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Spain probes steelmaker bosses for alleged trading with Israeli arms firm

Spain probes steelmaker bosses for alleged trading with Israeli arms firm
Smoke rises during an Israeli military operation in Gaza City, as seen from the central Gaza Strip, September 28, 2025. (Reuters)
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Updated 2 min 43 sec ago

Spain probes steelmaker bosses for alleged trading with Israeli arms firm

Spain probes steelmaker bosses for alleged trading with Israeli arms firm
  • Country's top criminal court investigates Sidenor executives for alleged complicity in crimes against humanity or genocide
  • Spain stopped exchanging weapons with Israel after the Gaza conflict started in 2023

MADRID: Spain’s top criminal court said Friday it had opened an investigation for alleged complicity in crimes against humanity or genocide into executives at the steelmaker Sidenor for trading with an Israeli arms company.
Spain, one of the fiercest critics of the Israeli offensive in Gaza, said it had stopped exchanging weapons with the country after the conflict started with the October 7, 2023 Hamas attack on Israel.
The embargo formally became law this month as part of measures aiming to stop what Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez calls a “genocide” in the devastated Palestinian territory.
Sidenor’s chairman Jose Antonio Jainaga and two other executives are being investigated for alleged smuggling and complicity in crimes against humanity or genocide for selling steel to Israel Military Industries, the Audiencia Nacional court said.
The Spanish firm sold the metal without requesting the government’s permission or registering the transaction, and knew the material “was going to be used for the manufacturing of weapons,” the court said in a statement.
It said the company itself was not being investigated because of whistleblower employees who contributed to the complaint and helped “prevent the continuation of the allegedly criminal activity.”
The investigating judge has summoned the three suspects to testify on November 12 in the case, initiated after a complaint by a pro-Palestinian association.
Sidenor did not respond to an AFP request for comment.
The 2023 Hamas attack resulted in the deaths of 1,221 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.
Palestinian militants also abducted around 250 hostages, with the remaining captives still alive returned during a fragile truce that began this month.
Israel’s retaliatory campaign has killed more than 68,000 people in Gaza, mainly civilians, according to the health ministry in the Hamas-run territory, figures the UN considers credible.


WHO pleads for sick Gazans to be allowed to leave

Updated 23 sec ago

WHO pleads for sick Gazans to be allowed to leave

WHO pleads for sick Gazans to be allowed to leave
WHO has supported the medical evacuation of nearly 7,800 patients out of Gaza
“All medical corridors need to be opened,” Peeperkorn said

GENEVA: The UN’s health agency pleaded Friday for thousands of people in desperate need of medical care to be allowed to leave Gaza, in what it said would be a “game-changer.”
The World Health Organization has supported the medical evacuation of nearly 7,800 patients out of the Gaza Strip since the war with Israel began two years ago — and estimates there are 15,000 people currently needing treatment outside the Palestinian territory.
But a US-brokered ceasefire that came into effect on October 10 has not sped up the process — the WHO has been able to evacuate only 41 critical patients since then.
Rik Peeperkorn, the WHO’s representative in the Palestinian territories, called for all crossings out of Gaza into Israel and Egypt to be opened up during the ceasefire — not only for the entry of aid but for medical evacuations too.
“All medical corridors need to be opened,” he said, particularly to hospitals in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, as happened routinely before the war.
“It is vital and is the most cost-effective route. If that route opened, it would really be a... game-changer.”
Speaking via video link from Jerusalem, he told journalists in Geneva that two evacuations were planned for next week, but he wanted them every day and said the WHO was ready to take “a minimum of 50 patients per day.”
At the current rate, he said evacuating the 15,000 people needing treatment — including 4,000 children — would drag on for a decade or so.
The WHO says more than 700 people have died waiting for medical evacuation since the war began.
The UN health agency has called for more countries to step up and accept Gazan patients. While over 20 countries have taken patients, only a handful have done so in large numbers.
Peeperkorn said only a fraction of Gaza’s health system remained in service — just 14 of 36 hospitals are even partially functional for a population topping two million.

Tunisia olive oil output to hit record 500,000 tons in 2026, producers head says

Tunisia olive oil output to hit record 500,000 tons in 2026, producers head says
Updated 15 min 23 sec ago

Tunisia olive oil output to hit record 500,000 tons in 2026, producers head says

Tunisia olive oil output to hit record 500,000 tons in 2026, producers head says
  • Harvest is expected to be around 500,000 tons due to good rainfall

TUNIS: Tunisia’s olive oil production this season is likely to increase by about 50 percent from last year to a record 500,000 tons, which will provide support to the country’s fragile economy and bolster its top export industry.
Najah Saidi Hamed, head of the Olive Producers Chamber, told Reuters that the harvest is expected to be around 500,000 tons due to good rainfall this season.
The record output would consolidate Tunisia’s place among the world’s top olive oil producers, a commodity that has seen growing interest from both consumers and investors.


