supply ship operating in the Miskar gas fields to rescue the 41 survivors, and the Tunisian navy turned up days later — but the migrants refused to go with them, a Sea-Watch spokesman told AFP.
“Some of these people would rather die than be forced to Tunisia,” he said.
Sea-Watch, which monitored events with its observation aircraft, said that Malta refused its requests to help but it finally received permission from Tunisian authorities to collect the migrants.
The Aurora took them to Lampedusa, located just 90 miles (145 kilometers) off the Tunisian coast.
Tunisia is a key transit country for thousands of African migrants seeking to reach Europe by sea each year.
In 2023, Tunisia signed a 255-million-euro ($290-million) deal with the European Union, nearly half of which was earmarked for tackling irregular migration.
The deal aimed to bolster Tunisia’s capacity to stop boats leaving its shore, but campaigners say migrants face discrimination, racism and violence in the country.
Italy’s hard-right government backed the Tunisia deal as part of its efforts to stop the boats, which also included restricting the activities of NGO ships.

 


Scotland to hinder arms firms doing business with Israel

Scotland to hinder arms firms doing business with Israel
Updated 7 min 47 sec ago

Scotland to hinder arms firms doing business with Israel

Scotland to hinder arms firms doing business with Israel
  • Laws to be changed around financial support for firms working with governments accused of genocide
  • First Minister John Swinney: ‘The scale of suffering (in Gaza) is unimaginable. Nobody can ignore it’

LONDON: The Scottish government is to change its rules on financial support for arms manufacturers to deter them from doing business with countries justifiably accused of genocide, The Guardian reported.

Scottish First Minister John Swinney made the announcement after urging the UK to join a case at the International Court of Justice against Israel.

He said defense firms in Scotland would need to prove they do not do business with the Israeli military if they want financial assistance in future.

Swinney told the Scottish parliament: “The scale of suffering (in Gaza) is unimaginable. Nobody can ignore it. We must confront this crisis with urgency, compassion and an unwavering commitment to accountability.”

The Scottish Enterprise business agency and the Scottish National Investment Bank have been instructed not to offer financial support to companies that breach the new regulations.

Meanwhile, trade ties with Israel will be cooled, with Scottish Enterprise also being told not to help new export deals for non-military goods with the country.

According to investigative journalism platform The Ferret, Scottish Enterprise has awarded more than £2.75 million ($3.69 million) to defense firms Raytheon, Thales and Leonardo since January 2022, all of which have major contracts with the Israeli military.

A UK government source said Swinney’s moves are “all over the place,” after he also announced plans to help defense companies — many of which arm Israel — supplying munitions to Ukraine.

Defense manufacturing and exporting is a significant part of the Scottish economy. On Sunday, the UK announced that a £10 billion deal had been reached with Norway to supply it with at least five Type 26 frigates to be built by BAE Systems at shipyards just outside Glasgow. 

BAE is a major player in the global arms supply chain, and has repeatedly been criticized by activists for its role in manufacturing parts for the F-35 fighter jet, which is used extensively by the Israeli military in Gaza.

Earlier this year, BAE was the recipient of £9.22 million for a new training center for apprentices set up at the site that will see the construction of the Type 26 frigates.

Swinney said none of the funding for apprenticeships in the industry would be affected by efforts to hinder the arms trade with Israel.

Jamie Livingston, head of the anti-poverty charity Oxfam, said: “Gaza is being turned into a graveyard before our eyes. History will ask if leaders did everything they could to stop it. The first minister has committed to act; Westminster must do the same.”

A UK government spokesperson said: “We have suspended licences for exports of military equipment to the IDF (Israel Defense Forces) that might be used in operations in Gaza, subject to the special measures in place for exports to the global F-35 program, based on our assessment that these could be used to commit or facilitate serious violations of international humanitarian law.

“We will work with our allies and those in the region on a meaningful process towards a two-state solution and continue to do what we can to support the foundations of Palestinian statehood.”


Just 25% of Gaza war detainees are combatants: Israeli data

Just 25% of Gaza war detainees are combatants: Israeli data
Updated 23 min 20 sec ago

Just 25% of Gaza war detainees are combatants: Israeli data

Just 25% of Gaza war detainees are combatants: Israeli data
  • Probe: Overwhelming majority are civilians, including elderly, sick, children, healthcare workers
  • Rights group: ‘We believe the proportion of civilians among those detained is even higher than Israel’s own figures suggest’

LONDON: Three-quarters of Palestinians arrested in Gaza are civilians, including children, disabled people and healthcare workers, according to classified Israeli data.

The revelation comes after a joint investigation by The Guardian, +972 Magazine and Local Call, which found that among the detained were an 82-year-old woman with Alzheimer’s who was held for six weeks without charge, and a single mother taken for 53 days, forcing her children to beg on the street.

More than 47,000 people have been identified by Israel as militants fighting for Hamas and Islamic Jihad, drawn largely from the groups’ own files seized in Gaza.

Of these, 1,450 were identified in May as being in Israeli captivity, or just under 25 percent of all Palestinians detained in Gaza under Israel’s “unlawful combatants” law since the outbreak of the war in October 2023.

The law allows indefinite detention without charge. An additional 300 people identified by Israel as participants in the Hamas attack of Oct. 7, 2023, are also being held. 

No one has been charged in relation to Oct. 7 or the war so far, with Israel allowing a 180-day period before detainees gain access to a lawyer, and 75 days before appearing in front of a judge to confirm the legality of the detention.

