Monday, December 29, 2025
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European countries divided on Russia sanctions: Report

The European Union

The bloc’s executive arm recently proposed curtailing trade with nations currently able to re-export goods from the bloc to Russia – thus helping the sanctions-hit country bypass penalties imposed by Brussels over the Ukraine conflict.

The measure, which could be included in a 12th package of sanctions on Russia, targets the sale of what the European Commission considers to be high-priority items, like semiconductors that can be used in weapons production. It reportedly obliges the buyer to deposit a sum in an escrow account to ensure compliance with the requirements.

According to documents seen by the news agency, at least half of the deposited amount would be transferred to a trust fund for Ukraine, while contracts would be terminated if the sanctions were breached.

However, diplomats from some large EU countries – which were not named by Bloomberg – have reportedly expressed concerns about the measures, raising doubts about their legality, and whether the insistence on guarantees and clauses from importers is viable.

According to the agency’s sources, the member states are also pushing to narrow the scope of the proposed clauses and the list of items targeted by the measures that, according to them, could put EU businesses at a competitive disadvantage.

Other members, including the Baltic countries, back the proposals, the unnamed people told the agency.

Brussels has so far imposed eleven rounds of penalties on Russia in response to Moscow’s military operation in Ukraine.

The latest proposals reportedly include measures to cut off Moscow’s access to commercial revenues by restricting exports to Russia, including a ban on the sale of certain chemicals, lithium batteries, thermostats and motors for drones, as well as machine tools and machinery parts that can be used to produce weapons. The package may also impose a complete ban on the sale of Russian diamonds and jewelry.

US cannot make decisions for Gazans: Iran president

Iran and Turkey Presidents Raisi and Erdogan

The Iranian president made the remark in a Sunday phone call with his Turkish counterpart, Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

During the conversation, Raisi stressed that the US is “the killer of the people of Gaza” and any intervention by Americans in determining the future course of developments in the Palestinian territory “would mean continuation of this country’s crimes against Palestinians”.

Noting that Americans are accomplice in “the Zionist regime’s horrendous crimes and massacre of the oppressed people of Gaza,” Iran’s president said the US has no credit in the public opinion of nations.

“Americans have no right to intervene in any decision-making [process] for the people of Gaza and any step they take in this regard is doomed to fail,” Raisi continued.

He added, “The people of Gaza must [have the right to] make decisions about the future of Gaza through Hamas as the legitimate and legal government of this territory, which has been elected through people’s votes.”

The Hamas resistance movement was elected by the people of Gaza to form the government through a popular vote in 2006, which was held a year after the Israeli regime was forced to withdraw from the territory.

Following the regime’s recent devastating war on Gaza, some American officials have suggested that after the war, the territory should not be ruled by the movement.

Nearly 15,000 Palestinians have been killed in Israel’s latest act of aggression against Gaza, which was launched through unwavering military and political support of the US.

Elsewhere in his remarks, the Iranian president touched on the country’s ties with Turkey, calling those relations “friendly, historical, and based on good neighborliness as well as religious values and common interests of the two nations.”

Raisi also described further expansion of the two countries’ cooperation and relations in various political, economic, and cultural fields as important, saying relations between Tehran and Ankara could serve as a “model of interaction” among Muslim countries.

For his part, Erdogan described bilateral relations as “favorable and constructive”, calling for their promotion to a “premium and exceptional” level.

The Turkish head of state also indicated Ankara’s readiness to hold a meeting of the two countries’ Supreme Economic Cooperation Council.

More Palestinian prisoners released as Israel-Hamas truce holds into third day

People crowd around a bus carrying released Palestinian prisoners near Ramallah, in the occupied West Bank, on Sunday.

Large crowds of Palestinians took to the streets in Ramallah in the occupied West Bank on Sunday night as they waited for Red Cross buses carrying the prisoners.

Some waved Palestinian flags alongside the flags of the two main Palestinian political parties, Hamas and Fatah. Some youth climbed on top of a white bus transporting mostly young men and some female prisoners.

