WFP calls for full access to Sudan amid looming famine

WFP calls for full access to Sudan amid looming famine
The conflict has killed tens of thousands of people, displaced millions and resulted in one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises. (File/AFP)
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Updated 28 October 2024

WFP calls for full access to Sudan amid looming famine

WFP calls for full access to Sudan amid looming famine
  • WFP warns famine already declared at Darfur’s Zamzam camp

PORT SUDAN: The World Food Programme has called on the warring parties in Sudan’s conflict to grant full access to the agency as the country faces the imminent threat of famine.
Sudan has been gripped by war since April 2023 between the regular armed forces led by the country’s de facto leader Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) led by his former deputy Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo.
The conflict has killed tens of thousands of people, displaced millions and resulted in one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises.
Both sides have been accused of committing war crimes, including targeting civilians and preventing aid from reaching those in need, as well as using methods that amount to starving millions.
“We want complete and unfettered access as well as the ability to get in through as many different entry points into Sudan as possible,” WFP’s executive director Cindy McCain told AFP on Sunday.
She warned that with the whole of Sudan currently at famine alert level and famine already declared at Darfur’s Zamzam camp, “it will spread so it’s really urgent and that we can get in and we can do it at scale.”
About 11.3 million people have been uprooted by the war, among them nearly three million who have fled outside Sudan, according to the UN refugee agency.
About 26 million people face acute food insecurity, and a UN-backed assessment in August said the war had pushed the Zamzam displacement camp in North Darfur state into famine.
“For us it’s about getting food and trucks in there so it’s important that the gates stay open,” McCain said, adding that this included not just Sudan’s border crossing with Chad but all crossings into the country.
“We need as many of them open as possible,” she said.
On October 18, Western countries including Britain, the United States, France and Germany urged both sides in war-torn Sudan to let in “urgently required” aid to millions of people in dire need.
“The two sides’ systematic obstruction of local and international humanitarian efforts is at the root of this famine,” the European and North American nations said in a joint statement.


West Bank farmers gather precious olives as harvest season brings new settler attacks

Updated 4 sec ago

West Bank farmers gather precious olives as harvest season brings new settler attacks

West Bank farmers gather precious olives as harvest season brings new settler attacks
TURMUS AYYA: Afaf Abu Alia had woken early on October 19 to join her grandchildren picking olives near the West Bank village of Turmus Ayya, when she heard a woman scream “settlers.”
Masked men burst out of the trees, one of whom hit 55-year-old Abu Alia on the head with a club, according to her account and a video verified by Reuters showing the attack.
While mediators try to bolster a fragile ceasefire in the Gaza Strip, intensified Israeli settler violence targetting the Palestinian olive harvest in the occupied West Bank has continued unabated, according to Palestinian and UN officials.
“I fell to the ground and I couldn’t feel anything,” Abu Alia told Reuters on Wednesday, her right eye bruised from the assault.

SYMBOL OF PALESTINIAN CONNECTION TO THE LAND
Since the harvest began in the first week of October, there have been at least 158 attacks across the Israeli-occupied West Bank, according to figures made public by the Palestinian Authority’s Colonization and Wall Resistance Commission (CWRC).
There was a 13 percent rise in settler attacks in the first two weeks of the 2025 harvest compared to the same period in 2024, said Ajith Sunghay, head of the UN Human Rights Office in the Occupied Palestinian Territory.
Activists and farmers say the violence has intensified since the Hamas-led attacks that triggered the war in Gaza two years ago. They say settlers target olive trees because Palestinians see them as a symbol of their connection to the land.
“The olive tree is a symbol of Palestinian steadfastness,” said Adham Al-Rabia, a Palestinian activist.
The UN’s Sunghay said that this season settlers had burned groves, chain-sawed olive trees, and destroyed homes and agricultural infrastructure.
“Settler violence has skyrocketed in scale and frequency, with the acquiescence, support, and in many cases participation, of Israeli security forces – and always with impunity,” he said in a regular update on the olive harvest season on Tuesday.
The Mateh Binyamin Regional Council, which governs Israeli West Bank settlements in the region of Turmus Ayya, said it condemned “every instance of violence that occurs” in the area.
It noted that settlers carried weapons “intended solely for self-defense.”

