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First private oil dock in Iran’s South Pars commences operations

Iran oil dock

According to IRNA news agency, “The largest ship designed for transporting warm and pressurized liquefied gas docked and loaded in the shortest possible time with the highest standards and safety at the 100,000-ton Parsa Fidar Paydar dock in South Pars.”

The operational commencement of Iran’s first private oil dock was supervised by representatives from the Customs Administration of the Islamic Republic of Iran, the Ports and Maritime Organization, the National Iranian Gas Company, and a special representative of the minister of oil for export oversight in Kangan.

The Parsa Fidar Paydar dock received its operational license two years after construction.

The official opening of the dock is expected to increase the export capacity of warm liquefied gas by up to 50% and annually handle up to three million tons of cold gas at the dolphin model dock.

Iran strongly condemns terror attack in US

New Orleans Attack

Foreign Ministry Spokesman Esmail Baqaei delivered the condemnation in a statement on Friday.

On New Year’s Day, a truck driver plowed his vehicle into a crowd in New Orleans in the state of Louisiana, causing the fatalities and injuring more than 30 others.

Baqaei reaffirmed the Islamic Republic’s principled position of denouncing terrorism in all its forms and representations no matter the place of its perpetration and those behind it.

The Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman condoled with the survivors.

The suspect was identified by the FBI as Shamsud-Din Jabbar, a 42-year-old US citizen from Texas state and a US military veteran.

A Daesh flag was located in the vehicle he drove, which appeared to be rented, in addition to weapons and a suspected improvised explosive device (IED).

Jabbar was “100% inspired” by Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS or ISIL), the FBI confirmed on Thursday. He supposedly recorded a series of videos in which he pledged allegiance to the group, CNN reported on the same day, citing multiple officials.

Hamas says wants ceasefire agreement in Gaza as soon as possible

Gaza War

Senior Hamas official Basem Naim said the new round of discussions will focus on a permanent ceasefire and the withdrawal of Israeli forces from the Gaza Strip, Reuters reported.

While on-and-off talks have been taking place for a year in Doha, a ceasefire between Hamas and Israel has been elusive.

On Thursday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu approved a delegation to resume Gaza ceasefire negotiations, even as he continues to publicly rule out a permanent end to the war.

Hamas and Israel were in negotiations in December to reach a ceasefire deal, but while reports at the time appeared to show progress in striking a deal, the Palestinian group accused Israeli negotiators of putting forward “new conditions” that delayed coming to an agreement.

Israel rebuffed those accusations, saying it was Hamas that was creating “new obstacles” to a ceasefire.

The US and Israel have long insisted Hamas is an obstacle to a ceasefire, but analysts say Netanyahu has shown little interest in striking an agreement.

Throughout 2024, the US and Israel insisted that the late Hamas chief Yahya Sinwar was the main obstacle to a ceasefire. But two months ago, Israeli troops killed Sinwar in a firefight, and a ceasefire is still nowhere in sight.

US President-elect Donald Trump will return to office on 20 January and has threatened “hell to pay” if a deal to release the remaining hostages is not achieved before he assumes office.

Israel’s war on Gaza has decimated the enclave’s civilian infrastructure, and Israeli soldiers continue to target hospitals while also killing journalists.

According to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics, the war has killed more than 45,000 Palestinians, while some 11,000 are missing and believed to be under the rubble. At least 100,000 have been forced to flee Gaza as Israel’s campaign of destruction continues to devastate the enclave.

Syrian FM to visit Qatar, UAE, Jordan in 2nd foreign trip

Assad al-Shaibani

“We look forward that these visits contribute to support the stability and security, the economic recovery and build distinguished partnerships,” he wrote on X.

al-Shaibani, however, did not set a date for his Arab tour.

On Wednesday, al-Shaibani has his first visit abroad to Saudi Arabia upon an invitation from his Saudi counterpart, Prince Faisal bin Farhan.

Assad, Syria’s leader for nearly 25 years, fled to Russia after armed groups took control of Damascus in early December.

The takeover came after Hayat Tahrir al-Sham fighters captured key cities in a lightning offensive that lasted less than two weeks.

Iranian journalist castigates advocates of negotiations with US

Iran US Flags

In a recent editorial titled “They are either asleep, drunk, or insane!”, Shariatmadari argued that proponents of US negotiations are either “naive” and lack intelligence, “incompetent” and hiding their inability to solve problems, or have “colluded with the enemy” out of deceit or greed.

