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Gaza Crisis: Over 376,000 Displaced Return North Amid Escalating Conflict, UN Reports

by Chief editor of world-today-news.com January 29, 2025
written by Chief editor of world-today-news.com

Syria⁤ Offers to Deploy‍ in Border Areas if Israel Withdraws, UN Mediates Tensions

In a high-stakes diplomatic ⁤move, Syria has signaled its readiness to deploy forces in contested border areas, but only if Israel withdraws⁣ its troops. This⁤ growth⁢ comes amid​ escalating tensions in the Golan Heights, a region that has been ⁤a ​flashpoint for decades.

During a meeting in Damascus on⁢ Wednesday, Syrian Foreign Minister⁣ Asaad Al Shaibani and Defense ⁢Minister Marhaf Abu Qasra assured Jean-Pierre Lacroix, the⁢ UN​ Under-Secretary for peace Operations, of Syria’s willingness to cooperate with the United Nations.The Syrian officials ⁤emphasized that their deployment would align with the 1974 mandate, which established a ceasefire⁢ and created the⁤ United Nations Disengagement Observer Force (UNDOF) to oversee the separation‌ of Israeli and Syrian forces.‌

“During the meeting, it was stressed that Syria is willing to cooperate fully with the UN and to cover its positions on the border, in accordance with the 1974 mandate,‍ on condition that the Israeli forces withdraw instantly,” the Syrian ⁣Ministry of Foreign Affairs stated.

The ‌meeting also included Patrick Goucha, the ⁣acting chief of the ​UNDOF mission, who reiterated the UN’s commitment to resolving the issue ‌and restoring stability. The UNDOF expressed its readiness to support demining operations and ‍coordinate efforts to clear war remnants, ensuring a​ safer environment for Syrian civilians.

This diplomatic push follows a controversial declaration by Israeli Defense⁤ Minister Israel katz,who declared that Israeli forces would remain indefinitely on the Syrian side of Mount Hermon in the Golan ‍Heights. Katz had previously described the deployment as temporary, citing security⁤ concerns⁤ during the winter ‍months. ‌

the move has drawn sharp criticism from Arab nations and the UN. Secretary-General António Guterres labeled it a violation of ⁣the 1974 territorial agreement between Israel and Syria. Local residents on the Syrian side have ‌also protested, calling on the international ⁤community to ​halt Israel’s advance. ‍

The Golan Heights has been a contentious region​ as Israel seized control during the 1967 ‌Middle ​East war. Despite international calls for withdrawal, Israel has maintained ‍its presence, further complicating efforts to achieve ‌lasting peace.

Key Developments at ​a Glance

| Event ⁣ ⁣ ‌ | ⁤ Details ‌ ‍⁤ ‌ ⁣ ⁢ ​ |
|————————————|—————————————————————————–|
| Syria’s Offer ⁤ | Will deploy in border areas ​if Israel withdraws, per‍ 1974 mandate. ⁤ |
| Israeli Deployment ‌ | Forces remain indefinitely on Syrian side‍ of Mount Hermon. ​ ‍ ⁤ ‌ ⁤ |
| UN⁣ Involvement ​ | UNDOF‍ commits to demining⁤ and restoring stability. ​ ‍ ​ ⁣|
| International Reaction ⁤ | UN and Arab nations criticize Israel’s move⁢ as a violation of 1974 accord. |

As tensions simmer, the international community watches closely. ⁢Will Israel heed calls for withdrawal, or will the Golan Heights remain a battleground for geopolitical strife? The answer could shape the future of the region. ​

For more ​on the history of the Golan⁤ Heights and its role in Middle Eastern conflicts, explore this ⁣detailed analysis here.

