Houthis warn German ships over Red Sea as vessel reports nearby missile strike

Update Houthis warn German ships over Red Sea as vessel reports nearby missile strike
A drone is displayed in an exhibition held by the Houthis to mark the 'Martyrs Week' in Sanaa, Yemen, on Nove. 17, 2024. (REUTERS)
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Updated 18 November 2024

Houthis warn German ships over Red Sea as vessel reports nearby missile strike

Houthis warn German ships over Red Sea as vessel reports nearby missile strike
  • A ship’s captain saw that “a missile splashed in close proximity to the vessel” as it traveled near the Bab el-Mandeb Strait, UKMTO reports
  • The Houthis theartened to hit vessels of German shipping firms passing near the Red Sea or using Israeli ports

DUBAI: A vessel 60 nautical miles southeast of Yemen's Aden reported on Monday a missile splashing into the sea in its close proximity, the United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) said.
UKMTO added that the vessel and its crew were safe.
The same vessel was passing through the Red Sea 25 nautical miles west of Yemen's Mokha on Sunday when it reported a missile splashing into the sea nearby, UKMTO said.
The attack comes as the Houthis continue their monthslong assault targeting shipping through a waterway that typically sees $1 trillion in goods pass through it a year over the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza and Israel’s ground offensive in Lebanon.

Meanwhile, the Houthis theartened to hit vessels of German shipping firms passing near the Red Sea or using Israeli ports, the German shipowners’ association VDR said Monday.
The emailed warnings sent to the German industry body and cargo carriers in recent months were “attempts at intimidation,” VDR executive Irina Haesler said.
The threats were “directed against ships that call at Israeli ports, as well as against those that pass through the Red Sea, the Bab Al-Mandab Strait, the Gulf of Aden, the Arabian Sea and the Indian Ocean,” the association said.
“Regardless of their location, ships with supposed links to Israel are considered potential targets,” it said.
One such email from the Houthis, seen by AFP, warned German shipowners of “a naval blockade on the Israeli enemy.”
It said “all vessels belonging to it, associated with it or bound for it” would be “subject to punishment and ... prohibited from crossing the area of operations of the Yemeni Armed Forces.”
A VDR spokeswoman told AFP the authenticity of the emails had been confirmed by the German navy and International Chamber of Shipping.
The Houthis have targeted more than 90 merchant vessels with missiles and drones since the war in Gaza started in October 2023. They seized one vessel and sank two in the campaign, which also killed four sailors. Other missiles and drones have either been intercepted by a US-led coalition in the Red Sea or failed to reach their targets, which have included Western military vessels as well.
The militia maintain that they target ships linked to Israel, the US or the UK to force an end to Israel’s campaign against Hamas in Gaza. However, many of the ships attacked have little or no connection to the conflict, including some bound for Iran.
The Houthis have shot down multiple American MQ-9 Reaper drones as well.
In the Houthi's last attack on Nov. 11, two US Navy warships targeted with multiple drones and missiles as they were traveling through the Bab el-Mandeb Strait, but the attacks were not successful.


Babies in Gaza City incubators at risk as Israeli assault intensifies: UNICEF

Babies in Gaza City incubators at risk as Israeli assault intensifies: UNICEF
Updated 59 min 43 sec ago

Babies in Gaza City incubators at risk as Israeli assault intensifies: UNICEF

Babies in Gaza City incubators at risk as Israeli assault intensifies: UNICEF
  • In Gaza City, there are more babies than incubators, and some of them are sharing, he said, adding that Israel had denied some requests to import more. Pires said he saw four in one incubator last month

GENEVA: The UN children’s charity called on Monday for an immediate evacuation to save at least 25 ill or premature babies in incubators in Gaza City as Israel steps up its ground offensive, shelling a hospital housing around half  of them.
Palestinian health officials say tanks are surrounding the area near Al-Helo Hospital, where at least 12 babies are in incubators. 
Medics said the site was shelled. Video obtained by Reuters showed hospital rooms and beds there strewn with debris. “It is time to move them because Gaza City again has become a combat zone, but moving them where? There is no safe place for them to go,” said UNICEF spokesperson Ricardo Pires.
Evacuation of the babies, many of them newborns, will mean moving them to makeshift carts, wrapped in blankets with portable oxygen supplies and drips, Pires said. 
Still, they could be exposed to infection, variable temperatures, or supplies could run out during the transfer.
“Moving them seems like the best option we have now ... but at the same time, it’s a very risky one.”
Pires was in Gaza City last month, where he saw one of the babies — a premature girl named Narges who, he said, had been removed from the womb of her dead mother, who had been shot in the head.
“We’re very concerned not only about her, but all the other babies,” he said, saying efforts to reach her father and her doctors since the shelling had been unsuccessful.
In Gaza City, there are more babies than incubators, and some of them are sharing, he said, adding that Israel had denied some requests to import more. Pires said he saw four in one incubator last month.
Hundreds of thousands of Gazans have been displaced by the offensive on Gaza’s famine-struck north, where shortages are worsening. 
Israel has said it will not halt fighting unless Hamas frees all hostages and permanently surrenders.  The assault on Gaza City has worsened a dire humanitarian crisis that has increased Israel’s international isolation. 

Several Western countries, including Britain and France have recognized Palestinian independence, defying Israeli objections.
Israeli tanks advanced on Monday to within a few hundred meters of Gaza City’s main Al-Shifa Hospital, where doctors say hundreds of patients were still being treated despite Israeli orders to leave.
Israel has said it will not halt fighting unless Hamas frees all hostages and permanently surrenders its weapons.
Hamas says it is willing to free its hostages in return for an end to the war, but will not give up its arms as long as Palestinians are still fighting for a state.
In Israel’s latest offensive, troops have flattened Gaza City neighborhoods, dynamiting buildings which they said were used by Hamas. 
Hundreds of thousands of residents have fled, though many say there is nowhere to go. Israel has told them to head south, where other cities have already been razed.
The military said in a Monday statement it was continuing to target militant groups. 
Medics said the military had killed at least 18 people across Gaza on Monday, most of them in Gaza City.
Previous ceasefire efforts have fallen apart due to a failure to bridge the gaps between Israel and Hamas.
Netanyahu’s far-right allies in the Israeli government want the war to continue until Hamas has been defeated. But the Gaza City offensive is also a source of domestic political tension, with families of hostages saying it is time to seek a peace deal to bring their loved ones home.
The Hostages Families Forum, representing many relatives of those held captive in Gaza, sent a letter to Trump ahead of his meeting with Netanyahu, urging him not to let anyone sabotage the deal he is putting forward to end the war.
“The stakes are too high, and our families have waited too long for any interference to derail this progress,” they wrote. 

 

 

 


UN Security Council meets on Palestine as Trump, Netanyahu hold talks

UN Security Council meets on Palestine as Trump, Netanyahu hold talks
Updated 29 September 2025

UN Security Council meets on Palestine as Trump, Netanyahu hold talks

UN Security Council meets on Palestine as Trump, Netanyahu hold talks
  • US Ambassador Mike Waltz stands as lone voice in support of Israel
  • UN official: ‘Alarming’ violence in West Bank while Gaza ‘beyond breaking point’

NEW YORK: The US ambassador to the UN stood as a lone voice in support of Israel on Monday, as he repeated accusations that the countries that recognized Palestine last week had “rewarded Hamas.”

Mike Waltz was addressing a UN Security Council meeting on the situation in the Middle East as US President Donald Trump was set to meet Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House.

Waltz accused the UNSC of having an “obsessive focus” on Israel. “The US continues to work tirelessly to free all 48 hostages and end the war … If we want to end the war, we need to place accountability where it belongs, with the terrorist organization known as Hamas,” he said.

“Members of this body rewarded Hamas for its horrible atrocities, including Oct. 7, by unilaterally recognizing a Palestinian state.”

Hamas “sees actions like that as winning and as a win for them,” Waltz said, calling on the council and UN member states to “pressure Hamas to end the bloodshed.”

A stable West Bank “keeps Israel secure, and is in line with this administration’s goal to achieve peace in the region,” Waltz said.

Last week, Trump reportedly promised Arab and Muslim leaders at a closed-door UN meeting that the US will not allow Israel to annex the West Bank.

In Monday’s meeting, Ramiz Alakbarov, the UN’s deputy special coordinator for the Middle East peace process, outlined the status of Resolution 2334, adopted in 2016, which calls for an end to Israeli settlement building in the Occupied Territories, among other stipulations.

This year, from June 18 to Sept. 19, Israeli planning authorities advanced or approved about 20,810 housing units in the West Bank, including in East Jerusalem, he said.

“Demolitions and seizures of Palestinian-owned structures also accelerated … Israeli authorities demolished, seized or forced people to demolish 455 structures in the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, displacing 420 people, including 175 children and 118 women,” he added.

During the same period, Gaza’s Health Ministry reported the deaths of at least 7,579 Palestinians and at least 37,201 injured, mostly women and children, Alakbarov said.

Despite the world’s focus on events in Gaza, violence in the West Bank is continuing “at an alarming rate,” he added.

Alakbarov described a series of incidents across cities in the West Bank, notably Tulkarem and Jenin, in which large-scale operations by Israeli forces killed Palestinian children.

“After 23 months of fighting, the humanitarian situation in Gaza is beyond breaking point,” he added.

Alakbarov shared the views of UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on the implementation of Resolution 2334.

“Israeli settlement expansion continues to accelerate alongside the proliferation of outposts and steps in the Israeli Knesset (parliament) promoting the annexation of the West Bank,” Guterres said.

“Israeli settlements have no legal validity and constitute a flagrant violation of international law and UN resolutions.

“They’re systematically shrinking the territory of the Palestinian state and further entrenching Israel’s unlawful occupation.

“I’m appalled at the horrific humanitarian situation in Gaza, with unbearable levels of suffering and untenable living conditions. Famine in Gaza is a man-made disaster.”

The UNSC meeting included remarks from permanent and non-permanent states, including Russia, France, China and Slovenia.

The latter, which recognized Palestine last year, is serving as a non-permanent member of the council for 2024–2025.

Samuel Zbogar, Slovenia’s ambassador to the UN, said “the horrors of Gaza dominated all discussions” at the UN General Assembly over the past week, highlighting the almost unanimous message that “the suffering in Gaza must end.”

He said Slovenia supports the Palestinian Authority and the UN Relief and Works Agency as crucial bodies in any postwar governance of Gaza.

Zbogar described UNRWA as an “indispensable part of the fiber of Palestinian society that “must be protected.”

Each national recognition of Palestine over the past week — which included France, the UK, Canada and Australia — strengthens the “legitimacy of Palestine and moves us closer to a just settlement,” he said.

“I want to underline that we also hear voices for peace in Israel … We hear families of hostages calling for ceasefire,” Zbogar added.

“We hear voices of so many Israelis understanding that their safety and future is intertwined with the safety and future of Palestinians … We hear Jewish voices around the globe emphasizing that peace can’t be achieved through war.”

Asim Iftikhar Ahmad, Pakistan’s ambassador to the UN, told the council meeting that Israel continues to violate Resolution 2334 “with impunity.”

Israel’s use of “systematic military operations, illegal settlements and forced displacement” are aimed at “extinguishing the very prospect of a two-state solution,” he said.

“The people of Palestine can’t wait. The cause of peace, and the credibility of this council, depend on what we do in this moment.”


Djibouti calls for urgent action on Gaza and Sudan, highlights need for UN reform

Djibouti calls for urgent action on Gaza and Sudan, highlights need for UN reform
Updated 29 September 2025

Djibouti calls for urgent action on Gaza and Sudan, highlights need for UN reform

Djibouti calls for urgent action on Gaza and Sudan, highlights need for UN reform
  • ‘The Palestinian people are resilient and courageous,’ envoy tells General Assembly
  • Mohamed Siad Doualeh: ‘The Security Council is paralyzed by the systematic use of the veto’

NEW YORK: Djibouti on Monday called for immediate international action to address the humanitarian crisis in Gaza and stressed the importance of supporting a viable Palestinian state, while also highlighting the need for reform at the UN and its Security Council.

In a speech to the UN General Assembly, Djibouti’s ambassador and permanent representative described the situation in Gaza as “unspeakable horror” where “children are killed daily with impunity” and famine is being used as a weapon of war. 

Mohamed Siad Doualeh also condemned the repeated violations of laws governing the use of force, citing Israeli bombings, raids and extraterritorial killings.

He reaffirmed Djibouti’s solidarity with Palestine, noting that while the international community works to revive the two-state solution, “Israel is busy burying not only the idea of two states but also the possibility of a future viable and sovereign Palestinian state.” 

He added: “The Palestinian people are resilient and courageous. The international community is equally determined.

“The two-state solution is the only one capable of meeting the legitimate aspirations of the Palestinian people and achieving lasting peace.”

Doualeh condemned Israeli aggression against Qatar and reaffirmed its support for the Gulf state, while warning of the broader dangers of geopolitical fragmentation in the region, from Sudan to the Sahel. 

He described the conflict in Sudan as a “fratricidal war” causing massive civilian casualties, widespread destruction and displacement. He called for an immediate ceasefire and coordinated international response.

Doualeh stressed that the UN remains a critical platform for collective action, but warned that its effectiveness is becoming increasingly undermined. 

“The Security Council is paralyzed by the systematic use of the veto,” he said, adding that international law and long-established norms are being “dangerously challenged.” 

He called for a renewed commitment to multilateralism, saying the UN must not remain “a symbolic theater, vigilant over its image but deaf to the requirements for reform.” 

Doualeh urged stronger representation for Africa in the Security Council, and a broader effort to strengthen international cooperation so that all nations can participate effectively in global decision-making. 

“The UN remains more essential than ever,” he said. “We must work together to give multilateralism renewed meaning and reinforce cooperation in the interest of all states.”


Palestine faces ‘erasure’ without international help, Algeria tells UN

Ahmed Attaf, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Algeria, addresses the 80th session of the UNGA at United Nations headquarters.
Ahmed Attaf, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Algeria, addresses the 80th session of the UNGA at United Nations headquarters.
Updated 29 September 2025

Palestine faces ‘erasure’ without international help, Algeria tells UN

Ahmed Attaf, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Algeria, addresses the 80th session of the UNGA at United Nations headquarters.
  • FM: Neighboring countries will suffer from Greater Israel expansionism if left unchecked
  • Ahmed Attaf also calls for end to ‘foreign interventions’ in Libya followed by elections

LONDON: Palestine faces “erasure” unless the international community does more to ensure the end of the conflict with Israel and the establishment of a sovereign Palestinian state, Algeria’s foreign minister told the UN General Assembly on Monday.

This, and the threat Israel poses to its neighbors, are the most important issues on the agenda at the global forum, said Ahmed Attaf.

“Palestine faces the greatest threat ever today, which is the threat of erasure through annexation and displacement, as well as through suffocating the legitimate institutions that represent the Palestinian question, and that may also eliminate the two-state solution that has been the consensus on the issue,” he added.

“The threat isn’t limited to Palestine … The Israeli occupation is now loud and proud in its intention to revive what it calls Greater Israel.

“This situation makes it incumbent on the international community as a whole to uphold (its) responsibilities.”

Attaf said: “It’s the responsibility (of the UN) to work in order to prevent Palestinian neighbors — in particular Lebanon, Syria, Egypt and Jordan — (suffering) the horrors of what Greater Israel promises.”

He called on UN members to push ahead with support for Palestinian statehood, saying: “It’s (our) responsibility to seek to preserve the two-state solution, and to build a Palestinian state that’s sovereign and independent on the borders of 1967 with East Jerusalem as its capital, as a just and lasting settlement for the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.” 

He added: “We appreciate the increasing recognition of the State of Palestine, and we also reiterate the call, launched by our President Abdelmadjid Tebboune, to empower the State of Palestine with full-fledged membership in the UN.

“The entire world ... must realize that the establishment of the State of Palestine isn’t a choice but a necessity, and it’s not a favor but a right, an integral right of the Palestinian people.

“It’s not a hope but a necessary condition that’s indispensable, and it can’t be evaded in order to restore security and stability in the Middle East as a whole.”

Attaf called for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, with fighting in the Palestinian enclave approaching its third year since the invasion by Israeli forces in October 2023.

“Algeria follows with great concern the ongoing negotiations under the auspices of the US in order to end the tragedy in Gaza,” he said.

“Algeria encourages these efforts and hopes they’ll lead to an end to the Nakba, the catastrophe in Gaza … as a step on the road to a final settlement to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.”

Attaf said: “The Libyan crisis deepens and complicates further day by day, while the international community is losing interest in Libya, and while any practical prospects for a peaceful settlement is absent. 

“Fourteen years after the start of the crisis, this sisterly nation remains trapped in divisions that are fueled and invested by foreign interventions, as per plots that don’t desire the best for Libya or desire Libya’s stability or security.

“If the matter was left to the Libyans alone, they’d have reached an end to their divisions by now and would’ve charted a path forward that ends the crisis a long time ago. 

“It’s high time to end the foreign interventions in Libya, in order for the resilient Libyan people to heal and reunite.

“Only then would we have paved the road to a consensus leading to a settlement and elections by which the Libyans would choose their representatives — representatives who are loyal to the Libyan nation and the Libyan people.”

Attaf reiterated Algeria’s commitment to the security of the Sahel region, highlighting the importance of maintaining peacekeeping efforts in various parts of Africa and of fighting terrorism, a “scourge” to which the continent is “vulnerable.”

He emphasized the importance of cooperation between African and European countries on security in the Mediterranean, noting Algeria’s continued role as a “constructive” and “reliable partner that’s fully engaged in all the efforts that aim to achieve security and prosperity in this shared Mediterranean space.”

He called for European nations to make “economic development on the southern front a shared priority in a strategic and urgent manner, and that will restore the balance of rules so that the countries of the north (can) be a driver for growth and development within a balanced partnership based on investment and technology transfer … expanding the prospects of shared prosperity.”


Bahrain’s crown prince, Pope Leo XIV discuss dialogue among cultures

Bahrain’s crown prince, Pope Leo XIV discuss dialogue among cultures
Updated 29 September 2025

Bahrain’s crown prince, Pope Leo XIV discuss dialogue among cultures

Bahrain’s crown prince, Pope Leo XIV discuss dialogue among cultures
  • Prince Salman bin Hamad Al-Khalifa says mosques, churches, temples in Bahrain reflect country’s dedication to peace, harmony
  • He emphasizes pope’s role in promoting coexistence, tolerance, compassion, peace, as well as fostering religious understanding, solidarity among faiths

LONDON: Prince Salman bin Hamad Al-Khalifa, the crown prince and prime minister of Bahrain, discussed the importance of fostering values of tolerance and coexistence worldwide with Pope Leo XIV during a visit to Vatican City State on Monday.

Prince Salman emphasized Bahrain’s dedication to defending religious freedom and protecting the right to worship. He also underscored the importance of enhancing cooperation across diverse fields, according to the Bahrain News Agency.

He also highlighted that the numerous mosques, churches, and temples in Bahrain reflected the country’s dedication to peace and harmony, as well as its commitment to encouraging dialogue among cultures.

Prince Salman stressed the pope’s role in promoting coexistence, tolerance, compassion, and peace, as well as fostering religious understanding and solidarity among faiths.

Several senior officials also attended the meeting, including Sheikh Isa bin Salman bin Hamad Al-Khalifa, minister of the prime minister’s court; Abdullatif bin Rashid Al-Zayani, minister of foreign affairs; and Sheikh Salman bin Khalifa Al-Khalifa, minister of finance and national economy.