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Egyptian foreign minister due in Tehran Wednesday

Sameh Shoukry

Ahmed Abu Zeid, the Egyptian Foreign Ministry’s spokesperson confirmed on Wednesday that that Shoukry will represent Egypt in the mourning ceremony of the Iranian president and foreign minister and six other people who died in a helicopter crash.

This is the first time an Egyptian foreign minister is travelling to Tehran since the two sides severed ties after the victory of Iran’s Islamic Revolution in 1979.

Efforts peaked during the late Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahin’s tenure to restore diplomatic ties.

Acting President Mohammad Mokhber and caretaker Foreign Minister Ali Bagheri will host delegations from over 50 countries in the memorial ceremony on Wednesday afternoon.

The Iranian president and his accompanying delegation died in the copter crash in northwestern Iran on Sunday and their burned bodies were recovered on Monday.

Over 50 high-ranking foreign delegations in Iran to take part in President Raisi’s commemoration ceremony

Funeral Procession Iran's President

Among the foreign participants, there will be more than 10 delegations at the level of heads of state, about 20 delegations at the ministerial level and the rest of the delegations will be at the level of parliamentarians and special envoys.

The ceremony is to be held on Wednesday afternoon with the acting President Mohammad Mokhber and caretaker Foreign Minister Ali Bagheri attending the event.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia’ al-Sudani have already arrived in Iran.

A funeral ceremony is underway in the capital Tehran where millions of grieving people have taken part to say farewell to the president and his companions, including Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian, who passed away in a helicopter crash on Sunday.

The president will be laid to rest in his hometown Mashhad, at the shrine of Imam Reza.

Republican bill aims to give Americans serving in Israeli military same benefits as US soldiers

The protections sought by the two lawmakers, Guy Reschenthaler and Max Miller, come in stark contrast to how other countries have been called upon to treat their citizens who have gone to serve in Israel’s military.

“Over 20,000 American citizens are currently defending Israel from Hamas terrorists, risking their lives for the betterment of our ally,” Reschenthaler said in a statement.

“This legislation will ensure we do everything possible to support these heroes who are standing with Israel, fighting for freedom, and combating terrorism in the Middle East,” he added.

By introducing this legislation last Friday, the lawmakers want Americans serving in a foreign military to be treated in the “same manner as service in the uniformed services”.

The bill, if passed, would amend US law and extend certain protections to include American citizens who serve in the Israeli military.

Those protections include being safe against foreclosure and the repossession of rental property, and would also reduce the interest rates of any loans taken out before their service. It would also protect those Americans from default judgements in legal cases, and grant them job rights and the employment benefits that US veterans receive.

Around 23,380 American citizens are currently serving in the Israeli army, according to a February report by The Washington Post. Some 21 Americans in those military units have been killed in Gaza, while another died in cross-border exchanges with Lebanon.

Many Republicans in Congress have been staunch supporters of Israel’s military actions in Gaza, where Israeli forces have killed more than 35,000 Palestinians, levelled civilian infrastructure, targeted hospitals and schools, and also killed healthcare workers and journalists.

Shortly after the war in Gaza began, Congressman Brian Mast entered the halls of Congress wearing an Israeli military uniform, and went on to boast about his service in the foreign nation’s military.

“As the only member to serve with both the United States Army and the Israel Defense Forces, I will always stand with Israel,” Mast stated.

While these Republicans are seeking to extend economic benefits to Americans serving in Israel, other countries have taken a completely different stance.

South Africa’s foreign minister announced it would prosecute its citizens who have served in Israel’s military once they return to the country.

Haaretz reported in March that the French foreign ministry quietly announced it would investigate French nationals who are implicated in possible war crimes in Gaza during their time serving in the Israeli military.

A UK-based Palestinian legal centre has requested the British government clarify if it plans to prosecute its citizens serving in the Israeli armed forces.

Millions gather in Iranian capital to mourn president, companions’ demise

Funeral Procession Iran's President

The mourners are holding portraits of President Raisi and his companions, including Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian near Tehran University in central Tehran on the third day of five days of national mourning announced by the Leader of Iran’s Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei.

Ayatollah Khamenei has led the prayers over bodies of President Raisi and his companions.

Foreign dignitaries are scheduled to arrive in Tehran later in the day to take part in the funeral ceremony.

Leader of the Palestinian resistance movement Hamas, Ismail Haniyeh, who has attended the funeral cortege, praised President Raisi for putting the Palestinian issue on top of the priorities for Iran, adding, “We are certain that the Islamic Republic will continue the policy of supporting Palestine until the liberation of Al-Quds.”

President Raisi and his companions were in a helicopter that crashed in northwestern Iran on a fog-shrouded mountainside on the way to the city of Tabriz after the inauguration of a dam project on the border with the Republic of Azerbaijan.

