Flareup of Syria civil war is ‘bitter fruit of collective failure’ of diplomacy: UN chief

Special Flareup of Syria civil war is ‘bitter fruit of collective failure’ of diplomacy: UN chief
Residents in Hama set ablaze a large banner bearing a picture of Syria’s President Bashar Assad hanging on the facade of a municipal building on December 5, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 05 December 2024

Flareup of Syria civil war is ‘bitter fruit of collective failure’ of diplomacy: UN chief

Flareup of Syria civil war is ‘bitter fruit of collective failure’ of diplomacy: UN chief
  • Antonio Guterres: ‘Syria is a crossroads of civilization. It’s painful to see its progressive fragmentation’
  • Coalition of opposition forces have launched their largest offensive in years, seizing Aleppo and now Hama

NEW YORK: The current flareup of the Syrian civil war is the “bitter fruit of a chronic collective failure” to agree a nationwide ceasefire and implement Security Council resolutions, the UN secretary-general said on Thursday.

Calling for the restoration of Syria’s “sovereignty, unity, independence and territorial integrity,” Antonio Guterres added that “after 14 years of conflict, it’s high time for all parties to engage seriously with Geir Pedersen, my special envoy for Syria, to finally chart a new, inclusive and comprehensive approach to resolving this crisis, in line with Security Council Resolution 2254. It’s time for serious dialogue.”

Resolution 2254, adopted in 2015, outlines a roadmap for a political resolution to the conflict, calling for a ceasefire, humanitarian access, and a Syrian-led political process involving all parties.

It emphasizes free and fair elections, constitutional reform and a transitional government, with the goal of achieving peace and stability in Syria.

The civil war, which had been at a stalemate for the past few years, was reignited last week when a coalition of opposition forces, including Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham — which is sanctioned by the UN Security Council — and an umbrella group of Turkey-backed militias called the Syrian National Army launched their largest offensive against the government in years.

They quickly swept through villages outside Aleppo, the largest city in Syria, much of which they now control. They met little resistance there as the Syrian military quickly withdrew.

On Thursday, they swept into the central city of Hama from which government forces again redeployed.

Rebels now appear to be heading further south, inching ever closer to the capital Damascus, President Bashar Assad’s seat of power.

There have been reports of civilian casualties, displacements of tens of thousands of people, damage to civilian infrastructure, and interruptions in essential services and humanitarian aid. 

Guterres discussed the current “grave developments” with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

He told reporters in New York that he emphasized to Erdogan “all” parties’ obligations to protect civilians, “the urgent need for immediate humanitarian access to all civilians in need, and a return to the UN-facilitated political process to end the bloodshed.” 

Erdogan’s office said he told the UN chief that the conflict has reached a new phase that is “being managed calmly.”

Guterres said: “Syria is a crossroads of civilization. It’s painful to see its progressive fragmentation.”

He added that during his tenure as high commissioner for refugees, he witnessed “the immense generosity” of the Syrian people who opened “their hearts and their homes” to countless Iraqi refugees.

“There were no refugee camps in Syria. Refugees lived among the Syrian people,” he said. “It breaks my heart to see their suffering grow, along with the threats to regional and indeed international security.”

Guterres again urged “all those with influence to do their part for the long-suffering people of Syria.”


What to know as key talks to end the war in Gaza begin

What to know as key talks to end the war in Gaza begin
Updated 58 sec ago

What to know as key talks to end the war in Gaza begin

What to know as key talks to end the war in Gaza begin

CAIRO: Israel and Hamas began indirect talks on ending the war in Gaza on Monday, after both sides signaled support for US President Donald Trump’s peace plan.
The talks in Egypt’s Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh are brokered by the US and aim at hammering out details for the plan’s first phase. That includes a ceasefire to allow for the release of all remaining hostages held by Hamas in exchange for hundreds of Palestinian prisoners in Israel.
Trump’s plan has received wide international backing and raised hopes for an end to a devastating war that has upended global politics, left tens of thousands of Palestinians dead and the Gaza Strip in ruins. The war began on Oct. 7, 2023, when Hamas-led militants stormed into southern Israel and killed around 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and abducted 251.
Many uncertainties remain around the latest plan, including the demand for Hamas to disarm and the future governance of Gaza. Tuesday marks two years since the war began.
Here’s what we know:
Who’s at the talks
US envoy Steve Witkoff is leading the US negotiating team, according to a senior Egyptian official Saturday. Local Egyptian media said that Witkoff and Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law, arrived in Egypt and are expected to join the talks.
Hamas said that its delegation will be headed by its chief negotiator, Khalil Al-Hayya, and Israel has said its delegation will be headed by top negotiator and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu confidant Ron Dermer, although it wasn’t clear if he was on the ground in Egypt. Netanyahu’s office said that foreign policy adviser Ophir Falk would also be present for Israel among others.
It’s not clear how long the talks would last. Netanyahu said they would be “confined to a few days maximum,” and Trump has said that Hamas must move quickly, “or else all bets will be off.” Hamas officials have warned more time may be needed to locate bodies of hostages buried under rubble.
The plan’s essentials
All hostilities would — in theory — immediately end. Under the deal, Hamas would release all hostages it holds, living or dead, within 72 hours. The militants still have 48 hostages. Israel believes 20 of them are alive.
Israel would free 250 Palestinians serving life sentences in its prisons and 1,700 people detained from Gaza since the war began, including all women and children. Israel also would hand over the bodies of 15 Palestinians for each body of a hostage handed over.
Israeli troops would withdraw from Gaza after Hamas disarms, and an international security force would deploy. The territory would be placed under international governance, with Trump and former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair overseeing it.
An interim administration of Palestinian technocrats would run day-to-day affairs. Hamas would have no part in administering Gaza, and all its military infrastructure, including tunnels, would be dismantled. Members who pledge to live peacefully would be granted amnesty. Those who wish to leave Gaza can.
Palestinians wouldn’t be expelled from Gaza. Large amounts of humanitarian aid would be allowed and would be run by “neutral international bodies,” including the United Nations and the Red Crescent.
What Hamas has said
A Hamas statement on Friday said that it was willing to release the hostages and hand over power to other Palestinians, but that other aspects of the plan require further consultations among Palestinians. The statement made no mention of Hamas disarming, which is a key Israeli demand.
The statement also reiterated its longstanding openness to handing power over to a politically independent Palestinian body.
What Israel has said
Netanyahu said on Friday that Israel was prepared for the implementation of the “first stage” of Trump’s plan, apparently referring to the release of hostages. But his office said in a statement that Israel was committed to ending the war based on principles that it has set out before. Netanyahu has long said that Hamas must surrender and disarm.
Israel’s army on Saturday said that the country’s leaders had instructed it to prepare for the first phase of the US plan.
What remains uncertain
Questions include the timing of key steps. One Hamas official said that it would need days or weeks to locate some hostages’ bodies. And senior Hamas officials have suggested that there are still major disagreements requiring further negotiations. A key demand is for Hamas to disarm, but the group’s response made no mention of that.
It’s not clear that Hamas officials can agree among themselves on the plan.
A senior official, Mousa Abu Marzouk, said that Hamas was willing to hand over its weapons to a future Palestinian body that runs Gaza, but there was no mention of that in the group’s official statement responding to Trump’s plan. Another official, Osama Hamdan, told Al Araby television that Hamas would refuse foreign administration of the Gaza Strip and that the entry of foreign forces would be “unacceptable.”
Parts of the plan remain unclear. Hamas wants Israel to leave Gaza completely, but the plan says Israel would maintain a “security perimeter presence,” which could mean it would keep a buffer zone inside the territory.
And the future of Gaza remains in question. The plan says that if the Palestinian Authority, which administers the occupied West Bank, reforms sufficiently and Gaza redevelopment advances, “the conditions may finally be in place for a credible pathway to Palestinian self-determination and statehood.”

 


Jordanian and Palestinian officials affirm need to empower women and children

Jordanian and Palestinian officials affirm need to empower women and children
Updated 26 min 16 sec ago

Jordanian and Palestinian officials affirm need to empower women and children

Jordanian and Palestinian officials affirm need to empower women and children
  • They also call for sharing of expertise related to social development, specifically on issues such as family welfare, child protection and care of the elderly
  • Jordanian minister stresses King Abdullah’s steadfast efforts to end the aggression on Gaza

LONDON: Jordan’s minister of social development, Wafa Bani Mustafa, emphasized the importance of empowering women and children, during talks in Amman on Monday with Maher Khudair, the chief justice of the Palestinian Supreme Shariah Court.

The minister also called for the sharing of expertise between the authorities relating to social development, specifically on topics such as family welfare, child protection, care of the elderly, and the empowerment of women. She noted the similarities between the Jordanian and Palestinian legal frameworks relating to such issues, in particular those covering marriage, divorce, custody, inheritance and family relationships.

Khudair said it was also important to share knowledge about personal status legislation and judicial procedures, and affirmed Palestine’s commitment to the enhancement of cooperation with Jordan.

Bani Mustafa highlighted King Abdullah’s efforts to help end the Israeli aggression against Gaza, and his steadfast support for the Palestinian people in their quest for justice and independence, the Jordan News Agency reported.


UNESCO selects Egypt’s Khaled El-Enany as new chief

UNESCO selects Egypt’s Khaled El-Enany as new chief
Updated 06 October 2025

UNESCO selects Egypt’s Khaled El-Enany as new chief

UNESCO selects Egypt’s Khaled El-Enany as new chief
  • Khaled El-Enany, 54, is a former Egyptian tourism and antiquities minister
  • He had been the favorite to win the secret ballot for a four-year term

PARIS: The United Nations’ cultural agency selected former Egyptian tourism and antiquities minister Khaled El-Enany as its new chief on Monday, handing him the keys to revive UNESCO’s fortunes after the US withdrew from it for a second time.
El-Enany, 54, was up against Édouard Firmin Matoko, 69, of Republic of Congo, but had been the favorite to win the secret ballot for a four-year term, having launched his campaign early in April 2023.
He had since built strong regional backing and international alliances.
UNESCO’s board, which represents 58 of the agency’s 194 member states, elected him with 55 votes. Matoko won two votes. The United States did not vote.
The selection will now be put forward for approval to UNESCO members on November 6.
While outgoing chief Audrey Azoulay has worked to diversify funding sources, the UN culture and education agency still receives about 8 percent of its budget from Washington.
Once the US withdrawal takes effect at the end of 2026, that funding will be cut.
The White House described UNESCO as supporting “woke, divisive cultural and social causes” when Trump decided to pull the US out in July, repeating a move he took in his first term that was reversed by Joe Biden.
The agency, founded after World War Two to promote peace through international cooperation in education, science, and culture, is best known for designating and protecting archaeological and heritage sites, from the Galapagos Islands to the tombs of Timbuktu.
“How come a country like Egypt, with its long history, with layers of Pharaonic, Greek, Roman, Coptic, Arab, Islamic civilization, has not led this important organization? This is not acceptable at all,” Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty said in Paris last week.
But El-Enany has faced criticism at home from conservationists who accused his ministry of failing to shield sensitive heritage sites in Cairo and the Sinai Peninsula.
Azoulay, from France, has completed the maximum two four-year terms.


EU wants to be part of Gaza transitional body, says Kallas

EU wants to be part of Gaza transitional body, says Kallas
Updated 06 October 2025

EU wants to be part of Gaza transitional body, says Kallas

EU wants to be part of Gaza transitional body, says Kallas
  • ‘We are working together with our Arab partners,’ foreign policy chief says in Kuwait City

KUWAIT CITY: The EU is seeking a role in US President Donald Trump’s transitional authority for the Gaza Strip, its top diplomat Kaja Kallas said on Monday.

“Yes, we feel that Europe has a great role and we should also be on board with this,” Kallas said, when asked if the EU wanted to take part in Trump’s “Board of Peace.”
The EU is a major aid donor to the Palestinians and has ties with both the Palestinian Authority and Israel, Kallas pointed out.
“I think Europe should not only be a payer, but we should also be a player,” she said on the sidelines of an EU-Gulf Cooperation Council meeting in Kuwait.
“We have worked on the peace plan ... and we are working together with our Arab partners. They understand that it is in the interest of everybody if we are there, so hopefully, also the Israelis agree to this,” she added.
Last week, Trump announced a 20-point plan to end the conflict in Gaza that includes the territory’s post-war governance.
Hamas and Israel are holding indirect talks about the proposal in Egypt this week.
Trump’s plan stipulates that Gaza will be governed by a temporary technocratic, apolitical Palestinian committee running day-to-day public services.
This committee will be overseen by the “Board of Peace” — headed and chaired by Trump himself, with former British Prime Minister Tony Blair also involved.
This body is set to handle funding for the redevelopment of Gaza until the Palestinian Authority completes a reform program and takes back control of the Strip.
Also on Monday, German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul said that the first phase of President Trump’s plans to halt the war in Gaza must be achieved by the start of next week at the latest, but added that all the other issues would need time.
The first phase aims at a ceasefire, release of hostages and prisoners, restraint in the military conflict, and bringing in supplies to Gaza — all of which are feasible, said Wadephul.
“All other issues are very complicated and, indeed, that is why they also need time,” said Wadephul at a press conference in Tel Aviv.
“We must not abandon all diplomatic efforts, but I would like to focus now on taking this first decisive step together.”