“At first we did not believe it,” Shakir Mahajna told Al Jazeera while he waited with his family for his son Omar, who recently turned 18.

“The last time I visited him he was frustrated, he told me ‘Dad I want to leave’,” said Mahajna, whose son was 16 when he was arrested and had four months left in his sentence.

“After what happened in October, I was even more scared,” Nour Ara’ar, whose 17-year-old brother Zeid was arrested in July, told Al Jazeera.

“Everything was suspended because of the war,” she stated, adding, “The trial did not take place.”

“We are happy, but we are experiencing mixed feelings. Our joy is incomplete because of what is happening in Gaza,” she continued.

Meanwhile, in nearby Beitunia, where some Palestinians had also gathered, three Palestinians aged 15, 18 and 33 were injured after Israeli forces fired live rounds, the Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS) said. Two children, aged 11 and 13, were admitted to a hospital for tear-gas inhalation, the PRCS added.

Earlier on Sunday, Hamas handed over 13 Israeli captives, including nine children and four foreign nationals – three Thais and one Israeli Russian – to the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) as part of the truce deal.

The Israeli Russian was released “in response to Russian President Vladimir Putin’s efforts and in recognition of Russia’s position in support of Palestine”, Hamas announced in a statement. He is the first male captive to be released since the truce deal came into effect.

US President Joe Biden said a four-year-old Israeli-American girl, Abigail Edan, whose parents were killed in the October 7 Hamas attack, was also among those released.

“She’s free and she’s in Israel,” he stated, adding that another dual American citizen – a 45-year-old woman – was also released. Biden also urged the parties to extend the truce deal to allow for more releases.

The exchange of captives was delayed by a few hours on Saturday after Hamas accused Israel of violating the truce agreement. The standoff sparked concerns that the deal was at risk of derailing.

The impasse was resolved following mediation by Qatar and Egypt.

Around 150 Palestinian prisoners and 50 civilian captives held in Gaza are to be released over four days under the Israel-Hamas deal.

Israel’s ground and air assault on the besieged Gaza Strip has so far killed more than 15,000 Palestinians and left vast swathes of the enclave in ruins.

Ahead of Sunday’s exchange, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu visited Gaza, the first since the Gaza assault began last month.

“We continue until the end – until victory,” he told soldiers, footage posted online by his office showed.

“Nothing will stop us, and we are convinced that we have the power, the strength, the will and the determination to achieve all the war’s goals, and we will.”

Al Jazeera’s Imran Khan, reporting from occupied East Jerusalem, said it was the first time an Israeli prime minister entered Gaza since Israel disengaged from the enclave in 2005.

“It is a landmark visit,” he stated.

“We’ve heard Netanyahu talk about victory but not in this location. This location is what he wants the Israeli public to see,” he added, calling it a “photo-op”.

In a statement on Sunday, Hamas stressed it is seeking to extend the four-day truce with Israel should serious efforts be made to increase the number of Palestinian detainees released from Israeli prisons.

Speaking from Beirut, senior Hamas spokesman Osama Hamdan told Al Jazeera he expected President Biden to push Israel to end its war on the Gaza Strip.

“President Biden has the ability to make an end to the Israeli offensive against Gaza. He has the power to do that and talking about extending the ceasefire is not the solution.”

“The solution is to stop the Israeli attack against Gaza and to force Israel to implement international resolutions regarding the Palestinian people,” he stated.

Israel-Palestine conflict LIVE: Qatar says Gaza Truce extended by two days

Gaza War

Qatar announces Gaza truce extension by two days

Qatar has announced that an agreement has been reached to extend the between Israel and Hamas truce by an additional two days.

Hamas announced that it had agreed with Qatar and Egypt to a two-day extension of the truce.

Israel, however, has not issued any statements regarding extending the truce which was meant to expire today.


