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Gaza flotilla sails again; Greta Thunberg among activists aboard

Greta Thunberg and members of the crew stand aboard a ship, part of the Global Sumud Flotilla aiming to reach Gaza and break Israel's naval blockade, as they sail off Crete island, Greece, September 25, 2025. (REUTERS)
Greta Thunberg and members of the crew stand aboard a ship, part of the Global Sumud Flotilla aiming to reach Gaza and break Israel's naval blockade, as they sail off Crete island, Greece, September 25, 2025. (REUTERS)
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Updated 37 sec ago

Gaza flotilla sails again; Greta Thunberg among activists aboard

Gaza flotilla sails again; Greta Thunberg among activists aboard
  • Italy’s Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani warns of dangers challenging the Israeli blockade
  • "Your resilience is our compass, your struggle is our struggle. Together, we will break the silence of the siege"

ROME: An international aid flotilla that paused for several days in Greek waters for repairs has set sail again for Gaza, where activists aim to challenge Israel’s naval blockade and deliver aid to the Palestinian territory.
Organizers said on Sunday that Greek vessels had now joined their enterprise, meaning that the flotilla, which counts some 47 civilian boats, was “complete.”
“Brothers and sisters in Gaza, we sail with hope in our hearts. Your resilience is our compass, your struggle is our struggle. Together, we will break the silence of the siege,” the Global Sumud Flotilla wrote on social media.
Around 40 Italians are aboard the flotilla alongside activists from dozens of other countries, including Swedish climate campaigner Greta Thunberg. They hope to bring humanitarian aid to Gaza in the coming week.
Italy’s Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani on Sunday repeated a proposal made last week for the flotilla to take the aid to Cyprus for eventual distribution in Gaza by the Roman Catholic Church. The flotilla rejected the suggestion.
“We have always said ... that it is dangerous to approach Israeli waters. We don’t know what might happen. Forcing the blockade is dangerous,” Tajani told reporters.
The flotilla was struck on Wednesday in international waters off Crete by drones armed with stun grenades and irritants, which caused damage but no injuries.
Israel did not comment on the incident. It has previously said it will use any means to prevent the boats from reaching Gaza, arguing that its naval blockade is legal as it battles Hamas militants in the coastal enclave.
Italy and Spain have deployed navy ships near the flotilla for rescue and humanitarian operations.
Israel began its Gaza offensive after the Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel.
The offensive has killed over 65,000 people in Gaza, Gaza health authorities say.


Starmer urges Labour party to unite for ‘fight of our lives’

Starmer urges Labour party to unite for ‘fight of our lives’
Updated 11 sec ago

Starmer urges Labour party to unite for ‘fight of our lives’

Starmer urges Labour party to unite for ‘fight of our lives’
  • Britain’s sluggish economy means a tax-raising budget is reportedly looming, while Starmer has U-turned on welfare reforms and scrapping energy benefits for millions of pensioners following anger among Labour’s left-wing base

