Palestinian Red Crescent staff members missing in Rafah during Israeli onslaught
Palestinian Red Crescent staff members missing in Rafah during Israeli onslaught/node/2595061/middle-east
Palestinian Red Crescent staff members missing in Rafah during Israeli onslaught
Ambulances of the Red Crescent are pictured on the main Salah al-Din road in the northern Gaza Strip, amid the ongoing war between Israel and the militant group Hamas, Nov. 17, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 27 March 2025
Arab News
Palestinian Red Crescent staff members missing in Rafah during Israeli onslaught
International community urged to intervene and allow rescue crews to access the Tel Sultan area
Updated 27 March 2025
Arab News
LONDON: The Palestinian Red Crescent Society on Thursday said that several of its staff members had been missing for almost five days in the southern Gaza Strip during the Israeli onslaught.
The Red Crescent urged the international community to intervene and allow rescue crews access to the Tel Sultan area in the city of Rafah to determine the fate of the missing paramedics.
It expressed concern for the safety of its nine staff members in Rafah over the past five days and held the Israeli authorities fully responsible for their fate.
Israel resumed its military campaign in the Gaza Strip last week after the collapse of the ceasefire agreement with Hamas. In the past 24 hours, at least 25 Palestinians were killed and 82 injured in the coastal enclave as the Israeli attacks continued, the WAFA agency reported.
The Palestinian Ministry of Health has reported 50,208 fatalities and 113,910 injuries since late 2023, with the majority of victims being women and children, according to WAFA.
UAE reiterates âred lineâ over West Bank annexation
Emirati official calls for immediate Gaza ceasefire in UN address
Lana Nusseibeh slams Israelâs âclear disregardâ for âsecurity of Arab regionâ
Updated 42 min 9 sec ago
Caspar Webb
NEW YORK: Only Palestinian statehood can bring an end to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, a top Emirati official told the 80th UN General Assembly on Saturday.
Lana Nusseibeh, assistant minister for political affairs and envoy of the minister of foreign affairs, repeated the UAEâs warning to Israel over West Bank annexation proposals, adding that the world is confronting threats to national sovereignty and creeping ideologies that are âworking together to destroy the foundations of progress and development.â
She said: âNothing can justify the displacement of tens of thousands of civilians from Gaza, as well as from the West Bank.â
Her comments follow her countryâs denunciation of Israeli threats to annex the West Bank. The UAE, which normalized relations with Israel five years ago, said earlier this month that any annexation attempt would represent a âred lineâ in the bilateral relationship.
Nusseibeh said any prospective Palestinian state must contain no elements with links to terrorism or extremism, and should restrict weapons to military use.
She also condemned Israelâs âincomprehensible mobilizationâ against Qatar earlier this month.
The strike, targeting Hamas negotiators in the capital Doha, showed a âclear disregardâ for Qatarâs ânational security and the security of the Arab region, as well as for fundamental international principles,â Nusseibeh said.
She laid out the UAEâs key demands to bring peace to Gaza: an immediate and permanent ceasefire, ending Israelâs siege, the release of hostages by Hamas and other militant groups, and the urgent, unhindered delivery of humanitarian aid at scale.
âThe UAE continues its role as the largest donor of aid to Gaza, mobilizing all its relations, resources and capabilities to this end,â Nusseibeh said. âWeâll continue to deliver aid to the most in need despite the restrictions and obstacles.â
Israel trying to âliquidateâ Palestinian question, Tunisian FM tells UN
Mohammed Ali Nafti: Only reform of organization can âput an end to this genocidal warâ
He urges Security Council to âimmediatelyâ intervene to stop Israelâs regional aggression
Updated 28 September 2025
Caspar Webb
NEW YORK: Tunisiaâs foreign minister on Saturday condemned the international communityâs failure to prevent Israel from attempting to âliquidateâ the Palestinian question.
