Paramilitary attack near besieged Darfur kills 14

Plumes of smoke rise during clashes between the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces and the army in Khartoum, Sudan, September 26, 2024. (REUTERS)
Plumes of smoke rise during clashes between the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces and the army in Khartoum, Sudan, September 26, 2024. (REUTERS)
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Updated 19 January 2025

Paramilitary attack near besieged Darfur kills 14

Paramilitary attack near besieged Darfur kills 14
  • Nearly all of Darfur is now controlled by the paramilitary troops, which has also taken over swathes of the neighboring Kordofan region and much of central Sudan

PORT SUDAN: A paramilitary attack on an area east of North Darfur’s besieged capital El-Fasher has killed 14 Sudanese civilians, activists said on Sunday.
The “treacherous attack” took place in an area “northeastern Um Kadadah in North Darfur state on Saturday,” said the local resistance committee. The group is one of hundreds of volunteer organizations that have coordinated aid across Sudan during 21 months of fighting between the regular army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces.
El-Fasher, a city of some 2 million people which has been under siege of the paramilitary troops since May, has seen some of the fiercest fighting of the war as the army battles to keep its last foothold in the vast Darfur region of western Sudan. Nearly all of Darfur is now controlled by the paramilitary troops, which has also taken over swathes of the neighboring Kordofan region and much of central Sudan. The regular army still controls the north and east, while the capital Khartoum and neighboring cities are a battleground between the warring parties.

HIGHLIGHTS

• Nearly all of Darfur is now controlled by the paramilitary troops, which has also taken over swathes of the neighboring Kordofan region and much of central Sudan.

• The regular army still controls the north and east, while the capital Khartoum and neighboring cities are a battleground between the warring parties.

The war in Sudan began in April 2023, and has killed tens of thousands of people and uprooted more than 12 million, creating what the United Nations calls one of the worst humanitarian disasters in recent memory.
Both the army and the paramilitary have been accused of indiscriminately targeting medical facilities and civilians, as well as deliberately attacking residential areas.
Separately, another 12 people died in the past two days in South Sudan in attacks on citizens from northern neighbor Sudan, the country’s security forces reported, despite an overnight curfew.
Demonstrations sparked by reports that 29 South Sudanese had been killed during fighting in Sudan’s Al-Jazeera state led to the looting of businesses owned by Sudanese nationals in the capital Juba.
Police opened fire to disperse the crowd, killing three and wounding seven.
South Sudan security forces said Saturday that nine people — two South Sudanese and seven Sudanese — had been killed during protests Friday in the town of Aweil.
The world’s newest nation had imposed a curfew Friday night as protests spread to other towns.


UN nuclear watchdog chief says inspectors ‘back in Iran’

UN nuclear watchdog chief says inspectors ‘back in Iran’
Updated 18 sec ago

UN nuclear watchdog chief says inspectors ‘back in Iran’

UN nuclear watchdog chief says inspectors ‘back in Iran’
  • The head of the UN’s nuclear watchdog has said a team of its inspectors are “back in Iran,” the first to enter since Israeli and US strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities this year
WASHINGTON: The head of the UN’s nuclear watchdog has said a team of its inspectors are “back in Iran,” the first to enter since Israeli and US strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities this year.
Iran suspended cooperation with the United Nations’ International Atomic Energy Agency following a 12-day war with Israel in June, with Tehran pointing to the IAEA’s failure to condemn Israeli and US strikes on its nuclear facilities.
“Now the first team of IAEA inspectors is back in Iran, and we are about to restart,” director general Rafael Grossi told Fox News’ “The Story” in an interview aired on Tuesday.
“When it comes to Iran, as you know, there are many facilities. Some were attacked, some were not,” Grossi said.
“So we are discussing what kind of... practical modalities can be implemented in order to facilitate the restart of our work there.”
The announcement came as Iran held talks with Britain, France and Germany in Geneva on Tuesday, with Tehran seeking to avert a sanctions snapback which the European powers have threatened to impose under a moribund 2015 nuclear deal.
Iran’s deputy foreign minister Kazem Gharibabadi, who attended the talks, said it was “high time” for the European trio “to make the right choice and give diplomacy time and space.”
Britain, France and Germany — parties to the 2015 deal — have threatened to trigger the accord’s “snapback mechanism” by the end of August.
Tuesday’s meeting was the second round of talks with European diplomats since the end of the June war, which was triggered by an unprecedented Israeli surprise attack.
The conflict derailed Iran’s nuclear negotiations with the United States.
It also cast a chill on Iran’s ties with the IAEA, with Tehran blaming the UN agency in part for the attacks on its nuclear facilities.
Israel says it launched the attacks to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon — an ambition Tehran has repeatedly denied.
The 2015 nuclear deal was torpedoed in 2018 when Donald Trump, during his first term as president, unilaterally withdrew the United States and slapped sanctions on Iran.