January 29, 2025 0 comments
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World

Israel Bombs Gaza, Killing Over 30 Hours After Truce Announcement | Middle East Conflict Live Updates

by Chief editor of world-today-news.com January 16, 2025
written by Chief editor of world-today-news.com

The Houthis Applaud Palestinian “Historic Firmness” After Gaza ‌Ceasefire​ Agreement

The Houthis, an Iran-aligned group based in Yemen, have hailed the “historic firmness” of ⁤the Palestinian people as the driving force ‌behind the recent ceasefire agreement between‌ Israel and Hamas. In a statement reported by the Yemeni news agency ⁢Saba, ‍Houthi spokesperson Mohammad Abdul ‍Salam emphasized that the “ferocious” Israeli aggression was met with unwavering resilience by the Palestinians, ultimately leading to the truce.

abdul⁣ Salam underscored ⁤that the “sacrifices” and “determination” of the Palestinians, coupled with ‍the deaths⁣ of their “great leaders,” including Hamas figures Ismail Haniya and Yahia Sinwar, compelled the israeli government to accept ‍the ceasefire. “We, in Yemen, thank God for allowing our beloved people and our armed forces to​ assume this obligation by supporting Gaza with massive‍ weekly demonstrations and effective and influential ​military operations from the beginning of the flood ​until the announcement​ of the ceasefire in Gaza,” he stated.

The⁣ Houthi spokesperson also warned that the ‍“continued occupation of ‌Palestine represents a threat to the security and stability​ of the region.” He argued that true peace in the Middle East can only be ⁤achieved with the elimination of what he described as an “emerging entity imposed⁢ by a Western and American force that provides it ⁢with the means to survive at the expense of ‍the Palestinian⁢ people and ⁤the‌ peoples of the region.”

The Houthis have been ⁣actively involved in supporting the Palestinian cause, launching​ dozens of attacks in the ⁣Red Sea and against ‌Israel since the conflict ⁢began in October 2023.These actions have drawn retaliatory strikes from‍ the United​ States, the United Kingdom, and Israel.

Key Points:

| aspect ⁣ | Details ‌ ‌ ⁢ ​ ⁢⁣ ⁢ |
|————————–|—————————————————————————–|
| Ceasefire Agreement | Result of Palestinian “historic⁣ firmness” against Israeli aggression. |
| ‍ Houthi Support ‌| Weekly demonstrations and military operations in⁤ solidarity‍ with Gaza. ⁤ |
| Regional​ threat | Continued occupation of Palestine seen as destabilizing.|
| Retaliatory Strikes | US, UK, and Israel have responded to Houthi attacks. ‍ ‍ ⁤ ⁤|

The Houthis’ unwavering support ‍for ⁤Gaza⁢ highlights their broader geopolitical stance, aligning with Iran’s regional strategy. As the ceasefire takes hold, the group’s rhetoric underscores the deep-rooted tensions that continue to‍ shape the Middle East.

For more insights into the Houthis’ role ‌in the region, ⁢explore their ongoing military operations and their impact on regional⁣ stability.

January 16, 2025 0 comments
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News

Global march on the eve of the anniversary of the Hamas attack

by Chief editor of world-today-news.com October 7, 2024
written by Chief editor of world-today-news.com

Paris., Crowds participated this Sunday in protests, in favor of the Palestinians or in favor of Israel, in commemorative events around the world on the eve of the first anniversary of the Hamas attacks against Israel that sparked the current war in Gaza.

On Saturday there were demonstrations in several European cities, including London, Berlin, Paris and Rome. Other events are scheduled throughout the week, with an expected peak for Monday, the anniversary date.

In Australia, thousands of people marched this Sunday in support of the Palestinians and Lebanon in several cities, and there was also a pro-Israel demonstration in Melbourne, where some people carried signs with portraits of Israelis still held hostage in Gaza.

“We feel like we didn’t do anything to deserve this,” said Jeremy Wenstein, one of the participants. “We are just supporting our brothers and sisters who are fighting in the war.”

In Berlin, near the Brandenburg Gate, hundreds of pro-Srael protesters escorted by police marched behind a banner that read “Against all anti-Semitism.”

With many Israeli flags flying overhead, some Jewish leaders chanted a song about “shalom” (peace), while protesters shouted “Free Gaza from Hamas!” and “Bring them home,” referring to the Israeli hostages.

Security forces raised the alert level in major cities amid concerns that the escalating conflict in the Middle East could inspire new terrorist attacks in Europe or that some of the protests could turn violent.

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni today expressed her “total solidarity” with the police, a day after security forces used tear gas and water cannon to disperse violent protesters in Rome.

Meloni strongly condemned the clashes between a few pro-Palestinian protesters and officers.

During the Angelus from the Vatican, Pope Francis made a new call for peace “on all fronts” and urged his audience not to forget the many hostages still held in Gaza, calling for “their immediate release.”