Rubio says more countries ready to recognize Israel

Rubio says more countries ready to recognize Israel
Updated 23 min 37 sec ago

Rubio says more countries ready to recognize Israel

Rubio says more countries ready to recognize Israel
  • “We have a lot of countries that want to join” the accords, he said
  • “I think there are some countries you could probably add right now if you wanted to”

KIRYAT GAT, Israel: US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said Friday that more countries are ready to normalize relations with Israel, but the decision would await a broader regional agreement.
Rubio, who was touring a US-led multinational center in Israel aimed at coordinating a ceasefire in Gaza, said that a sustained end to the war would encourage more countries to join the so-called Abraham Accords, under which a number of Arab countries normalized ties with Israel in 2020.
“We have a lot of countries that want to join” the accords, he said.
“I think there are some countries you could probably add right now if you wanted to, but we want to do a big thing about it, and so we’re working on it,” Rubio told reporters on a visit to Israel.
“So, I think that would be great, and I think that could be a byproduct of achieving some of this,” he said, referring to the Gaza ceasefire.
Rubio did not mention specific countries, saying that they needed to address their domestic audiences first, but said “there’s some bigger than others.”
ֱ had been in talks with the United States on normalizing ties with Israel, in what would be a historic milestone as the kingdom is home to Islam’s two holiest sites.
But the kingdom stepped back on normalization after war broke out in Gaza following Hamas’s attack on Israel in October 2023.
Both US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu see the Abraham Accords, which saw the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Morocco forge ties with Israel, as a crowning achievement.


Wife of jailed Palestinian leader Marwan Barghouti asks Trump to seek his release

Wife of jailed Palestinian leader Marwan Barghouti asks Trump to seek his release
Updated 24 October 2025

Wife of jailed Palestinian leader Marwan Barghouti asks Trump to seek his release

Wife of jailed Palestinian leader Marwan Barghouti asks Trump to seek his release
  • The wife of high profile Palestinian prisoner Marwan Barghouti, Fadwa Barghouti, appealed to US President Donald Trump to help release the popular leader from his Israeli jail, her son Arab told AFP

RAMALLAH: The wife of high profile Palestinian prisoner Marwan Barghouti, Fadwa Barghouti, appealed to US President Donald Trump to help release the popular leader from his Israeli jail, her son Arab told AFP.
“Mr President, a genuine partner awaits you — one who can help fulfil the dream we share of just and lasting peace in the region. For the sake of freedom for the Palestinian people and peace for all future generations, help release Marwan Barghouti,” lawyer Fadwa Barghouti said in a statement.
Marwan Barghouti, from Hamas’s historic rivals Fatah, was among the Palestinian prisoners Hamas had wanted to see released as part of the Gaza ceasefire deal, according to Egyptian state-linked media.


Turkiye in talks with Qatar and Oman to buy used Eurofighter jets, Erdogan says

Turkiye in talks with Qatar and Oman to buy used Eurofighter jets, Erdogan says
Updated 24 October 2025

Turkiye in talks with Qatar and Oman to buy used Eurofighter jets, Erdogan says

Turkiye in talks with Qatar and Oman to buy used Eurofighter jets, Erdogan says
  • President Recep Tayyip Erdogan confirmed the talks in comments released Friday as part of a plan to strengthen Turkiye’s fleet until its domestically developed KAAN fighter jet becomes operational

ANKARA: Turkiye is negotiating with Qatar and Oman to acquire used Eurofighter Typhoon fighter jets as part of its effort to bolster its air force capabilities, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said in comments released Friday.
Turkiye aims to purchase dozens of Eurofighters and other advanced jets as a stopgap measure to strengthen its fleet until its domestically developed fifth-generation KAAN fighter jet becomes operational.
In July, Turkiye and United Kingdom signed a preliminary agreement for the sale of Eurofighter Typhoons, which are produced by a consortium made up of the UK, Germany, Italy and Spain. However, reports indicate that the Turkish government is also seeking to source secondhand jets from Gulf nations to meet its immediate needs.
“We discussed the ongoing negotiations with the Qatari and Omani sides regarding the purchase of Eurofighter warplanes,” Erdogan told journalists Thursday during a flight returning from a Gulf tour that included Qatar and Oman.
“The talks on this technically detailed matter are progressing positively,” he said, according to a transcript released Friday.
During his three-day tour of Kuwait, Qatar, and Oman, Erdogan oversaw the signing of several agreements, including in the defense sector, his office said, without providing details.
Turkiye, a member of NATO, is also pursuing the country’s return into the US-led F-35 fighter jet program, from which it was removed in 2019 following its acquisition of Russian-made S-400 missile defense systems. The US had cited security risks to the F-35 program.
Erdogan raised the issue of Turkiye’s reentry into the program during a meeting with US President Donald Trump at the White House last month.
Turkish officials have stated that the country plans to acquire a total of 120 fighter jets — 40 Eurofighters, 40 US-made F-16s and 40 F-35s — as a transitional fleet until the KAAN is expected to enter service in 2028 at the earliest.