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Hamas says no prisoner swap deal with Israel under bombardment

Israel Hostages Hamas

Khalil al-Hayya, a member of the Hamas’ Political Bureau, made the remarks in an interview with Al Jazeera television network on Sunday.

“The resistance rejects the aggression of the enemy, which must be stopped before we can discuss prisoner exchanges,” he said.

“The issue of prisoner exchange is closed until the cessation of the war,” al-Hayya asserted, reiterating, “We want an end to the aggression. Then we will start reconstruction and construction [of Gaza], and after that we will talk about the prisoners.”

Around 19,000 people have been killed in the Israeli regime’s onslaught on Gaza that began on October 7 following an operation by the territory’s resistance movements, dubbed Operation al-Aqsa Storm.

Last month, as part of a week-long humanitarian ceasefire brokered by Qatar and Egypt, fighting was paused and humanitarian aid entered Gaza, which is also under a complete siege by Israel.

The deal enabled the two sides to exchange 240 Palestinian abductees held by Israel and 105 captives held in Gaza, including 81 Israelis and 24 foreigners.

Israel claims that about 137 captives are still in Gaza, while there are thought to be 7,000 Palestinian abductees in Israeli prisons, many of whom have been detained without charge.

Elsewhere in his remarks, al-Hayya stressed that Gaza’s resistance groups are capable of withstanding the Israeli aggression and inflicting more losses on the enemy.

“The resistance is fine, steadfast, and capable of inflicting more losses on the enemy in terms of personnel and equipment,” he continued, adding, “The enemy will not be left in peace, neither in Gaza [City], nor in Khan Yunis, nor in the north, nor in any other area across the Gaza Strip.”

The Hamas official reaffirmed that the final goal sought by the Palestinian resistance groups is “the liberation of our land and our sanctities.”

Pointing to the Israeli regime’s allegations that it seeks to end the rule and presence of Hamas in Gaza, al-Hayya stressed, “[What comes] next in Gaza is a victory [for the resistance] and whoever thinks [about Gaza] without Hamas is thinking of an illusion.”

Western companies lost $103 billion from Russia exits: Report

Within days of Russian troops entering Ukraine last February, a host of Western corporations began pulling out of the Russian market. Ukrainian activists and officials hounded those who refused to leave, and US and EU sanctions prohibited the export of goods from, and import of raw materials to, Russia.

Companies that sold up their Russian operations lost a combined $103 billion, the New York Times daily reported on Sunday, citing financial reports. These firms have also handed over at least $1.25 billion in exit taxes to the Russian state, the newspaper added.

As of last March, Western companies looking to sell their assets in Russia such sales must have the sales approved by a Russian government commission, which often works to ensure that local buyers snap up these assets at bargain basement prices.

Citing the minutes from a commission meeting, the Times claimed that the commission rejected the sale of factories owned by Honeywell, an American electronics firm, until the company agreed to sell at a 50% discount. As of earlier this year, companies are legally bound to sell their assets at this 50% markdown.

“In all, [Russian President Vladimr] Putin has overseen one of the biggest transfers of wealth within Russia since the fall of the Soviet Union. Huge swaths of industries – elevators, tires, industrial coatings and more – are now in the hands of increasingly dominant Russian players,” the Times wrote.

“Those who are leaving are losing their position,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitri Peskov told the NYT.

“And of course, their property is being bought at a serious discount and taken over by our companies, which are doing it with pleasure.”

Yemen says Red Sea operations left significant economic impact on Israel

Yemen Houthis

“Yemen’s operations have left a significant economic impact on the Israeli enemy,” Abdul-Salam said on Sunday.

Yemen’s Armed Forces have warned that they will target all the vessels that would use the country’s territorial waters in the Red Sea and the Arabian Sea to reach Israeli ports.

The Yemeni army has also announced that its operations will continue as long as the Israeli regime keeps up its all-out aggression against the Gaza Strip and a concomitant siege that the regime has been imposing on the coastal territory remains in place.

Around 19,000 people have been killed in the Israeli regime’s onslaught on Gaza that began on October 7 following an operation by the territory’s resistance movements, dubbed Operation al-Aqsa Storm.

“All actions taken by the Yemeni Armed Forces are linked to lifting the siege of Gaza and halting the [Israeli] aggression against it,” Abdul-Salam stated.

“If you want to stop Yemen’s naval operations against the Israeli enemy, you must lift the blockade on Gaza, and food and medicine must be allowed in,” he added.

Several international shipping firms have already suspended transit through the Red Sea’s internationally important Bab al-Mandab strait, citing the potential of Yemeni attacks.

This has reportedly inflicted three billion dollars in damage on the Israeli economy by increasing the price of the goods that are imported to the occupied territories three times.

Stressing that “the Red Sea is safe except for ships associated with the Israeli enemy”, Abdul-Salam also praised a decision taken by a Chinese company to stop sending its ships to the occupying entity’s ports.

The Ansarullah official affirmed that Yemen’s stance on Palestine stems from religious, national, and moral principles, while describing Israel as a source of threat to the unity of Muslim nations.

“The Palestinian cause is not open to negotiation and we cannot accept what is happening to the people of Gaza,” he reiterated.

Abdul-Salam announced that “there is ongoing communication with influential countries with the goal of achieving [Yemen’s] stated objectives, including lifting the blockade of Gaza and stopping the aggression against it”.

Pope says no terrorists in Gaza parish where Israeli soldier killed 2 women

Pope

Two Christian women – an elderly mother and her daughter – were shot dead by an Israeli soldier on the grounds of a Catholic church in Gaza City, the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem has confirmed.

Pope Francis on Sunday deplored the killings, suggesting Israel was using “terrorism” tactics in Gaza.

“I continue receiving very serious and sad news about Gaza,” Francis said during his weekly Angelus prayer.

“Unarmed civilians are targets for bombs and gunfire. And this has happened even within the parish complex of the Holy Family, where there are no terrorists, but families, children, people who are sick and have disabilities, sisters.”

The majority of Christian families inside Gaza have taken refuge inside the parish since the start of the war, the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem announced, adding that IDF tanks have also targeted the Convent of the Sisters of Mother Theresa, which houses 54 disabled people and is part of the church’s compound.

“Some are saying, ‘This is terrorism and war.’ Yes, it is war; it is terrorism. That is why Scripture says that ‘God puts an end to war … the bow he breaks and the spear he snaps.’ Let us pray to the Lord for peace,” Francis stressed.

It was the second time in less than a month that the pope used the word “terrorism” while speaking of events in Gaza.

On November 22, after meeting separately with Israeli relatives of hostages held by Hamas and Palestinians with family in Gaza, he stressed: “This is what wars do. But here we have gone beyond wars. This is not war. This is terrorism.”

70% of Palestinians killed in Gaza war are women and children: Health Ministry

Gaza War

More than 300 health sector workers, 86 journalists, 135 employees of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East and approximately 35 civil defense crews are included in the death toll, the ministry said.

The ministry added that more than 51,100 people have been reportedly wounded, with scores of other people unaccounted for.

The ministry went on to say in its report that only eight out of 36 hospitals are partially functional in the enclave, and that occupancy rates have soared to 206% in inpatient departments and 250% in intensive care units.

As of last week (December 10), the Israel Defense Forces stated it had struck over 22,000 targets in Gaza since Hamas’ attack on Israel on October 7.

About 45,000 pregnant women and 68,000 breastfeeding women in the Gaza Strip face the risk of anaemia, bleeding and death.

In a post on X, the United Nations Population Fund said pregnant and lactating women are facing “severe food shortages” because of Israel’s siege and attacks.

“The severe food shortage in Gaza exposes pregnant and breastfeeding women to the risk of anaemia, preeclampsia, bleeding, and even death,” the post added.

In an interview with Al Jazeera, head of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees Philippe Lazzarini said he hasn’t seen anything of this scale of disaster before.

“Everything is absolutely unprecedented and staggering,” Lazzarini told diplomatic correspondent James Bays.

“In 40 days, more women and children were killed than the number of civilians in the Ukraine war,” he added.

The UNRWA head went on to say the level of destruction resulted in more than 60 percent of infrastructure being destroyed, and more than 90 percent of the population displaced.

“Conditions are absolutely appalling. The sanitary conditions are terrible [and] there is hardly any clean water.”

British, German, French FMs call for Gaza ceasefire

Gaza War
A Palestinian woman inspects the bodies of victims outside Gaza City's Al-Shifa hospital who were killed in Israeli bombardment.

“Too many civilians have been killed,” UK Foreign Secretary David Cameron and German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock wrote.

“The Israeli government should do more to discriminate sufficiently between terrorists and civilians, ensuring its campaign targets Hamas leaders and operatives.”

French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna urged an “immediate truce” so as to allow “progress to be made toward a ceasefire to obtain the release of the hostages, to allow access and the delivery of more humanitarian aid to the suffering civilian population of Gaza, and in fact to move toward a humanitarian ceasefire and the beginning of a political solution”.

While Germany and France supported Tuesday’s call for a stop to hostilities at the United Nations General Assembly, the UK abstained from voting and has previously only called for “humanitarian pauses” in the fighting. Cameron’s subsequent decision to side with his EU counterparts bolsters the credibility of warnings from Israel’s allies that it is fast losing foreign support for its war.

US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin is expected to pressure Israel to adopt a more targeted strategy when he visits on Monday, as alarm over the consequences of its assault on Gaza reaches a fever pitch. President Joe Biden recently cautioned his Middle Eastern counterpart that the “indiscriminate bombing” of Gaza was driving allies away.

Israel has killed nearly 19,000 Palestinians since Hamas’ surprise attack on October 7, according to the Gaza Health Ministry. Much of Gaza has been reduced to rubble, and 85% of its residents have reportedly been displaced. UN representatives from the World Food Programme have warned that half the population is starving due to Israel’s refusal to allow more than a trickle of humanitarian aid inside.

On Thursday, Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar argued the EU had “lost credibility” because of its failure to condemn Israel’s actions in Gaza, claiming the rest of the world sees a double-standard in Europe’s condemnation of Russia’s military operation in Ukraine.

Tuesday’s UN resolution passed with 153 nations in favor of a ceasefire, 23 abstaining and 10 against. Seventeen EU members backed the move, compared to just eight who supported a truce in October.

Over 100 Israeli hostages remain in Gaza. Israeli Defense Forces shot three who managed to escape their captors in Shijaiyah on Friday, claiming to have misidentified the trio, who were waving white flags, as enemy combatants. Some hostages’ families have joined the calls for a ceasefire, fearing their loved ones will die under Israeli bombardment.

Afghanistan’s poppy supply on global market plummeted 95% since last year: Report

Taliban

According to the publication, opium output declined throughout the country from 233,000 hectares in 2022 to just 10,800 hectares in 2023. The nation’s global opium supply has shrunk by 95% to 333 tons, with many farmers having switched to growing wheat.

The Taliban’s leader, Mullah Hibatullah Akhundzada, banned cultivation of poppy in April 2022, and the Interior Ministry said it would destroy any remaining crops.

According to media reports, no such supply reductions were achieved during Washington’s 50-year war on drugs, including two decades of US presence in Afghanistan. The country has historically accounted for more than 80% of global opium production and 95% of European opioid supplies.

Meanwhile, UNODC reported in December that Myanmar has emerged as the world’s new center of opium production and supply after seeing a significant rise in poppy farming. The watchdog announced that the economic, security, and governance disruptions in Myanmar that followed the military takeover in February 2021 “continue to drive farmers in remote areas towards opium to make a living”. Poppy cultivation is expected to accelerate in the near future in the Southeast Asian nation, the UNODC has projected.

