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Iran sees the ‘necessary will’ to resolve prisoner issue with France

Iran sees the ‘necessary will’ to resolve prisoner issue with France
This handout picture provided by Iran's Ministry of Foreign Affairs shows Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi (R) meeting with ambassadors and diplomatic representatives in Tehran on July 12, 2025.(File/AFP)
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Iran sees the ‘necessary will’ to resolve prisoner issue with France

Iran sees the ‘necessary will’ to resolve prisoner issue with France
  • Iran has accused France of arbitrarily detaining Mahdieh Esfandiari, an Iranian student in Lyon arrested earlier this year over anti-Israel posts on social media

DUBAI: Both Tehran and Paris have the necessary will to resolve the “issue” of prisoners, Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei said on Monday, a week after an Iranian court gave heavy prison sentences to two French citizens.
“We are following the issue seriously. We believe both sides have the necessary will to resolve this issue,” Baghaei said when asked at a weekly press conference about the possibility of a prisoner swap.
Cecile Kohler and her partner Jacques Paris are the only two French citizens being held in Iran and have been detained since 2022.

Iran has accused France of arbitrarily detaining Mahdieh Esfandiari, an Iranian student living in the French city of Lyon who was arrested this year over anti-Israel social media posts.


Hamas meets with Gaza truce mediators in Cairo

Hamas meets with Gaza truce mediators in Cairo
Updated 16 min 50 sec ago

Hamas meets with Gaza truce mediators in Cairo

Hamas meets with Gaza truce mediators in Cairo
  • Hamas delegation would discuss ‘the dozens of airstrikes that killed dozens in the Gaza Strip’ on Sunday
  • Egypt and Qatar have long played a mediating role in indirect talks between Israel and Hamas

CAIRO: A Hamas delegation was to meet Qatari and Egyptian officials in Cairo on Monday to discuss the continuation of a fragile Gaza ceasefire, a source close to negotiations said.
The Israeli military struck dozens of Hamas positions across Gaza on Sunday after the militants killed two of its soldiers and Israel accused the group of “a blatant violation” of the truce.
Hamas denied any knowledge of an attack and in turn asserted Israel had broken the ceasefire deal in place since 10 October.
The source said that the delegation, headed by Hamas official Khalil Al-Hayya, would discuss “the dozens of airstrikes that killed dozens in the Gaza Strip” on Sunday.
Egypt and Qatar have long played a mediating role in indirect talks between Israel and Hamas, aiming to bring about an end to the war sparked by Hamas’ unprecedented attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023.
Hamas’ delegation will also meet Egyptian officials to discuss an upcoming intra-Palestinian dialogue hosted by Egypt and aiming “to unify the Palestinian factions,” the source said.
Egypt has hosted several such meetings between Palestinian factions, notably including the two main rival political movements, Islamist movement Hamas and Fatah, whose leader Mahmud Abbas is also president of the Palestinian Authority.
Hamas and Fatah have been opposed for decades, all the more so since the former’s violent ousting of the latter from the Gaza Strip in 2007.
“The dialogue aims to unify the Palestinian factions and discuss key issues, including the future of the Gaza Strip and the formation of the independent committee of experts that will assume management of the Strip,” the source said.
Under the US-brokered ceasefire deal an independent transitional authority, run by technocrats, has been proposed to administer Gaza.
Hamas said it did not wish to govern Gaza after two years of war, but its forces have moved back into areas from which Israel has withdrawn since the ceasefire.
Several Palestinian political officials recently raised the possibility of a group of unaffiliated Palestinian managers to run the Palestinian territory.
Another informed source said that “mediators’ contacts and efforts succeeded last night in restoring calm and implementing the ceasefire agreement in Gaza.”


Russia prepared to expand ties with Iran in all areas, the Kremlin says

Russia prepared to expand ties with Iran in all areas, the Kremlin says
Updated 33 min 41 sec ago

Russia prepared to expand ties with Iran in all areas, the Kremlin says

Russia prepared to expand ties with Iran in all areas, the Kremlin says
  • Putin and his Iranian counterpart Masoud Pezeshkian signed a strategic partnership agreement in January