Hamas challenges Israeli account of Gaza hospital casualties

Hamas challenges Israeli account of Gaza hospital casualties
Updated 27 August 2025

Hamas challenges Israeli account of Gaza hospital casualties

Hamas challenges Israeli account of Gaza hospital casualties
  • The Israel-Hamas war has been one of the bloodiest conflicts for media workers, with 189 Palestinian journalists killed by Israeli fire in Gaza in 22 months of fighting, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists

GAZA CITY: Hamas denied on Tuesday that any of the Palestinians killed in Israel’s attack on Gaza’s Nasser hospital on Monday were militants.
Earlier, Israel said it had killed six militants in the attack but it was investigating how civilians, including five journalists, were killed. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu described it as a “tragic mishap.”
The Hamas government media office said in a statement that one of the six Palestinians who Israel alleged were militants was killed in Al-Mawasi some distance from the hospital, and another was killed elsewhere at a different time.
The Hamas statement did not clarify whether the two who were killed elsewhere were also civilians. 

 


Trump to chair ‘large meeting’ on post-war Gaza: US envoy

Trump to chair ‘large meeting’ on post-war Gaza: US envoy
Updated 27 August 2025

Trump to chair ‘large meeting’ on post-war Gaza: US envoy

Trump to chair ‘large meeting’ on post-war Gaza: US envoy
  • Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed at least 62,819 Palestinians, most of them civilians, according to figures from the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza that the United Nations considers reliable
  • Trump said the United States would remove rubble and unexploded bombs and turn Gaza into the “Riviera of the Middle East”

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump will host a meeting on Wednesday on post-war plans for Gaza, his envoy Steve Witkoff said Tuesday.
“We’ve got a large meeting in the White House tomorrow, chaired by the president, and it’s a very comprehensive plan we’re putting together on the next day,” Witkoff said in a Fox News interview, without providing more details.
He was asked if there was “a plan for a day after in Gaza,” referencing the end of Israel’s war in the Palestinian territory that began in October 2023.
Trump stunned the world earlier this year when he suggested the United States should take control of the Gaza Strip, clear out its two million inhabitants and build seaside real estate.
Trump said the United States would remove rubble and unexploded bombs and turn Gaza into the “Riviera of the Middle East.”
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu praised the proposal, which was heavily criticized by many European and Arab states.
Witkoff did not elaborate on the plan he touted Tuesday, but said he believed that people would “see how robust it is and how it’s, how well meaning, it is.”
The war in Gaza was sparked by Hamas’s October 2023 attack on Israel, which resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures.
Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed at least 62,819 Palestinians, most of them civilians, according to figures from the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza that the United Nations considers reliable.

 


Israeli protesters demand hostage deal as cabinet meets

Israeli protesters demand hostage deal as cabinet meets
Updated 26 August 2025

Israeli protesters demand hostage deal as cabinet meets

Israeli protesters demand hostage deal as cabinet meets
  • People sounded air horns, blew whistles and banged on drums as they chanted: ‘The government is failing us, we won’t give up until every hostage is home’
  • Israel has been under mounting pressure both at home and abroad to wrap up its campaign in Gaza

TEL AVIV: Thousands of demonstrators massed in Tel Aviv on Tuesday, seeking to pour pressure on the government to end the war in Gaza and strike a deal to return hostages, as the security cabinet convened.
The first protests began at daybreak as demonstrators blocked roads in the commercial hub, where they waved Israeli flags and held up pictures of the hostages, AFP journalists reported.
Israeli media said others rallied near the US embassy branch in the city, as well as outside the houses of various ministers.
Hours later as the sun set over Tel Aviv, thousands more gathered in “Hostage Square,” which has served as a focal point for the protest movement for months.
People in the crowd sounded air horns, blew whistles and banged on drums as they chanted: “The government is failing us, we won’t give up until every hostage is home.”
“I’m here first and foremost to protest, and to call for the government to make a deal and bring all the hostages home and to end the war,” said demonstrator Yoav Vider, 29.
Following the cabinet meeting, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu later spoke at an event Tuesday evening, remaining vague about the government’s intentions as Israeli media reported the meeting had been inconclusive.
“We have just come from a cabinet meeting. I don’t think I can elaborate too much,” said Netanyahu.
“But I will say one thing: It started in Gaza, and it will end in Gaza. We will not leave those monsters there.”
The security cabinet approved a plan in early August for the military to take over Gaza City, triggering fresh fears for the safety of the hostages and a new wave of protests that has seen tens of thousands take to the streets.
Netanyahu last week ordered immediate talks aimed at securing the release of all remaining captives in Gaza, while also doubling down on the plans for a new offensive to seize Gaza’s largest city.
That came days after Hamas said it had accepted a new ceasefire proposal put forward by mediators that would see the staggered release of hostages over an initial 60-day period in exchange for Palestinian prisoners held by Israel.
In Doha on Tuesday, Qatari foreign ministry spokesman Majed Al-Ansari told a regular news conference that mediators were still “waiting for an answer” from Israel to the latest proposal.
“The responsibility now lies on the Israeli side to respond to an offer that is on the table. Anything else is political posturing by the Israeli side.”
Earlier in the day, the families of hostages in Tel Aviv lambasted the government for failing to prioritize a deal that could see those still held captive in Gaza released.
“Prime Minister (Benjamin) Netanyahu prioritizes the destruction of Hamas over releasing the hostages,” said Ruby Chen, whose son was abducted by militants in October 2023.
“He believes it is OK and it is a valid alternative to sacrifice 50 hostages for political needs,” he said in a speech to one of Tuesday’s demonstrations.
Israel has been under mounting pressure both at home and abroad to wrap up its campaign in Gaza, where famine has been declared and much of the territory has been devastated.
On Monday, Israeli strikes hit a Gaza hospital, killing at least 20 people, including five journalists working for Al Jazeera, the Associated Press and Reuters, among other outlets.
Governments around the world, including staunch Israeli allies, expressed shock at the attack.
The Israeli military on Tuesday said its forces were targeting a camera operated by Hamas in two strikes that killed the reporters.
“Six of the individuals killed were terrorists,” it said, adding that the chief of staff instructed “to further examine several gaps,” including the “authorization process prior to the strike.”
Hamas later rejected the allegations, calling them baseless.
The war in Gaza has been one of the deadliest for journalists, with around 200 media workers killed in the nearly two-year Israeli assault, according to press watchdogs.
Later Tuesday, Gaza’s civil defense agency reported that at least 35 people were killed in attacks throughout the Palestinian territory.
Media restrictions in Gaza and difficulties in accessing many areas mean AFP is unable to independently verify the tolls and details provided by the civil defense agency or the Israeli military.
The war was sparked by Hamas’s October 2023 attack on Israel, which resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli figures.
Out of 251 hostages seized during the attack, 49 are still held in Gaza, including 27 the Israeli military says are dead.
Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed at least 62,819 Palestinians, most of them civilians, according to figures from the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza that the United Nations considers reliable.


How Israel’s prolonged Gaza war and failure to free hostages has exposed deep divisions in society

How Israel’s prolonged Gaza war and failure to free hostages has exposed deep divisions in society
Updated 26 August 2025

How Israel’s prolonged Gaza war and failure to free hostages has exposed deep divisions in society

How Israel’s prolonged Gaza war and failure to free hostages has exposed deep divisions in society
  • Deep societal divisions are emerging in Israel, driven by ideological differences, religious tensions and competing visions for the nation’s future
  • Analysts say the ongoing conflict in Gaza, societal fractures, and ultra-Orthodox demographic trends could increase risks of internal unrest

LONDON: At precisely 6:29 a.m. on Tuesday, Israel’s Hostages and Missing Families Forum launched a “day of struggle” in towns and cities across the country.

It was the biggest mass protest to date against what many in Israel now see as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s willful determination to escalate the war in Gaza at all costs — including the potential sacrifice of the remaining hostages who have been held by Hamas since the attack on Israel, which began at 6:29 a.m. on Oct. 7, 2023.

It was also the most dramatic demonstration yet of an increasingly obvious reality: that the war in Gaza is exposing deep fractures within Israeli society.

Global outrage over the war in Gaza reached new heights on Monday following an Israeli strike on a hospital that killed 20 people, including five journalists working for international news outlets.

But opposition to the war is also rising inexorably within Israel itself, even as the Israel Defense Forces press ahead with Netanyahu’s plan to broaden the war and attack Gaza City in the face of international condemnation.

Israeli troops stand guard during a weekly settlers’ tour in Hebron, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. (Reuters)

“Almost every day and every night there are massive protests that block roads,” Rabbi Noa Sattath, head of the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, told Arab News. 

“The protestors include hostage families, people demanding an end to the war and atrocities in Gaza, ultra-Orthodox men who have staged huge protests against plans to draft them into the army, and other people who feel it’s unfair that the ultra-Orthodox are not serving yet. It is all pretty chaotic for everyday life.”

