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Iran dismisses reports oil tankers involved in collision near Singapore carrying Iranian crude

Iran Oil Tanker

“None of the damaged tankers were related to Iran,” the ministry announced and stressed that the crude oil cargo of neither of the two damaged tankers belonged to Iran.

Thick black smoke billowed from the site of the incident northeast of the Singaporean island of Pedra Branca on Friday. The crew were rescued by life rafts and flown to hospital.

The Iranian oil ministry raised questions on the incentives behind spreading the rumor at a time the country has managed to increase its oil production and exports under US-led Western sanctions.

Official: Dengue fever under control in Iran, 150 contracted

Fever

Abdolreza Mir-Oliaei, the head of the Department of Control and Management of Communicable Diseases of the Ministry of Health, said climate change has caused the spread of Aedes mosquitoes, which is responsible for the spread of the disease in different countries.

Mir-Oliaei noted that many areas in Iran are breeding grounds for the mosquitos, adding the ministry is following up on plans to recognize the areas where the mosquitos are reproducing.

He warned that the mosquitos are being monitored in northern, western and southern border provinces, adding control measures are being carried out to stop the spread of the disease.

The official advised citizens to take precautionary measures by staying in roofed spaces and windows with nets, wearing long and bright clothes, and using insect repellants to help prevent mosquito bites.

Protection against transmission of the disease, protection of medical personnel, and management of waste and sewage are among the key preventive measures.

The most common symptoms of the acute viral disease are high fever, headache, body aches, nausea, and rash. In severe cases, it will involve hemorrhagic manifestations.

US calls for more powerful response to Houthi attacks: Report

US-led coalition Yemen

In a classified letter, General Michael Erik Kurilla, the head of US Central Command (Centcom), suggested the US should take a more forceful approach against the Houthis, the report said. The letter comes amid fears that Red Sea tensions could draw in Russia.

The WSJ cited an exclusive article published by Middle East Eye last month which revealed US intelligence agencies learned Russian President Vladimir Putin has mulled arming Yemen’s Houthis with anti-ship cruise missiles.

MEE revealed that Putin was dissuaded from the move by Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

“Putin engaged Mohammed bin Salman who requested them (Russia) not to pursue the arrangement,” the senior US official previously told MEE.

According to The Wall Street Journal, the Joe Biden administration still believes Putin could pursue the arrangement and is confidently trying to stop Russia from arming the Houthis.

Fears about the Houthis’ access to potentially more sophisticated weapons are likely to grow, following a drone attack on Tel Aviv on Friday that killed one person and injured several others. The Houthis claimed responsibility for the strike.

Russia’s deliberations to step up its involvement adds a new dimension to the conflict. Moscow is upset with US and European military support for Ukraine. Putin stated last month that Moscow is considering providing long-range missiles to third countries to hit the assets of NATO countries.

“There is a connection between Russia’s war on Ukraine and the Red Sea,” General Frank Mckenzie, the retired commander of US Central Command, told MEE.

But aiding the Houthis is not straightforward for Moscow, which enjoys good ties to Persian Gulf monarchies and Iran, the Houthis main foreign backer.

Saudi Arabia and the UAE launched a campaign against the Houthis after Yemen descended into war in 2014 amid concerns a Houthi takeover of Yemen would install Tehran’s partners at their borders.

The Saudi-led coalition launched thousands of air strikes on Yemen which failed to dislodge the Houthis but resulted in thousands of civilian deaths and a major humanitarian crisis. The Houthis responded by lobbing missiles and drones at civilian infrastructure in Saudi Arabia and the UAE.

Since 2022, an uneasy truce has held between the Houthis and Saudi-backed forces, but Persian Gulf states are alarmed about rising tensions in the Red Sea. The Houthis began attacking commercial ships in November, in what they said was in solidarity with Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.

The attacks have upended global trade, forcing shipping companies plying goods between Europe and Asia to take a circuitous route around Africa to avoid Houthi attacks.

The Houthis have also struck at the core of the US’s great power projection in the region: protecting sea lanes of communication.

In January, the US began striking Houthi positions in response to the attacks.

MEE reported previously that Houthi fighters have been tapping commercially available maritime intelligence to draw up their target lists in the Red Sea.

The WSJ reported that Kurilla warned in his letter that “US service members will die if we continue going this way”, as he argued for a more forceful response to Houthi attacks.

The report added that Centcom has been instructed to draw up a list of expanded targets, including specific Houthi fighters.

Gaza ceasefire deal moving towards ‘goal line’: US

Gaza War

“We’re inside the 10-yard line and driving toward the goal line on getting an agreement that would produce a cease-fire, get the hostages home, and put us on a better track to trying to build lasting peace and stability,” Blinken told the Aspen Security Forum in Colorado.

However, Blinken stated that the “last 10 yards are often the hardest”.