Israel says it is open to truce extension if more captives released

Eilon Levy, Israeli government spokesperson, has said that Hamas was aware of Israel’s willingness to extend the truce in return for the release of 50 more captives held in Gaza.

Levy added that 184 Israelis are still detained in the Gaza Strip.


Top EU diplomat calls for enduring peace in Gaza

The European Union’s foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell, has called for a “long-lasting” truce between Israel and Hamas.

The initial four-day truce was an “important first step” towards a “political solution”, the EU’s top diplomat said at the 8th Union for the Mediterranean (UfM) Regional Forum in Barcelona, Spain.

“Tomorrow, the suspension of operations will end. Perhaps it will last a few more days. But we have to start thinking, how do we continue the political process from today,” Borrell added.

The Spaniard condemned Hamas’ attack on Israel but stated that “the way Israel exercises its right to defense matters” while highlighting the “highly disproportionate death toll” and civilian suffering in Gaza.


Qatar, Egypt, US, EU and Spain working to extend truce deal: PA

The Palestinian Authority says Qatar, Egypt, the US, the EU and Spain are working to extend the four-day truce deal.

PA’s Foreign Minister Riyad al-Maliki stated the current truce could be extended for “one, two, three days” but added that no one knows exactly for how long.


Israel, Hamas raise concerns over lists of people due to be freed: Report

Israel and Palestinian group Hamas have raised concerns over the lists of Israelis and Palestinians due to be released on Monday, the final day of an agreed four-day truce, an official briefed on the matter told Reuters.

The official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Qatari mediators were working with Israel and Hamas to resolve the issues and avoid delays.

Hamas announced it wanted to extend the truce. Israel has previously offered to agree to an additional day for each additional 10 people freed, and to release three times the number of Palestinian prisoners each time.

“There is a slight issue with today’s lists. The Qataris are working with both sides to resolve it and avoid delays,” the official briefed on the matter stated.


Israel receives list of hostages to be released on fourth day of truce

Israel has received a list of hostages expected to be released by Hamas on Monday and “discussions are underway” about it, the Israeli prime minister’s office said in a statement.

“Discussions are being held on the list that was received overnight and which is now being evaluated in Israel,” the office announced in a statement on behalf of the government coordinator for the hostages and missing persons.

Monday is the fourth, and potentially final, day of the initially negotiated truce between Hamas and Israel. As of Sunday both parties had discussed the possibility of extending the truce, but no such deal has been announced yet.


Israel’s war cabinet has discussed possibility of extending Gaza truce: Source

Israel’s war cabinet discussed the possibility of extending the temporary truce with Hamas when it met Sunday evening, an Israeli source told CNN.

The source said conditions for an extension remain unchanged from the original agreement, which means Hamas needs to release an additional 10 hostages for each additional day’s pause in the fighting.

Israel and Hamas reached a deal last week for a four-day pause in fighting and the release of at least 50 women and children held hostage in Gaza.

The deal involved hostages who were held captive by Hamas being released in exchange for a number of Palestinian women and children in Israeli jails. The truce, meanwhile, also allowed the entry of “a larger number of humanitarian convoys and relief aid”. The first release of hostages and prisoners took place on Friday, with others taking place Saturday and Sunday.


Islamic Jihad evaluating merits of extending truce

A senior leader of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) group stated in an interview with Al Jazeera that the proposal to extend the humanitarian truce between Israel and Hamas is still under “evaluation” by PIJ.

Daoud Shehab said PIJ is “committed to the interests of the Palestinian people more than anything else”.

He added the group is seeking to end the war and the displacement of more Palestinians. However, Shehab said PIJ will not allow Israel to impose its will on the people of Gaza.

After the truce entered into force, Ziyad Nakhalah, the secretary general of the Gaza-based Islamic Jihad resistance movement, said the Israeli regime agreed to the truce because it failed to achieve its stated goals in the Gaza war and also due to its “losses on the battlefield.”

“Had it not been for the losses on the battlefield, the Zionist regime would not have agreed to the ceasefire agreement and the exchange of prisoners,” Nakhalah added in a televised address.