 


Lebanese govt receives first progress report on disarming Hezbollah

Lebanon’s army was tasked in August with drafting and overseeing the plan to disarm Hezbollah. (Supplied)
Lebanon’s army was tasked in August with drafting and overseeing the plan to disarm Hezbollah. (Supplied)
Updated 06 October 2025

Lebanese govt receives first progress report on disarming Hezbollah

Lebanon’s army was tasked in August with drafting and overseeing the plan to disarm Hezbollah. (Supplied)
  • Lebanon’s Cabinet on Monday received its first progress report on the disarmament of Hezbollah

BEIRUT: Army chief Gen. Rodolphe Haykal presented the Army Command report on the newly implemented plan to establish exclusive state control over weapons.

The Lebanese state, under President Joseph Aoun, is attempting to seize weapons belonging to Hezbollah in an attempt to secure a monopoly on arms and greater authority over events in the country.

Hezbollah, the Shiite political party and paramilitary group, has long been viewed as one of the word’s most powerful non-state actors.

Monday’s meeting was chaired by Aoun at the Presidential Palace. It focused on measures undertaken in the South Litani sector and beyond, in areas where illegal weapons and military activity have historically challenged state authority.

Lebanon’s army was tasked in August with drafting and overseeing the plan to disarm Hezbollah.

While the military institution has remained tight-lipped about the details of its plan, Haykal — who had just toured several military units in the South Litani sector to review progress — said in a speech distributed by Army Command that the next phase “will once again prove that the army holds the power of right, and that it is the (sole) protector of the national interests.”

The army’s plan, particularly south of the Litani River, is being implemented in coordination with UNIFIL, the UN peacekeeping force, amid heightened tensions from regular Israeli cross-border strikes and the continued occupation of Lebanese border territory.

A senior military source said that the army’s approach focuses on “containing Hezbollah’s weapons,” specifically restricting any transfer or new introduction of weapons that could allow the organization to reconstitute its armed capacity in the wake of its bruising war with Israel.

During a recent visit to meet officers and soldiers assigned to South Litani Sector Command, Haykal praised their professionalism in “achieving great accomplishments,” adding that they “have proven themselves equal to the immense responsibility placed upon them, earning the confidence of brotherly and friendly nations.

“This compels us to continue exerting efforts and making sacrifices to fulfill our duty.”

Before heading to the Presidential Palace on Monday, Haykal met US Gen. Joseph Clearfield, head of the Hezbollah-Israel ceasefire oversight mechanism. They discussed progress on the ceasefire agreement.

During Monday’s Cabinet session, discussions focused on Hezbollah’s controversial defiance of the Prime Minister’s Office.

In late September, members of the militia illuminated Beirut’s iconic Raouche Rock with images of former Hezbollah leaders Hassan Nasrallah and Hashem Safieddine, despite being prohibited by official orders.

The illumination of Raouche Rock — a prominent tourist landmark — also took place despite warnings from prominent Beirut MPs.

The Cabinet agenda included a proposal to revoke the license of Hezbollah’s cultural association, Ressalat, for violating the terms of its permit by illuminating the site.

This triggered a deep rift between Hezbollah and Prime Minister Nawaf Salam, escalating into a smear campaign against the prime minister led by Hezbollah supporters and officials, including coordinated attacks on social media.

An official source told Arab News that that the Cabinet sought to bridge this rift “by allowing each party to present its viewpoint, without voting on the step of withdrawing the license from the Ressalat Association, and awaiting the results of the administrative investigations into what happened.”

The source added that Lebanon’s interior minister, Ahmad Al-Hajjar, is expected to take appropriate measures, including issuing warnings and imposing fines, to deter the undermining of the state.

The country’s judiciary has investigated several activists who insulted and defamed Salam on social media; some have refused to appear before court.

Commenting on the incident, Deputy Prime Minister Tarek Mitri said that “calling the prime minister a Zionist is contrary to political ethics.”

Meanwhile, Israel’s air force on Monday struck Bekaa Valley training camps belonging to Hezbollah’s elite Radwan Force, media reports said.

The strikes hit locations including Zaghrine, the barren areas around Hrabta and Hermel, as well as heights between Hrabta and Chaat.

Reports suggest that Hezbollah continues to store heavy weapons in the Bekaa region, particularly in the barren areas bordering Syria.