“So I don’t want to be in any way naive about it,” he added, acknowledging that some issues still need to be resolved.

“We continue to believe, that the quickest way to bring this war to an end to bring relief to the people of Gaza who so desperately need it to put Gaza itself to put the entire region on a better path is through an agreement on a cease-fire,” he continued.

Israel and Hamas have been engaged in indirect talks since January to reach an agreement that ends the war on Gaza and swaps prisoners.

Israel’s war on Gaza, now nearing its tenth month, has destroyed large swaths of the besieged territory.

More than 38,800 people have been killed, the great majority of them women and children. Thousands more are missing or presumed to be dead under the rubble.

Top UN court says Israel’s presence in occupied Palestinian territories ‘unlawful’

ICJ

The International Court of Justice (ICJ) opinion determined for the first time that Israel’s annexation and settlement of Palestinian territory violated a prohibition of acquiring territory by force, and that it violates international law.

“The Court reaffirms that the Israeli settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, and the régime associated with them, have been established and are being maintained in violation of international law,” the ICJ said in the opinion.

The ICJ added Israel was annexing land in Palestinian territory under “policies and practices are designed to remain in place indefinitely and to create irreversible effects on the ground”.

Specifically, the court found that the transfer of Israeli settlers to the West Bank and East Jerusalem is contrary to the sixth paragraph of Article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention, which states that an occupying power must not transfer its own civilian population into a territory it holds.

The court also noted Israel violated the Geneva Convention by extending its legal authority to Israeli settlers but imposing a harsher military law on Palestinians; by forcible evictions, extensive house demolitions and restrictions on residence and movement of Palestinians; and by a “systematic failure” to address violence against Palestinians in the territories, along with other discriminatory practices.

“It is a wrongful act of a continuing character which has been brought about by Israel’s violations, through its policies and practices, of the prohibition on the acquisition of territory by force and the right to self-determination of the Palestinian people,” the court said.

“Consequently, Israel has an obligation to bring an end to its presence in the Occupied Palestinian Territory as rapidly as possible,” the ICJ added, also calling for Israel to issue reparations for the wrongdoing, including by returning land and property.

The ICJ ruling is an advisory opinion and not a binding order. But it puts more pressure on Israel, which is waging a war against Palestinian militant group Hamas in Gaza that has sparked widespread concern over the more than 38,500 Gazans who have been killed in nearly 10 months of war. The ICJ also calls for all states to not assist Israel in any way with its occupation of Palestinian territories.

Israel captured the West Bank, East Jerusalem and Gaza in a 1967 war. Israel returned Gaza to the rule of Palestinians in 2005 but continues to have authority over the West Bank and East Jerusalem, where Palestinians live.

Israel has been accused of violating international law by encroaching into Palestinian territory through the expansion of Israeli settlements, an issue that even Tel Aviv’s most ardent ally, Washington, has called the nation out on. It has also come under pressure for a harsh rule over the Palestinian people in occupied territories.

The United Nations announced over the spring that the size of Israeli settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem increased dramatically from November 2022 to October 2023, with more than 24,000 housing units being added in that period.

The ICJ case was brought before the court after a 2022 request from the United Nations General Assembly to seek an opinion from the court on the impact of Israeli settlements and occupation in Palestinian territory.

The court heard from some 52 countries, including the state of Palestine, on the issue, the largest bloc of nations in one case since the ICJ was founded in 1945. Oral arguments were made in February.

The ICJ is also hearing a separate case filed by South Africa over the war in Gaza, with South African officials accusing Israel of genocide. That case may take years to resolve.

Russia sentences American journalist to 16 years in prison

Evan Gershkovich

Prosecutors had asked for 18 years in a high-security penal colony, just two years below the maximum penalty for espionage.

Gershkovich was arrested in the Urals city of Yekaterinburg in March last year on a reporting assignment for his employer, the Wall Street Journal.

The Kremlin says the reporter was caught “red-handed” spying for the CIA by collecting information about a tank factory. But with court proceedings held behind closed doors, public scrutiny of the supposed evidence has been made impossible. Gershkovich has pleaded not guilty.

The Wall Street Journal and the American government have slammed the case as politically motivated and the trial a “sham”.

They argue that Gershkovich, 32, and several other American citizens jailed in Russia are being used as leverage to force Western governments to release Russians who have been imprisoned there.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has openly hinted that he is seeking the freeing of Vadim Krasikov, an FSB assassin currently serving a life sentence in Berlin.

Both U.S. presidential candidates have stated securing Gershkovich’s release is a priority. Joe Biden’s administration has said that it has been in talks with Moscow for more than a year to try to broker a deal.

Biden’s rival Donald Trump has used the lack of progress as ammunition, promising Gershkovich would be “released almost immediately” if he were elected.