Iran says supports Kuwait under new Emir                                       

Hossein Amirabdollahian

Hossein Amirabdollahian  who has travelled to Kuwait held talks with the country’s new Emir Mashaal Al-Ahmed Al-Jaber Al-Sabah on Sunday.

While offering condolences over the death of Kuwait’s late emir on behalf of the Iranian president, government and people, Amirabdollahian congratulated the new emir on his accession.

Amirabdollahian further reaffirmed Iran’s support for Kuwait.

He then described the Iran-Kuwait ties as good and expressed hope that during the new period bilateral relations between the two countries will expand more than ever before.

The new Kuwaiti emir for his part sent his warm greetings to the leader of Iran’s Islamic Revolution and the Iranian president.

He also thanked Iran for its message of condolence and stressed that he has instructed Kuwait’s foreign minister and other cabinet members to push for expanding relations with Iran in all spheres.

Sheikh Meshal al-Ahmad al-Sabah, 83, Kuwait’s de facto ruler since 2021, has been named as new Kuwaiti Emir following the passing of Sheikh Nawaf al-Ahmad al-Sabah on Saturday.

Putin says Russia has no interest or reason to fight NATO

Vladimir Putin

“The entire NATO organization cannot fail to understand that Russia has no reason, no interest – neither geopolitical interest, nor economic, nor political, nor military – to fight with NATO countries,” he said in an interview with Rossiya-1 TV channel journalist Pavel Zarubin.

Washington will have to take Russia into account and find common ground with it, he continued, adding, “They will have to find common ground with us, because they will have to take us into account.”

Western countries, believing that such a big Russia is not needed, want to divide and subdue it, the president stated

“After the dissolution of the Soviet Union, [Western politicians] believed that all they needed was a little patience and Russia would have completely collapsed,” he said, adding that such a relatively large country by European standards – with the largest territory in the world and a fairly large number of inhabitants compared to other European countries – “is generally not needed”.

“It would be better, as suggested by a well-known political figure in the United States [former US presidential adviser Zbigniew] Brzezinski, to divide it into five parts and subdue these parts and use the resources.”

Israel kills 5 Palestinians in drone strike in West Bank

Israeli Army

“The young men Mahmoud Samer Jaber, 22, and Ghaith Yasser Shehadeh, 25, were killed earlier Sunday in an Israeli drone attack on the Nour Shams camp in Tulkarm,” Palestine’s official news agency Wafa reported.

Several people were injured in the attack amid arrests and destruction of infrastructure, it added.

Later, the Palestinian Red Crescent and the Health Ministry announced that the death toll from an Israeli attack in the Nur Shams refugee camp in Tulkarem has risen to five.

In a separate attack, another Palestinian youth succumbed to his wounds as a result of an Israeli attack on the Jenin refugee camp in the West Bank.

Medical sources at Al-Razi Hospital in Jenin announced Sunday that Laith Abu Al-Nimr died due to injuries he sustained during an Israeli attack on the eastern neighborhood of Jenin during a raid by Israeli forces of the city on Dec. 12, which lasted for three days, the agency also reported.

“In a separate incident, the occupation forces arrested a PRCS volunteer from the ambulance while heading to transport a medical case from the camp after obtaining coordination,” the aid organization added.

Two young Palestinian men have been killed by Israeli soldiers in two separate incidents in the occupied West Bank, according to the Palestinian health ministry.

The incidents on Saturday killed 20-year-old Aziz Abdulrahim Ekhlail and 25-year old Salem Nasser Hajar.

Tensions have been running high across the West Bank amid an Israeli military offensive on the Gaza Strip following a cross-border attack by Hamas on Oct. 7.

Almost 295 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces and settlers in the West Bank since then, in addition to more than 3,500 others injured, according to the Palestinian Health Ministry.