The demised Iranian president will be laid to rest in his hometown Mashhad, in Imam Reza’s shrine, on Thursday while Amirabdollahian will be buried in Shah Abdul Azim’s shrine in Shahr-e Rey, south of Tehran.

UN says halted food shipments to Gaza’s Rafah as supplies run out

Gaza War

The UN said food distribution was halted due to insecurity and the lack of supplies.

The United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), the main agency providing aid to Palestinians in Gaza, announced the distribution in the area is suspended.

“Food distributions in Rafah, southern Gaza, are currently suspended due to lack of supplies and insecurity,” UNRWA wrote on X.

UNRWA also shared that due to the ongoing Israeli military operation in eastern Rafah, both the agency’s distribution center and the World Food Programme’s (WFP) are “inaccessible”.

The UN added that no aid trucks have entered the area using the newly-built pier that was spearheaded by the US.

At least 900,000 people have been displaced from Rafah in the past two weeks, according to a UN official. The crisis has worsened since Israel launched its military operation into Rafah on May 6. The Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) captured the Rafah crossing on the border with Egypt which has been shut down ever since.

The UN reported that around 1.1 million people in Gaza are on the brink of starvation. The US has warned Israel not to invade Rafah with a developed plan that would ensure the safety of civilians in the area.

EU’s Borrell says member states have to nab Netanyahu if ICC issues arrest warrent

Benjamin Netanyahu

On Monday, ICC chief prosecutor Karim Khan applied for warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant – as well as Hamas leaders Yahya Sinwar, Mohammed Diab Ibrahim al-Masri, and Ismail Haniyeh – accusing them of “war crimes and crimes against humanity.”

The European Union has taken “note” of the move, Borrell acknowledged in a post on X (formerly Twitter).

“The mandate of the ICC, as an independent international institution, is to prosecute the most serious crimes under international law,” Borrell wrote, insisting that “All States that have ratified the ICC statutes are bound to execute the Court’s decisions”.

Even though the prosecutor has requested arrest warrants, it may take months of deliberations before a three-judge panel decides whether to issue them or not.

Israel is not a member of the ICC and does not recognize the jurisdiction of the court, but the State of Palestine joined the organization in 2015. The US was one of the creators of the ICC, but Congress never ratified the Rome Statute. Russia, China, India, Indonesia, Saudi Arabia and dozens of other countries also do not accept the court’s jurisdiction.

However, some 124 countries around the globe have signed and ratified the Rome Statute, including all EU member states and all candidates, except Ukraine and Türkiye. If warrants against Netanyahu and Gallant are issued, it could severely complicate the Israeli leader’s ability to travel abroad.

Spokesman: Yemen’s Houthis shoot down US MQ-9 Reaper drone

US Drone

Yahya Saree said in a televised statement on Tuesday that the unmanned aerial vehicle was targeted with a locally made surface-to-air missile, and that footage of shootdown will be released later.

According to Saree, this is the fifth aircraft that the Yemeni air defenses have shot down since the start of the operations in support of Palestinians in Gaza amid the Israeli regime’s genocidal war.

The spokesperson affirmed that the Yemeni forces will continue to enhance their defense capabilities in order to confront the joint US-British aggression against their homeland, and will carry on conducting pro-Palestine operations until the Israeli aggression against Gaza ceases and the all-out siege on the coastal sliver is fully lifted.

Back on May 17, Saree stated Yemeni forces had downed another US MQ-9 Reaper drone over the southeastern province of Ma’rib.

The Yemeni troops have staged numerous pro-Palestinian strikes since October 7, when the Israeli regime began the Gaza war.

American and British warships have been carrying out attacks against the Arab Peninsula nation as means of trying to halt strikes that it has been conducting against Israeli vessels or those heading towards the ports lying in the occupied Palestinian territories.

At least 35,500 Palestinians have been killed and 80,000 others wounded in the brutal Israeli military onslaught that was launched following Al-Aqsa Storm, a retaliatory operation staged by Gaza’s resistance groups.

The US has been the main supporter of Israel, proving it with munitions and political support in its brutal war on Gaza. Washington has also used its veto power to protect Israel against UN resolutions.

Israeli soldiers kill Palestinian students, teacher, doctor in West Bank raid

Israeli forces West Bank

At least seven people were killed in total and 19 wounded, two in serious condition, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health.

An undercover unit of Israeli special forces was discovered in the Jenin refugee camp around 8am local time, which was followed by an incursion of military vehicles into the area.

Eyewitnesses said Israeli troops were shooting indiscriminately at any Palestinian who moved in their vicinity, including people in their cars and families who went to pick up their children from school, which had been cancelled because of the raid.

Two boys, Osama Abu Hajeer, 16, and Mahmoud Hamadneh, 15, were killed as they were leaving their school. One of them was riding a bicycle when he was shot, according to local reports.