“Vladimir Putin, president of Russia, will do that for me, but not for anyone else, and WE WILL BE PAYING NOTHING!” Trump wrote on his Truth Social media platform in late May. But the Kremlin promptly denied it had had any contact with Trump on the matter, saying talks could only be successful if conducted “absolutely discreetly”, in a seeming jab at the rabble-rousing Republican.

Another name frequently mentioned in relation to a possible prisoner swap is that of the prominent Kremlin critic and Russian-British dual citizen Vladimir Kara-Murza, who has been jailed in Russia for treason.

Kara-Murza’s supporters have in recent weeks raised the alarm after the opposition politician, who suffers from severe health problems after two attempted poisonings, was supposedly transferred to a hospital, where he has been denied any visits from his lawyers.

Over 200 US congressional staffers sign letter protesting Netanyahu address amid Gaza war

Benjamin Netanyahu

The letter, organized by the Congressional Progressive Staff Association and signed by 230 House and Senate staffers, said speaking out against Netanyahu’s July 24 joint address to Congress was an “issue of morality” and not politics.

“Citizens, students, and lawmakers across the country and the world have spoken out against the actions of Mr. Netanyahu in his War on Gaza,” the letter reads.

“Israelis have been protesting in the streets for months, decrying his failure to negotiate a ceasefire and release of hostages. We hope you will join your fellow Members of Congress in protest at his speech or in refusing to attend it.”

Some staffers, mostly progressives, have repeatedly called for a cease-fire between Israel and Palestinian militant group Hamas, including at a demonstration in November and another in May.

Several Democratic lawmakers have already announced they will protest Netanyahu’s speech, which was organized after a May invitation from the top Democratic and Republican leaders in both chambers.

It’s likely that most if not all of the roughly 100 members of the Congressional Progressive Caucus in the House and Senate will boycott or protest the speech in some way.

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), among the most vocal critics of Israel’s war in Gaza, earlier this month criticized leaders for inviting Netanyahu while more than 38,800 Palestinians have been killed in the war that began Oct. 7. Sanders reupped his vow to sit out the meeting last month, calling the Israeli leader a “war criminal”.

Netanyahu will arrive in Washington next week for the speech before Congress and will meet with President Joe Biden at the White House for his first visit since 2020.

The joint address to Congress is the prime minister’s first since 2015, when 58 lawmakers boycotted him over concerns about his opposition to the Iran nuclear deal under negotiation at the time between Tehran and then-President Obama.

Israel has faced widespread criticism for its nearly 10-month war in Gaza, where Palestinians are struggling to access the basic necessities of food and water and are not considered safe anywhere in the territory by the United Nations from airstrikes and other fighting.

Suez Canal income drops significantly amid Yemen’s Houthi attacks

Shipping Firms Red Sea

The canal is a crucial source of foreign currency for Egypt, which is currently grappling with a severe financial crisis.

Since November, the Houthis have launched numerous attacks on ships in the Gulf of Aden and Red Sea. The group says the attacks are aimed at vessels with links to Israel in solidarity with Palestinians in the war-torn Gaza Strip.

The attacks have forced many major shipping firms to suspend passage through the Red Sea, which usually carries about 10 percent of global trade, and divert their vessels thousands of miles around Africa.

The canal recorded “during the financial year 2023/24 the passage of 20,148 ships, generating revenues of $7.2 billion, compared with 25,911 ships during the financial year 2022/23, with revenues of $9.4 billion”, the Suez Canal Authority said in a statement.

The financial year in Egypt runs from the beginning of July to the end of June of the following year.

Oussama Rabie, the president of the public body that administers the canal, attributed the decline to “the severe impact of the Red Sea crisis on traffic in the canal, because security problems encourage many ship owners and operators to take alternative routes”.

The use of these alternative routes has “resulted in an increase in travel times and costs”, he was quoted as saying in the statement.

Fire in Iran’s Kūh-e Bīsotūn contained

The fire destroyed tens of hectares of forests and pasture.

The cause of the blaze is unknown. There are no reports of casualties as a result of the fire.

Kūh-e Bīsotūn is of high importance archeologically and an inscription engraved on a wall in the mountain is a world heritage site.

The inscription is unique, being the only known monumental text of the Achaemenids to document a specific historic event, that of the re-establishment of the empire by the great Persian king, Darius I.

This is the first cuneiform writing to be deciphered in the 19th century.

People rally for Gaza in Mashhad, northeastern Iran 

The protesters included people pilgrimaging the 8th Shia Imam’s shrine in Mashhad and the city’s residents.

They condemned the Zionist regime’s genocidal war on Gaza.

Around 39,000 Palestinians, mostly women and children have been killed during 9 months of Israel’s onslaught against Gaza.

Iranian cities have been the scene of many protest rallies since Israel waged the allout war against Gaza in early October 2023.