He criticized the current reformist officials in Iran for their unprecedented “alignment with American officials” and their insistence on negotiations as the only solution to Iran’s problems.

The journalist also referenced former president Hassan Rouhani’s remark, suggesting that such individuals might be “insane.”

Shariatmadari emphasized that over the past two decades, internal factions aligned with foreign media have promoted negotiations with the US while spreading despair and exaggerating problems at home to the public.

He warned that the tactic, which he called “Artificial Drowning,” is a psychological operation used by enemies to inject hopelessness and present their desired outcomes as solutions.

Drawing a historical parallel, Shariatmadari compared the situation to General Francisco Franco’s use of a “fifth column” during the Spanish Civil War to demoralize Madrid’s defenders.

Trump appoints Morgan Ortagus as deputy Middle East special envoy

Morgan Ortagus

Trump noted in his announcement that Ortagus previously was critical of him. As a Fox News contributor in 2016, she bashed Trump over behavior she thought was “disgusting”. She then served in the State Department from 2019 to 2021.

“Early on Morgan fought me for three years, but hopefully has learned her lesson. These things usually don’t work out, but she has strong Republican support, and I’m not doing this for me, I’m doing it for them,” he said on Truth Social.

“Let’s see what happens.”

Ortagus would serve as deputy to real estate executive Steven Witkoff, who Trump named in November to be special envoy to the Middle East.

“She will hopefully be an asset to Steve, a great leader and talent, as we seek to bring calm and prosperity to a very troubled region. I expect great results, and soon!” Trump said in the announcement.

Trump endorsed Ortagus’s run for Congress in 2022, before she was removed from the ballot by the Tennessee Republican Party because she had moved to the state too recently.

Ortagus is an officer in the Navy Reserve and worked at the Treasury Department during President Obama’s administration.

Trump highlighted her experience in his announcement on Friday.

“From 2019-2021, Morgan served as Spokesperson at the Department of State (Pompeo!), where she was a member of my Historic Abraham Accords team that brought unprecedented Peace to the Middle East. Earlier, she worked at the Department of the Treasury as a financial intelligence analyst and, from 2010-2011, was the Deputy U.S. Treasury Attaché to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia,” Trump stated.

He added, “Good luck Morgan!”

Israeli MPs urge killing of every Gazan without white flag

Gaza War

Eight members of the Knesset’s Foreign Affairs and Defence Committee have demanded that Defence Minister Israel Katz order the destruction of all water, food and power supplies in northern Gaza, a move which would result in the starvation of thousands of Palestinians.

Their proposals include treating any man, woman and child remaining in the area without a white flag as a legitimate target to be killed.

The lawmakers, including figures from the ruling Likud party and its coalition allies Religious Zionism, Jewish Power and Shas, argued in a letter that the Israeli army had failed to achieve its objectives of dismantling Hamas’ governance and military operations.

They accused the military of not carrying out the forced expulsion of Palestinians “properly” from the besieged northern Gaza, where an estimated 70,000 Palestinians remain hungry and without shelter while Israel continues its onslaught.

The lawmakers insisted that the Israeli army should impose a total blockade, destroy essential infrastructure and carry out what they described as a “complete cleansing” of the region.

They also suggested that such draconian tactics be applied across other parts of Gaza.

“This must be done not only in the northern Gaza Strip, but also in every other region,” the letter added.

The group lambasted Israeli army officials for not providing clear explanations during committee sessions as to why such measures had not yet been adopted or what the army’s strategy entails.

Israel faces charges of genocide at the International Court of Justice (ICJ), and human rights organisations have published a vast body of evidence detailing ethnic cleansing and war crimes committed by its army.

The International Criminal Court (ICC) is also pursuing arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former Defence Minister Yoav Gallant on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity in connection with Israel’s war on Gaza.

The MPs’ demands echo the “Generals’ Plan”, a proposal widely condemned for labelling all remaining civilians in northern Gaza as military targets while cutting off food, medicine and other supplies.

Israel has incrementally implemented the plan despite condemnations from human rights organisations.

The humanitarian situation in Gaza has reached catastrophic levels, the UN has reported.

The northern health system has completely collapsed, with the Indonesian Hospital, the last partially functioning facility, struggling without water or electricity.

Residents are being forced to flee south under appalling conditions, with reports of the Israeli army preventing them from taking personal belongings or warm clothing despite freezing temperatures.

Six infants and an adult have reportedly succumbed to hypothermia in the past week, highlighting the dire conditions faced by Gaza’s population.

