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Israel must be brought to justice for Gaza war: Iran

Hossein Amirabdollahian

Amirabdollahian made the requests on Wednesday in separate letters to Secretary General of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Kao Kim Hourn, Executive Secretary of the Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America (ALBA) Félix Plasencia and Secretary General of the Collective Security Treaty Organization Imangali Nurgaliuly Tasmagambetov as well as Chairperson of the African Union Commission and Moussa Faki Mahamat.

In his letter to the ASEAN secretary general, the Iranian minister said international bodies shoulder the responsibility to bring the occupying Israeli regime to justice.

He added that Israel committed heinous crimes in Gaza since the beginning of its savage attack on the besieged Strip on October 7, which killed more than 15,000 Palestinian people and destroyed vital infrastructure and public buildings. He also rebuked the regime for using banned weapons and threatening to nuke the territory.

He highlighted the responsibility of international bodies to hold the occupying regime accountable for its crimes in Gaza, and bring it to justice.

Amirabdollahian in his letter to Plasencia, hailed ALBA’s clear stance on the need to end the massacre of people in Gaza and respect international laws and human rights regulations.

He also blamed the inaction of some international actors and institutions for the impunity that Israel has been enjoying for the crimes it committed during past weeks in the Gaza Strip.

He called on the ALBA executive secretary to adopt more effective measures to help stop crimes of the Zionist regime and relieve the sufferings of the defenseless Palestinian people.

The top Iranian diplomat also urged the secretary general of the Collective Security Treaty Organization to take more effective steps to put a permanent end to Israel’s attacks on the Gaza Strip and its blockade.

Amirabdollahian further lauded the chairperson of the African Union Commission’s stance on the need to end Israel’s attacks and deliver humanitarian assistance to the oppressed Palestinian people.

Israel considering Gaza government backed by Saudi Arabia and UAE: Report

Gaza War

The report says that Israel’s military think-tank has drafted a paper detailing ‘Hamas-free safe zones’ that could be created in Gaza and managed by an authority backed by Riyadh and Abu Dhabi.

The article adds that Israel and the US have also floated an idea to expel rank and file Hamas fighters from the Gaza Strip, by potentially offering them safe passage.

The idea to give “low-level” fighters in Gaza safe passage out of Israel stems from a 1982 agreement that saw Yasser Arafat and about 11,000 Palestinian fighters belonging to the Palestinian Liberation Organization leave Beirut for Tunisia, after Israel laid siege to the city, according to the WSJ.

Israel has announced it doesn’t want the Palestinian Authority (PA) to govern the Gaza Strip if and when it defeats Hamas. The US has stressed it wants Gaza and the occupied West Bank to be governed by the PA.

Hamas has vowed that the Palestinian territory would only be ruled by its own people once the war was over.

Hamas frees 14 more captives in sixth phase of swap deal with Israel

Gaza War

The captives, comprising 10 Israelis and four Thai nationals, were released by the group on Wednesday. They were taken to Egypt before being transferred to the occupied territories.

Hamas and its fellow Gaza Strip-based resistance movement of the Islamic Jihad launched the operation on October 7 in response to the Israeli regime’s decades-long campaign of bloodletting and devastation against Palestinians.

Around 250 people were taken captive during the operation.

The regime responded to the operation by bringing Gaza under a genocidal war that has so far killed more than 15,000 people.

Israel announced early on Thursday it had freed 30 Palestinians in the sixth batch of prisoner releases under a truce arrangement with Hamas. The Palestinians were released from prison facilities in Israel, the occupied West Bank and Jerusalem, Israel added.

So far under the deal, five rounds of exchanges have led to the release of more than 250 people from both sides.

The truce is set to expire early Thursday.

Speaking on Tuesday, Khalil al-Hayya, a member of the Hamas’ Political Bureau, said he hoped the deal would be extended for a longer period of time.

Israel, however, has vowed to resume the war with “full force”, claiming that it seeks to end Hamas’ rule over Gaza.

Hamas has vowed that the Palestinian territory would only be ruled by its own people once the war was over.

Aid to Gaza residents “remains completely inadequate”: UN chief

Gaza War
Trucks carrying humanitarian aid from King Salman humanitarian aid and relief center (KSrelief), line up as they prepare to cross Rafah crossing port to Gaza Strip.

“The level of aid to Palestinians in Gaza remains completely inadequate to meet the huge needs of more than 2 million people,” Guterres said.

“And although the total volume of fuel allowed into Gaza has also increased, it remains utterly insufficient to sustain basic operations.”