MOSCOW: Russia is prepared to expand cooperation with Iran in all areas, the Kremlin said on Monday.
Moscow has close relations with Tehran and condemned US and Israeli strikes on Iranian nuclear sites earlier this year that were carried out with the stated aim of preventing Tehran from acquiring a nuclear bomb. Iran denies building a nuclear weapon.
Asked by reporters how Russia saw the development of events around Iran’s nuclear program and if Moscow would deepen ties with Tehran, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said:
“Russia is definitely ready to expand cooperation with Iran in all areas. Iran is our partner, and our relations are developing very dynamically.”
Peskov said European countries were putting “excessive pressure” on Iran in regards to negotiations over its nuclear program, adding that the situation was “very complicated.”
An envoy for Russian President Vladimir Putin is set to meet with Iran’s Supreme National Security Council Secretary Ali Larijani later on Monday, less than a week after Larijani
met with the Kremlin leader and handed him a message from Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
Putin and his Iranian counterpart Masoud Pezeshkian signed a strategic partnership agreement in January, although the pact does not contain a mutual defense clause. Moscow says it legally supplies Tehran with military equipment, while Iran has provided Russia with drones to use in its war in Ukraine.
Russian state nuclear energy giant Rosatom signed a $25-billion deal last month with Iran to build four nuclear power plants in the country, which suffers from electricity shortages and currently has only one operating nuclear power plant, built by Russia in the southern city of Bushehr.


Israel’s Kerem Shalom border crossing to Gaza reopens for aid: military official

Israel’s Kerem Shalom border crossing to Gaza reopens for aid: military official
Updated 20 October 2025

Israel’s Kerem Shalom border crossing to Gaza reopens for aid: military official

Israel’s Kerem Shalom border crossing to Gaza reopens for aid: military official
  • Following a decision at the political level, aid flowed through Kerem Shalom ‘in full compliance with the signed agreement’

JERUSALEM: Israel’s Kerem Shalom border crossing into Gaza reopened for aid on Monday, an Israeli military official said, a day after Israel closed it, accusing Hamas of violating an ongoing ceasefire.
Following a decision at the political level, aid flowed through Kerem Shalom “in full compliance with the signed agreement,” the official said, adding that Gaza’s Rafah crossing to Egypt “will remain closed until further notice.”
Hamas has denied breaching the truce agreement and in turn accused Israel of violating the deal.


After war, Israel must ‘find a way to help’ Palestinians: US envoy

After war, Israel must ‘find a way to help’ Palestinians: US envoy
Updated 20 October 2025

After war, Israel must ‘find a way to help’ Palestinians: US envoy

After war, Israel must ‘find a way to help’ Palestinians: US envoy
  • Jared Kushner returned to Israel on Monday alongside Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff for a visit

WASHINGTON: Israel should help the Palestinians “thrive” if it seeks regional integration after the Gaza war is over, said US envoy Jared Kushner, who has been involved in mediation efforts for a ceasefire.

“The biggest message that we’ve tried to convey to the Israeli leadership now is that now that the war is over, if you want to integrate Israel with the broader Middle East, you have to find a way to help the Palestinian people thrive and do better,” Kushner told CBS News in an interview that aired on Sunday.

The interview preceded fresh Israeli strikes on the Gaza Strip following Israel’s accusation that militant group Hamas had violated the truce by attacking troops.

Kushner, who is also US President Donald Trump’s son-in-law, helped broker landmark deals during his first term in office that saw several Arab governments normalize ties with Israel.

In the CBS interview, he said that the situation remained “very difficult,” but he was looking for “joint security and economic opportunity” to guarantee that Israelis and Palestinians “can live peacefully side by side in a durable way.”

On Monday, Kushner returned to Israel alongside Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff for a visit that is expected to see them meet with Israeli government officials.

Referring to the situation in Gaza since the October 10 ceasefire began, Kushner said: “Hamas right now is doing exactly what you would expect a terrorist organization to do, which is to try to reconstitute and take back their positions.”

But he argued that if “a viable alternative” emerges, “Hamas will fail, and Gaza will not be a threat to Israel in the future.”

When asked about the prospect of a Palestinian state – which most governments worldwide now recognize but Israel and the United States do not – Kushner said it was “too early to tell.”