He stressed the resistance would “force the Zionist enemy to exchange all the prisoners on a wider scale.”

“The rest of the enemy’s prisoners, including officers and soldiers, will not be released without the release of the rest of our prisoners, and this issue is related to the end of the war and aggression,” Nakhala asserted.


Hamas says it wants to extend 4-day truce

Hamas announced it wants to extend its four-day truce with Israel, which has entered its third day and has now seen the release of three groups of Israeli hostages from Gaza and three groups of Palestinian prisoners and detainees from Israeli jails.

In a statement released Sunday evening, Hamas said it wants “to extend the truce after the four-day period ends, through serious efforts to increase the number of those released from imprisonment as stipulated in the humanitarian ceasefire agreement”.

Earlier this weekend, Qatar, which played a central role in mediating the agreement, announced it too was hoping to extend the truce, which includes provision for an extension of one extra day for every ten hostages Hamas is ready to free.

“What we are hoping for is that the momentum that has carried from the releases … and from this agreement of four days will allow us to extend the truce beyond these four days, and therefore get into more serious discussions about the rest of the hostages,” Qatar’s foreign ministry spokesperson, Majed Al-Ansari, stated

US President Joe Biden also expressed wanting to extend the pause in fighting during remarks Sunday.


At least 120 aid trucks have entered Gaza through Rafah border Sunday: Egyptian official

At least 120 trucks carrying aid have entered Gaza on Sunday, according to the Egyptian government.

Trucks carrying fuel and cooking gas headed toward northern Gaza in coordination with the United Nations and the Palestinian Red Crescent Society (PRCS), Diaa Rashwan, chair of Egypt’s government press office, said in a statement.

Rashwan added the number of aid trucks will likely increase in the coming hours.

The PRCS announced in a statement that an aid convoy of 100 trucks was sent to Gaza City and northern areas of the strip, carrying food, water, relief items, first aid supplies and medicine.

Dozens of trucks that entered the crossing on Saturday were still being processed through the Israeli checkpoint as of Sunday afternoon local time, or they were still unloading on the Gaza side of the border crossing, an Egyptian border official said.

The official added that about 129,000 liters of diesel and 80,000 liters of gas went through the Rafah border crossing from the Egyptian side of the border.


Biden: Our goal is to keep this pause in fighting going beyond tomorrow

US President Joe Biden said his administration’s goal is to extend the pause in fighting in Gaza to provide for the safe release of hostages and allow more critical aid to reach civilians in the enclave.

During remarks made Sunday, Biden stated he and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will remain “personally engaged to see that this deal is fully implemented and work to extend the deal, as well. For weeks I’ve been advocating the pause in the fighting for two purposes: to increase the assistance getting in to the Gaza civilians who need help, and to facilitate the release of hostages.”

Biden added that the deal struck between Israel and Hamas was “structured so that it can be extended to keep building on these results.”

“That’s our goal: to keep this pause going beyond tomorrow,” Biden continued.


Netanyahu tells Biden Israel will resume Gaza operation after truce

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday told US President Joe Biden that Israel would resume its campaign in Gaza with full force once a temporary truce comes to an end, Reuters reported.

However, Netanyahu also said he would welcome extending the truce if it facilitated the release of 10 additional hostages every day, as agreed under the original Qatari-brokered deal.

To date, there have been 117 prisoners released during the temporary truce and 54 hostages.


Biden rejected staffers’ suggestion to omit unverified beheaded babies claim: Report

Ahead of a 10 October address, described as one of the most pro-Israel speeches by a sitting president, US President Joe Biden was told by staffers he should omit a line referencing beheaded babies killed by Hamas.

The staffers warned that the information had not been verified. But Biden ignored the warning and made the unverified claim anyway.

Quickly after his speech, the White House issued a statement saying that he had seen no photos of beheaded babies, sparking outrage as to why the president would publicly spread an unverified claim.