The Pope called for a day of prayer and fasting this Monday, the first anniversary of the attack.

On October 7 of last year, Hamas launched a surprise attack against Israel, killing 1,200 Israelis and taking 250 people hostage. This sparked a war that has devastated much of Gaza.

More than 41,000 Palestinians have died since then in Gaza, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health, which does not differentiate between combatants and civilians. He says more than half are women and children.

Nearly 100 Israeli hostages remain in Gaza, and fewer than 70 are believed to be alive.

Since the start of the fighting, Israel has exchanged fire with the Lebanese political-paramilitary group Hezbollah, and more recently Israel launched an incursion into Lebanon to confront the militants.


#Global #march #eve #anniversary #Hamas #attack
– 2024-10-07 00:44:00

October 7, 2024 0 comments
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The trail of the Israeli offensive in the West Bank: “The feeling is that they are looking for blood” | International

by Chief editor of world-today-news.com August 30, 2024
written by Chief editor of world-today-news.com

The Israeli soldiers and tanks have just withdrawn. And everyone, from the neighbours sweeping up the broken windows of their shops or fixing the windows of their cars to the militiamen who – with an M16 rifle on their shoulders and a headband with the legend “There is no god but Allah” – dare to go out into the streets again amid the admiring gaze of the little ones, agree on one idea: never has the Israeli army entered here for so long (32 hours) or in such an aggressive manner since October 7, 2023, when raids and deaths in the West Bank skyrocketed in parallel to the Gaza war.

The elderly Ahmed illustrates this by the twisted door of his building, which the soldiers blew up in order to enter and handcuff him: the missile against a mosque located dozens of meters away “sounded softer than in the videos of Gaza, but closer.” It is not Gaza, but Fara’a, a refugee camp next to the city of Tubas and one of the three points in the north of the West Bank where the Israeli army began this Wednesday one of its largest offensives in the West Bank since the Second Intifada (2000-2005), which has already claimed 18 lives. Fara’a has been the small game: a relatively brief and localized operation, compared to Jenin and Tulkarem, where the troops are expected to remain for several days, supported by drones and armored vehicles.

Hassan stands in front of the door of his house in the Fara’a refugee camp that was blown up by Israeli soldiers.Antonio Pita

Jenin is, in fact, the city with a hospital where Hazim Na’ya thought of taking her brother when she found him wounded. Three drone shots had hit the first floor of their building and the roof. As is usual in the Middle East, the family lives in the same building and Hazim lives on the third floor. After the bombing, she found herself with the rubble blocking her way and “in the middle of the dust and in the dark” (the army cut off the electricity as soon as the raid began) trying to reach her brother by following his cries of: “Help, I’m wounded!”

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“When I saw him, he was wounded in the chest, but all he was saying was: ‘The children, the children! They were upstairs!’ We went up to the roof and understood that it had been a direct hit, because Murad [de 14 años] He was headless. Then we had to pick up the parts. Mohamed [su hermano dos años mayor] “He was also dead. I couldn’t do anything there anymore, so I focused on getting my brother to the hospital. I thought about Jenin, but it was surrounded. There is only one ambulance here and it couldn’t get there because the soldiers opened fire when it came close. We waited for it for two and a half hours. My sister is a nurse and she was able to take care of him a little,” she recalls.

Knowing what’s happening outside means understanding what’s going to happen inside, so don’t miss anything.

KEEP READINGMural with images of the “martyrs” in the Fara’a refugee camp in the northern West Bank.Antonio Pita

In view of the situation, Na’ya put her brother on her back and walked him to the ambulance, which took an hour and a half to reach Nablus “on a secondary road full of rocks.” She shows a video on her mobile phone of her carrying her brother in the dark and another of him bleeding from the head, but she does not want to share them. “No one has to see what I saw,” she adds. In addition to her two nephews, a third has been left with such serious injuries that “it depends on God’s mercy,” she adds, hoping that she will not have to add words to make her situation understood.

He tells this in front of a municipal hall that normally hosts weddings or other events where the camp celebrates happiness together. Today, more than a hundred men with different faces come to offer their condolences to the relatives. Because his brother is so weak, Hazim greets the neighbours who shake his hand with the usual formula: “May God have mercy on them.” Paradoxically, he says, the troops used the place on Wednesday for interrogations.

View of the Fara’a refugee camp in the northern West Bank.Antonio Pita

They are four teenagers, “martyrs of Zionist terrorism,” as the banner in Arabic that some friends place at the entrance of the hall. It does not bear the logo of any armed faction, but of the Palestine Liberation Organization, to which Islamic Jihad, the main target of the Israeli offensive, does not belong. To their relatives, they were just kids playing games; to Israel, they were terrorists. Whatever the case, children in Palestinian refugee camps take up arms at ages when most only fight in video games. And, in the middle of the streets raised by the bulldozers and gunshot wounds at a hospital run by the United Nations refugee agency, do not appear likely to change.

In front of the blackened facade of the bombed-out mosque, two militants suddenly emerge with their rifles. “Since the war in Gaza began, the feeling is that they are not coming for someone, but for blood,” says one of them. “This was the most aggressive attack. Everything that was forbidden to use is now allowed. But they don’t realise that the more aggressive they are, the more motivated people here are to join the resistance,” says another, fingering his magazine. Next to them, a mural with drawings commemorates the “martyrs” of previous Israeli raids with graffiti to underline that their memory spans generations.

A militiaman with his rifle, after the withdrawal of Israeli troops from Fara’a.Antonio Pita

Hassan is philosophical about spending eight hours handcuffed together with his two nephews because, he says, being 63 years old, they handcuffed him with his hands in front (not behind, like his relatives), hardly tightening (that is why he was able to take them off first when the soldiers left without taking them off) and they allowed him to go to the bathroom. The nephews got the worst of it: “The first thing the soldiers did when they came in was separate the men from the women and children, and take all the mobile phones. They asked my nephew for the PIN and he said he didn’t know it, that it was his wife’s. They made me call his father and told him: ‘It would be a shame if you didn’t give it to us and we beat the kids until we didn’t care. The result will be the same.’”

They got it, obviously, and he says that they found a photo on the mobile phone of one of his nephews posing with a long gun next to militiamen. “They hit him pretty hard there,” he adds, although they did not arrest him. What worries him most now is that they blew up the entrance door to his building and he barely earns between 30 and 100 shekels a day (between eight and 25 euros) from selling the cucumbers he picks.

Electronics store in Fara’a, after the Israeli withdrawal.Antonio Pita

The militants leave within minutes: a military helicopter appears in the sky and a rumour circulates that the army is massing troops at a nearby checkpoint, which could indicate an imminent return to the camp, which does not happen. The checkpoint is where an endless queue of vehicles awaits the nonchalant search of two Israeli soldiers who, like the militants in Fara’a, are barely out of their teens. A barrier cuts off the quickest route to the camp and the military gives the order not to turn onto an extension of Highway 60, opened last year under pressure from settler leaders, because of the danger of passing through the Palestinian village of Huwara. Today it is empty because the settlers in the area (particularly radical ones) continue to cross through Huwara to – as they say – “show a Jewish presence”.

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August 30, 2024 0 comments
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News

UN halts aid operations in Gaza

by Chief editor of world-today-news.com August 28, 2024
written by Chief editor of world-today-news.com

United Nations. United Nations humanitarian aid operations in Gaza were halted on Monday after Israel issued new evacuation orders for Deir Al-Balah in the central Gaza Strip late on Sunday, a senior UN official said.

“We cannot deliver today under the conditions we are in,” said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

“We are not leaving (Gaza) because people there need us,” the official said. “We are trying to balance the needs of the population with the need for protection and security of UN staff.”

The official said UN staff deployed in the area had been instructed to try to find a way to continue operating.

Israel receives more than 50 thousand tons of military equipment and ammunition

The Israeli Defense Ministry said today that since the start of its military operations in the Gaza Strip in October last year, the country has received more than 50,000 tons of military equipment and ammunition.

“The equipment purchased and transported includes armoured vehicles, ammunition, personal protective equipment and medical equipment,” the ministry said.

Military transports have been “crucial to maintaining the operational capabilities of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) during the ongoing war” in the Palestinian enclave and against Hezbollah along the Israel-Lebanon border, he added.

The ministry did not specify which countries the weapons were purchased from, although Israeli government sources have previously said most of its weapons and ammunition were acquired in the United States and Europe.