ECONOMIC IMPORTANCE OF OLIVES
Home to 2.7 million Palestinians, the West Bank has long been at the heart of plans for a future nation existing alongside Israel, but settlements have expanded rapidly, fragmenting the land.
Palestinians and most nations regard settlements as illegal under international law. Israel disputes this.
Olives are the backbone of Palestinian agriculture, a sector which accounts for around 8 percent of GDP and more than 60,000 jobs, according to the Palestinian Authority’s agriculture ministry.
A few kilometers from Turmus Ayya lies the village of Al-Mughayyir, where Abu Alia is from. She and her family came to Turmus Ayya because settlers cut down their orchard of about 500 olive trees near Al-Mughayyir a few weeks earlier, according to a relative. In return for harvesting the olives, the family would receive a share of the crop.
The Israeli military said they cut down over 3,000 trees in the area “to improve defenses,” though locals say the real number is higher. A combination of military orders and settler violence has left villagers unable to access most of their crops.
Marzook Abu Naem, a local council member, said settlers and military orders had almost totally blocked access to olive groves. The economic impact meant some young people were delaying university and meat had become a luxury for many, he said.
The agriculture ministry recorded a 17 percent increase in financial losses for West Bank farmers from the start of 2025 until mid-October, compared to the same period last year.
The CWRC says more than 15,000 trees have been attacked since October 2024.

ISRAELI MILITARY ROLE
Many Palestinians, as well as Israeli human rights groups, believe the army has abetted settler attacks.
The Israeli military did not respond to a request for comment on the claim.
Activist Rabia works with the Israeli group Rabbis for Human Rights to organize volunteers to protect farmers during the harvest. On October 15, a Reuters reporter witnessed an army unit blocking him and the volunteers from accessing a field.
Palestinian activists and farmers manage WhatsApp groups to send warnings about approaching settlers.
Yasser Al-Qam, a lawyer from Turmus Ayya who witnessed the attack on Abu Alia, said Israeli soldiers had left him and a friend alone with settlers before the assault.
The Israel Defense Forces said they had sent troops and police to defuse the confrontation and were not aware of soldiers being present at the time of the attack.
“The IDF is operating to enable the harvest season to proceed in a proper and safe manner for all residents,” it said in a statement to Reuters following the incident.
A few days after the attack, families and international volunteers brought thermoses of coffee and bread to share as they returned to the Turmus Ayya groves to pick olives.

Turkish court expected to rule on case that could oust opposition leader

Turkish court expected to rule on case that could oust opposition leader
Updated 24 October 2025

Turkish court expected to rule on case that could oust opposition leader

Turkish court expected to rule on case that could oust opposition leader
  • If the court annuls the outcome of proceedings in a 2023 annual congress of the Republican People’s Party (CHP), that would mean the ouster of Ozel, 51, its combative leader

ANKARA: A Turkish court is expected to announce a verdict on Friday that could lead to the removal of the main opposition party leader Ozgur Ozel, in a case seen as a test of the country’s shaky balance between democracy and autocracy.
If the court annuls the outcome of proceedings in a 2023 annual congress of the Republican People’s Party (CHP), that would mean the ouster of Ozel, 51, its combative leader.
Ozel has risen to prominence since the March detention of Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu, his party’s presidential candidate and the main political rival of President Tayyip Erdogan.
The centrist CHP, which denies the charges against it, is level with Erdogan’s Islamic-rooted, conservative AK party (AKP) in most polls.
If the court cancels the congress and ousts Ozel, it could name a trustee to run the party or reinstate former chairman Kemal Kilicdaroglu, whom Erdogan defeated in 2023 elections but has since lost much trust within the CHP.
It could also reject the case, brought by a CHP member, or delay a ruling again.
The CHP sought to shield Ozel from any court ruling last month when it re-elected him leader in an extraordinary party congress.
Hundreds of CHP members have also been jailed pending trial in a separate year-long crackdown that government critics call politicized and anti-democratic. The government rejects this, saying the judiciary is independent.


