ֱ

UN expert Albanese: Israel seeks to make Gaza City unlivable

UN expert Albanese: Israel seeks to make Gaza City unlivable
A Palestinian girl searches the rubble of Al-Ghafari tower after its destruction by Israeli airstrikes in Gaza City on Monday. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 15 September 2025

UN expert Albanese: Israel seeks to make Gaza City unlivable

UN expert Albanese: Israel seeks to make Gaza City unlivable
  • Francesca Albanese accuses Israeli military of using unconventional weapons in Gaza

GENEVA: Israel is trying to make Gaza City unliveable in its assault on the enclave’s largest urban area and is endangering the lives of Israeli hostages, the top UN expert on Palestinian rights Francesca Albanese said on Monday.

“Israel is bombing using unconventional weapons ... it is trying to forcibly evacuate Palestinians. Why? This is the last piece of Gaza that needs to be rendered unlivable before advancing the ethnic cleansing of that piece of land,” Albanese told reporters in Geneva.
The Israeli mission in Geneva was not immediately available for comment.
Israel says the offensive to take control of Gaza City is part of a plan to defeat Palestinian militant group Hamas for good and that it has warned civilians to head south to a designated humanitarian zone.
However, the UN and numerous countries say its tactics amount to forced mass displacement and that conditions in the humanitarian zone are dire, with food in short supply.




UN Special Rapporteur on the occupied Palestinian territories Francesca Albanese at a press conference in Geneva on Monday on the human rights situation in Gaza. (AFP)

Italian lawyer Albanese serves as a special rapporteur on human rights in the occupied Palestinian territories, one of dozens of experts appointed by the 47-member UN Human Rights Council to report on specific global issues.
“The ongoing assault to take the last remnant of Gaza will not only devastate the Palestinians but endanger also the remaining Israeli hostages,” Albanese said.
She accused Israel of genocide and said the international community was complicit.
The nearly two-year campaign in the Palestinian enclave has killed more than 64,000 people, according to local authorities. Some rights groups like Amnesty International have also accused Israel of committing genocide, but not the United Nations itself. UN officials have in the past said it is up to international courts to determine genocide.
Israel rejects the accusation, citing its right to self-defense following the October 7, 2023, attack by Hamas militants that killed 1,200 people and resulted in the capture of 251 hostages, according to Israeli figures.
In July, the US Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced that Albanese would be added to the US sanctions list for her actions, which he described as prompting illegitimate prosecutions of Israelis at the International Criminal Court.
Albanese said her attempts to travel to New York for the UN General Assembly in September to deliver a report do not look promising.


Under US pressure, Lebanon tightens screws on money transfers

Under US pressure, Lebanon tightens screws on money transfers
Updated 5 sec ago

Under US pressure, Lebanon tightens screws on money transfers

Under US pressure, Lebanon tightens screws on money transfers
As part of efforts “to remove Lebanon from the FATF grey list... the central bank of Lebanon today has taken the first step ,” a statement said
From Dec. 1, all non-bank financial institutions must “collect information and data linked to their customers and operations“

BEIRUT: Lebanon announced on Friday that money changers and transfer companies must comply with stricter rules as the country faces heavy US pressure to regulate its cash economy and cut off Hezbollah funding.
The move comes days after a visiting US official said his country was determined to cut off Tehran’s funding to the group, and after the US Treasury said Iran’s Revolutionary Guards had transferred over $1 billion to Hezbollah this year, mainly via money exchange companies.
Lebanese authorities are seeking to disarm Hezbollah, which was badly weakened in a recent war with Israel, and face heavy US pressure to do so more quickly as well as fears of expanded Israeli military action.
As part of efforts “to remove Lebanon from the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) grey list... the central bank of Lebanon today has taken the first step in a series of precautionary measures aiming to strengthen the compliance environment within the financial sector,” a central bank statement said.
The FATF in October last year added Lebanon to its “grey list” of nations that are subject to increased monitoring of financial transactions.
The central bank said it was imposing measures “on all non-bank financial institutions licensed by the central bank of Lebanon, including money transfer companies, exchange bureaus” and other firms handling foreign currency transactions and transfers to and from the country.
According to a central bank circular, from December 1, all non-bank financial institutions must “collect information and data linked to their customers and operations” for transactions of $1,000 or more and report them to the central bank.
Institutions must confirm they have collected the required information before carrying out any transaction, the circular added.
The measures are consistent “with international standards on fighting money laundering and terrorist financing, and preventing the misuse of the authorized financial system for suspicious transactions.”
Hezbollah has pushed back against moves to stifle the group.
On Thursday, its parliamentary bloc condemned “US efforts to tighten the financial siege on Lebanon” and rejected what it said was Washington’s aim of imposing “financial guardianship” on the country.
Lebanon was once known as the “Switzerland of the Middle East” for its thriving banking sector before a crippling financial crisis in 2019.
Confidence in lenders tanked and the cash economy has since boomed, despite international institutions repeatedly warning of the risk of money laundering and terrorism financing.