LIVERPOOL: A pep-talk from Australian leader Anthony Albanese kick-started UK Labour’s annual conference on Sunday, with Prime Minister Keir Starmer struggling to convince nervous members that he can lead the “fight of our lives” against the insurgent hard-right.
Although the ex-lawyer led Labour back to power in July last year after 14 years in opposition, scandals, policy missteps, and plummeting poll ratings have already raised doubts about his future.
The four-day gathering in Liverpool, northwest England, comes amid chatter about a possible leadership challenge and follows two recent high-profile departures from government in the wake of embarrassing revelations.
The conference, which concludes on Wednesday, is taking place with Labour lagging well behind the upstart anti-immigrant Reform UK party, led by anti-EU firebrand Nigel Farage, in national surveys.
Going into the conference, Labour trailed Reform by 12 points, while Starmer’s satisfaction ratings hit the lowest recorded by Ipsos for any prime minister since 1977.
Starmer said on Sunday that the party had “got the fight of our lives ahead of us.”
“We’ve got to take on Reform, we’ve got to beat them. The effects will be there for generations,” he told the BBC.
He also called Reform’s plan to make migrants reapply for new visas with tougher rules “racist,” adding it would “tear our country apart.”
Despite some success on the international stage in helping coordinate European support for Ukraine, Starmer has endured a largely disappointing first 14 months domestically as prime minister.
Britain’s sluggish economy means a tax-raising budget is reportedly looming, while Starmer has U-turned on welfare reforms and scrapping energy benefits for millions of pensioners following anger among Labour’s left-wing base.
Meanwhile, small boat crossings to England of undocumented migrants are at record levels, fueling support for Reform.
Starmer’s attempts to reboot his government earlier in September were quickly overshadowed by Angela Rayner’s resignation as deputy prime minister for underpaying property tax.
Starmer then sacked Peter Mandelson as Britain’s ambassador in Washington over his friendship with late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, with the row raising questions about his judgment.
“His leadership is in crisis, really,” said political scientist Steven Fielding. “And the conference isn’t really going to resolve that. It’ll give people occasion to air their discontent with Starmer,” he said.
Australian leader Albanese offered words of support for his “friend” in one of the conference’s first speeches.
“Being a party of government means grappling with uncertainty and complexity. .., it means making, and yes, owning tough decisions,” he told members.
“But friends, we wouldn’t have it any other way. We’re better for all of that, because in the end, the hard road is the only one that takes us anywhere,” he added, taking a swipe at “the low politics of fear and resentment.”
Seeking to follow Albanese’s example, Starmer will aim to spark a turnaround in his fortunes when he delivers the keynote speech at the gathering on Tuesday.
“The conference is a pivotal moment because it’s an opportunity for him to lay out a clear vision of where he is taking the country,” said Patrick Diamond, politics professor at Queen Mary, University of London.
He is expected to pitch the next general election, due in 2029, as a straight fight between Labour and Reform, saying the choice is between “patriotic renewal” and “toxic division.”
Regional mayor Andy Burnham has called on Starmer to put forward a more leftist vision for Labour, claiming in interviews this week that lawmakers have been urging him to run for leader.
Burnham would first have to find a way to get elected to parliament, and 80 MPs would then have to nominate him to trigger a contest, meaning Starmer is unlikely to face a challenge soon.
The Gaza conflict is also likely to burst onto the agenda with demonstrations planned by pro-Palestinian groups in Liverpool over the weekend.

 


Taliban releases US citizen after visit by envoy

Special Envoy for Hostage Response Adam Boehler and the acting Foreign Minister of Afghanistan Mawlawi Amir Khan Muttaqi.
Special Envoy for Hostage Response Adam Boehler and the acting Foreign Minister of Afghanistan Mawlawi Amir Khan Muttaqi.
Updated 26 min 53 sec ago

Taliban releases US citizen after visit by envoy

Special Envoy for Hostage Response Adam Boehler and the acting Foreign Minister of Afghanistan Mawlawi Amir Khan Muttaqi.
  • Amir Amiri, who had been detained in Afghanistan since December 2024, was released through Qatari mediation and was on his way to Doha on Sunday evening

ISLAMABAD: Afghanistan’s ruling Taliban released another US citizen from custody on Sunday after a visit by Washington’s hostage envoy Adam Boehler, the US government said.

Amir Amiri, who had been detained in Afghanistan since December 2024, was released through Qatari mediation and was on his way to Doha on Sunday evening, an official source told Reuters, asking not to be identified by name or nationality.
Boehler’s visit came a week after US President Donald Trump urged the Taliban to give back control of Bagram air base to the United States, threatening “bad things” would happen to Afghanistan if it does not.
Amiri was the fifth US citizen freed by the Taliban this year thanks to Qatari mediation, including earlier in September a British couple held for eight months, the source said.
“I want to thank Qatar for helping secure his freedom,” US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on X, confirming the release. “POTUS (the president) has made it clear we will not stop until every American unjustly detained abroad is back home.”
The Bagram base targeted by Trump was used by US forces after the September 11, 2001, attacks on the United States. 
It was among bases the Taliban movement took over after the withdrawal of American forces in 2021 and toppling of the US-backed government in Kabul.


Greta Thunberg says Gaza flotilla is no ‘publicity stunt’ in response to Israeli claims

Greta Thunberg says Gaza flotilla is no ‘publicity stunt’ in response to Israeli claims
Updated 28 September 2025

Greta Thunberg says Gaza flotilla is no ‘publicity stunt’ in response to Israeli claims

Greta Thunberg says Gaza flotilla is no ‘publicity stunt’ in response to Israeli claims
  • More than 500 volunteers are aboard 50 civilian boats heading to Gaza
  • ‘I don’t think anyone would risk their lives for a publicity stunt,’ Thunberg told a BBC show

LONDON: Greta Thunberg, the Swedish activist, responded to claims from the Israeli government about the Global Sumud Flotilla, saying that “no one would risk their lives for a publicity stunt.”