Iraq faces elections at a delicate moment in the Middle East

Iraq faces elections at a delicate moment in the Middle East
Updated 24 October 2025

Iraq faces elections at a delicate moment in the Middle East

Iraq faces elections at a delicate moment in the Middle East
  • The Nov. 11 vote will determine whether Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al-Sudani gets another term. Polling shows that Iraqis are relatively positive about the country’s situation

BAGHDAD: Iraq is weeks away from parliamentary elections that will set the country’s course during one of the Middle East’s most delicate moments in years.
While the ceasefire in Gaza may have tamped down regional tensions, fears remain of another round of conflict between Israel and Iraq’s neighbor, Iran. Iraq managed to stay on the sidelines during the brief Israel-Iran war in June.
Meanwhile, Baghdad faces increasing pressure from Washington over the presence of Iran-linked armed groups in Iraq.
Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al-Sudani came to power in 2022 with the backing of a group of pro-Iran parties but has since sought to balance Iraq’s relations with Tehran and Washington.
The Nov. 11 vote will determine whether he gets a second term — rare for Iraqi premiers in the past.
Who’s missing from the elections
A total of 7,768 candidates — 2,248 women and 5,520 men — are competing for 329 parliament seats.
The strongest political factions running include Shiite blocs led by former Prime Minister Nouri Al-Maliki, cleric Ammar Al-Hakim, and several linked to armed groups; competing Sunni factions led by former parliament speaker Mohammed Al-Halbousi and current speaker Mahmoud Al-Mashhadan i; and the two main Kurdish parties, the Kurdistan Democratic Party and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan.
The contest is just as notable for who is absent.
The popular Sadrist Movement, led by influential Shiite cleric Muqtada Al-Sadr, is boycotting. Al-Sadr’s bloc won the largest number of seats in the 2021 elections but later withdrew after failed negotiations over forming a government, and it continues to stay out of elections.
In the suburb known as Sadr City on Baghdad’s outskirts, a banner posted on one street read, “We are all boycotting upon orders from leader Al-Sadr. No to America, no to Israel, no to corruption.”
The Victory Coalition, a smaller group led by former Prime Minister Haider Al-Abadi, also announced a boycott, alleging corruption in the process.
Meanwhile, some reformist groups emerging from mass anti-government protests that began in October 2019 are participating but have been bogged down by internal divisions and lack of funding and political support.
Vote-buying and political violence
There have been widespread allegations of corruption and vote-buying. Political analyst Bassem Al-Qazwini described these elections as “the most exploited since 2003 in terms of political money and state resources.”
A campaign official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was talking about alleged illegal conduct, asserted that almost all candidates, including major blocs, are distributing money and buying voter cards, with the price of a card going as high as 300,000 Iraqi dinars (around $200).
The Independent High Electoral Commission asserted its commitment to conducting a fair and transparent process, saying in a statement to The Associated Press that “strict measures have been taken to monitor campaign spending and curb vote-buying.”
It added that any candidate found guilty of violating laws or buying votes will be “immediately disqualified.”
Campaigning has been marred by political violence.
On Oct. 15, Baghdad Provincial Council member Safaa Al-Mashhadani, a Sunni candidate in the Al-Tarmiya district north of the capital, was killed by a car bomb. Two people were arrested on suspicion of the killing, the First Karkh Investigative Court said Thursday. It did not name the suspects but said the crime was believed to be “related to electoral competition.”
Aisha Ghazal Al-Masari, a member of parliament from the Sovereignty Alliance to which Al-Mashhadani belonged, described the killing as “a cowardly crime reminiscent of the dark days of assassinations,” referring to the years of security vacuum after Iraq’s former autocratic leader, Saddam Hussein, was ousted in the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq.
The role of militias
Political parties linked to Iran-backed militias are leveraging their significant military and financial influence.
They include the Kataib Hezbollah militia, with its Harakat Huqouq (Rights Movement) bloc, and the Sadiqoun Bloc led by the leader of the Asaib Ahl Al-Haq militia, Qais Al-Khazali.
The Popular Mobilization Forces, a coalition of militias that formed to fight the Daesh group, was formally placed under the control of the Iraqi military in 2016 but in practice still operates with significant autonomy.
Al-Sudani told journalists recently that armed factions that have transformed into political entities have the constitutional right to participate in elections.
“We cannot prevent any group from engaging in politics if they renounce arms. This is a step in the right direction,” he said.
However, several militias with affiliated political parties participating in the elections are still active and armed.
The US State Department said in a statement that Secretary of State Marco Rubio spoke with Al-Sudani on Monday and “highlighted the urgency in disarming Iran-backed militias that undermine Iraq’s sovereignty, threaten the lives and businesses of Americans and Iraqis, and pilfer Iraqi resources for Iran.”
Al-Sudani seeks another term
Al-Sudani has positioned himself as a pragmatist focused on improving public services. Polling shows that Iraqis are relatively positive about the country’s situation.
Al-Mustakella Research Group, affiliated with Gallup International Association, found that over the past two years, for the first time since 2004, more than half of Iraqis polled believed the country is heading in the right direction.
In the latest poll, in early 2025, 55 percent of Iraqis surveyed said they had confidence in the central government.
However, only one Iraqi prime minister, Maliki, has served more than one term since 2003.
Ihsan Al-Shammari, professor of strategic and international studies at Baghdad University, said that the premiership “does not depend solely on election results but on political bloc agreements and regional and international understandings” to form a government.
He added that disagreements over control of state institutions that have arisen between Al-Sudani and some leaders in the Shiite Coordination Framework bloc that brought him to power “may hinder his chances of a second term.”
Some Iraqis said they don’t have high hopes for the country, no matter what the election outcome.
Baghdad resident Saif Ali said he does not plan to vote, pointing to lagging public services.
“What happened with regards to electricity from 2003 until now? Nothing,” he said, referring to regular power cuts. ”What happened with water? Drought has reached Baghdad. These are the basic services, and they are not available, so what is the point of elections?”