The Security Council convened on Wednesday to discuss how to implement its mandatory resolution earlier this month, which calls for “humanitarian pauses and corridors” within Gaza.

Guterres noted the importance of opening more crossings into Gaza as the Rafah crossing with Egypt has become inundated.

“It is important to recognize that the Rafah border crossing does not have enough capacity, especially taking into account the slow pace of security procedures,” Guterres continued.

“That is why we have been urging the opening of other crossings, including Kerem Shalom, and the streamlining of inspection mechanisms to allow for the necessary increase of lifesaving aid,” he added.

A convoy of trucks successfully delivered “much-needed” humanitarian aid to UN shelters in the northern Gaza Strip earlier this week — the first arrival of aid to the area in nearly 50 days, according to the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA), which runs many of the shelters.

Guterres also said that over 80% of Gaza residents have been forced to leave their homes amid the Israel-Hamas conflict.

“Beyond the many civilians killed and wounded, that I have spoken of, 80% of Gaza’s people have now been forced from their homes,” he stated, adding the growing number of people has been pushed out to the southern part of Gaza but nowhere is safe.

NATO says Russia has huge winter missile stockpile for Ukraine war

Russia Ukraine War

Speaking after a meeting of NATO foreign ministers in Brussels on Wednesday, Stoltenberg repeated for the second time this week that the West should not “underestimate Russia.”

“Russia has amassed a large missile stockpile ahead of winter, and we see new attempts to strike Ukraine’s power grid and energy infrastructure, trying to leave Ukraine in the dark and cold,” he added.

When winter weather stalled progress on the frontline last year, Russia began launching missile and drone barrages against Ukrainian military and infrastructure targets.

In a statement on Wednesday, the Russian Defense Ministry said that missiles and drones were used the previous day to hit radar and anti-aircraft systems, fuel and ammunition depots, and Ukrainian personnel and hardware in multiple areas. A large-scale drone attack on Saturday targeted energy facilities in Kiev and several surrounding regions.

Within weeks of Russian troops entering Ukraine last February, military officials in Washington and Kiev were claiming that Moscow had only several weeks’ supply of missiles in storage. By November 2022, then-Ukrainian Defense Minister Aleksey Reznikov declared that Russia was down to 229 Kalibr and 132 Kh-101 cruise missiles remaining.

Several times that number were fired at Ukrainian targets in the next month alone, and the Russian Defense Ministry boasted in a post to its Telegram channel in late December that its “Kalibr [cruise missiles] will never run out.”

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has demanded more and better air defense systems from his Western backers for several months. The US, however, is not currently in a position to provide these systems, with the latest arms package from Washington including an unspecified amount of ammunition for Ukraine’s existing NASAMS launchers rather than the Patriot batteries that Zelensky has requested since last year.

Earlier this month, the White House admitted that the money previously allocated for Kiev was almost all spent. US President Joe Biden has asked Congress for more than $60 billion in additional funding for Ukraine, although this request remains stalled amid opposition from some Republican lawmakers.

Israel-Palestine conflict LIVE: Hamas, Israel agree to extend Gaza truce for a seventh day

Gaza War

Top US diplomat meets Palestinian Authority President Abbas in Ramallah after meetings with Israeli officials

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken is meeting with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas in Ramallah, West Bank, Thursday.

It’s the top US diplomat’s second visit to the West Bank since the Israel-Hamas war began and comes amid escalating Israeli settler violence in the territory following the October 7 attack on Israel.

Earlier Thursday, Blinken met in Jerusalem with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and the war cabinet, just hours after the truce with Hamas was extended. According to a US State Department readout of those meetings, Blinken “reaffirmed the United States’ support for Israel’s right to protect itself from terrorist violence in compliance with international humanitarian law and urged Israel to take every possible measure to avoid civilian harm.”

“Secretary Blinken reiterated that the United States remains committed to tangible steps to advance a Palestinian state living in peace, freedom, and security alongside Israel,” the readout from spokesperson Matt Miller said.

Meanwhile, following the shooting attack in Jerusalem, Netanyahu said he told Blinken, “we have sworn, I have sworn, to eliminate Hamas. Nothing will stop us.”

Blinken also met with Israeli President Isaac Herzog in Tel Aviv on Thursday.


Egypt, Qatar push for two-day truce extension

Egyptian and Qatari negotiators are pressing for a new two-day extension to the truce.

According to a statement from Egypt’s State Information Service (SIS), mediators are pushing for more prisoner releases and an increase in the delivery of humanitarian aid.

“Egypt will continue to exert its utmost efforts to ensure the continued flow of humanitarian aid to the north and south of the Gaza Strip,” it announced.

Last night, Israel and Hamas agreed to a last-minute extension to the truce deal for 24 hours. It included the release of 10 Israelis captured by Hamas and 30 Palestinian prisoners, as well as the provision of the same levels of humanitarian relief as during the previous six days, the SIS head stated.


Blinken says Israel-Hamas truce is helping get aid into Gaza

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken stated the temporary truce between Israel and Hamas, now in its sixth day, is working to help move more aid into Gaza.

“We have been focused relentlessly on trying to secure the release of hostages,” Blinken said during his third visit to the region since the October 7 Hamas attacks on Thursday.

“So the process is producing results, is important, and we hope that it will continue.”

Blinken also reaffirmed US commitment to supporting Israel’s right to defend itself.

On Tuesday, the US military announced it would fly three planeloads of crucial humanitarian aid to North Sinai in Egypt to be brought into Gaza to aid civilians in the region, according to senior administration officials.

The aid that was taken included medical supplies, food and winter weather gear as Gaza enters its rainy season – which can be wet, cold and even lead to flooding – with countless Palestinians displaced in temporary shelters.


More than 1,100 aid trucks entered Gaza since truce began: PRCS

Some 1,132 trucks carrying humanitarian aid for Gaza have entered the coastal region via Egypt’s Rafah border crossing since the truce began on Friday, the Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS) has said.

“Since the beginning of the truce until yesterday, PRCS staff and volunteers have received 1,132 aid trucks via Rafah Crossing,” the relief group added in a brief statement.


There are still 145 hostages in Gaza: Israel

Israel now believes there are 145 hostages taken captive on October 7 who are still in Gaza, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office told CNN Thursday.

Of those people, 134 are Israeli citizens, including those who hold dual citizenship, and 11 and foreigners.

Out of the 145 abductees:

  • 118 are men and 27 are women.
  • 3 are children under the age of 18.
  • 1 is age 18.
  • 10 are aged 75 and older.

Under the United Nations definition, an 18-year-old is also legally considered a child.

A total of 102 people have been released or recovered so far. These include:

  • 78 Israelis (70 as part of the framework with Hamas; three Russian-Israeli citizens; four women released before the Israel-Hamas deal; and one soldier who was rescued by IDF troops)
  • 24 foreigners

Two abductees who were murdered were located by IDF soldiers.


Hamas confirms attackers in Jerusalem shooting were members of its group

Hamas confirmed on Thursday that the individuals who perpetrated a shooting incident in Jerusalem were members of its organisation.

In a statement, Hamas announced that “the operation came as a natural response to unprecedented crimes conducted by the occupation”, citing Israel’s military campaign in Gaza and the treatment of Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails.

Three people were killed and several wounded after the two gunmen opened fire with an assault weapon and a pistol.


Israeli forces kill Palestinian man during West Bank prisoner release: Officials

A 21-year-old Palestinian man, Fadi Muayyad Badran, was killed by Israeli forces during a prisoner release from the Ofer prison in the West Bank early Thursday morning, according to a statement from the Palestinian Ministry of Health.

The Palestinian WAFA news agency reported that Badran, who was not among the prisoners being released, was killed by a gunshot wound to the chest and that four others had been wounded by live fire during pre-dawn confrontations in front of the prison in the city of Beitunia.

For a sixth straight day, Israel has intervened to prevent Palestinians from gathering to celebrate the release of detainees that have been freed as part of the truce deal with Hamas.

WAFA also reported that Israeli forces entered the neighborhoods near the prison, leading to further confrontations in which live bullets, stun grenades and tear gas were used.

The health ministry also added that with Badran’s death, the total number of Palestinians killed in the West Bank had risen to 455 for the year with 247 of them since October 7.


Deal reached to extend Israel-Hamas truce

A temporary truce between Israel and Hamas has been extended to a seventh day, Israel Defense Forces announced Thursday morning, minutes before the deal was set to expire .

This is the second extension of the initial four-day truce that began on Friday.

The truce has resulted in the return of 70 Israelis under the agreement. During the pause, three dual-national Israeli citizens and twenty-four foreign nationals have also been released outside of the deal.

In exchange, 210 Palestinians have been freed from Israeli jails, officials announced.

In a separate statement, Hamas said that an agreement has been reached to extend the truce for a seventh day.

Until the last hour, the prospect of an extension of the truce was in question, after the two sides failed to agree on the new list of Israelis to be released from Gaza.


Hamas blames Israel for impasse in ceasefire extension talks

Talks for an extension of a current ceasefire between Israel and Hamas are at an impasse, according to a statement from Hamas Thursday.

Hamas announced Israel had refused an offer to extend the truce in exchange for receiving seven detained women and children and the bodies of three deceased women or children who Hamas claim were killed by Israeli bombardment.

The truce is set to expire at 7 a.m. local time (midnight ET).


Hamas military wing asks fighters to be ready for combat if truce isn’t extended

The Hamas military wing on Thursday asked its forces to maintain a high-combat readiness posture in the final hours of a truce with Israel in case it isn’t renewed.

The Al-Qassam Brigades said on Telegram that its fighters should remain in the high-combat readiness position unless an official statement is issued confirming the extension of the truce, which is set to expire at 7 a.m. local time (midnight ET).

Key mediator Qatar is “very optimistic” an extension will be announced, a foreign ministry spokesperson stated on Wednesday.

However, the Israeli military is prepared for the next stage of the war in Gaza when the truce ends, Herzi Halevi, Israel Defense Forces (IDF) chief of staff announced Wednesday, according to an IDF statement.


Truce would only be extended if Hamas provides list of hostages to be released Thursday: Sources

As the current truce deal is poised to expire, multiple sources familiar with the talks told CNN that another extension would be announced once Hamas has handed over the next list of names of hostages to be released.

The truce began on Friday at 7 a.m. local time (midnight ET). With the two-day extension, the current deal would be expected to expire at 7 a.m. local time Thursday (midnight ET).

The sources have expressed optimism about an extension — but until the list is provided by Hamas nothing is certain.


Palestinian activist Ahed Tamimi released from prison

High-profile Palestinian activist Ahed Tamimi has arrived in Ramallah after being released as part of the truce between Israel and Hamas.

Tamimi was detained earlier this month over what her family said was an Instagram post she didn’t make that referenced Hitler and the “slaughter” of settlers.

Tamimi has often been referred to as an icon of the Palestinian resistance.

She garnered widespread media attention in 2017 when she was arrested following an altercation with Israeli soldiers who refused to leave her home in Nabi Saleh, a village in the occupied West Bank. Tamimi was just 16 years old at the time she was sentenced to eight months in an Israeli prison.


Northern Gaza’s health care system faces crisis: Health ministry

Northern Gaza’s health care system has lost over 60% of its capacity across all of its hospitals, according to the Hamas-run Ministry of Health.

The reduction extends to operation rooms and intensive care units, which have seen a similar decline in capacity, spokesperson Dr. Ashraf Al-Qidra told CNN in a written statement Wednesday.

The spokesperson noted that 62% of renal dialysis units have been lost recently, leaving only 38% of the units predominantly in the south operational. This equates to about 70 units.

Additionally, the healthcare infrastructure for neonatal and maternity care has been heavily affected, according to Al-Qidra.

In the north, 76 premature incubators have been lost, leaving only 51 units in the south. The north has also seen the loss of 150 maternity beds, with only a few remaining in Al-Sahaba NGO clinic and Kamal Adwan Hospital.

“Primary health care centers (PHCC) are continuing to function in the south, along with nine UNRWA clinics. However, only four PHCCs are currently operational in the north. The refugee centers in the North, numbering 57, are receiving only partial health services,” Al-Qidra added.


US secretary of state arrives in Israel

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken has arrived in Tel Aviv as a truce between Israel and Hamas is poised to expire.

Blinken has said he will be focused on extending the pause in fighting in Gaza “so that we continue to get more hostages out and more humanitarian assistance in.”

“We’d like to see the pause extended because what it has enabled, first and foremost is hostages being released and being united with their families,” Blinken stated.

“It’s also enabled us to surge humanitarian assistance into the people of Gaza who so desperately need it. So, its continuation, by definition means that more hostages would be coming home, more assistance would be getting in.”

The top US diplomat added he also believes that an extension of the pause is something Israel wants because “they’re also intensely focused on bringing people home”. He said he plans to discuss the issue in his meetings with Israeli officials in the coming days.

“We’ll discuss with Israel how it can achieve its objective of ensuring that the terrorist attacks of October 7 never happen again, while sustaining and increasing humanitarian assistance and minimizing further suffering and casualties among Palestinian civilians,” Blinken added.

President Joe Biden also said at an event in Colorado that he spoke with members of his national security team about the next group of hostages set to be released by Hamas.

In addition to his stop in Israel, Blinken will travel to the West Bank and then on to Dubai for the COP28 climate summit.

Iranian interior min. backs hijab protectors in public places 

Iran Hijab

Vahidi said the citizens who are known as hijab protectors basically do not need a permit to do what they are supposed to.

He added that these people already have a permit under the Support of the Promoters of good and Preventers of Vice Act. Vahidi also noted that the government does not plan to issue permits for the activity of all the groups.

He said each hijab protector has her own way of promoting good and preventing vice, adding that one hijab protector gives a flower to violators of the Islamic veil rule and another puts them on notice verbally and all these ways are acceptable under the law.

Many people on social media have recently criticized the hijab protectors, saying what they do is in breach of the law. They are also accusing the hijab protectors of filming them without their consent.

NATO makes new Ukraine announcement

Russia Ukraine War

In a statement released after Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmitry Kuleba met with his NATO counterparts in Brussels on Wednesday, the Western alliance said that it is “developing a roadmap for Ukraine’s transition to full interoperability with NATO.”

NATO defines “interoperability” as the use of common weapons and equipment, tactics and doctrine, and terminology and communications standards, to enable member states and their partners to operate on the battlefield together.

“We are pretty much becoming a de facto NATO army, in terms of our technical capacity, management approaches and principles of running an army,” Kuleba stated ahead of Wednesday’s meeting.

The statement made no mention of Ukraine joining NATO in the near future. Instead, it praised Kiev’s commitment to a package of political and military reforms, saying that these changes would help Ukraine “on its path towards future membership in NATO.” Kiev has been bound to these reforms since NATO said in 2008 that Ukraine “will become” a member at an unspecified point in the future. The country has not received a date for membership in the 15 years since.

When NATO’s annual summit began in July without a membership invitation, Zelensky accused the bloc of failing to show his country “respect”, adding that it was “unprecedented and absurd” for NATO to apply “conditions” to Ukraine’s accession. As admitting Ukraine during the ongoing conflict would draw the rest of the Western bloc into open war with Russia, Zelensky relented and said that these conditions were “understandable,” after he was rebuked by multiple Western diplomats and officials.

Appearing alongside Kuleba on Wednesday, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken reiterated that “Ukraine will become a member of NATO when allies agree and conditions are met.”

Russia has repeatedly made it clear that Ukraine’s membership in NATO would be unacceptable to Moscow. Zelensky’s top MP and former head negotiator in Istanbul, David Arakhamia, admitted last week that Kiev could have stopped the conflict in April 2022 by agreeing to the Russian demand for neutrality, but said that the West urged Ukraine to keep fighting instead.

Israel kills two Palestinian children in West Bank refugee camp

Gaza War

The Palestinian Ministry of Health said Adam al-Ghoul, nine, and Basil Suleiman Abu al-Wafa, 15, were killed by soldiers in the camp, in the north of the occupied West Bank.

Israeli forces have launched an all-out assault on the camp, which is a major source of resistance and has been invaded repeatedly over the past year, especially since Hamas’s 7 October attack on southern Israel.

Locals told the Wafa news agency that Israeli troops forced residents of Damj neighbourhood to leave their homes at gunpoint, after “massive destruction” by Israeli weaponry.

CCTV footage of Ghoul’s killing was greeted with outrage on social media.

Ghoul can be seen running before falling down dead, apparently from a gunshot wound. Another boy is then seen dragging him off the street, with blood pooling beneath Ghoul.

At least 230 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli soldiers and settlers in the West Bank in 50 days. Over 3,300 have been detained.

The early hours of Wednesday morning also saw Israeli forces launch a string of raids across several other refugee camps in the West Bank.

In Jericho, Israeli troops stormed homes in Ein el-Sultan and Aqbat Jabr refugee camps, accompanied by a military bulldozer in the latter. In Nablus, Israeli forces raided Askar camp, where violent confrontations broke out with residents. And in Ramallah, Palestinian homes were stormed in the Jalazone camp, after which young men from the camp confronted Israeli forces.

Settler violence has continued throughout the war and the ceasefire.

Iranian interior minister: Hundreds of thousands of refugees deported

Afghan Refugee

Vahidi however said there are not enough deterring rules to dissuade them from returning Iran.

He added that this problem must be resolved through proper means.

Iran is already hosting millions of Afghan refugees including many that entered the Islamic Republic following the 2020 takeover of Afghanistan by the Taliban.

Iran has repeatedly called on the international community to help it handle the issue but it has yet to receive assistance from foreign countries.