More than 500 volunteers, including doctors, lawyers, politicians and activists, are aboard 50 civilian boats heading to Gaza. Israeli leaders have repeatedly characterized the flotilla as “a publicity stunt,” a claim activists on board deny.

“First of all, I don’t think anyone would risk their lives for a publicity stunt. Second of all, if you think it’s a publicity stunt, have you asked people in Gaza if they consider this a publicity stunt?” Thunberg told the BBC show “Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg.”

She added: “I repeat, this mission should not have to exist, we do not want to be doing this, but we have to keep trying right?

“If we just thought to ourselves, ‘well I’m just one person I can’t make a difference,’ then almost no one would have rights by now.”

The flotilla is en route to the Palestinian coastal enclave of Gaza in an attempt to break the Israeli naval blockade and deliver essential medical supplies and food. Palestinians have been experiencing widespread hunger due to ongoing Israeli attacks that began in late 2023 in Gaza and resulted in the killing of more than 65,000 people. 

The Israeli Foreign Ministry has proposed that flotilla activists unload their aid at Ashkelon port for transport into Gaza, saying they will “not allow a breach of a lawful naval blockade.”

The flotilla has reported several drone attacks since departing from Spain on Sept. 1. The crew said that some vessels were sprayed with unidentified chemicals, hit by sound bombs and explosive flares, and had their communications jammed. Last week, Italy and Spain sent military ships for assistance and possible rescue operations after the recent attacks on the flotilla.


UK foreign secretary says ‘no military solution’ in Gaza as Trump backs peace plan

UK foreign secretary says ‘no military solution’ in Gaza as Trump backs peace plan
Updated 28 September 2025

UK foreign secretary says ‘no military solution’ in Gaza as Trump backs peace plan

UK foreign secretary says ‘no military solution’ in Gaza as Trump backs peace plan
  • Yvette Cooper says Israeli government ‘urgently needs to change course’ after it pushed forces to occupy Gaza City
  • Cooper has not yet met the Israeli prime minister, although she was in New York when he made his remarks at the UN

LONDON: UK Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper said that there is “no military solution” in Gaza and called for an end to the war, noting that the international community is making progress toward a peace deal for the Palestinian coastal enclave, backed by the US administration.

Cooper, who reaffirmed the British government’s decision to recognize the state of Palestine during her speech at the UN General Assembly last week, told The Guardian that the international community has “reached a moment where the world wants to end this war.”

Israeli actions in the Gaza Strip since late 2023, which have resulted in the killing of more than 65,000 people in a span of two years, have been labeled as genocide by several EU and UN officials.

Cooper, believed to be one of the cabinet ministers who urged Prime Minister Keir Starmer to recognize Palestinian statehood, refrained from declaring that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza. She said that it is up to the government’s legal expert to make that determination, according to The Guardian.

“For security for Israelis, as well as security for Palestinians and as well as dealing with this devastating humanitarian crisis, I think the Israeli government urgently needs to change course,” she said.

US President Donald Trump announced that a peace deal was attainable in Gaza after several meetings during the general assembly with leaders from Arab and majority-Muslim countries, who urged him to push for an immediate ceasefire in the territory.

The White House is reportedly supporting a plan for a temporary technocratic administration in Gaza, led by Tony Blair, the former UK prime minister and a controversial figure in the Middle East because of his involvement in the 2003 Iraq war. Cooper declined to say if Blair was suitable to lead the Gaza transitional authority, The Guardian added.

“I feel like there is a consensus, a real, huge consensus building, and there was real energy and determination (at the UN) around peace. I think we’ve reached a moment where the world wants to end this war,” Cooper said.

However, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, from the UN, vowed to “finish the job.” Since August, Israeli forces have been advancing into Gaza City, the enclave’s main metropolis and home to major government, financial, medical, and educational institutions. It was home to one million Palestinians before the mass displacement since late 2023.

“There is no military solution to this that works, there is no way that the security of Israel is remotely strengthened by this further Gaza City offensive,” Cooper said.

The British diplomat has not yet met Netanyahu, although she was in New York when he made his remarks at the UN. Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president, was the last world leader Cooper met as shadow foreign secretary in 2011 and the first she met after becoming UK foreign secretary this month, according to The Guardian.