Rebuilding wrecked Syria vital for regional stability: UN

Rebuilding wrecked Syria vital for regional stability: UN
Updated 24 October 2025

Rebuilding wrecked Syria vital for regional stability: UN

Rebuilding wrecked Syria vital for regional stability: UN
  • UNDP says Syria must be swiftly rebuilt to bring stability to the country and the wider region
  • World Bank estimates Syria’s post-war reconstruction to cost up to $216 billion

GENEVA: After 14 years of destruction, Syria must be swiftly rebuilt to bring stability to the country and the wider region, a top UN official in the war-ravaged nation told AFP.
Reconstruction is one of the most significant challenges facing Syria’s new Islamist authorities after the overthrow of longtime ruler Bashar Assad last December.
“The international community should definitely rush into rebuilding Syria,” Rawhi Afaghani, the UN Development Programme’s deputy representative in Syria, told AFP this week during a visit to Geneva.
“Being able to help the country to rebound and come out of this war and come out of this destruction is for the Syrians themselves, but also for the stability and the good of the whole region,” he said in the interview.
The Syrian civil war, which erupted in 2011 with Assad’s brutal repression of anti-government protests, killed over half a million people and devastated the country’s infrastructure.
The World Bank this week estimated that Syria’s post-war reconstruction could cost up to $216 billion.
Afaghani said he could not put a price tag on rebuilding Syria, but described the needs as “massive.”

A drone view shows widespread destruction in the Idlib countryside, Syria, on October 9, 2025. (REUTERS)

Across the country, he said governors had told him about the massive need for housing, schools, and health centers, as well as electricity and water.
Complicating the clean-up efforts are the vast quantities of unexploded ordnance littering the entire country, including within mountains of rubble that need to be cleared, he said.

‘TԲDzԲ’&Բ;

More than one million Syrian refugees have already returned from abroad and nearly double as many have returned to their places of origin after being displaced inside the country, UN figures show.
While those returns are a good sign, Afaghani warned that they were “putting a lot of pressure on the infrastructure, on the transportation, on the education, on the bakeries.”
“People are returning to destroyed houses or houses that are actually occupied by other people,” he said.
Afaghani warned that the strain on infrastructure “could lead to community tensions.”
At the same time, he said the lack of infrastructure, services and jobs was dissuading many Syrians who want to return home from doing so.
“We thought there would be a much higher rate of return,” he acknowledged, pointing out that most of those who have returned from abroad had left often difficult conditions in neighboring Jordan and Lebanon.
From Europe, “we don’t see that massive return,” he said.
Afaghani voiced hope that swift reconstruction could usher in “a stable Syria,” which in turn would draw more returns from Europe.
“Those are high-skilled people — they can rebuild Syria,” he said.
Those returnees, he insisted, could also “be a big, good influence in the whole region from an economic perspective, and from a peace-building perspective.”
 