Meanwhile, humanitarian organisations have decried Israel’s tactics as collective punishment, with UN officials warning that the situation is causing unprecedented suffering for Gaza’s civilian population.

UN report warns ‘pattern’ of destruction of hospitals in Gaza by Israel

Gaza War

The report, covering the period from 7 October 2023 to 30 June 2024, found that “22 out of 38 hospitals across Gaza had been rendered non-functional”.

Its publication comes after the most recent destruction of Kamal Adwan Hospital, the last remaining in northern Gaza. Israeli forces stormed the hospital last week, following nearly three months of a blockade and constant air strikes on its departments.

Although not within the remit of the report’s time period, this attack followed the same pattern highlighted, which includes “missile strikes on hospital buildings, the destruction of hospital facilities, shooting of civilians, sieges, as well as temporarily taking over the hospital buildings”.

The report cited the first major attack against al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City, which took place in November 2023, as an example of such an incursion.

During the attacks on both al-Shifa and Kamal Adwan, Israeli forces began by bombarding the area outside the hospitals, cutting off supplies, rendering the generators out of service, and sparking fires in several departments – including the surgery, intensive care and maternity wards.

Troops then stormed the hospitals, forcing many of the remaining staff and patients to strip almost naked and detaining them, including the hospital directors.

The director of al-Shifa Hospital, Dr Mohammed Abu Salmiya, has since been released after seven months of incarceration. However, the head of orthopaedic medicine, Dr Adnan al-Bursh, was tortured to death in Israeli custody.

Likewise, the director of Kamal Adwan Hospital, Dr Hussam Abu Safiya, was arrested and is currently missing despite calls for his release.

The same procedure is mirrored in incursions against al-Amal Hospital, the Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS) facilities in Khan Younis and al-Awda Hospital in northern Gaza, among others, as documented in the report.

In many cases, but most prominently in the bombardment of al-Shifa, the Israeli government justified its actions by alleging that Palestinian armed groups used the hospitals to run their operations, holding captives, stealing fuel provided by the Israeli army and treating the patients and medical personnel as human shields.

“However, insufficient information has so far been made publicly available to substantiate these allegations, which have remained vague and broad, and in some cases appear contradicted by publicly available information,” the UN report found.

The report called for an “independent, credible and transparent investigations of these incidents, and full accountability for all violations of international humanitarian and human rights law which have taken place”.

Israel also ignored pleas from the World Health Organization (WHO) to stop attacking medical facilities in northern Gaza, with a medical worker telling Middle East Eye on Thursday that heavy shelling and gunfire from unmanned quadcopters was taking place in the direction of the war-battered Indonesian Hospital.

Dr Rawia Tambour told MEE that Israeli forces were firing heavy artillery shells in the vicinity of the facility in Beit Lahia, while quadcopters shot at anything that moved.

“Israeli military vehicles are advancing towards the hospital,” Tambour said in an audio message, as the sounds of blasts echoed in the background.

The Indonesian Hospital, one the biggest health facilities in northern Gaza, has been out of service for weeks due to ongoing Israeli attacks and a debilitating siege put in place since early October.

Earlier this week, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the head of the WHO, called on Israel to cease its attacks on Gaza’s beleaguered hospitals and medical centres and offer a brief reprieve to exhausted Palestinians.

“Hospitals in Gaza have once again become battlegrounds and the health system is under severe threat,” Tedros stated, adding: “We repeat: stop attacks on hospitals. People in Gaza need access to healthcare. Humanitarians need access to provide health aid. Cease fire!”

A day later, the UN Human Rights Office released a report saying Israeli forces had “destroyed the healthcare system in Gaza”, with the situation reaching “catastrophic levels”.

The report added that Israel’s 15-month offensive had resulted in the “killing of hundreds of health and medical professionals”, as well as patients and civilians.

“It is essential that there be independent, credible and transparent investigations of these incidents, and full accountability for all violations of international humanitarian and human rights law which have taken place,” according to the report by the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights.

Israel has repeatedly targeted Gaza’s healthcare system since declaring war, with videos, investigations and witness testimony documenting relentless attacks on hospitals, ambulances and doctors.

Israeli forces previously raided the two largest hospitals in the strip, al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City and Naser Hospital in Khan Younis, destroying them in the process.

Since 7 October, Israel has killed over 1,150 healthcare workers and detained 300, according to the Palestinian health ministry.

French, German top diplomats meet Syria’s de facto rulers in Damascus

German French FMs Syria

Germany’s Annalena Baerbock and France’s Jean-Noel Barrot held talks with Syria’s de-facto leader Ahmed al-Sharaa, also referred to as Abu Mohammed al-Julani, in the Syrian capital on Friday.

Their visit comes as Western governments open channels with al-Sharaa’s Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) – a group with past links to al-Qaeda that led the rebellion against al-Assad – debating whether to remove its terrorist designation.

Barrot landed first in the Syrian capital on Friday morning, having posted on social media platform X that France and Germany stood with the Syrian people “in all their diversity”, voicing support for a “peaceful and demanding transition in the service of the Syrians and for regional stability”.

“A political solution must be reached with France’s allies, the Kurds, so that they are fully integrated into this political process that is beginning today,” Barrot said after meeting civil society representatives in Damascus.

In a news briefing after meeting the new Syrian administration, Baerbock stated: “In our talks today we made clear Europe will support [Syria] but Europe will not be a financier of Islamist structures.”

“Ethnic and religious groups involving men as well as women … must be involved in the constitutional process and in a future Syrian government,” she added.

The ministers also visited Sednaya Prison, the site of extrajudicial executions, torture and forced disappearances during the al-Assad family’s decades-long rule.

“What the Assad regime has meant we saw today in Sednayah … This gave only a faint idea of the unimaginable physical and mental torment that took place there,” Baerboek said, adding that an “accountability mechanism could help the people of Syria to slowly heal the deep wounds”.

Before her visit to Syria, Baerbock had specifically asked the new government to avoid “acts of vengeance against groups within the population”, to avoid a long delay before elections, and to avert attempts to introduce religious content into the judicial and education systems.

The new Syrian authorities have already announced curriculum changes, including scrapping poetry relating to women and love and references to “Gods” in ancient history courses.

On governance, al-Sharaa recently stated that it could take about three years to present a new draft constitution, and another year until elections.

Baerbock noted Germany wanted to overcome “scepticism” about HTS and help Syria return to being “a functioning state with full control over its territory”.

Al Jazeera reproted that the German and French foreign ministers came with a “long list of demands” for the new administration.

“They say that HTS has to renounce acts of vengeance against its opponents and embrace a moderate path. It has to allow an inclusive government where minorities will be represented and it also has to present the Syrian people and international community with a clear path to a transition that should start in March,” it said.

“They also made it clear they would not tolerate the presence of radical groups here. They said that there’s a huge concern about the IS taking advantage of the volatile situation in Syria to pose a serious threat to the entire region,” it added.

UN experts urge Israel to stop ‘blatant disregard’ of right to health in Gaza

Gaza War

“For well over a year into the genocide, Israel’s blatant assault on the right to health in Gaza and the rest of the occupied Palestinian territory is plumbing new depths of impunity,” UN special rapporteur on the right to health, Tlaleng Mofokeng, and UN special rapporteur for Palestine, Francesca Albanese, said in a statement.

“We are horrified and concerned by reports from northern Gaza and especially the attack on the healthcare workers including the last remaining of 22 now destroyed hospitals: Kamal Adwan Hospital,” they added

“We are gravely concerned with the fate of Dr Hussam Abu Safiya, yet another doctor to be harassed, kidnapped and arbitrarily detained by the occupation forces, in his case for defying evacuation orders to leave his patients and colleagues behind. This is part of a pattern by Israel to continuously bombard, destroy and fully annihilate the realisation of the right to health in Gaza.”

“More disturbing reports indicate that Israeli forces allegedly conducted extrajudicial executions of some people in the vicinity of the hospital, including a Palestinian man who was reportedly holding a white flag,” they stated.

More than 1,057 Palestinian health and medical professionals have been killed and many arbitrarily arrested, according to the experts.

They urged Israeli authorities, as the occupying power, to respect and protect the right to life and the right to health in Gaza and the whole occupied Palestinian Territory by ensuring unhindered access to necessary health care and urgently restoring the continuity of essential health services in Gaza.

“Under occupation, intentional assaults on healthcare facilities have the potential to expose individuals to cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment and may constitute a war crime,” they said.

“In Gaza, this is clearly part of a well-established pattern of genocide, for which Israeli leaders will have to be held accountable,” they added.

Several members of UN Security Council on Friday expressed concern over Israeli attacks on the hospitals in the Gaza Strip.

Israel has killed more than 45,600 victims, mostly women and children, in Gaza since a Hamas attack on Oct. 7, 2023.

In November, the International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant for war crimes and crimes against humanity in Gaza.

Israel also faces a genocide case at the International Court of Justice for its war on the enclave.