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Three Bangladeshi nationals given life in prison by UAE

Bangladesh Protest

On Monday, the Abu Dhabi Federal Court of Appeal handed out the three life sentences, as well as 10-year prison terms for 53 others, for participating in demonstrations.

Those convicted will be deported to Bangladesh at the end of their sentences, according to Emirati news agency WAM.

The demonstrators were protesting against a Bangladesh High Court verdict that was set to reintroduce a quota system in the country, reserving 30 percent of government jobs for the descendants of veterans who fought in the country’s independence war in 1971.

Mass protests against the quota system, led by students who believed the move to be anti-meritocratic, were violently cracked down on by authorities in Bangladesh last week, with at least 170 protesters killed.

Over the weekend, Bangladesh’s Supreme Court scrapped the High Court verdict and recommended that only five percent of jobs should be set aside for the relatives of veterans.

Videos emerged on Friday of scores of protesters in the UAE, including in Dubai, rallying against Bangladesh’s government. Dozens of Bangladeshi nationals were immediately arrested.

Unauthorised protests are banned in UAE, a country where freedom of expression is severely restricted.

The Emirates’ attorney general ordered an immediate investigation into the protests on Friday.

Anwar Gargash, adviser to the UAE presidency, said: “The Attorney General’s decision to refer the protesters to trial is within the legal framework to maintain the state model and prevent the export of other countries’ problems to the UAE.”

The demonstrators were charged with deliberately disrupting transportation, inciting protests, rioting, causing damage to property and sharing content about the demonstrations online, according to WAM.

“This just shows how quick the UAE authorities are to stamp on any form of freedom of expression,” James Lynch, co-founder of Fair Square, which campaigns for workers’ rights in the Persian Gulf, told Middle East Eye.

He added that all speech was cracked down on, whether it was concerned with UAE domestic politics, foreign policy issues related to the Emirates, like on Israel and Palestine, or issues where the UAE’s role was not significant, like in Bangladesh.

“Simply the idea of protest, of criticism and dissent, [is] discouraged,” Lynch continued, noting, “Migrant workers are heavily restricted from expressing themselves in any form.”

Bangladeshis reportedly make up about seven percent of the UAE’s population. They are the third-largest immigrant community in the Emirates, after Indians and Pakistanis.

The vast majority of the UAE’s population of 9.2 million is made up of migrants, with only around 10 percent being Emirati citizens.

Palestinian rights advocates describe Gaza genocide as Biden’s legacy

Joe Biden

While political leaders showered Biden with compliments, bombs continued to rain down on the besieged enclave, killing dozens and sparking another wave of mass displacement in Khan Younis.

For many Palestinian rights advocates, the carnage and abuses in Gaza will define Biden’s place in the history books, as the US remains steadfast in its support of Israel’s war in the Palestinian territory.

“He’ll be remembered for the hundreds of thousands killed, injured and displaced in Gaza,” said Abed Ayoub, the executive director of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC).

“There is no way around it. ‘Genocide Joe’ is what he’s going to be remembered as.”

Since Israel’s war on Gaza started on October 7, Biden has offered the government of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu unconditional military and diplomatic support.

Only once did Biden withhold a shipment of bombs to Israel over humanitarian concerns — and even then, he released part of that cargo a couple months later, amid pressure from Netanyahu.

Israel’s war, meanwhile, has killed more than 39,000 Palestinians, displaced hundreds of thousands, fuelled a man-made hunger crisis and destroyed large parts of the territory. United Nations experts and other observers have warned of a “risk of genocide” in Gaza.

Ayoub told Al Jazeera that, despite Biden’s domestic achievements, the president will rank among the worst in US history due to his unconditional support for Israel.

The US Campaign for Palestinian Rights (USCPR) echoed that comment.

“Nothing will erase the fact that Biden’s legacy is — and always will be — genocide,” the group announced in a statement.

The US president has been a stalwart supporter of Israel throughout his decades-long political career.

He frequently calls himself a Zionist and argues that Jews across the world would not be safe without Israel.

He put that worldview into policy during his presidency, as he pushed on with Former President Donald Trump’s pro-Israel doctrine. Biden kept the US embassy in Jerusalem and refused to reverse the Donald Trump-era decision to recognise Israel’s claims to the occupied Golan Heights in Syria.

He also aggressively pursued formal ties between Israel and Arab states, a goal Trump advanced with the 2020 Abraham Accords.

That push for normalisation, however, came without progress towards the recognition of an independent Palestinian state or the dismantling of systemic anti-Palestinian discrimination.

The outbreak of the war in Gaza further underscored Biden’s pro-Israel policies.

Weeks after the conflict started, Biden travelled to Israel and publicly embraced Netanyahu in what many critics have described as a “bear hug”.

That sign of friendliness was widely understood to be an endorsement of Netanyahu’s response in Gaza, after the Palestinian group Hamas attacked southern Israel on October 7.

Even early in the conflict, human rights groups accused Israel of horrific violations rising to the level of genocide — a push to destroy the Palestinian people.

Within the first week alone, the Israeli military announced it had unleashed 2,000 strikes across Gaza — a strip of land roughly the size of Las Vegas.

Biden has since authorised continuous arms transfers and more than $14bn in additional aid to sustain Israel’s Gaza offensive. Moreover, his administration has vetoed three United Nations Security Council proposals that would have called for a ceasefire.

Hatem Abudayyeh, the chair of the US Palestinian Community Network (USPCN), stated Biden will be remembered above all for enabling Israel’s “crimes against humanity”.

“He could’ve turned the tap of money and weapons off in October, but he allowed this genocide to happen. He is complicit, and that’s what will be written on his tombstone,” Abudayyeh told Al Jazeera.

Following his entry into politics in 1970, Biden quickly rose from local to national prominence, mounting a successful dark-horse campaign to represent Delaware in the US Senate in 1972.

After nearly four decades in Congress, he became vice president under Barack Obama, and in 2021, he won the presidency himself.

The president does not hail from a political dynasty, and he is not an exceptional orator. His success in politics is often credited to his interpersonal skills and ability to project empathy.

That sense of compassion, however, never extended to Palestinians, activists say.

“For nine and a half months, President Biden has funded and armed the brutal Israeli genocide of Palestinians in Gaza, making the US government directly complicit in the killing of at least 39,000 people, including over 15,000 children,” Jewish Voice for Peace Action said in a statement on Sunday.

“Americans have watched in horror and outrage as Biden sent the Israeli government the weapons it used to wipe out entire generations of Palestinian families, to destroy hospitals, bakeries, schools, mosques, churches, universities, refugee camps, homes and Gaza’s entire health care system and electricity and water grids.”

Beyond policy, Biden’s rhetoric at times seemed dismissive of Israeli atrocities and Palestinian suffering.

“I have no notion that the Palestinians are telling the truth about how many people are killed. I’m sure innocents have been killed, and it’s the price of waging a war,” the US president said in October.

But that stance caused Biden troubles both domestically and abroad.

Even before Biden delivered a disastrous debate performance on June 27, the 81-year-old had started to trail his Republican rival Trump in public opinion polls.

Parts of the Democratic base — including young people, progressives, Arabs and Muslims — voiced frustration and anger with his support for Israel.

Groups like the USCPR argued that Biden’s age and debate performance were only one factor in the pressure that forced him from the presidential race.

“It was not Biden’s failed debate that showed he is unfit to lead,” USCPR noted, adding, “It was the tens of thousands of bombs he sent to kill Palestinian families. It was his callous, dystopian disregard for Palestinian lives.”

Other commentators likewise argued that Biden failed to show enough concern for the humanitarian crisis unfolding in Gaza.

IRGC says seized foreign tanker smuggling fuel in Persian Gulf

IRGC Boat

All 12 crew members with Indian and Sri Lankan nationalities were also arrested.

The second naval zone of the IRGC said in a statement on Monday that the vessel with the flag of Togo was carrying over 1.5 million liters of smuggled fuel.

The Belt Guse tanker was seized off the coast of the southern port city of Bushehr. It was smuggling fuel in an “organized way”.

Late in January, the IRGC Navy also confiscated a foreign tanker carrying two million liters of smuggled fuel in the southern waters.

The IRGC Navy has been using state-of-the-art detection tools over recent years to monitor all movements in the Persian Gulf and maintain the security of the marine route.

It has over the past years foiled several attacks on both Iranian and foreign tankers in the strategic Persian Gulf region and other high seas.

Israel confirms two more captives dead in Gaza

Israel Hostages

Alex Dancyg, 75, and Yagev Buchstav, 35, who were taken by Hamas fighters during the October 7 attacks on Israel from their homes near the Gaza fence, were declared dead on Monday after a review by Israeli authorities including health experts.

They are believed to have died several months ago, the military announced, but did not comment on previous claims by Hamas, or provide details about the manner of their deaths. Their bodies have not been recovered.

Hamas had announced the death of the two captives in March, saying Buchstav died due to lack of food and medicine, and Dancyg was killed by Israeli military attacks.

Buchshtav’s wife, Rimon Kirsht Buchshtav, was taken to the besieged territory with him by Palestinian fighters. She was one of the people released on November 28 as part of an exchange agreement with Hamas.

The two captives died in Khan Younis in the southern part of the enclave, but the Israeli military announced this is unrelated to its latest planned ground invasion of the area announced on Monday.

The air raids and artillery shelling of the area that came shortly after the announcement of a new order to flee has killed dozens and wounded tens of others, according to health officials in Gaza.

Out of about 250 people who were taken on October 7, a total of 116 captives are believed to remain in the besieged enclave, with more than 40 confirmed dead in the Israeli military attacks.

On June 8, the Israeli military launched a daylight operation in central Gaza’s Nuseirat that led to the rescue of four captives held in the enclave. At least 270 Palestinians were killed during the assault, which was supported by many air attacks in the area.

Over 39,000 Palestinians have been killed as a result of the relentless pounding of the Gaza Strip by the Israeli military, and more than 89,800 injuries have been recorded by health authorities.

Israeli citizens continue to hold protests in Tel Aviv and other areas to call for a ceasefire agreement to ensure the captives are brought back safely from Gaza.

In demonstrations this week, they demanded that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu prioritise achieving a captive deal over a planned trip to the United States, where he will deliver a speech to Congress.

Gaza death toll surges past 39,000

Gaza War

A ministry statement said that some 89,818 others have been injured in the assault.

“Israeli forces killed 23 people and injured 91 others in three ‘massacres’ against families in the last 24 hours,” the ministry announced

“Many people are still trapped under rubble and on the roads as rescuers are unable to reach them,” it noted.

Flouting a UN Security Council resolution demanding an immediate cease-fire, Israel has faced international condemnation amid its continued brutal offensive on Gaza since an Oct. 7, 2023 attack by Palestinian group Hamas.

Over nine months into the Israeli war, vast tracts of Gaza lie in ruins amid a crippling blockade of food, clean water and medicine.

Iranian wild goats and leopards spotted in northwestern protected area of Kaghazkonan 

Iranian wild goats

Males, called Kal, have long, sword-like horns. The biological range of this mammal includes Europe and Asia Minor to Central Asia and the Middle East.

The Iranian leopard, which is among the endangered species, has a small population and Iranian authorities have been making a strenuous effort to prevent the species from extinction.

IRGC cmdr.: Protecting borders means enemy policies at bay 

Hossein Salami

Brigadier General Hossein Salami pointed out that establishing the security of the Islamic Republic is not limited to a narrow strip, but it’s the establishment of security in all Islamic borders.

According to the IRGC commander, deepening the credibility and authority of Iran with regard to security is a big task that is taking shape thanks to the efforts of the revolutionary forces.

General Salami added that the enemies aim to gradually cross the borders with a plan and strategy and turn the unstable regions of Iran into the country’s center in a creeping and accelerated movement, but to no avail.

Number of Israeli soldiers seeking psychological support amid Gaza war increases six-fold: Report

Israeli Army

The Ministry of Defence’s helpline has noted a dramatic increase in distress calls from reservists and soldiers, along with their families, the newspaper reported.

Just last week, the hotline received four inquiries with suicidal characteristics that required the immediate intervention of the police, the report added.

According to data by the NTL association which operates the helpline, between October 2022 and June 2023, before the war, the hotline was required to contact the police 35 times due to fear of suicide.

A year later, the number jumped to 86 – a 145 percent increase. The data shows that the number of references has also jumped six-fold compared to before the war, and that in recent weeks the number of requests at night has doubled.

The Israeli army has confirmed that tens of thousands of Israeli soldiers have called up a mental health hotline since the outbreak of the Gaza Strip on October 7.

Since Israel launched the war October last year in response to Operation Al-Aqsa Storm, around 39,000 Palestinians, most of them women and children, and injured more than 89,700 others.

Iran urges Europe to pursue policies independent of US for ties improvement

Nasser Kanaani

Speaking to reporters at a weekly press conference on Monday, Kanaani bemoaned the lack of sufficient dynamism in the relations between Iran and Europe considering their capacities.

Asked about Europe’s cold response to the result of the recent presidential elections in Iran, the spokesman said the cold relations or the failure to employ the existing capacities result from “Europe’s miscalculations or bowing to pressure from the US”.

Kanaani stated that the bilateral relations will definitely improve if the European governments adopt independent policies towards Iran and rid themselves of US influence.

Asked about the US presidential election result’s impact on Iran’s foreign policy, the spokesman reiterated that Tehran does not care who is in charge of the US administrations.

What matters is that the US has taken a hostile policy against Iran, Kanaani noted, adding, “A fundamental change in the US’ hostile policies could change the atmosphere.”

Israel sending Shin Bet operatives to France to protect its Olympic athletes

Olympic France

Around 88 Israeli athletes and their teams will be protected by Shin Bet due to alleged security concerns. However, not all will have a personal bodyguard, the Jewish Chronicle reported on Sunday.

Israel has been preparing the security details for the Olympics for “more than a year”, doubling the team’s security budget this year, Israel’s Culture and Sports Minister Miki Zohar told the Telegraph.

Former Shin Bet officer Lior Akerman also told the Telegraph that agents will be “equipped with weapons and technologies” and will receive support from local security and police forces.

According to Akerman, Shin Bet will manage the athletes’ security “at every stage and place”, from their arrival until they board the plane returning to Israel.

Israeli athletes have received threatening online messages in poorly written Hebrew, Israeli broadcaster Walla reported over the weekend. As many as 15 athletes and their teams are said to have received similar death threats via email, warning of fatal consequences if they came to France.

This comes amid growing calls from activists, politicians, and athletes demanding Israel’s expulsion from the world’s biggest sporting event, set to take place from July 26 to August 11.

Israel has continued its offensive on Gaza since an October 7 attack by Hamas. Nearly 39,000 Palestinians have since been killed, mostly women and children, and over 89,700 injured, according to local health authorities.

France’s interior minister also stated on Monday Israeli athletes will receive 24-hour protection during the Paris Olympics.

French Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin said in a TV interview Israeli athletes would be protected around the clock during the Games, which begin on Friday.

At a pro-Gaza rally on Saturday, far-left France Unbowed (LFI) party lawmaker Thomas Portes was filmed saying Israel’s Olympic athletes were not welcome in France, and that there should be protests against their taking part in the Games.

On Monday, Foreign Minister Stephane Sejourne told a meeting of European Union counterparts in Brussels: “I want to say that on behalf of France, to the Israeli delegation, we welcome you to France for these Olympic Games.”