However, the large number of civilian prisoners held under the law could be even greater, with Israeli newspaper Haaretz quoting senior officers in late 2023 that “85 to 90 percent” of prisoners taken by Israel were not Hamas members.

Tal Steiner, director of the Public Committee Against Torture, told The Guardian: “As soon as the wave of mass arrests began in Gaza in October 2023, there was serious concern that many uninvolved people were being detained without cause.

“This concern was confirmed when we learned that half of those arrested at the beginning of the war were eventually released, demonstrating that there had been no basis for their detention in the first place.”

The Sde Teiman military base at one point had so many elderly and disabled prisoners that the wing they were kept in was nicknamed “the geriatric pen,” an Israeli soldier who served there told the investigation.

“They brought men in wheelchairs, people without legs,” he said. “I always assumed the supposed excuse for arresting patients was that maybe they had seen the hostages or something.”

Samir Zaqout, deputy director of Al-Mezan Center for Human Rights, which has represented hundreds of civilians imprisoned by Israel, said: “We believe the proportion of civilians among those detained is even higher than Israel’s own figures suggest.”

He added: “At most, perhaps one in six or seven might have any link to Hamas or other militant factions, and even then, not necessarily through their military wings.”

A military medic who treated 82-year-old Alzheimer’s patient Fahamiya Al-Khalidi at Anatot detention center after she was taken from Gaza City in December 2023 told The Guardian: “I remember her limping badly toward the clinic. And she’s classified as an unlawful combatant. The way that label is used is insane.”

He added that he had treated a woman bleeding after suffering a miscarriage, and a breastfeeding mother who had been separated from her infant.

The mother, Abeer Ghaban, knew after she was detained that Israeli authorities had mistaken her estranged husband for a Hamas member with the same name.

Despite proving his identity through comparing photos, she was not released for weeks, leaving her three children to fend for themselves in a war zone. “They were alive, but seeing the state they had been in for 53 days without me broke me,” Ghaban said.

Hassan Jabareen, director of the Palestinian legal rights group Adalah, said the Israeli system “strips detainees of protections guaranteed under international law, including safeguards specifically intended for civilians, using the ‘unlawful combatant’ label to justify the systematic denial of their rights.”

An Israeli source at another military facility said soldiers wanted to hold innocent civilians longer to be used as leverage in hostage negotiations.

A spokesperson for Al-Mezan said: “Even before Oct. 7, Israel withheld the bodies of hundreds of Palestinians, using them as bargaining chips instead of returning them to their families for burial.

“We believe the thousands of civilians from Gaza now in detention are likewise intended to be used as bargaining chips.”


Arab leaders put Palestine at center of Arab League ministerial talks in Cairo

Arab leaders put Palestine at center of Arab League ministerial talks in Cairo
Updated 04 September 2025

Arab leaders put Palestine at center of Arab League ministerial talks in Cairo

Arab leaders put Palestine at center of Arab League ministerial talks in Cairo
  • The UAEcalled for an end to displacement in Palestinian territories
  • Jordanstressed that joint Arab action is a top priority and reaffirmed support for Lebanon and Syria
  • Arab League Secretary-General urged stopping the violence in Gaza and defending the two-state solution

DUBAI: Palestine dominated the agenda as Arab League foreign ministers met in Cairo on Thursday, with leaders calling for an end to Israeli settlement activity and reiterating support for the establishment of a Palestinian state.

The session focused on efforts to persuade more Western countries to recognize Palestinian statehood and to halt what ministers described as “Israeli aggression against the Gaza Strip.”

UAE Minister of State Khalifa bin Shaheen Al-Marr urged an immediate end to “displacement and colonization in Palestinian territories,” adding that the UAE has presented an official roadmap for establishing a Palestinian state.

He also underscored the importance of stability in Libya and Syria, welcomed Lebanon’s decision to restrict weapons to state control, and called on the international community to shoulder its responsibilities toward Yemen.

Al-Marr further pressed for greater Arab economic cooperation, expanded partnerships, and a unified stance on peace and counter-terrorism at what he described as “a very dangerous moment” in the region.

Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi echoed the centrality of Palestine, describing joint Arab action as “a necessity that should be placed at the top of our priorities.”

He reaffirmed Jordan’s support for Lebanon’s stability and Syria’s reconstruction while warning against “plans to divide” Syria.

Arab League Secretary-General Ahmed Aboul Gheit delivered some of the strongest remarks, condemning Israeli policies and voicing support for Palestine, Lebanon, and Sudan.

He said the Cairo talks were being held at a “delicate and dangerous time.”

Aboul Gheit accused Israel of seeking to “liquidate the Palestinian cause and erase the Palestinian entity,” describing the war in Gaza as a “genocidal war” aimed at eliminating Palestinian statehood.

He urged urgent action to stop what he called a massacre in Gaza and said defending the two-state solution was “a defense of the future of the region.”

He also criticized Washington for refusing visas to a Palestinian delegation to attend the UN General Assembly, calling the decision a violation of international obligations.

On Lebanon, Aboul Gheit praised the government’s “courageous” decision to restrict weapons to state authority, calling it essential for stability.

He also condemned Israeli violations in Lebanese territory and urged the US to pressure Israel to halt them.

Addressing Sudan, he warned there was “no alternative to a ceasefire” to preserve the country’s unity and end what he described as one of the region’s worst humanitarian crises.