“We can’t pretend this isn’t incredibly hard, and how long the crisis has been going on makes it challenging. But there was no doubt that there is a real sense of determination and energy behind trying to get an end to the war and to try and get not just an immediate ceasefire, but a proper plan for the future,” she said.

The 21-point White House peace plan for Gaza is clear that there will be no mass displacement of Palestinians, it excludes Hamas from any future government and prohibits Israel from annexing the West Bank. It remains to be confirmed whether Blair, who served as the Middle East envoy, will head it.

“Everybody can see the horror of what has happened and the fact that it feels like nothing’s being done. It feels like nothing is changing. It feels like everything is just getting worse.

“The challenge for us now is that there is a moment, and we have to make sure that that moment, through international action, is turned into a peace process.”


World-renowned photographer joins Gaza flotilla as first from Bangladesh

Shahidul Alam, center, speaks to the media during a press conference at Drik gallery in Dhaka, Sept. 27, 2025. (Drik)
Shahidul Alam, center, speaks to the media during a press conference at Drik gallery in Dhaka, Sept. 27, 2025. (Drik)
Updated 28 September 2025

World-renowned photographer joins Gaza flotilla as first from Bangladesh

Shahidul Alam, center, speaks to the media during a press conference at Drik gallery in Dhaka, Sept. 27, 2025. (Drik)
  • Shahidul Alam was Time’s Person of the Year 2018, first Asian to chair World Press Photo jury
  • ‘We will stop the siege, we’ll put our bodies on the line,’ he said upon departure to join flotilla in Italy

DHAKA: Renowned photographer Shahidul Alam joined the Freedom Flotilla Coalition’s latest mission on Sunday, becoming the first Bangladeshi to take part in the international effort to break Israel’s siege of Gaza.

An educator, media institution builder, and activist, Alam, 70, has received numerous accolades for his work documenting human rights abuses and political upheaval across Bangladesh for over four decades.

A Time magazine Person of the Year in 2018, he was also the first person of color to chair the World Press Photo jury.

He flew from Dhaka on Sunday for Sicily, where a new wave of boats is following the route of the Global Sumud Flotilla, which sailed from Italy, Spain, and Tunisia in late August and early September with around 500 activists from 44 countries.

“I want to represent Bangladeshi people and express the fact that Bangladeshis have this love for Palestine, and there is this resistance,” Alam told Arab News.

“I think this is the time to express that Bangladeshi people are not spineless: We’ve taken down an autocrat of our own; we want to rid the world of dictators.”

Student protests across Bangladesh last year led to the ousting of former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, who ruled the country for 15 straight years  —  a period marred by crackdowns on the opposition, freedom of expression and press.

Alam was in prison during Hasina’s time in power, following his 2018 interview with Al Jazeera, in which he spoke about police brutality, allegations of government corruption, and criticized the then-ruling party, the Awami League.

The Gaza-bound flotilla is carrying relief supplies for the besieged enclave, where Israeli forces have killed at least 66,000 Palestinians since October 2023. The true death toll is feared to be much higher, as many people have died due to injury and lack of access to healthcare and food — caused by the Israeli military’s destruction of most of Gaza’s infrastructure, and the blocking of medical aid and food.

Although several major Western countries, including the UK, France, and Australia, have officially recognized Palestine in recent weeks, they have not terminated their weapons sales to Israel or intervened to stop the daily deadly attacks and the blockade of Gaza — despite UN investigators concluding that Israel was committing genocide.

“The time for empty rhetoric is over. Diplomacy is a sham. People talking about recognition at a time when people are dying — it’s meaningless. It is time for action. The deaths need to stop. I can only do what I can. I, along with other citizens, are doing what world leaders have failed to do: We will be there, we will stop the siege, we will put our bodies on the line,” Alam said, as he departed to join the flotilla, whose vessels have already reported coming under suspected Israeli attacks in international waters at least a dozen times this month.

“For me, this is one way through which I can express the solidarity of the Bangladeshi people and the fact that the people of the majority world will not put up with this oppression, with this white supremacy, with this colonial rule.”

Alam has consistently condemned Israeli apartheid and the occupation of Palestine. He has also criticized Western governments and institutions for their silence or complicity.

He returned his honorary doctorate from the University of the Arts London in 2022, citing the institution’s partnerships with Israel and its efforts to stifle pro-Palestine student protests.