Mohammed Ali Nafti told the 80th UN General Assembly that only reform of the organization and the wider multilateral system will allow an empowered Security Council to âput an end to the terrible humanitarian tragedy, genocidal war and starvation against the Palestinian people.â
He warned that 2025 represents a âcritical time for our world, a time of instability and unprecedented frequency of violations of the rules of international law and the principles of the UN Charter.â
Tunisia is âdisappointed today as the Security Council is still unable to put an endâ to the suffering in Gaza, he added.
âThe brutal occupying entity continues to worsen the suffering of the Palestinian people before the entire world without accountability and with full impunity,â Nafti said.
âWe call on the international community to shoulder its responsibility immediately to lift the blockade on the Gaza Strip and all the Palestinian territory, and to put an end to the starvation and to guarantee an effective delivery of assistance.â
Nafti called on the UN Security Council to âimmediatelyâ intervene and put an end to Israelâs violations against Syria, Lebanon, Iran and Qatar.
âTunisia will remain committed with an unshakable will to support the Palestinian people in their struggle to reclaim their legitimate and inalienable rights,â he said.
âWe canât confront the current and emerging global challenges if we donât rebuild international relations based on solidarity, constructive cooperation, justice, mutual respect, non-interference in the affairs of others and respect for national sovereignty.â
Nafti addressed Tunisiaâs status as a critical transit hub for irregular migration. The North African state is a common departure point for sub-Saharan African migrants seeking to cross the Mediterranean Sea for European shores.
Tunisiaâs approach to the issue is âbased on respecting human rights and rejecting all forms of racial discrimination and hate speech,â Nafti said.
The countryâs authorities âcontinue to make every possible effort to save the lives of irregular migrants on land and at sea, to provide them with care and enable them to voluntarily return to their countries of origin in cooperation with the International Organization for Migration,â he added.
âWe renew our call to adopt a comprehensive approach to migration that takes into account the human and historic dimensions, and not just the narrow security dimension.â
Nafti warned that countries in the Global South should not be handed a migration burden âthat exceeds their capacity.â
He said: âWe refuse to be a country of transit for irregular migrants that are victims of networks of human smuggling and human trafficking. Migration must be a choice and not a necessity.â
Nafti voiced his countryâs support for non-interference by foreign actors in the affairs of Libya, Syria, Yemen and Sudan.
Only the UN is entitled to support actors within those countries in bringing about peace and security, he said.
âWe remain hopeful that weâll be able to build together a future that carries opportunities that meet the aspirations and the hopes of our people and future generations,â he added.
What childrenâs drawings from Gaza reveal about the conflictâs mental toll
Artworks reveal recurring themes of lost homes, drones, and destruction, reflecting widespread trauma and a desire for safety
Local artists and charities provide children with safe spaces, helping them process fear and grief through creative expression
Updated 28 September 2025
ANAN TELLO
LONDON: âThis is my brotherâs shroud,â said 12-year-old Jenan Abu Saada, lifting a clay figure she had shaped in an art workshop in central Gaza.
The image of her little brotherâs body wrapped in cloth has never left her. Through her art, it lingers with everyone who sees it â a stark reminder of the heavy price war exacts on innocent lives.
Jenanâs brother was killed by unexploded ordnance after an Israeli assault on the Maghazi refugee camp, she told her art instructor, visual artist Jihad Jarbou.
This painting by Lyad Abu Shaar powerfully conveys the unbreakable spirit of Palestinian resistance and their ongoing struggle for freedom on their land. (Photo: Drawings From Gaza)
Jarbou began working with children in central Gaza after realizing their desperate need for a safe space to express themselves.
With schools shuttered and community centers destroyed, she and other artists â supported by the Shababeek Center for Contemporary Art and UK-based charity Hope and Play â improvised makeshift workshops to help children cope with trauma.