EU leaders seek more active role in Gaza

EU leaders seek more active role in Gaza
Updated 24 October 2025

EU leaders seek more active role in Gaza

EU leaders seek more active role in Gaza
  • Outrage over the war in Gaza has riven the 27-nation bloc and pushed relations between Israel and the EU to a historic low
  • Israeli PM Netanyahu said earlier this month that “Europe has essentially become irrelevant and displayed enormous weakness”
  • The EU has been the biggest provider of aid to the Palestinians and is Israel’s top trading partner

BRUSSELS: European Union leaders are seeking a more active role in Gaza and the occupied West Bank after being sidelined from the US-brokered ceasefire between Israel and Hamas.
At a summit Thursday in Brussels largely focused on Ukraine and Russia, EU heads of state discussed the shaky ceasefire in Gaza and pledged EU support for stability in the war-torn coastal enclave. The EU has been the biggest provider of aid to the Palestinians and is Israel’s top trading partner.
“It is important that Europe not only watches but plays an active role,” said Luc Frieden, the prime minister of Luxembourg, as he headed into the meeting. “Gaza is not over; peace is not yet permanent,” he said.
Outrage over the war in Gaza has riven the 27-nation bloc and pushed relations between Israel and the EU to a historic low.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen announced in September plans to seek sanctions and a partial trade suspension against Israel, aimed to pressure it to reach a peace deal in Gaza.
Momentum driving the measures seemed to falter with the ceasefire deal mediated by US President Donald Trump, with some European leaders calling for them to be scrapped.
But leaders from Ireland to the Netherlands say that with violence continuing to flare up in Gaza and the occupied West Bank, keeping on the table sanctions of Israeli cabinet ministers and settlements and the partial suspension of a trade deal gives the EU leverage on Israel to curtail military action.
In the run-up to the ceasefire, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said earlier this month that “Europe has essentially become irrelevant and displayed enormous weakness.”
The ceasefire deal came about with no visible input from the EU, and European leaders have since scrambled to join the diplomacy effort currently reshaping Gaza.
The EU’s top diplomat, Kaja Kallas, has said the EU should play a role in Gaza and not just pay to support stability and eventually reconstruction.
The EU has provided key support for the Palestinian Authority, which administers parts of the occupied West Bank.
At the summit’s conclusion, EU leaders issued a pledge to deliver humanitarian aid to Gaza, potentially via a maritime route from Cyprus. They also suggested that a West Bank police support program could be extended to Gaza to bolster the stabilization force called for in the current 20-point ceasefire plan.
The EU has sought membership in the plan’s “Board of Peace” transitional oversight body, Dubravka Šuica, European Commissioner for the Mediterranean, said this week.
At least two EU countries, Denmark and Germany, are participating in the new US-led stabilization effort overseeing and implementing the Gaza ceasefire. Flags of those two nations have been raised at the Civil-Military Coordination Center in southern Israel.
The European Border Assistance Mission in Rafah, on the Gaza-Egypt border, began in 2005. In January, it deployed 20 security border police experts from Italy, Spain and France.
During the February-March ceasefire, the mission helped 4,176 individuals leave the Gaza Strip, including 1,683 medical patients. Those efforts were paused when fighting resumed. Outside of the EU, individual nations have acted to pressure Israel on their own as protests have rocked cities from Barcelona to Oslo. Many have recognized a Palestinian state. Spain has ratcheted up its opposition to Israel’s actions in Gaza. Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez called the war a “genocide” when he announced in September plans to formalize an arms embargo and block Israel-bound fuel deliveries from passing through Spanish ports. In August, Slovenia issued an arms embargo in what it said was a first for a EU member country.
Some national broadcasters have sought to exclude Israel from the Eurovision Song Contest. Member broadcasters will vote in November on whether Israel can participate in the musical extravaganza next year, as calls have mounted for the country to be excluded over the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza.