Family mourns Bangladeshi man killed by Israeli strike in Lebanon

Special Family mourns Bangladeshi man killed by Israeli strike in Lebanon
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A lightning flash gleams over Beirut's southern suburbs, amid the ongoing hostilities between Hezbollah and Israeli forces, as seen from Baabda, Lebanon, November 2, 2024. (Reuters)
Special Family mourns Bangladeshi man killed by Israeli strike in Lebanon
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Updated 03 November 2024

Family mourns Bangladeshi man killed by Israeli strike in Lebanon

Family mourns Bangladeshi man killed by Israeli strike in Lebanon
  • Mohammad Nizam, 31, was killed on Saturday afternoon on his way to work in Beirut
  • Death toll from Israeli attacks on Lebanon has surged to nearly 3,000 people

DHAKA: The family of a Bangladeshi worker who died in an Israeli airstrike in Lebanon said on Sunday that Tel Aviv was the only one responsible for his death and called for an immediate stop to the war raging in the Middle East.

There are between 70,000 and 100,000 Bangladeshi nationals in Lebanon, many working as laborers or domestic workers, according to estimates from the Bangladeshi Foreign Ministry.

Mohammad Nizam, 31, was killed on Saturday afternoon as he stopped at a coffee shop on the way to work in Beirut, Bangladesh’s Ambassador to Lebanon Javed Tanveer Khan said in a statement.




Mohammad Nizam, 31, was killed on Saturday afternoon in Beirut. (Supplied)

“Israel is solely responsible for the death of my brother. This war should be stopped without any delay,” Nizam’s older brother, Mohammad Jalal, told Arab News.

“Since the beginning of recent Israeli attacks in Lebanon, I have been worried about Nizam’s safety. But I couldn’t imagine this tragic end to my brother’s life. If I could have sensed this outcome even a little bit, I would have brought him back at any cost.”

The death toll from Israel’s attacks on Lebanon since late September has surged to nearly 3,000, according to the Lebanese Health Ministry. More than 13,300 people have been injured in air and ground raids, many of which have targeted civilian and medical infrastructure.

“I don’t understand how many innocent lives need to be sacrificed to satisfy the whims of the Israeli leadership. It’s simply inhuman, insane and cynical,” Jalal said.

In the wake of Israel’s invasion of Lebanon, an estimated 1,800 Bangladeshis had registered for an evacuation flight home.    

The first flights, organized by the government in Dhaka with the UN’s International Organization for Migration, had already brought some of them from Beirut last month.

Nizam was not among those who registered, with Jalal saying that his younger sibling had not been home once since he started living and working in Lebanon 12 years ago.

“The last time we talked … he was talking about building a house here in his birthplace. He was planning to return home soon by the end of this year. But now all of our dreams for a happy reunion have faded away with this sudden blow,” he said.

Though a request to repatriate the body of the deceased has been made, officials have said it was not currently possible due to the ongoing war. But Nizam’s family is still hoping for an arrangement with the help of authorities.

“Now I am waiting to see my brother’s face for one last time and bury him in our village. But I have no idea whether it would be possible or not amid this war situation,” Jalal said. “I don’t know when I will be able to see his face.”


3 people shot at immigration facility in Dallas and the shooter is dead, official says

Updated 2 sec ago

3 people shot at immigration facility in Dallas and the shooter is dead, official says

3 people shot at immigration facility in Dallas and the shooter is dead, official says
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said details were still emerging but the agency was confirming there were “multiple injuries and fatalities”
Dozens of emergency vehicles were seen along a highway near the facility

DALLAS, USA: Three people have been shot at an Immigration and US Customs Enforcement facility in Dallas, and the shooter is dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, the agency’s director said.
Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons confirmed the shooting during an interview on CNN on Wednesday.
“It could be employees, it could be civilians that were visiting the facility, it could be detainees,” Lyons said of those who were shot. “At this point, we’re still working through that.”
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said details were still emerging but the agency was confirming there were “multiple injuries and fatalities” at the field office. Noem said the motive remained unclear but noted there has been an uptick of targeting of ICE agents.
Dozens of emergency vehicles were seen along a highway near the facility. Traffic cameras near the scene show six lanes of a normally busy freeway completely empty, with cars and semi-trailers ground to a halt on an interstate exit.
ICE and Homeland Security didn’t immediately provide additional details.
The Dallas Fire-Rescue Department was dispatched at 6:41 a.m. after a call reporting a shooting at or near the immigration office, department spokesperson Jason L. Evans said in an email. Evans said he didn’t have any confirmed details he could share, calling it an active and ongoing incident.
A July 4 attack at a Texas immigration detention center injured a police officer, who was shot in the neck. Attackers dressed in black military-style clothing opened fire outside the Prairieland Detention Center in Alvarado, southwest of Dallas, federal prosecutors said. At least 11 people have been charged in connection with the attack.
A man with an assault rifle fired dozens of rounds at federal agents as they were leaving a US Border Patrol facility in McAllen on July 7. The man, identified as Ryan Louis Mosqueda, injured a police officer who responded to the scene before authorities shot and killed him. Police later found other weaponry, ammunition and backpacks inside his car.

Russia blamed for GPS attack on Spanish defense minister’s plane

Russia blamed for GPS attack on Spanish defense minister’s plane
Updated 11 min 42 sec ago

Russia blamed for GPS attack on Spanish defense minister’s plane

Russia blamed for GPS attack on Spanish defense minister’s plane
  • “There was an attempt to scramble the GPS signal” of the plane transporting Margarita Robles to Lithuania, the defense ministry source said
  • Sakaliene called the incident “another illustration that Russia is a neighbor that does not follow any rules “

MADRID: A plane carrying Spain’s defense minister suffered an attack on its GPS navigation while flying near Russia’s exclave of Kaliningrad on Wednesday, a ministry source said, the latest such incident blamed on Moscow.
“There was an attempt to scramble the GPS signal” of the plane transporting Margarita Robles to Lithuania, the defense ministry source said, adding that the flight had an encrypted navigation system and was not “affected.”
“It seems to be normal on this trip, including for commercial flights” that pass close to the small territory wedged between EU and NATO members Poland and Lithuania, the source said.
Robles appeared to blame Russia during a news conference with her Lithuanian counterpart Dovile Sakaliene at Lithuania’s Siauliai air base.
“We all have the right to fly and travel across all European territory without, as we experienced this morning, interference by everyone knows who,” Robles said.
Sakaliene called the incident “another illustration that Russia is a neighbor that does not follow any rules and does not care about the damage it may cause.”
Earlier this month, the European Commission said Russia was suspected of jamming the GPS of EU chief Ursula von der Leyen’s plane as it prepared to land in Bulgaria.
But Bulgaria’s prime minister said there was “nothing unusual” about the GPS jamming, saying it was “one of the consequences” of Russia’s three-year-old war in Ukraine and ruling out an investigation.
Sweden’s Transport Agency has reported that interference incidents with global navigation satellite systems in Swedish airspace spiked from 55 to 733 between 2023 and August 18, 2025, blaming Russia.
The incidents have spread in scope, occurring over Swedish land and sea as well as international waters, the agency said.
In early June, Sweden and five other Baltic Sea countries — Estonia, Finland, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland — raised the issue with the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), of which Russia is a member state.
The ICAO Council “expressed grave concern over the situation” and demanded that Russia end the interference, but incidents in the Baltic Sea region have increased, the agency said.


WHO confirms 11 new Ebola cases in Congo

WHO confirms 11 new Ebola cases in Congo
Updated 46 min 51 sec ago

WHO confirms 11 new Ebola cases in Congo

WHO confirms 11 new Ebola cases in Congo
  • “The outbreak shows a decreasing trend of cases in the recent week ,” WHO said

KASAI, Congo: Eleven new confirmed cases of Ebola were reported in Democratic Republic of Congo since the World Health Organization’s last update on September 15, showing a decreasing trend of cases in the recent week, the UN health agency said on Wednesday.
As of September 21, a total of 57 cases, including 10 probable cases and 35 deaths were reported in Congo’s Kasai Province, the WHO added. The total deaths included 10 probable deaths.
“The outbreak shows a decreasing trend of cases in the recent week, nevertheless the attention remains high,” the agency said.


