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Swiss move to dissolve Gaza aid delivery group’s Geneva branch

Swiss move to dissolve Gaza aid delivery group’s Geneva branch
Switzerland on Wednesday initiated proceedings to dissolve the Geneva branch of the controversial, U.S- and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation aid group, citing legal shortcomings in its establishment. (AP/File)
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Updated 02 July 2025

Swiss move to dissolve Gaza aid delivery group’s Geneva branch

Swiss move to dissolve Gaza aid delivery group’s Geneva branch
  • “The ESA may order the dissolution of the foundation if no creditors come forward within the legal 30-day period,” ESA said
  • GHF had not fulfilled certain legal requirements

GENEVA: Switzerland on Wednesday initiated proceedings to dissolve the Geneva branch of the controversial, U.S- and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation aid group, citing legal shortcomings in its establishment.

The GHF began handing out food packages in the Gaza Strip at the end of May, overseeing a new model of aid deliveries that has drawn UN criticism over a perceived lack of neutrality in Gaza’s war as well as the killings of hundreds of Palestinians in mass shootings near its distribution hubs.

The GHF is registered in the US state of Delaware and had registered an affiliate in Geneva on February 12. It did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the Swiss move to shut down its Geneva office.

“The ESA may order the dissolution of the foundation if no creditors come forward within the legal 30-day period,” the Federal Supervisory Authority for Foundations (ESA) said in a creditors notice published in the Swiss Official Gazette of Commerce on Wednesday.

The ESA told Reuters the GHF had not fulfilled certain legal requirements including having the correct number of board members, a postal address or a Swiss bank account.

“GHF confirmed to the ESA that it had never carried out activities in Switzerland...and that it intends to dissolve the Geneva-registered (branch),” the ESA said in a statement.

Last week, Geneva authorities issued a separate legal notice to the GHF to remedy within 30 days “deficiencies in the organization” or face potential action.

More than 500 people have been killed near GHF distribution hubs in Gaza or along access roads guarded by Israeli forces since the GHF started operating, according to Palestinian medical authorities in the territory.

Israel’s military acknowledged on Monday that Palestinian civilians have been harmed near the distribution centers and its forces had been issued new instructions following what it called “lessons learned.”

The GHF has said that it has delivered more than 52 million meals to needy Palestinians in five weeks and that other humanitarian groups had “nearly all of their aid looted.”

There is an acute shortage of food and other basic supplies in Gaza after a nearly two-year war by Israel against militant group Hamas that has displaced most of the enclave’s two million inhabitants and left much of it in rubble.


Israeli forces kill 20-year-old Palestinian near Hebron

Israeli forces kill 20-year-old Palestinian near Hebron
Updated 27 October 2025

Israeli forces kill 20-year-old Palestinian near Hebron

Israeli forces kill 20-year-old Palestinian near Hebron
  • Mohammad Sha’our died instantly near Adh Dhahiriya town and his body was transferred to Dura Government Hospital

LONDON: Israeli forces shot and killed a 20-year-old Palestinian on Sunday evening near Hebron, in the southern occupied West Bank.

The Ministry of Health confirmed that Mohammad Bassam Tayaha Sha’our, 20, was killed by bullets fired by Israeli forces at the Meitar crossing near the town of Adh Dhahiriya, south of Hebron.

Sha’our died instantly at the scene, according to Wafa news agency. The Red Crescent paramedics transferred his body to Dura Government Hospital.

Since January, over 300 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces or settlers in the West Bank, including 44 individuals under the age of 18, according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.


Jordanian and Pakistani army chiefs discuss military cooperation

Jordanian and Pakistani army chiefs discuss military cooperation
Updated 32 min ago

Jordanian and Pakistani army chiefs discuss military cooperation

Jordanian and Pakistani army chiefs discuss military cooperation
  • The two sides discussed training, operational, and logistical programs aimed at strengthening military cooperation

LODNON: Pakistan’s Chief of the Army Staff, Field Marshal Asim Munir, discussed military cooperation with King Abdullah II of Jordan and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Maj. Gen. Yousef Huneiti.

The meeting held on Sunday in Amman discussed enhancing cooperation between Jordan and Pakistan, particularly in defense and related regional developments, according to Petra news agency.

Huneiti and Munir held a separate meeting to explore joint military cooperation between their countries’ armed forces. The two sides discussed training, operational, and logistical programs aimed at enhancing military cooperation, particularly in exercises and training courses to develop defense capabilities, Petra added.

Munir praised Jordan’s vital role under King Abdullah in promoting security and stability, highlighting the JAF’s professionalism and performance. Pakistan’s ambassador and defense attaché in Amman, along with several senior JAF officers, attended the meeting.


Hundreds of Syrians in Libya take up offer of free tickets home

Hundreds of Syrians in Libya take up offer of free tickets home
Updated 26 October 2025

Hundreds of Syrians in Libya take up offer of free tickets home

Hundreds of Syrians in Libya take up offer of free tickets home
  • While there is no official census of Syrians in Libya, thousands of families have been living in the country for decades

TRIPOLI: Hundreds of Syrian refugees living in Libya poured into a travel agency in Tripoli to take advantage of an offer of free tickets to Damascus, AFP journalists saw.

By midday, more than 700 Syrians, many of them residing in Libya for years after fleeing their country’s civil war, had come to collect tickets and travel passes from the agency commissioned by the new authorities in Damascus.

In all, thousands have taken up the offer since the Syrian Arab Republic’s Foreign Ministry first announced it.

Walid Hamud, a 32-year-old refugee who arrived five years ago, acknowledged that “the situation still is not very stable” back home, but nonetheless wanted to return, while keeping open the possibility of coming back to Libya for work “legally with a residence permit”.

Fellow refugee Rami Hassun fled Idlib province in 2020 because his life was in danger, he said.

“Today, Syria is finding peace and is in a better situation than before. We are returning to our country, thank God,” he said.

Once there, “we will strive to work and rebuild everything, given the scale of the destruction”, said Mahmoud Nasr Al-Din, who has been in Libya for three years.

Din said he anticipated “strong demand for labor” back home, but noted returning would have been difficult without the new travel arrangement, given the Syrian Arab Republic’s lack of a fully functioning embassy in Libya.

In mid-August, a Damascus delegation symbolically reopened the embassy, which had been shut in 2012, but it currently does not offer consular services.

While there is no official census of Syrians in Libya, thousands of families have been living in the country for decades, with thousands more arriving since the start of the Syrian civil war in 2011, many hoping to cross the Mediterranean to Europe.


Netanyahu says Israel to decide which foreign troops acceptable to secure Gaza truce

Palestinians watch machinery and some workers from Egypt searching for the bodies of hostages at Hamad City, in Khan Younis.
Palestinians watch machinery and some workers from Egypt searching for the bodies of hostages at Hamad City, in Khan Younis.
Updated 26 October 2025

Netanyahu says Israel to decide which foreign troops acceptable to secure Gaza truce

Palestinians watch machinery and some workers from Egypt searching for the bodies of hostages at Hamad City, in Khan Younis.
  • Trump administration has been speaking to Indonesia,UAE, Egypt, Qatar, Turkiye and Azerbaijan to contribute to the multinational force

JERUSALEM: Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Sunday Israel would determine which foreign forces it would allow as part of a planned international force in Gaza to help secure a fragile ceasefire under US President Donald Trump’s plan.
It remains unclear whether Arab and other states will be ready to commit troops, in part given the refusal of Palestinian Hamas militants to disarm as called for by the plan, while Israel has voiced concerns about the make-up of the force.
While the Trump administration has ruled out sending US soldiers into the Gaza Strip, it has been speaking to Indonesia, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Qatar, Turkiye and Azerbaijan to contribute to the multinational force.
“We are in control of our security, and we have also made it clear regarding international forces that Israel will determine which forces are unacceptable to us, and this is how we operate and will continue to operate,” Netanyahu said.
“This is, of course, acceptable to the United States as well, as its most senior representatives have expressed in recent days,” he told a session of his cabinet.
Israel, which besieged Gaza for two years to back up its air and ground war in the enclave against Hamas after the Palestinian militant group’s cross-border attack on October 7, 2023, continues to control all access to the territory.
Israel opposed to Turkish role in Gaza force
Last week Netanyahu hinted that he would be opposed to any role for Turkish security forces in Gaza. Once-warm Turkish-Israeli relations soured drastically during the Gaza war, with Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan lambasting Israel’s devastating air and ground campaign in the small Palestinian enclave.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, on a visit to Israel aimed at shoring up the truce, said on Friday the international force would have to be made up of “countries that Israel’s comfortable with.” He made no comment on Turkish involvement.
Rubio added that Gaza’s future governance still needed to be worked out among Israel and partner nations but could not include Hamas.
Rubio later said US officials were receiving input on a possible UN resolution or international agreement to authorize the multinational force in Gaza and would discuss the issue in Qatar, a key Gulf mediator on Gaza, on Sunday.
A major challenge to Trump’s plan is that Hamas has balked at disarming. Since the ceasefire took hold two weeks ago as the first stage of Trump’s 20-point plan, Hamas has waged a violent crackdown on clans that have tested its grip on power.
Israel says Hamas knows where hostage remains are
At the same time, the remains of 13 deceased hostages remain in Gaza with Hamas citing obstacles to locating them in the pervasive rubble left by the fighting.
An Israeli government spokesperson said on Sunday Hamas, which released the remaining 20 living hostages it took in its October 2023 assault, knew where the bodies were.
“Israel is aware that Hamas knows where our deceased hostages are, in fact, located. If Hamas made more of an effort, they would be able to retrieve the remains of our hostages,” the spokesperson said.
Israel had, however, allowed the entry of an Egyptian technical team to work with the Red Cross to locate the bodies. She said the team would use excavator machines and trucks for the search beyond the so-called yellow line in Gaza behind which Israeli troops have initially pulled back under Trump’s plan.
Netanyahu began the cabinet session by stressing Israel was an independent country, rejecting the notion that “the American administration controls me and dictates Israel’s security policy.” Israel and the US, he said, are a “partnership.”
Diplomats and analysts say Trump managed to push Netanyahu, who had long rejected global pressure for a ceasefire in Gaza, to accept his framework for a broader peace deal and also forced Netanyahu to call Qatar’s leader to apologize after a failed bombing raid targeting Hamas negotiators in that country.
Trump also persuaded Arab states to convince Hamas to return all the Israeli hostages, its key leverage in the war.


Jordan will not accept ongoing Israeli violations in West Bank: King Abdullah

Jordan will not accept ongoing Israeli violations in West Bank: King Abdullah
Updated 26 October 2025

Jordan will not accept ongoing Israeli violations in West Bank: King Abdullah

Jordan will not accept ongoing Israeli violations in West Bank: King Abdullah
  • King Abdullah said that Amman will continue to send relief aid and provide medical services to Palestinians in Gaza
  • Jordan, he added, will maintain its role in safeguarding Jerusalem’s Muslim and Christian holy sites under Hashemite Custodianship

LONDON: King Abdullah II of Jordan reaffirmed support for Palestinians in the coastal Gaza Strip and condemned Israeli violations in the occupied West Bank.

During a speech inaugurating the second session of the 20th Parliament, he also addressed the education and healthcare systems, modernizing the transport sector, and plans for megaprojects, investment attraction, job creation, and improving living standards.

“Today, we stand witness to the tragedy endured by our brothers and sisters in Gaza, who continue to persevere. To them we say: We stand with you as brothers, supporting you with all that we can,” King Abdullah said.

He said that Amman will continue to send relief aid and provide essential medical services to Palestinians in Gaza.

“We will also not accept the continuation of violations in the West Bank. The stance of Jordanians is firm and unyielding, just like their nation,” he said.

Jordan, he added, will maintain its role in safeguarding Jerusalem’s Muslim and Christian holy sites under Hashemite Custodianship.

King Abdullah was welcomed with an official ceremony at Parliament on Sunday, accompanied by Crown Prince Hussein, where he was received by the heads of the three branches of government, according to Petra news agency. Queen Rania, members of the royal family, senior officials, and diplomats also attended the speech.