âOur kids have been spending most of their days fetching water, food from the Takiya (community kitchen), and firewood,â Jarbou told Arab News. But when she unrolls the paper for them to draw on, she says the mood shifts.
âItâs like a summons that reminds them theyâre only children. They run to me, and we form a circle.â
While children elsewhere return to classrooms for the new academic term, students in Gaza are missing their third consecutive school year.
A drawing from from Jihad Jarbou's workshops. (Supplied)
Nearly 92 percent of school buildings have been damaged or destroyed since October 2023, according to an August report by the Education Cluster, Save the Children and UNICEF.
Survival itself remains a daily struggle. Frail with hunger and disease, children often wait hours for water or a meager portion of food.
Against this backdrop, Jarbou begins her art sessions with questions no one seems to ask anymore â about favorite colors, or dreams for the future. âNo one listens to them anymore,â she said.
Nearly 90 percent of Gazaâs 2.1 million residents have been displaced, many repeatedly, UN figures show. Families crowd into tents or makeshift shelters in UN-run schools.
At least 20,000 children have been killed since the war began, according to Gazaâs health authority, while Save the Children estimates that one child dies every hour.
The devastation is deepened by what UN experts call Israelâs deliberate starvation campaign. Famine was declared in Gaza Governorate in August, with warnings it could spread.
At least 132,000 children under five are at risk of acute malnutrition; 135 have already starved, 20 since the famine was declared. Earlier this month, an independent UN commission concluded Israel is committing genocide in Gaza â a claim Israel rejects.
This reality is etched into the drawings by Gazaâs children. Local artists say recurring themes include quadcopter drones â which children call âthe monster that stole their loved onesâ â and pictures of home.
âHardly a page is without a house,â said visual artist Mostafa Muhanna, who also works with Shababeek and Hope and Play. âIt reflects their deep need to feel safe.â
Visual artist Mostafa Muhanna with children at a street in Gaza. (Photo: Shababeek and Hope and Play)
One boy drew the home he hoped to rebuild. A girl sketched a tent in bright colors, calling it âthe place where I live with my sisters.â Dania, who has suffered an eye injury, drew her motherâs room tucked into a corner of the page, describing it as her âsafe space.â
But safety keeps slipping away. âThe feeling of safety has been lost, and the meaning of âhomeâ keeps changing,â said Muhanna. âI fear the children may come to see a home not as shelter, but as a tent they despise â scorching in summer, soaked with rain and bitter cold in winter.â
He recalled a 4-year-old who drew evacuation routes, with people fleeing soldiers. Another girl, Jana, once sketched Gazaâs streets colored entirely in black. She was killed in January.
For visual artist Maysa Yousef, the journey into art therapy began at home, after her daughter lost two close friends.
Visual artist Maysa Yousef in her bombed-out home studio. (Supplied)
âMy daughter had two friends, twins named Cedal and Loujein, who were the daughters of her schoolteacher,â Yousef told Arab News. âOne night, a single airstrike killed the entire household. My daughter and I were in shock.
âShe was consumed by grief, so I told her theyâre now in heaven, and whenever we miss them, we can write letters to them. Now, whenever she goes through periods of intense crying and fear, she writes to Cedal and Loujein until she calms down.â
That experience inspired Yousef to launch the project Rasaâel Ila Assamaa â âLetters to the Sky.â
INNUMBERS:
âą 20k+ Palestinian children killed in Gaza since Oct. 2023.
âą 132k+ Under-fives at risk of death from acute malnutrition.
âą 39.4k+ Orphaned by the war between Oct. 2023 and March 2025.
(Sources: Gazaâs health authority, UN, Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics)
The war turned Yousefâs home in Deir Al-Balah into a shelter for 70 displaced families. With her psychologist husband, she trained herself in art therapy and began holding workshops in her home and nearby camps.
âWhen Israeli forces began targeting tents, I moved the workshops to the street outside my home, sometimes working with 120 children at once,â she said. âBut even this street came under fire.
âI then moved my work to my house, which also received several strikes. My studio has been destroyed. I now let the children draw on the walls and wherever they please.â
Despite support from groups like Hope and Play, art materials remain scarce, often requiring long hours of searching. âThere were times I felt despair and fear,â she said. âBut my husband kept encouraging me.
âNot a single household in Gaza is free from loss, and this deliberate starvation has devastated children and adults alike. In these workshops, children find someone to ask them: How are you? Itâs a space for freedom.â
Drawings created by children in Project HOPEâs art therapy programs in Gaza. (Photos: projecthope.org)
For these children, art is a language. âIt gives them a voice when words fail,â Amroo Al-Zeer, a senior protection officer in Gaza with Project HOPE, told Arab News. âIt allows them to reclaim their narrative, build self-esteem and foster mutual support.
âThese expressions are deeply personal and often leave layers of emotional complexity that verbal communication alone might not uncover. In a group setting, creative practice also promotes community healing and solidarity.
âThese drawings are more than just pictures. They are stories. They help us â as mental health professionals â to better understand their inner world and tailor our intervention accordingly.â
Hope and Play initially focused on food and water, but soon realized children also needed hope. âWhen asked what they wanted to be when they grew up, seven- or eight-year-olds said they wished they were dead,â founder Iyas Al-Qasem told Arab News.
âIn a world where children dream of being doctors or athletes, these children did not want to survive because of what they were seeing around them. Every day was torture.
From art and craft workshops, to skate schools, kite-making sessions, chess tournaments, sports and games, each and every activity leader in Gaza is providing entertainment for children profoundly traumatized, acutely hungry, and experiencing deep loss. (Photo: hopeandplay.org)
His teams soon realized that âas much as we needed to keep them alive with food and water, we also needed to do something to keep hope alive, because these children literally had no hope.â
Artists saw that despair â but also resilience. âThose children have lost their schools, homes, loved ones, friends, and even parts of their bodies,â said Jarbou.
She described one boy who lost his foot in an airstrike yet still hopped around to play. âItâs so astounding how he can do all of this with one foot.â
UNICEF says Gaza now has the highest number of child amputees per capita in the world. In January, it reported up to 17,550 severe limb injuries among children, many treated without anesthesia or adequate supplies.
Hope and Play partnered with Shababeek â long active in art exhibitions and childrenâs projects before October 2023 â to expand workshops. âWe provided stipends and materials. Often food was involved because people needed to be fed while taking part,â said Al-Qasem.
âOne artist took children to the sea to build sand replicas of their homes as a way to reconnect and also to recognize impermanence; waves would wash the sand away and they would build again.â
One of the workshops supported by Shababeek and Hope and Play. (Supplied)
Experts agree art provides a vital outlet. âTheyâve been exposed to experiences that are extremely difficult to process,â Rim Ajjour, a Lebanon-based child psychologist, told Arab News. âOften, theyâre afraid to put those experiences into words. Drawing offers a safe space.
âWhile art is not a solution, it provides a way for children to express themselves, since itâs really hard to erase the images from their minds or undo what theyâve lived through.â
Despite the dark themes, âthere are also drawings of the sun and flowers,â said Al-Zeer. âA symbol of hope and resilience.â Both Yousef and Muhanna noted how childrenâs moods lifted after these activities.
Colors, too, tell a story. Black, red and gray dominate when fear is strongest; yellow, green and blue appear when children feel safe.
In Arab cultures, children are often discouraged from expressing sadness or anger, Ajjour said, âbecause such feelings can be seen as signs of weakness. Instead, they are encouraged to display bravery and strength, which is sometimes viewed as a coping mechanism.
âBut while adults may use this approach, children often cannot distinguish between coping and suppression, and they still need space to express what they truly feel.â
In Gaza, that expression spills beyond paper, onto rubble itself. âA single sheet of paper was never enough to contain their feelings,â said Muhanna.
âWhen they discovered watercolors, I felt I was standing before young artists carrying the seeds of the future.â
For the artists themselves, the work is also healing. âI lost my father and brother in this war,â Jarbou said. âI couldnât create for a while. But through working with children, I managed to return to my art.â
In the end, however, no paper, no wall, and no canvas is large enough to contain the grief of Gazaâs children.
Mauritania backs Saudi-French push for two-state solution
Mauritania âfully supports the just cause of the Palestinian people,â FM tells UN General Assembly
Mohamed Salem Ould Merzoug highlights security threats facing Sahel region
Updated 28 September 2025
Arab News
NEW YORK: Mauritania threw its weight behind international efforts to secure a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict on Saturday, backing a Saudi-French initiative while urging stronger global cooperation to tackle security, development and climate challenges.
Speaking at the 80th session of the UN General Assembly in New York, Foreign Minister Mohamed Salem Ould Merzoug said Mauritania âfully supports the just cause of the Palestinian people,â and reaffirmed its position that peace in the Middle East depends on the establishment of an independent Palestinian state with East Jerusalem as its capital.
He welcomed diplomatic efforts led by șÚÁÏÉçÇű and France to revive the long-stalled peace process.
âPalestine remains at the heart of our shared responsibility to uphold international law and the principles of justice,â Ould Merzoug told delegates, calling on the international community to take decisive steps to end the suffering of the Palestinian people.
He also underlined Mauritaniaâs broader commitment to the values of the UN Charter, stressing that dialogue, diplomacy and multilateral cooperation are the only effective tools to resolve global conflicts.
Ould Merzoug highlighted the security threats facing the Sahel region, where he said Mauritania and its neighbors continue to battle terrorism and instability.
He said the situation demands coordinated international support to confront extremist groups and address the humanitarian crises they create.
He also urged stronger partnerships between developed and developing nations, warning that poverty, inequality and climate change threaten to undermine international peace if left unaddressed.
Ould Merzoug stressed the importance of tackling food insecurity and the effects of climate change, both of which pose acute challenges to vulnerable countries.
He called for practical solutions that ensure sustainable growth while protecting the environment. âNo country or people should be left behind in the pursuit of prosperity,â he said.
NEW YORK: San Marino officially recognized Palestine at the 80th session of the UN General Assembly on Saturday.
âOn May 15, our parliament, with unanimous support, mandated the government to recognize the State of Palestine within this year. Today, before this Assembly, we announce the fulfillment of that mandate: San Marino officially recognizes the State of Palestine,â said Foreign Minister Luca Beccari.
The hall rang out with applause as San Marino joined the growing number of nations recognizing Palestine.
Beccari affirmed San Marinoâs recognition of Palestine âas a sovereign and independent state within secure, internationally recognized borders, in line with UN resolutions.â
He added: âHaving a state is the right of the Palestinian people. It is not, and can never be, a reward for Hamas.â
Beccari said this decision aligns with San Marinoâs position delivered last July at the high-level conference chaired by șÚÁÏÉçÇű and France.
He lamented the humanitarian catastrophe unfolding in Gaza and the West Bank, describing it as âunbearableâ and âone of the most painful and long-standing tragedies of our time.â
Beccari âunequivocallyâ condemned the Hamas attack on Israel of Oct. 7, 2023, and again called for the immediate and unconditional release of all hostages.
He also reiterated his countryâs call for an immediate and permanent ceasefire in Gaza, full and unhindered humanitarian access, and an end to Israelâs illegal settlement of Palestinian land in the West Bank, which sabotages any âconcrete possibility of peace.â
He added: âNothing can justify the collective punishment of the Palestinian people through indiscriminate bombing, starvation and displacement.
âUnless we act with unity and determination, the vision of two peoples living side by side in dignity and security will be lost.â
He concluded: âIn this dark hour, our responsibility becomes urgent.â