The debacle is one of many that have taken place in the Biden administration over the past week, chronicled in a new report by the Washington Post.

Russia asks UK to clarify its role in disrupting peace negotiations with Ukraine

Russia Ukraine War

On Friday, Davyd Arakhamia, the head of Ukraine’s ruling Servant of the People party’s faction in the parliament and the former chief negotiator with Russia, said that Johnson talked Kiev out of signing an agreement with Moscow to end the conflict in the spring of 2022. He also added that Ukraine rejected the ceasefire deal due to its contradicting the constitution’s clause on the country’s Euro-Atlantic aspiration.

“Thus, evidently, with substantial UK input, an off-ramp for a negotiated solution was missed – with tragic consequences for Ukrainian statehood, economy and population. Would the UK Government care to comment on Arakhamia’s assertions?” the Embassy posted on X (formerly known as Twitter).

Russia and Ukraine held a few rounds of talks in the early phase of the conflict but the negotiation eventually stalled.

Russia launched its special military operation in Ukraine on February 24, 2022. Western countries responded by imposing comprehensive sanctions against Moscow while also ramping up its military support for Kiev.

White House moves to lift all restrictions on Israel’s access to US weapons stockpile: Report

Joe Biden

The Intercept said on Saturday that Biden is seeking to remove all restrictions on the usage of the little-known US weapons stockpiles in Israel that the Pentagon established for use in regional conflicts, to which the Israeli regime had been previously permitted to have access in limited circumstances.

The move was included in the White House’s supplemental budget request, sent to the Senate on October 20, according to the report.

“This request would allow for the transfer of all categories of defense articles,” the proposed budget says.

The War Reserve Stockpile Allies-Israel (WRSA-I) was created in the 1980s to supply the United States with equipment in the case of a regional war, which is the largest node in a network of de facto US foreign arms stockpiles. These warehouses are controlled by a set of strict requirements.

Under the conditions outlined in these requirements, the Israeli regime has been able to tap into these stockpiles and purchase weapons at low costs if effective subsidization of US military aid is used.

The report notes that with WRSA-I, Biden seeks to remove nearly all meaningful restrictions on the stockpile and arms transfer to Israel, with plans to lift restrictions on obsolete or surplus weapons, waive an annual spending cap on replenishing the stockpile, remove weapon-specific restrictions, and curtail congressional oversight.

All of the changes in the Biden budget plan would be permanent, except for lifting the spending cap, which is limited to the 2024 fiscal year. The changes would come in an arms-trade relationship that is already shrouded in secrecy.

The House has already passed legislation reflecting the White House’s request last month, and it now stands before the Senate.

“By dropping the requirement that such articles be declared excess, it would also increase the existing strain on US military readiness in order to provide more arms to Israel,” stated Josh Paul, who was the director of congressional and public affairs for the State Department’s Bureau of Political-Military Affairs, for over 11 years.

Paul, whose resignation last month due to US military aid to Israel caused a stir in Washington, admitted that “the President’s emergency supplemental funding request, would essentially create a free-flowing pipeline to provide any defense articles to Israel by the simple act of placing them in the WRSA-I stockpile, or other stockpiles intended for Israel.”

According to experts, the White House request would make it much harder for Congress or the public to monitor US arms transfers to Israel.

Under US law, there must be 30 days prior notice to Congress before arms transfer, but the Biden budget request would allow this to be shortened in “extraordinary” circumstances.

In a report last January, The New York Times, citing US and Israeli officials, revealed that the Pentagon sent hundreds of thousands of artillery shells to Ukraine from the so-called American emergency stockpile in Israel to help meet Ukraine’s need for artillery shells in the war with Russia.

The US has been a steadfast supporter of Israel for decades, both diplomatically and militarily. Each year, the US provides around $4bn of military support to the regime and since war broke out between Israel and Hamas last month, the US sent an additional $14bn in military aid.

In early November, the American news outlet Bloomberg stated that the Pentagon has secretly increased its military aid to Israel, including more sophisticated missiles and equipment such as thousands of Hellfire missiles, which have been used extensively by Israel in Gaza war.

On Saturday in a phone call with Israeli minister of military affairs, Yoav Gallant, Pentagon chief Lloyd J. Austin underscored the US’s unwavering support for Israel and received updates as a temporary ceasefire continues across the besieged Gaza Strip following nearly seven weeks of Israeli genocidal war.

According to the Gaza-based health ministry, nearly 15,000 Palestinians have been killed in the Israeli strikes, most of them women and children, and injured around 36,000 others. 7,000 Palestinians are still missing.

Leopard spotted in north central Iran

Persian leopard

Ahmad Darvish, leading a team at a national park in the province of Semnan, along with local environmentalists, stumbled upon evidence of an Iranian leopard’s presence.

While exploring the park, they discovered the remnants of a wild ram hunted by the elusive predator.

Prompted by this discovery, environmentalists strategically placed telephoto cameras in the area, resulting in breathtaking photographs of the Iranian leopard in its natural habitat.

This isn’t the first encounter; a similar event occurred recently in another section of the park, leading to the documentation of captivating images showcasing the majestic carnivore thriving in the province’s wilderness.

Tehran prosecutor office files criminal case against Etemad newspaper for publishing confidential document

Iran Newspaper Daily

According to the prosecution’s declaration, Etemad newspaper, in an article released on 26 November 2023 unlawfully published the contents of a document deemed extremely sensitive.
In line with the press law governing such matters, the publication of this article prompted the filing of a criminal case against the newspaper.

The document seemed to be about a directive issued by the Ministry of Interior about the must-to-follow guidelines set out for those tasked with maintaining the hijab law in the country.

Etemad newspaper has yet to provide a statement or response regarding the filed case.

Iran’s Army chief offers Tehran’s medical aid to Gaza

Abdulrahim Mousavi

The Iranian Army has informed the domestic authorities and the international organizations that it is prepared to deploy forces to areas near the Gaza Strip and provide the necessary medical aid for the people of Gaza, Mousavi said on Sunday.

Denouncing the Zionist regime’s heinous crimes against Palestinians after the Al-Aqsa Storm operation that Hamas launched outside Gaza on October 7, the general stated the signs of downfall of the Israeli regime became crystal clear in the operation, as the Zionists were brought to their knees and accepted all conditions set by the resistance forces.

He added that the Zionist regime failed to crown any military achievement in its onslaught against Gaza, which indicates that Israel is weaker than a spider’s web in the true sense of the word.

More than 14,800 Palestinians, including 6,150 children, have been killed in Gaza in the Israeli strikes since October 7.

After prolonged negotiations and a delay of at least 24 hours, a four-day truce between the Israeli regime and Hamas took effect on Friday morning, with captives held in Gaza released in exchange for Palestinian women and children detained in Israeli prisons.

Israel dropped 40,000 tonnes of explosives on Gaza: Hamas govt.

Gaza War

The media office said that the temporary truce is revealing the extent of the damage and that a third of the population of Gaza still does not have basic needs.

A Palestinian Ministry of Health official also announced on Sunday that only three hospitals are operating in northern Gaza, following seven weeks of intense Israeli bombardment.

The official added that the hospitals have very limited capabilities and are not able to cater to all patients due to the lack of tools, fuel and electricity.

The Ministry of Health reiterated calls for more medicine and medical supplies to be brought into Gaza, as people and hospitals struggle to get hold of basic medicines such as pain killers.

Israel began a bombardment campaign Gaza Strip after Palestinian resistance movement Hamas launched Operation Al-Aqsa Storm inside the occupied territories on October 7. The regime has killed at least 14,854 people, including more than 6,150 children and 4,000 women, in Gaza.

Israel also laid total siege to the Gaza Strip and cut off food, water and electricity supplies to the impoverished enclave.

Gazans have struggled to survive with shortages of food, water and other essentials.