Civilians in Sudan’s El Fasher cower from drones as siege worsens hunger

Civilians in Sudan’s El Fasher cower from drones as siege worsens hunger
Updated 20 October 2025

Civilians in Sudan’s El Fasher cower from drones as siege worsens hunger

Civilians in Sudan’s El Fasher cower from drones as siege worsens hunger
  • The conflict, which erupted from an internal power struggle, has triggered ethnic killings, drawn in foreign powers and created a massive humanitarian crisis
  • More than one million have fled El Fasher during an 18-month siege by the RSF, according to the UN, but it has become dangerous and expensive to leave

Residents of Sudan’s besieged city of El Fasher have been taking refuge in underground bunkers to try to protect themselves from drones and shells after intensifying attacks on displacement shelters, clinics and mosques.
Famine-stricken El Fasher is the Sudanese army’s last holdout in the vast, western region of Darfur as it battles the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) in a civil war that has raged for two-and-a-half years.
The conflict, which erupted from an internal power struggle, has triggered ethnic killings, drawn in foreign powers and created a massive humanitarian crisis.
The army has been gaining ground elsewhere in Sudan, but Darfur is the RSF’s stronghold where it aims to base a parallel government, potentially cementing a geographical splintering of the country.
More than one million have fled El Fasher during an 18-month siege by the RSF, according to the UN, but it has become dangerous and expensive to leave. An estimated quarter of a million civilians remain, and there are fears of mass reprisals if the city falls.

STRUGGLE TO AVOID DRONE STRIKES
Many of those still in the city have dug bunkers for protection after repeated strikes on civilians, according to more than a dozen residents reached by phone as well as footage obtained and verified by Reuters.
The residents described avoiding drones by limiting movements and large gatherings during daytime, and not using lights after dark.
“We can only bury people at night, or very early in the morning,” said Mohyaldeen Abdallah, a local journalist. “It’s become normal for us.”
Five residents said drones have followed civilians into areas where they gather, such as clinics. “When you’re walking around you stick to the wall like a gecko so the drone won’t see you go inside,” said Dr. Ezzeldin Asow, head of Al-Fashir’s now-abandoned Southern Hospital.
At one shelter in Al-Fashir’s Abu Taleb school at least 18 people were killed in the week from September 30 by bombardment, a drone attack and an RSF raid, said Abdallah, who visited the site before and after the attacks.
Footage verified by Reuters showed the school’s shattered ceilings and scarred walls. On the school grounds, it showed a dead body lying outside a shipping container buried in the ground to create a shelter, with sandbags around the entrance.
Neither the army nor the RSF responded to written requests or calls seeking comment on the incidents at Abu Taleb school and elsewhere in Al-Fashir.
Residents captured in the footage blamed the RSF for attacks. Reuters could not independently verify who was responsible.
“They don’t distinguish between civilians and soldiers, if you’re human they fire at you,” Khadiga Musa, head of the North Darfur health ministry, told Reuters by phone from El Fasher.
The RSF and its allies have been blamed for waves of ethnically driven violence in Darfur during the war, with the US determining last year that they had committed genocide. Its leadership denies ordering such attacks and says rogue soldiers will face justice.
In a statement on October 12, the RSF said Al-Fashir was “devoid of civilians.” The army and allied self-defense fighters and former rebels had “turned hospitals and mosques into military barracks and rocket launchers,” the RSF said.
The Sudanese army, which has denied responsibility for civilian deaths, has also used drones in El Fasher.

REPEATED ATTACKS ON SECOND SHELTER
On October 10-11 another displacement shelter, Dar Al-Arqam, located on university grounds that also house a mosque, suffered repeated strikes. The center’s manager, Hashim Bosh, recorded 57 dead including 17 children, among them three babies.
“They were aiming at the mosque. They attacked right after Friday prayer,” he said in a voice note to Reuters, describing the first strike. A second strike, he said, came from a drone that followed people running to another shipping container used as a shelter.
The next morning four more shells hit during dawn prayers, Bosh said. Residents interviewed in footage taken by local activists and verified by Reuters confirmed the attacks.
The footage also showed what appear to be 10 bodies covered in sheets at the site, a child-sized body covered by a small prayer rug, and several bodies, mangled and uncovered, inside the container.
Satellite imagery published by the Yale Humanitarian Research Lab (HRL) on October 16 showed six impact points on Dar Al-Arqam’s buildings.

BODIES SCATTERED IN THE STREETS
According to HRL, as of October 4 the RSF had extended earthen barriers to almost fully encircle El Fasher.
As a result, activists warned last week that even ambaz, an animal feed people had resorted to eating, had become unavailable.
Activists from a local network, the El Fasher Resistance Committee, say on average 30 people a day are dying from violence, hunger, and disease.
So many bodies were scattered in the streets that it was a health risk, according to the Abu Shouk Emergency Response Room, a volunteer network.
Those who spoke to Reuters said they feared being kidnapped, robbed, or killed if they left.
“El Fasher is basically lifeless,” said a member of the Abu Shouk Emergency Response Room who only gave his first name, Mohamed. “But leaving is even more dangerous than staying.”