US designates El Salvador gang Barrio 18 as ‘terrorist’ group

US designates El Salvador gang Barrio 18 as ‘terrorist’ group
Updated 24 September 2025

US designates El Salvador gang Barrio 18 as ‘terrorist’ group

US designates El Salvador gang Barrio 18 as ‘terrorist’ group

WASHINGTON: The United States has designated the El Salvador-based gang Barrio 18 a “foreign terrorist organization,” part of the Trump Administration’s crackdown on drug trafficking.
“Barrio 18 is one of the largest gangs in our hemisphere and has conducted attacks against security personnel, public officials, and civilians in El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras,” US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said in a statement on Tuesday.
In February, the United States had designated the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua, the Mexican Sinaloa cartel, and six other drug trafficking groups as “terrorist” organizations.
In July, Washington added the “Cartel de los Soles” to this list, which it described as a Venezuelan gang led by President Nicolas Maduro to support drug trafficking into the United States.
The United States has deployed eight warships to the Caribbean to combat drug trafficking, and says it has destroyed at least three small boats belonging to suspected drug traffickers in waters near Venezuela, killing a dozen people.
The legality of the strikes has been questioned by critics. In the past, such boats have been intercepted and seized, if detected by US authorities.
According to the Salvadoran government, Mara Salvatrucha (better known as MS-13) and Barrio 18 are responsible for the deaths of approximately 200,000 people in three decades.
The two gangs once controlled an estimated 80 percent of the country, and El Salvador had one of the highest homicide rates in the world.


Indonesia seeks new Saudi partnerships on digital economy, infrastructure

Indonesia seeks new Saudi partnerships on digital economy, infrastructure
Updated 24 September 2025

Indonesia seeks new Saudi partnerships on digital economy, infrastructure

Indonesia seeks new Saudi partnerships on digital economy, infrastructure
  • , Indonesia signed deals worth $27 billion during Prabowo’s Jeddah visit in July
  • Saudi investment already plays important role in Indonesia’s infrastructure, energy sectors, minister says

JAKARTA: The government of Indonesia is seeking new Saudi partnerships in infrastructure projects and the digital economy, a minister said during celebrations of the Kingdom’s National Day in Jakarta.

Indonesia and in July agreed to strengthen their strategic cooperation after talks between President Prabowo Subianto and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in Jeddah.  

The meeting was part of Prabowo’s first visit to the Kingdom since taking office, during which the two countries signed deals worth about $27 billion between private sector institutions in fields that include clean energy and petrochemicals.  

“Looking ahead, we see vast potential for new forms of partnership. Indonesia welcomes greater Saudi participation in our infrastructure projects, halal industry development, and digital economy,” Religious Affairs Minister Nasaruddin Umar said during a ceremony on Tuesday evening commemorating the 95th Saudi National Day. 

“ remains one of Indonesia’s key economic partners in the Middle East. Trade between our two countries has grown steadily, encompassing energy, agriculture, manufacturing, and services,” he said.

“Indonesian companies are increasingly active in the Saudi market, while Saudi investment plays an important role in Indonesia’s infrastructure and energy sectors.” 

Saudi-Indonesia trade and investment ties have been on the rise in recent years, with non-oil trade worth about $3.3 billion last year, a 14.5 percent increase compared with 2020. 

As Indonesia aims to make renewables a third of its total energy mix by 2034, has been one of its main partners in various clean energy projects. This includes a July agreement between Saudi power giant ACWA Power and Indonesian state energy company Pertamina, which covers technology development of up to 500 megawatts in renewable energy and green hydrogen projects. 

Infrastructure and digital economy are also priorities for the Indonesian government, which sees both sectors as key drivers of economic growth. 

“’s Vision 2030 is transforming the Kingdom into a global hub for innovation, culture, and economic diversification. Indonesia watches these developments with admiration, for we share a similar aspiration through our own Vision 2045, when Indonesia will mark a century of independence,” Umar said. 

“These parallel visions create abundant opportunities for collaboration in technology, renewable energy, and sustainable development.”