Wednesday, January 14, 2026
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Israel’s Gaza attacks continue despite purported ‘tactical pauses’: UNRWA

Gaza War

On Sunday, the Israeli military declared a daily humanitarian pause, from 8pm to 7pm local time in the area from the Karem Abu Salem crossing, also known as Kerem Shalom, in southern Israel, to the Salah al-Din Road and then northwards.

The Israeli military announced the pauses aim at allowing in more aid through a pre-determined route into the south. However the army later backtracked, after coming under pressure from the government, saying operations in Rafah, the main focus of its operations in southern Gaza, would not stop.

The pause was slammed by the Israeli government, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his far-right allies, Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich and National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir

The Gaza government office stated talk of “tactical pauses” was “an Israeli lie”.

On Monday morning, Israeli forces set ablaze the departure hall of Rafah crossing, between the Gaza Strip and Egypt, according to local officials and media reports.

Pictures shared online, which were not verified by Middle East Eye, showed what appears to be the exterior of the crossing’s departure hall incinerated.

Damage to the crossing, the only non-Israeli exit point for Palestinians with the outside world, may make it inoperable in the near future, leaving Gaza’s 2.2 million Palestinian population trapped inside.

The invasion of Rafah and the seizure of the crossing with Egypt has deepened an already perilous humanitarian crisis, with vital aid routes, through the Rafah and Karem Abu Salem crossings, blocked.

The Gaza government media office has called for an urgent opening of crossings with Gaza to allow humanitarian aid to reach Palestinians in the northern parts of the strip.

Meanwhile, residents have reported that Israeli troops were advancing deeper into the central and western areas of Rafah under heavy fire from the ground and the air.

The Palestinian health ministry said Israeli soldiers have killed at least 10 Palestinians and wounded dozens more in the past 24 hours, including reporter Mahmoud Qasem.

Qasem’s death brings the number of journalists and media workers killed in Gaza since 7 October to 151. Qasem worked for the Falasteen online news outlet.

More than 37,300 Palestinians have been killed, and over 85,300 wounded since the start of the war on Gaza. An estimated 10,000 people are missing, likely dead and buried under rubble.

Health officials have said that over 70 percent of the victims are children and women.

In Israel, opposition leader Yair Lapid has stated Netanyahu should dissolve the Israeli government after he disbanded the war cabinet on Monday. Netanyahu’s move came after key opposition figure Benny Gantz quit the six-member cabinet.

Lapid applauded Gantz’s decision as “important and correct”.

“The time has come to replace this extreme and reckless government with a sane government that will lead to the return of security to the citizens of Israel, to the return of the abducted, to the restoration of Israel’s economy and international status,” he added.

According to Haaretz, Netanyahu stressed he will continue to consult a limited “forum” for sensitive decisions.

Israel seeking to strengthen West Bank settlements after recognition of Palestinian state

West Bank settlements

In a statement, the Prime Minister’s Office said all of the proposals for strengthening settlements in what Israel biblically refers to as Judea and Samaria would be voted on at the next Security Cabinet meeting.

Norway, Ireland, Spain and Slovenia have each recognized an independent Palestinian state in recent weeks, a move motivated at least in part by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s open refusal to commit to a two-state solution.

Israel’s Foreign Ministry stressed the move was a reward for “terrorism” and would strengthen Hamas.

The statement also added Israel would look at what actions to take against the Palestinian Authority as it took actions against Israel in international bodies.

Earlier this month, the Palestinian Authority applied to join South Africa’s case against Israel at the International Court of Justice.

Israel’s far-right finance minister, Bezalel Smotrich, said in May that Israel should approve 10,000 settlements in the West Bank, establish a new settlement for every country that recognizes a state of Palestine, and cancel travel permits for Palestinian Authority officials.

It is unclear if any of these radical ideas are part of the proposals currently under consideration in Israel.

Three people die of dengue fever in Iran

Ambulance Iran

Meanwhile, the director of the Center for Hospital Management and Excellence in Clinical Services affiliated with the Health Ministry said the habitat of the Aedes mosquito in the country is more than that of malaria, adding that the Iranian hospitals are prepared to deal with dengue fever.

Hassan Vaezi warned that the Fars, Khuzestan, Hormozgan, Bushehr, Sistan and Baluchistan, Mazandaran, Gilan, and Golestan provinces are high-risk areas in terms of the existence of the disease and there are many accidental cases of Dengue fever in those regions.

Pointing to the spread of Dengue fever in some world countries, he said efforts are underway to prepare outpatient and inpatient treatment staff for diagnosis and treatment of diseases transmitted by the Aedes mosquito.

Vaezi stressed that protection against transmission of the disease protection of medical personnel and management of waste and sewage are among the key preventive measures in hospitals.

Dengue fever is a mosquito-borne acute viral disease presenting with hemorrhagic manifestations in severe cases. It is more common in tropical and subtropical climates.

Most people who get this potentially deadly disease will not have symptoms. But for those who do, the most common symptoms are high fever, headache, body aches, nausea, and rash.

IAEA head says Iran’s nuclear deal holds no real significance

Rafael Grossi

“I believe we need to return to diplomacy,” Grossi said in an interview with Russian newspaper Izvestia.

“We had the JCPOA, but now it’s just a paper agreement that nobody is adhering to.”

“There have been attempts to revive it here in Vienna, but unfortunately, despite coming close to success, they fell through for reasons unknown to me, as I wasn’t directly involved in the process. It’s no surprise that the US and Iran are blaming each other for its failure,” he remarked.

The IAEA chief stressed the importance of avoiding a repeat of the North Korean scenario, where decades of negotiations ultimately proved futile.

Grossi also confirmed ongoing difficulties with gaining access to Iranian nuclear facilities.

The JCPOA was a multilateral international agreement signed between Iran and five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council plus Germany in 2015, which required Iran to scale back some of its nuclear activities in return for the lifting of cruel sanctions imposed on the country, especially by the United States.

However, former US President Donald Trump pulled Washington out of the UNSC-endorsed agreement in May 2018, imposing severe economic sanctions against Tehran while Iran was adhering to its commitments under the deal and even continued to do so for a year after the US withdrawal.

Tehran started to reduce its commitments under the deal in a series of pre-announced and clear steps after witnessing the other parties’ failure to secure its interests under the agreement.

The Strategic Action Plan to Counter Sanctions law was adopted by Iranian lawmakers in December 2020 to counter sanctions imposed on Iran by the United States and its Western allies, and to promote the country’s peaceful nuclear program.

Under the parliament’s law, the Iranian administration is required to restrict the IAEA’s inspections and accelerate the development of the country’s nuclear program beyond the limits set under the JCPOA.

Iran Environmental protection officers rescue trapped bear

Black Bear

The river is located in Kavand village in the city of Ardal.

The main habitats of the brown bears in Iran are Caspian forest areas, Arsbaran forests, and Zagros forests as well as high mountain meadows near the forests and downstream valleys.

French magazine claims Russia recruiting Afghans to fight in Ukraine 

Russian Army

L’Obs added that the Russian army also started recruiting former service members of the Afghan army trained by the US-led NATO troops for the Ukraine war a year ago.

According to this report, the Russian contractor group Wagner is responsible for employing the former members of the Afghan armed forces.

The report invoked statements by former Afghan interior minister Haibatollah Alizai who was the last commander of the Afghan army before the Taliban takeover of the country in 2021.

L’Obs further cited a former Afghan army officer with his alias being Sadeq as saying that he took part in missions in Afghanistan alongside the US forces but after the Taliban takeover, he was forced to flee to Iran.

Sadeq tells the French magazine that he is confident that he will not return from the Ukraine war alive but he is waiting for the Russian embassy in Tehran to give him a green light.

L’Obs added that with the expiry of Sadeq’s visa, he is living illegally in Iran.

He is afraid of being sent back to Afghanistan and he says that in Iran, two people took him to a building that he did not know where it was and they gave him a final deadline to go to the Russian embassy in Tehran to be transferred to Moscow.

The magazine quoted former Afghan interior minister Haibatollah Alizai as also saying that 6 former generals of the elite forces of the Afghan army, who were trained by the US, are now cooperating with Russia under pseudonyms to recruit and organize Afghan forces.

They act, Azizai noted, as mediators between the Russian side and the Afghan military. Each of them is allegedly responsible for a group of hundreds of troops.

The Russian embassy in Tehran has not commented on the French magazine’s report.

The report comes as the Western media and governments admit that Russia has already the upper hand on the battlefield in Ukraine.

Iranian motorcyclist wins Russian Superbike Championship  

Sasan Akbari

Iran’s ISNA news agency quoted the public relations of the Motorcycling and Automobile Racing Federation of Iran as saying that Sasan Akbari, the champion of the 1000cc class of Iran, who went to the Moscow tournament with the support of the federation, was able to win the 1000cc BMW motorcycle class.

This is the first championship of an Iranian competitor in the Russian league.

Maziar Nazemi, head of the Motorcycling and Automobile Racing Federation, says the policy of the federation is to support such champions to win numerous medals in international competitions.

Nazemi congratulated Akbari on his win. This year, Akbari also participated in the Qatar Super Stock 600 tournament.

This motorcyclist, who is the safety and rescue ambassador of the Iranian Motorcycling and Automobile Racing Federation, also participates in search and rescue operations during natural disasters on behalf of his peers in the federation.

Kremlin says Putin to visit North Korea within hours

Putin and Kim

“At the invitation of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, Russian President Vladimir Putin will pay a friendly state visit to the DPRK on June 18-19,” the Kremlin said.

North Korea’s Kim paid an official visit to Russia in September 2023. Russia became the first country on the North Korean leader’s itinerary since the pandemic. During his stay in Russia’s Far East, the North Korean president invited his Russian counterpart to make a return visit when he thinks fit.

The only time Putin visited North Korea was in July 2000, two months after his first inauguration is president. During that visit, he discussed bilateral and international issues with Kim’s father, Kim Jong Il, who held the post of the republic’s leader then. Putin visited the mausoleum for Kim Il Sung, the founder of North Korea, and laid flowers at the Liberation Monument honoring Soviet Army soldiers.

Netanyahu dissolves Israel’s War Cabinet

Benjamin Netanyahu

According to public broadcaster KAN, far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir had made a forceful request to join the Cabinet.

The move came after opposition leader Benny Gantz quit the emergency government earlier this month following disagreements over a post-war strategy on the Gaza Strip.

It originally included Netanyahu, Gantz, Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, Ron Dermer, Gadi Eizenkot, and Shas party leader Aryeh Deri.

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

More than 37,300 Palestinians have since been killed in Gaza, most of them women and children, and more than 85,000 others injured, according to local health authorities.

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

Israel stands accused of genocide at the International Court of Justice, whose latest ruling ordered Tel Aviv to immediately halt its operation in Rafah, where over a million Palestinians had sought refuge from the war before it was invaded in early May.

Iranians perform Eid al-Adha prayers

In the capital Tehran, the prayers were held at the University of Tehran with senior cleric Mohammad Javad Haj Ali Akbari leading the congregation.

In the northeastern city of Mashhad, worshippers prayed at the shrine of the eighth Shia Imam, Ali ibn Musa al-Reza.

The festival, which falls on the 10th day of the Dhu al-Hijjah month on the lunar calendar, marks the end of the Hajj pilgrimage.

It also honors Prophet Abraham’s submission to God.

Below you can find some pictures of the prayers in Iran: