Egypt and Qatar are working to salvage the Gaza ceasefire deal

A Palestinian man carries a water tank amid the devastation in Beit Hanun in the northern Gaza Strip on February 12, 2025. (AFP)
A Palestinian man carries a water tank amid the devastation in Beit Hanun in the northern Gaza Strip on February 12, 2025. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 12 February 2025

Egypt and Qatar are working to salvage the Gaza ceasefire deal

A Palestinian man carries a water tank amid the devastation in Beit Hanun in the northern Gaza Strip on February 12, 2025. (AFP)
  • Since the truce started on Jan. 19, Israeli fire has killed at least 92 Palestinians and wounded more than 800 others, said director general of the Health Ministry

GAZA: Egyptian and Qatari mediators were working to salvage the ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas on Wednesday, according to Egypt’s state-run Al-Qahera News TV, which is close to the country’s security agencies.
The fragile ceasefire is facing a significant test after Hamas said it would delay the next release of hostages scheduled for Saturday, alleging Israel has violated the truce by firing on people in Gaza and not allowing the agreed-upon number of tents, shelters and other vital aid to enter the territory.
Since the truce started on Jan. 19, Israeli fire has killed at least 92 Palestinians and wounded more than 800 others, said Munir Al-Bursh, director general of the Health Ministry, on Tuesday. The Israeli military says it has fired on people who approach its forces or enter certain areas in violation of the truce.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, with the support of President Donald Trump, has warned that Israel would resume fighting if hostages are not freed on Saturday. Trump has threated that “all hell” will break out if the militant group does not release the remaining Israeli hostages held in Gaza by Saturday.
The United Nations said Wednesday that since the start of the ceasefire in Gaza, its agencies and partners have fed 1.2 million people, provided shelter aid to more than 600,000 people and provided water and waste disposal services to nearly half a million.
In a briefing, the UN said it opened 37 shelters for Palestinians returning to the war-battered north, where they were providing tents, blankets and warm clothing. At least 644,000 people across the territory had received tents, tarps or sealing-off materials to improve their shelter conditions.
The ceasefire, which came into effect on Jan. 19, has paused the war in Gaza and sent aid flowing more freely to Palestinians in need. The war sparked a humanitarian crisis in the territory.
The top Sunni Muslim religious authority slams Trump’s plan for Gaza
Al-Azhar, the Sunni Muslim world’s foremost seat of religious learning, on Wednesday threw its support behind Egypt’s rejection of President Donald Trump’s plan to depopulate the Gaza Strip.
“No one has the right to force the Palestinian people to accept unworkable proposals,” the Cairo-based institution said in a statement. “The whole world must respect the right of the Palestinians to live on their land and establish their independent state with Jerusalem as its capital.”
It called for Arab and Muslim leaders as well as “the world’s wise people” to reject “transfer plans that aim at destroying the Palestinian cause.” Al-Azhar also called on religious institutions around the world to use their influence and defend “the vulnerable in Palestine.”


Syria president to ask Moscow to hand over Assad during visit: official to AFP

Syria president to ask Moscow to hand over Assad during visit: official to AFP
Updated 57 min 3 sec ago

Syria president to ask Moscow to hand over Assad during visit: official to AFP

Syria president to ask Moscow to hand over Assad during visit: official to AFP
  • Government official: ‘Sharaa will ask the Russian president to hand over all individuals who committed war crimes and are in Russia, most notably Bashar Assad’

DAMASCUS: Syrian interim president Ahmed Al-Sharaa will ask Russia to hand over former ruler Bashar Assad during his first visit to Moscow on Wednesday, a government official said.

The official, who requested anonymity as they were not allowed to brief the media, told AFP “Sharaa will ask the Russian president to hand over all individuals who committed war crimes and are in Russia, most notably Bashar Assad,” the longtime ruler who was toppled in December and sought refuge in Moscow.

Syria’s state news agency SANA said Sharaa arrived in Russia on Wednesday for “an official visit to hold talks with his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, on bilateral relations between the two countries and regional and international developments of common interest.”

Putin will discuss the fate of Russian military bases in Syria with Sharaa during talks in Moscow later on Wednesday, the Kremlin said.

Russia has two main military bases in Syria – the Hmeimim air base in Latakia province, and a naval facility at Tartous on the coast.


Iraq launches investigation after election candidate killed in Baghdad bombing

Iraq launches investigation after election candidate killed in Baghdad bombing
Updated 15 October 2025

Iraq launches investigation after election candidate killed in Baghdad bombing

Iraq launches investigation after election candidate killed in Baghdad bombing
  • The bombing raises concerns about security and political violence as Iraq prepares for national elections next month

DUBAI: Iraq’s Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al-Sudani on Wednesday ordered the formation of a joint forensic task force and a high-level investigative committee to examine the killing of election candidate Safaa Al-Mashhadani in a bomb attack north of Baghdad.

The committee was tasked with determining who was responsible for the attack, which struck Al-Mashhadani’s vehicle in the Tarmiya district early on Wednesday.

According to the Baghdad Operations Command, a “sticky bomb” had been placed under Al-Mashhadani’s car, killing him and injuring four others.

Al Mashhadani, a member of the Baghdad Provincial Council, was running in next month’s parliamentary elections as part of the Siyada Coalition led by Sunni politician and businessman Khamis Al-Khanjar.

Parliament Speaker Mahmoud Al-Mashhadani condemned the assassination and called for accountability, describing the attack as an attempt to destabilize Iraq ahead of the vote. No group has yet claimed responsibility.

Security officials said the use of magnetic explosive devices under vehicles mirrors tactics used by militant groups in Iraq in previous years.

The bombing raises concerns about security and political violence as Iraq prepares for national elections next month.


Israeli forces enter villages in Syrian countryside 

Israeli forces enter villages in Syrian countryside 
Updated 15 October 2025

Israeli forces enter villages in Syrian countryside 

Israeli forces enter villages in Syrian countryside 
  • SANA say incursions are part of continuing Israeli attacks on Syrian territory

DUBAI: Israeli forces crossed into two areas in the Quneitra countryside in Syria on Wednesday before withdrawing, according to Syria’s state news agency SANA.

A SANA correspondent reported that an Israeli unit of eight military vehicles, a heavy vehicle, and two tanks advanced from Tal Kroum, toward the eastern town of Al-Samadaniyeh Al-Sharqiya, staying there for several hours before returning toward the destroyed city of Quneitra.

The report added that another Israeli force entered the village of Ofaniya, where troops raided and searched two homes before pulling back.

SANA said the incursions were part of continuing Israeli attacks on Syrian territory, which Damascus says breach the 1974 Disengagement Agreement and international law.

Syrian authorities called on the international community to take a firm stance to halt such actions.

 


Israel expected to open key aid crossing into Gaza

Israel expected to open key aid crossing into Gaza
Updated 15 October 2025

Israel expected to open key aid crossing into Gaza

Israel expected to open key aid crossing into Gaza
  • Palestinian Authority says it is prepared to operate a key crossing for aid between Egypt and Gaza

JERUSALEM: Israel was expected to allow Gaza’s sole border crossing to the outside world to reopen Wednesday to allow humanitarian aid into the devastated territory as part of a US-backed ceasefire deal.

Israeli public broadcaster KAN said the reopening was imminent despite questions over Hamas’s ongoing transfer of the remains of deceased hostages, under a swap deal spearheaded by US President Donald Trump after two years of war.

The swap has seen the last 20 surviving hostages return home in exchange for nearly 2,000 Palestinian prisoners freed from Israeli jails, as well as a halt in the fighting and bombardment.

The Palestinian Authority said on Wednesday it is prepared to operate a key crossing for aid between Egypt and Gaza.

“Now we are ready to engage again, and we have notified all parties that we are ready to operate the Rafah crossing,” said Mohammad Shtayyeh, special envoy to President of the Palestinian Authority, Mahmoud Abbas.

So far, Hamas has handed back eight bodies, seven of which have been identified. The remains of 20 others remain in Gaza, and there is domestic pressure on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to tie aid to the fate of the bodies.

“It is with a broken heart and unbearable grief that we announce that the body of Tamir, my eldest and beloved son, was brought back from Gaza,” Tamir Nimrodi’s father Alon Nimrodi wrote on Facebook.

Tamir was a soldier captured at age 18 from a military base on the Gaza border.

Israel’s far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir has threatened to cut off aid supplies to Gaza if Hamas fails to return the remains of soldiers still held in the territory.

According to KAN, the decision to reopen Rafah also came after Israel was informed of Hamas’s intention to return four more bodies on Wednesday, a move not yet confirmed by the militant group.

Aid trucks

The war sparked by Hamas’s Oct. 7, 2023 attack on Israel led to a humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza, with the densely-populated territory reliant on aid that was heavily restricted, when not cut off outright.

At the end of August, the United Nations declared a famine in Gaza, though Israel rejected the claim.

“Six hundred trucks of humanitarian aid will be dispatched (on Wednesday) to the Gaza Strip by the UN, approved international organizations, the private sector and donor countries,” KAN said on its website, without citing sources.

The return of aid is listed in Trump’s 20-point plan for Gaza.

Another is Hamas’s disarmament, a demand rejected by the militant group, which has been the dominant Palestinian faction in Gaza since 2007.

In Gaza, the group is tightening its grip on ruined cities, launching a crackdown and executing alleged collaborators.

Hamas has published a video on its official channel showing the street execution of eight blindfolded and kneeling suspects, branding them “collaborators and outlaws.”

The footage, apparently from Monday evening, emerged as armed clashes were underway between Hamas’s various security units and armed Palestinian clans, some alleged to have Israeli backing.

In the north of the territory, as Israeli forces withdrew from Gaza City, the Hamas government’s black-masked armed police resumed street patrols.

“Our message is clear: There will be no place for outlaws or those who threaten the security of citizens,” a Palestinian security source in Gaza said.

‘Perhaps violently’

Gaza civilians who spoke to AFP broadly welcomed the crackdown.

“After the war ended and the police spread out in the streets, we started to feel safe,” said 34-year-old Abu Fadi Al-Banna, in Deir Al-Balah, central Gaza.

Israel and the United States insist Hamas can have no role in a future Gaza government.

Trump’s plan says that Hamas members who agree to “decommission their weapons” will be given amnesty.

“If they don’t disarm, we will disarm them,” Trump told reporters at the White House a day after visiting the Middle East to celebrate the Gaza ceasefire.

“And it will happen quickly and perhaps violently.”


Israel says one of four bodies received from Hamas does not match any hostage

Israel says one of four bodies received from Hamas does not match any hostage
Updated 15 October 2025

Israel says one of four bodies received from Hamas does not match any hostage

Israel says one of four bodies received from Hamas does not match any hostage
  • Three of the four bodies of Israeli hostages identified following forensic confirmation of their identities

JERUSALEM: Israel’s military said on Wednesday that one of the four bodies it received from Hamas on Tuesday does not match any of the hostages that were in the group’s custody.

It added that the Palestinian group is required to make all efforts to return the bodies of the remaining hostages.

Three of the four bodies of Israeli hostages in Gaza returned by Hamas late Tuesday have been identified, their families said on Wednesday following forensic confirmation of their identities.

“It is with immense sadness and pain that we announce the return of the body of our beloved Ouriel Baruch from the Gaza Strip, after two long years of prayer, hope, and faith,” said the family of the Jerusalem resident who was kidnapped on October 7, 2023, at the Nova festival at the age of 35.

The relatives of Tamir Nimrodi and Eitan Levy also announced their return to Israel. Eitan Levy, a 53-year-old taxi driver, was killed after dropping off a friend at Kibbutz Beeri on the morning of the Hamas attack. Tamir Nimrodi, an 18-year-old soldier, was captured at a military base on the Gaza border.