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Israel looking for ‘imaginary victory’ in Gaza: Hamas

Izzat Al-Rishq, a member of Hamas’s political bureau, was commenting on a speech by Netanyahu during which he insisted on keeping the Gaza-Egypt border area known as the Philadelphi Corridor under the Israeli army’s control, claiming it is necessary for achieving the war on Gaza’s goals.

“Netanyahu’s statements are the speech of a desperate person who is looking for an imaginary victory that he has not succeeded in marketing to his audience after 10 months of his Nazi war against our people in the Gaza Strip,” Al-Rishq said.

He “confirms with his statements that he is the one obstructing the exchange deal and the cease-fire agreement”, Al-Rishq continued.

He added that any delay in his “approval and commitment to what was reached on July 7 (in a cease-fire proposal) means putting the lives of more prisoners at risk,” referring to the recent deaths of six Israeli captives in Gaza, saying “Netanyahu bears responsibility for the lives and safety of the prisoners held by the resistance.”

Netanyahu had reaffirmed his intention to maintain Israeli troops in the Philadelphi Corridor.

“If we withdraw, we won’t (be able to) return there — not for 42 days and not for 42 years,” Israel’s Channel 12 quoted him as saying at a Cabinet meeting.

He was referring to the first 42-day phase of a proposed Gaza cease-fire and hostage swap deal with Hamas.

Netanyahu claimed that the Philadelphi Corridor, a demilitarized area on the border between Gaza and Egypt, is a “lifeline” for Hamas.

Contrary to his insistence on the Philadelphi Corridor, his Defense Minister, Yoav Gallant, called Sunday for the immediate convening of the Security Cabinet to reverse its decision to keep forces in the corridor.

Israel estimates that more than 100 hostages are still being held by Hamas in Gaza, some of whom are believed to have been already killed.

For months, the US, Qatar and Egypt have been trying to reach an agreement between Israel and Hamas to ensure a prisoner exchange and a cease-fire and allow humanitarian aid to enter Gaza. But mediation efforts have been stalled due to Netanyahu’s refusal to meet Hamas’s demands to stop the war.

Israel’s ongoing war on the Gaza Strip has killed nearly 40,800 Palestinians, mostly women and children, and injured over 94,200 others, according to local health authorities.

An ongoing blockade of the enclave has led to severe shortages of food, clean water and medicine, leaving much of the region in ruins.

Israel faces accusations of genocide for its actions in Gaza at the International Court of Justice.

Iran marks National Day Against British Colonialism

Born in 1882 in the southern Iranian port city of Bushehr, Rais- Ali organized popular resistance against British forces after the invasion of Iran in 1915 and etched his name in history as an Iranian independent fighter and anti-British colonialism activist.

After British forces took over Delvar, Rais-Ali’s uprising in nearby Tangestan lasted for nearly seven years in order to secure Iran’s independence.

The national hero was shot dead by a traitor on September 2, 1915, at the age of 33, when his forces were staging a counterattack against the invading British forces.

Rais-Ali’s house in Delvar has been transformed into a museum displaying some of his personal items and historic documents, along with various types of guns.

US says captured Daesh leader in Syria

Daesh

CENTCOM forces, working with Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), captured Khaled Ahmed al-Dandal on Sunday, according to a release on Monday, just days after five Daesh foreign terrorist fighter detainees fled the Raqqah Detention Facility.

Three of the escapees remain at large, according to CENTCOM, after SDF recaptured two others. Al-Dandal was assessed as a “facilitator” aiding efforts of detained Daesh fighters.

More than 9,000 Daesh detainees are held in over 20 SDF detention facilities in Syria, the military said, and Daesh wants to free its detained fighters and “subsequently fuel a Daesh revival.”

Gen. Michael Erik Kurilla, CENTCOM commander, called the numbers “a literal and figurative ‘Daesh Army’ in detention”.

“If a large number of these Daesh fighters escaped, it would pose an extreme danger to the region and beyond,” Kurilla said in a statement, adding that the US will continue to work with the international community to repatriate the Daesh fighters to their countries of origin.

Last week, the US military and Iraqi Security Forces targeted Daesh militants in a separate raid that left at least 15 of the group’s operatives dead in Western Iraq.

The latest developments come as threats from terrorist groups such as Daesh come into new focus three years after the US withdrawal from Afghanistan, worrying security experts. Last month, Daesh-affiliated actors carried out a stabbing attack in Germany and threatened a Taylor Swift concert in Austria.

Hamas warns Gaza hostages will return ‘in coffins’ if Israel continues military onslaught

“[Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu’s insistence on freeing the captives through military pressure instead of reaching a deal means they will go back to their families in coffins. Their families have to choose between receiving them dead or alive,” Abu Obeida, spokesman for the Qassam Brigades, said in a statement on Monday, two days after the bodies of six captives were recovered by Israel.

“Netanyahu and the army are fully responsible for the death of the captives after they intentionally hindered any prisoners’ exchange deal,” it added.

The statement from the Qassam Brigades came shortly after Netanyahu said the six captives whose bodies were recovered from a tunnel in southern Gaza’s Rafah area had been “executed” by Hamas.

“I ask for your forgiveness for not bringing them back alive,” Netanyahu stated during a televised news conference earlier on Monday as protests over the deaths continued for a second day in Israel.

“We were close, but we didn’t succeed. Hamas will pay a very heavy price for this,” he added.

Hamas has claimed that the six captives were killed in Israeli air strikes.

Meanwhile, protests in Israel over the deaths of the captives continued with angry demonstrators saying they could have been returned alive if Netanyahu’s government had signed a ceasefire with Hamas.

Months of stop-start negotiations mediated by the United States, Qatar and Egypt have so far failed to reach an accord on a Gaza ceasefire proposal laid out by President Joe Biden in May.

The Palestinian group wants an agreement to end the war and get Israeli forces out of Gaza while Netanyahu says the war can only end once Hamas is defeated.

Netanyahu not doing enough to secure hostage agreement: Biden

Biden was speaking to reporters at the White House after Israeli forces over the weekend recovered the bodies of six hostages, including 23-year-old American-Israeli Hersh Goldberg-Polin, from a tunnel in Gaza.

That has sparked criticism of the Biden administration’s Gaza ceasefire strategy and ratcheted up pressure on Netanyahu from Israelis to bring the remaining hostages home.

Asked whether he thought Netanyahu was doing enough to reach a hostage deal, Biden said “No”.

Netanyahu appeared to push back when asked about Biden’s comments, saying pressure should be applied to Hamas, not Israel, particularly after the hostages’ deaths.

“And now after this we’re asked to show seriousness? We’re asked to make concessions? What message does this send Hamas? It says, kill more hostages,” he told a news conference in Jerusalem.

Netanyahu stated he did not believe Biden or anyone serious about achieving peace would ask Israel to make more concessions and that instead it was Hamas that needed to do so.

Asked if he was planning to present a final hostage deal to both sides this week, Biden told reporters: “We’re very close to that.”

“Hope springs eternal,” he added when asked whether a deal would be successful.

Biden stated later in the evening that he plans to talk to Netanyahu “eventually” but did not specify a clear timeline when asked. Biden and Netanyahu have spoken several times amid Israel’s war in Gaza.

Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris also met with the US hostage negotiation team, during which the president expressed “devastation and outrage” at the hostages’ murders, and they discussed the next steps in efforts to free the remaining captives, the White House announced.

Biden’s fresh criticism of Netanyahu comes as he and Harris, who has replaced the president at the top of the Democratic ticket for the Nov. 5 election, face increased calls for decisive action to end Israel’s nearly 11-month-old war in Gaza.

The conflict has sown divisions among Democrats, with many progressives pressing Biden to restrict or at least place conditions on US weapon supplies to Israel, Washington’s chief Middle East ally.

The latest bloodshed in the decades-old Israeli-Palestinian conflict was triggered on Oct. 7 when Hamas attacked Israel, killing 1,200 and taking about 250 hostages, according to Israeli tallies.

Israel’s subsequent assault on the Hamas-governed enclave has since killed over 40,000 Palestinians, according to the local health ministry, while also displacing nearly the entire population of 2.3 million, causing a hunger crisis and leading to genocide allegations at the World Court.

Responding to Biden’s remarks on Netanyahu “not doing enough” during ceasefire talks, senior Hamas official Sami Abu Zuhri stressed the comments are an acknowledgement that Israel’s leader is undermining efforts.

Any proposal for a permanent ceasefire and complete Israeli withdrawal from Gaza would be received positively, Abu Zuhri added.

Another senior Hamas leader said Netanyahu’s new conditions, which did not exist previously, demonstrated that he has no desire to reach a ceasefire agreement in Gaza that allows for a hostage-prisoner swap.

“What became clear to all parties following the negotiations is that the occupation (Israeli government) led by Netanyahu doesn’t want to reach a deal,” Hussam Badran, responsible for the group’s national relations file, told Anadolu.

He added that “whenever there is a kind of proposal or consensus between us and the mediators, we find that Netanyahu is putting new conditions that didn’t exist in the past”.

UK suspends dozens of arms exports to Israel over Gaza war crimes concerns

Gaza War

Arms campaigners and rights advocates who have pressed for a full suspension of arms sales to Israel for months welcomed the decision, but criticised the continued export of F-35 fighter jet components which one called “a workhorse of Israel’s brutal bombing campaign”.

The suspension, announced by Foreign Secretary David Lammy in parliament on Monday, covers components for other types of military aircraft, including fighter planes, helicopters and drones.

Under its arms exporting criteria, the government is obligated to suspend licences for arms exports if it determines that there is a clear risk that British weapons might be used in serious violations of international humanitarian law.

“Facing a conflict such as this, it is this government’s legal duty to review export licences,” Lammy told MPs.

“It is with regret that I inform the House today the assessment I have received leaves me unable to conclude anything other than that, for certain UK arms exports to Israel, there does exist a clear risk.”

Lammy stressed that the government’s review, a summary of which will be published, did not mean that Israel had broken humantarian law and that it was impossible verify all claims.

However, he said, the assessment found “that Israel could reasonably do more to ensure life saving food and medical supplies reach people in Gaza”.

Lammy also added the government was “deeply concerned” about reports of mistreatment of Palestinian detainees, which the International Committee of the Red Cross has not been able to investigate after being denied access.

“My predecessor and major allies have raised these concerns,” he said of the detainees.

“Regrettably, these have not been addressed satisfactorily.”

He added that Britain would continue to support Israel if it was under attack, particularly from Iran, announcing fresh sanctions against three members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).

“This government will continue to stand for Israel’s security and we will always do so in a manner consistent with our obligations to domestic and international law,” he continued.

The announcement came hours before two organisations which have challenged the UK government in the High Court over the continued exports were set to pursue fresh legal action in an attempt to force the exports to stop immediately.

Lawyers with the UK-based Global Legan Action Network (Glan) and the Palestinian human rights group Al-Haq announced they told the government last week of their intent to request an emergency order and had planned to do this at a Tuesday morning hearing.

But late on Monday, the organisations stated they would now consider whether the announced ban was “extensive enough to meet the gravity of the situation and assess whether further litigation remains necessary”.

Dearblha Minogue, a senior lawyer with Glan, noted the government’s “momentous decision vindicates everything Palestinians have been saying for months”.

“The UK government was backed into a corner,” she added.

Without F-35 components included in the ban list, campaigners and human rights groups which have called for a blanket end of UK arms exports to Israel sales for months said the announcement fell short.

“The suspension of export licenses took far long and didn’t go far enough,” said Yasmine Ahmed, UK Director of Human Rights Watch.

“That the UK government chose to exempt components for the F-35, a workhorse of Israel’s brutal bombing campaign, shows either a miscomprehension of the law or a wilful disregard.”

Earlier on Monday, Danish news outlet Information revealed that the Israeli military used an F-35 stealth fighter in a 13 July attack on a designated safe zone in Gaza which killed at least 90 people.

British-made components comprise 15 percent of all F-35 fighter jets, raising questions about whether the news would shift UK arms export policy.

But Lammy stated that parts for F-35s, used in a multi-national programme, were not among the items suspended which would “undermine the global F-35 supply chain that is vital for the security of the UK, our allies and NATO”.

Sam Perlo-Freeman, research coordinator for Campaign Against Arms Trade, said exempting F-35 parts for Israel was “utterly outrageous and unjustifiable”.

“These are by far the UK’s most significant arms supplies to the Israeli military, and just today we have confirmation that they have been used in one of the most egregious attacks in recent months,” he added.

Anna Stavrianakis, director of research and strategy at UK-based Shadow World Investigations and professor of international relations at the University of Sussex, told Middle East Eye that without the suspension of the F-35 components, the statement “seems more like an attempt to mollify critics than a meaningful restriction on Israel’s ability to commit genocide”.

Chris Doyle, director of the Council for the Advancement of Arab-British Understanding, told MEE it was extraodinary that it had taken “11 months of carnage and atrocities” for the government to come to its conclusions, something he said was “unforgivable”.

But he also added the move was a welcome step to build on.

“The most crucial element is that for the first time a British government has accepted that Israel was likely to have violated international law in Gaza,” he continued, stating, “Which bits of international law? It opens up a conversation.”

Labour MP Afzal Khan told MEE he was pleased that Lammy had taken an “important first step”.

“Upholding international humanitarian law must be central to any export regime, and it’s clear the new Labour government recognises this,” Khan said.

“Ultimately, the only thing that will stop innocent Palestinian civilians being killed is an immediate and permanent ceasefire in Gaza, as the Labour Government has been calling for. This must remain our utmost priority.”

Josh Paul, the former US official who resigned last October in protest over US arms transfers to Israel, told MEE: “With America’s closest ally, the UK, now acknowledging the clear and obvious risk of harm and legal violations inherent in continued arms transfers to Israel, one can only hope the US takes note and follows suit.

“Sadly,” he added, “under this president, I do not expect it will.”

Turkey detains several people over attack on US soldiers

On Monday, a video circulated on social media showing alleged members of the anti-American Turkish Youth Union (TGB) attacking American service members.

One US serviceman tries to free himself from the gang but is unable to break their grip.

“Yankee go home! Yankee go home!” The men scream in English.

Several people are seen forcing a bag over the head of a person dressed in civilian clothes. One man unfurls a flag with TGB initials and a picture of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the founder of modern-day Turkey.

“American soldiers who carry the blood of our soldiers and thousands of Palestinians on their hands cannot defile our country,” the TGB said in an X post sharing the video.

The bag over the head referred to an incident from the 2003 Iraq war when US forces in northern Iraq arrested a group of Turkish soldiers, forced hoods over their heads, and held them for three days. The incident outraged many in Turkey and across the Muslim world.

“We can confirm reports that US service members embarked aboard the USS Wasp were the victims of an assault in İzmir today, and are now safe,” the US embassy to Turkey said on X.

“We thank Turkish authorities for their rapid response and ongoing investigation.”

The attack came after the USS Wasp carried out joint training exercises with Turkish military vessels in the Mediterranean.

The drills drew criticism from some in Turkish media close to the opposition, which saw the American ship’s deployment as part of the United States’ support for Israel.

Since suffering significant losses in Turkey’s local elections in March, the Turkish government has intensified its criticism of Israel and taken a series of steps against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has claimed Hamas is defending Turkish lands against Israel, and that Israel – a close US ally – could attack Turkey if it’s not stopped in Gaza.

“Israel is not only attacking Palestinians in Gaza; [it is] attacking us. Hamas is the forward line defence of Anatolia in Gaza,” he said.

The statement came as bilateral relations hit a new low after Ankara completely halted trade with Israel earlier this month, demanding an unhindered flow of humanitarian aid into Gaza Strip and a ceasefire.

“Israel will answer for the 35,000 Palestinians they murdered and the 85,000 people they injured. We will be on their backs,” Erdogan added.

At least 6 killed in Kabul blast

“Details will be shared later,” spokesman Abdul Mateen Qaniee told Reuters over the phone, adding that the blast took place in the southwestern area of Darul Aman.

Kabul police spokesman Khalid Zadran stated six people were killed in the blast, including a woman, and 13 were injured.

Zadran stated the attack took place in the Qala-e-Bakhtiar area of southern Kabul, adding that an investigation is under way.

No group has claimed responsibility so far.

Violence has waned in Afghanistan since the 2021 Taliban takeover, which ended a two-decade war that included foreign forces.

But the ISIL (ISIS) affiliate in Khorasan Province remains active and has regularly targeted civilians, foreigners and Taliban officials with gun and bomb attacks. The group is the largest security threat in Afghanistan and has frequently also targeted Shia communities.

The most notorious ISIL-linked attack since the Taliban takeover was in 2022 when at least 53 people – including 46 girls and young women – were slain in a suicide bombing at an education centre in a Shia neighbourhood of Kabul.

The last suicide attack in Afghanistan claimed by the regional chapter of ISIL was in the southern city of Kandahar – the Taliban’s historic stronghold – in March.

Taliban government spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid told the AFP news agency last month that ISIL “existed” in the country before but the Taliban “suppressed them very hard”.

“No such groups exist here that can pose a threat to anyone,” he said.

Majesty of the Caspian Red Deer in Northern Alborz, Iran

The Hyrcanian forests of Iran, with a history of 40 million years, are considered some of the most valuable forests in the world. A few years ago, they were inscribed as Iran’s second natural World Heritage site by UNESCO.

Hamed Tizrouyan and Mehdi Kia, two Iranian environmental and wildlife activists, recently shared a video on their Instagram pages showing several Marals in a protected area in northern Iran.

These environmentalists have highlighted the approaching mating season for the Iranian red deer and have called on environmental supporters to assist in protecting the animals.

The mating opportunity for the Iranian red deer occurs only once a year, which is crucial for ensuring the survival of this valuable species.

According to researchers, more than 80% of this precious deer population in northern Iran has been lost in recent years.

Iranian dissident criticizes officials for his implication in new case

Tajzadeh said he will not appear at the court in the case nor will he defend himself.

He noted that the judge in charge of the case could give him another six years in prison in the case of which 5 years will be enforceable.

Takzadeh added that when Hassan Rouhani was elected as Iran’s president in 2013, his jail sentence was increased from 6 years to 7 years, claiming that this time around, his 5-year term could be increased to 10 years.

According to Tajzadeh, in the new case, he has been accused of assembly and collusion with the intent of committing crimes against national security and engaging in propaganda against the Islamic establishment.

Tajzadeh served as political deputy of Iran’s interior minister under former president Mohammad Khatami.