Allam Jaradat, 48, a teacher, was shot dead in his vehicle as he was also leaving the school. A photo taken from his car showed blood-stained school reports in the backseat.

“Jaradat was trying to leave the city… but the soldiers stopped him and shot him without any justification,” Amer Abu Ali, a resident of Jenin refugee camp, told Middle East Eye.

“He remained bleeding for more than half an hour without anyone being able to reach him, then he died of his wounds,” he added.

Dr Osaid Jabarin, a general surgery specialist, was fatally shot in “cold blood” by Israeli forces as he was heading to Jenin Governmental Hospital, where he worked for the past 17 years, journalist Muhammad Abu Al-Rub told MEE.

Jabarin, 51, who is also a dentistry lecturer at Jenin’s Arab American University, was killed outside the hospital, according to Wissam Sbeihat, the director general of the health ministry in the city.

“The Israeli army targets everything that moves on the ground and prevents ambulances from reaching the injured,” Sbeihat stated.

“[There is] complete destruction of the infrastructure and direct targeting of medical personnel and ambulance teams.”

Sbeihat added the Jenin hospital was unable to handle the large number of wounded people and warned they could “lost control” if the raid continues.

The other three slain Palestinians were identified by the health ministry as Basem Turkman, 53, Muamar Abu Amira, 50 and Amir Abu Amira, 22.

Israeli troops also opened fire at a group of journalists, an ambulance, a moving civilian car and people in the courtyard of Jenin hospital, according to eyewitnesses.

Journalist Amr Manasara and two men in the moving car were wounded in the attacks.

Medical teams were also blocked by Israeli forces from reaching some of those wounded in the attack, which led to the death of some victims from their injuries.

Local sources said at least 10 wounded people were lying in the alleys of Jenin camp and medical teams had not yet been able to reach them.

“The situation in the camp is catastrophic. A number of people were injured by sniper fire and medical teams were unable to reach them,” Abu Ali told MEE.

“Residents are trying to provide first aid to them in their homes,” he added.

Nabil Abu Rudeineh, spokesperson for Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, warned of the “dangers of the ongoing Israeli genocidal war waged against the Palestinian people” from Rafah in the Gaza Strip to Jenin in the West Bank.

Hamas said the “massacre” in Jenin was a “desperate attempt” by the Israeli military to discourage Palestinians from resisting the occupation.

“As we mourn the martyrs, we affirm that the ongoing crimes of the occupation against our people in Gaza and the West Bank will not weaken the support of our people, nor will they stop their resistance and relentless pursuit of liberating their land and sanctities and achieving their national rights,” the group said in a statement.

The Israeli military announced in a brief statement they had launched an operation in Jenin, adding that more details would follow.

The raid comes as Israeli forces have escalated deadly violence against Palestinians in the occupied West Bank since 7 October.

In over seven months, more than 500 Palestinians, including over 120 children, were killed by Israeli fire in the West Bank, according to the Palestinian health ministry.

The escalation in the West Bank coincides with the continued aggression and besiegement of the Gaza Strip, which has killed over 35,500 Palestinians and wounded nearly 80,000 more.

People in Qom hold procession for Pres. Raisi, FM, companions

Funeral Procession Iran's President

See the pictures for more details and moments from the procession ceremony:

More than 900k displaced in Gaza over past two weeks

Gaza War

The Israeli bombardment has been accompanied by ground incursions and intense fighting, particularly in eastern Rafah and Jabalya, he added, saying that of the displaced Palestinians, 812,000 are from Rafah and over 100,000 from northern Gaza.

“To date, more than 75% of the Gaza Strip – some 285 square kilometers – is under evacuation orders amid escalating hostilities,” Dujarric said.

He added that the large-scale displacement has resulted in dire living conditions due to a severe shortage of shelters, with no tents and very few shelter items available for distribution.

Displaced individuals are seeking refuge in open spaces, damaged buildings, and agricultural lands in Khan Younis and Deir al-Balah.

The Israeli army launched a ground offensive on May 6 in Rafah, home to around 1.5 million displaced Palestinians. Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh has warned that the Israeli onslaught on Rafah undermines negotiations for a Gaza cease-fire and hostage swap deal with Israel.

Israel continued its brutal offensive on the Gaza Strip despite a UN Security Council resolution demanding an immediate cease-fire in the enclave.

More than 35,600 Palestinians have since been killed, the vast majority of whom have been women and children, and over 80,000 others since last October following a Hamas attack.

More than seven months into the Israeli war, vast swathes of Gaza lay in ruins amid a crippling blockade of food, clean water and medicine.

Israel is accused of “genocide” at the International Court of Justice, which has ordered Tel Aviv to ensure its forces do not commit acts of genocide and take measures to guarantee that humanitarian assistance is provided to civilians in Gaza.