The death toll from ongoing Israeli attacks on the Gaza Strip has risen to more than 40,400 Palestinians, according to Gaza health authorities.


#halts #aid #operations #Gaza
– 2024-08-28 20:59:53

August 28, 2024 0 comments
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World

Gaza war spills into Chicago Democratic convention | US Elections

by Chief editor of world-today-news.com August 19, 2024
written by Chief editor of world-today-news.com

The Democratic National Convention, which is being held from Monday to Thursday to seal Kamala Harris’s presidential candidacy, emphasizes the idea of ​​unity even in the name of its venue: the United Center in Chicago. But that image of harmony around the vice president was fractured just a few blocks away: more than a hundred groups from the left wing of the party had called for a large protest this Monday to demonstrate against the war in Gaza. On the eve of the inauguration, a thousand people had already marched through the streets of the Windy City with Palestinian flags to demand “the closure of the convention.”

The war in Gaza is one of the issues that has most painfully divided the Democratic Party for months. On the one hand, progressive and Arab-American groups point to a Palestinian death toll that has already exceeded 40,000 to accuse President Joe Biden of genocide for his pro-Israeli positions and, by extension, the rest of his administration, including Harris. On the other, pro-Israeli groups protest against the use of the term “genocide” and consider that Israel is only responding to the Hamas attacks on October 7. And, in the middle, the rest of the party, concerned about the course of events in the Middle East and hoping that the dispute does not harm the image of Democratic unity or their electoral prospects against Donald Trump’s Republicans on November 5.

While Biden was the Democratic presidential candidate, the war in Gaza was one of the great ghosts that haunted him during the campaign and one of the reasons for his decline in voting intention among young people and progressive groups. Every presidential rally was marked by protest cries or pro-Palestinian flags, and protest voting was exercised during the Democratic primaries in several states, especially Michigan and Minnesota, with a high proportion of Arab-American populations. There, nearly 800,000 people chose to vote “undeclared,” a form of blank vote. These voters elected about thirty delegates who are not obliged to vote for Biden or Harris, out of the total of 5,000 attending the Democratic caucus in Chicago.

Initially, there was a lull in the protests after Kamala Harris replaced her as the Democratic front-runner: the vice president was perceived as more willing to listen to pro-Palestinian demands. The truce was short-lived. These voices have been heard again at rallies: in the past two weeks, the candidate has interrupted her campaign speeches on more than one occasion to address these activists. Now they can also be heard within the convention itself.

Pro-Israel protesters at the Democratic Convention in Chicago on Monday. Frank Franklin II (AP)

The thirty or so “undeclared” delegates, grouped together in what they call themselves “Delegates Against Genocide,” are demanding an immediate ceasefire and an arms embargo against Israel. This group had unsuccessfully demanded a space in the party’s speech programme and the inclusion of the embargo in the official electoral programme. They now say they will use their right to freedom of expression to demand an end to the war during the events planned for the four-day convention, which includes a ceremonial vote to symbolically confirm Harris’ nomination as the Democratic candidate on Tuesday.

Knowing what’s happening outside means understanding what’s going to happen inside, so don’t miss anything.

KEEP READING

“They are delegates of the Democratic Party and the hope is that they will be respected as delegates. In the same way, we intend to respect the development of the work of the Democratic National Convention,” said Layla Elabed, co-founder of the Undeclared National Movement, on the eve of the conclave.

Since Harris was nominated as the Democratic candidate, party representatives have been engaged in talks with pro-Palestinian organizations in an attempt to avoid showing open fractures during the convention or divisions that could harm the party’s electoral prospects. During a visit to Michigan for an election event, the vice president spoke briefly with Elabed and other leaders of that movement.

Other senior Democrats, including Harris’ campaign manager Julie Rodriguez-Chavez, have traveled to Michigan to hear from the Arab-American community.

In a nod to the two wings of the party with opposing views on the war, convention organizers have included family members of American hostages held in Gaza in the speaking slots. The second gentleman, Vice President Kamala Harris’s husband Douglas Emhoff, is scheduled to speak about his Judaism in his address to delegates on Tuesday. And on Monday, the Undeclared National Movement has announced, a convention panel will address Palestinian rights.

A pro-Palestinian protester during the National Convention in Chicago on Monday.Eduardo Munoz (REUTERS)

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August 19, 2024 0 comments
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