Sattath is speaking from her car, and her conversation with Arab News is briefly interrupted. “I was just stopped by a nice woman who gave me an anti-war sticker,” she said.

Last week, the Israeli Cabinet approved plans for an assault on Gaza City despite Hamas agreeing to mediators’ proposals for a 60-day ceasefire, which would have seen half of the surviving hostages released.

Israeli peace campaigners say this broadening of the war, in tandem with increasing attacks on Palestinians in the West Bank by radical Israeli settlers, benefits only Netanyahu and the far-right members of his coalition government.

In May, thousands gathered in Jerusalem for a two-day People’s Peace Summit, organized by It’s Time, a coalition of more than 60 Jewish and Arab peacebuilding and shared-society organizations founded last year “to end the Israeli-Palestinian conflict through a political agreement that will ensure both peoples’ right to self-determination and secure lives.”

The coalition accuses Netanyahu’s government of conducting “a criminal war for political reasons that are certainly not in the interest of the Israeli people.”

Protesters block a main road during a demonstration demanding the immediate end of the war and the release of all hostages. (Reuters)

Leading establishment figures, from high-ranking former members of the military to politicians, have expressed concern about the direction in which Netanyahu and his Cabinet are taking Israel.

On Tuesday, in an interview with public radio, Gadi Eisenkot, the former IDF chief of staff, whose soldier son Gal was killed in Gaza, said Netanyahu’s government “is not worthy of Gal (and) many combat soldiers and, unfortunately, also the hostages, who lost their lives because of cowardice and … political and ideological considerations of those who want to return to the settlement of the Gaza Strip.”

Appearing on the Arab News current affairs program “Frankly Speaking” on Sunday, former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert spoke of the “deep division between a major part of public opinion which is in favor of changing course, and a part which is now governed by the Netanyahus and the group of thugs which are known to be the Cabinet ministers.”

Netanyahu’s war, he added, “is an unneeded and unnecessary war … There is not any national interest of Israel which can be served by continuing the war. And therefore, the inevitable conclusion is that it serves the personal interests of the prime minister.”

Civil groups in Israel are not shying away from using the word “genocide” to describe what is happening.

On July 28, the Israeli human rights organization B’Tselem published a powerful report, titled “Our Genocide,” condemning the “genocidal regime in Israel.”

The report concluded that “an examination of Israel’s policy in the Gaza Strip and its horrific outcomes, together with statements by senior Israeli politicians and military commanders about the goals of the attack, leads us to the unequivocal conclusion that Israel is taking coordinated action to intentionally destroy Palestinian society in the Gaza Strip.”

The report came with a stark statement from B’Tselem Executive Director Yuli Novak. “Nothing prepares you for the realization that you are part of a society committing genocide. This is a deeply painful moment for us,” she said.

A Palestinian inspects the damage on houses destroyed during an Israeli military operation, in Deir Al-Balah. (Reuters)

The genocide, she added, is rooted in part in the existential fear among Israelis created by the Hamas-led attack on Oct. 7, 2023 — a fear now being exploited by “the extremist, far-right messianic government … to promote an agenda of destruction and expulsion.”

“Messianic” is a word that has increasing resonance in, and consequences for, Israeli society.

Messianism, said Sattath, “is really dangerous. What they are trying constantly to achieve is to ignite another front in the war, either in the West Bank or in East Jerusalem or inside Israel.”

For the messianic element in Israeli society, major disasters in Jewish history — from the Holocaust to the Oct. 7 attack and the subsequent war — are interpreted as painful but divinely guided stages on the path toward ultimate redemption.

In this view, such events are part of a larger historical process leading to the full resettling of what they believe to be the biblical Land of Israel, extending beyond today’s borders to include all of Palestine and parts of Jordan, Syria, and Lebanon.

Many in Israel, said Sattath, are looking toward the country’s next election, half in hope, half in fear. “We don’t know when the elections will be,” she said. “The full term for the government would be November 2026, but we have not had a government that completed a full term since 1981.”

The Association for Civil Rights in Israel and other organizations, she said, have multiple concerns about the upcoming election.

“One is changes to election laws in order to disqualify Arab candidates and parties from running. There’s legislation that hasn’t been advanced yet, but it could get advanced very quickly, and that would have dramatic effects on the elections.

“We are also worried about police harassment of voters, because the police have been so taken over by National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, or voter harassment by thugs in which the police would not intervene.

Palestinians rush for cover as smoke billows after an Israeli strike on a building in Jabalia in the northern Gaza Strip. (AFP)

“Everybody’s looking towards the next elections. But we are very worried about whether free and fair elections are even possible under the current system.”

Another issue fragmenting Israeli society is whether or not ultra-Orthodox Jews should be drafted into the military. This is something they bitterly oppose, while other Israelis resent having to send their sons and daughters to die while the ultra-Orthodox are exempt.

A recent survey found “a sharp drop in support for the current situation of exempting ultra-Orthodox” — only 9 percent compared with 22 percent 10 months earlier. Meanwhile, support for conscripting the ultra-Orthodox rose from 67 percent last year to more than 84.5 percent, with a third of respondents backing economic penalties for those who refuse to serve.

In a special research paper for Arab News, Yossi Mekelberg, a professor of international relations and a senior consulting fellow of the MENA Program at the UK-based Chatham House think-tank, highlighted the “mutual opportunism” that had seen Netanyahu join forces with two ultra-Orthodox parties in order to maintain his grip on power.

It was, wrote Mekelberg, “a measure of how far to the right the political discourse in Israel has shifted” that in 2022 the parties Religious Zionism and Otzma Yehudit (Jewish Power) had gained nearly 11 percent of the vote and 14 seats in the Knesset.

The parties are led by settlers, Bezalel Smotrich and Itamar Ben-Gvir, whose rewards for supporting Netanyahu were jobs in his Cabinet, as finance minister and national security minister, respectively.

Israel's National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir dances as he attends a convention calling for Israel to rebuild settlements in the Gaza Strip. (AFP)

The ultra-Orthodox, once a small, isolated element in society, now pose a long-term demographic threat to the very future of Israel.

With a fertility rate among the ultra-Orthodox, or Haredim, of 6.1 children per woman, compared with 2.3 among non-Haredi Jews, the growth rate of Haredi society is about 4 percent a year — double the rest of Israel’s population.

In 2024, the 1.26 million Haredi Jews accounted for 16 percent of the total Jewish population of Israel. At the current rate of growth, a quarter of Israel’s population will be Haredim by 2065.

According to Israel’s Central Bureau of Statistics, one-third of the 480,000 Jews living in West Bank settlements or outposts are Haredim.

As Israel’s war in Gaza drags on, there is increasing pressure on the government to call up Haredim youth to serve in the military — a red line for a religious group that until now has been exempt from military service on the historical basis that they can best protect Israel by studying the Torah, the first five books of the Hebrew bible.

The exemption was granted in 1948 by Israel’s first Prime Minister David Ben Gurion. Since then, however, the number of ultra-Orthodox Jews has grown dramatically and in June last year, Israel’s Supreme Court ruled that the IDF should begin drafting Haredim. 

Israel needs more troops for its latest Gaza campaign. As part of its controversial plan, the IDF is currently calling up 60,000 reservists , but very few Haredim are answering the call — each year, fewer than 10 percent of the 13,000 eligible ultra-Orthodox youths enlist.

Protests against conscription have seen thousands of Haredim take to the streets, driving a wedge between mainstream Israeli society and a once small and marginal faction that has now become disproportionately influential.

Protesters demand the immediate end of the war and the release of all hostages who were kidnapped during the October 7, 2023 Hamas attack on Israel. (Reuters)

“What we are seeing now is the Israeli tribes fighting each other,” Dr. Ahron Bregman, a senior teaching fellow in the Department of War Studies at King’s College London and a former officer in the IDF, told Arab News.

The Israeli “tribes,” he said, “are pulling in different directions, and it is hard for me to see how they could come together again.

“The small but influential settler tribe wants to expand into the West Bank and expel the West Bankers. The Tel Aviv liberal camp is wary of the consequences of the occupation.

“The Haredi tribe doesn’t really care much about what Israel does or doesn’t do as long as they don’t have to serve in the military and as they keep getting their money from the state.”

Israelis should, he added, be careful what they wish for. 

“There is a growing effort to put pressure on the Haredim to join the military. I believe that they will be enlisted in the end, because there is a real need for more manpower as the IDF is too small and the missions too big.

“But personally, I would not like them to be enlisted, as they will make the military even more religious than it already is.”

Palestinian mother Alaa Al-Najjar mourns her three-month-old baby Yehia, who died due to malnutrition amid a man-made starvation in Gaza. (AFP)

Bregman believes Israeli society has become so fractured — by the war, the ideological settlement of Palestinian lands, and demographic changes under way — that he fears the worst.

“Tensions within Israeli society are so high that the situation could easily deteriorate into an open civil war,” he said.

“What could spark such a war? For example, the refusal of Netanyahu to accept the results of the forthcoming general elections. Or maybe even a political assassination.”