Members of leading British Jewish group oppose Israeli resumption of war in Gaza

Members of leading British Jewish group oppose Israeli resumption of war in Gaza
A demonstrator raises their hand during an anti-government protest in Tel Aviv, calling for action to secure the release of Israeli hostages from the Gaza Strip, Apr. 3, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 16 April 2025

Members of leading British Jewish group oppose Israeli resumption of war in Gaza

Members of leading British Jewish group oppose Israeli resumption of war in Gaza
  • 36 members of the Board of Deputies of British Jews could not ‘turn a blind eye’ to events in Gaza
  • They said ‘Israel's soul is being ripped out’ by the Netanyahu government

LONDON: Leaders of the British Jewish community expressed concern for Israel’s future in their first public letter opposing the resumption of military actions after 18 months of Israeli war in the Gaza Strip.

In an open letter published in the Financial Times, 36 members of the Board of Deputies of British Jews, the UK’s largest Jewish representative body, said they could not “turn a blind eye or remain silent in the face of this renewed loss of life and livelihoods.”

“We write as representatives of the British Jewish community, out of love for Israel and deep concern for its future,” they wrote in the letter published on Wednesday.

They said the past 18 months of Israeli action in Gaza demonstrated that diplomacy was more effective in securing the release of 135 hostages captured by Hamas. In contrast, military action in Gaza resulted in the return of only eight hostages, with at least three being killed by Israeli forces.

The signatories noted that the Israeli government resumed its military campaign in Gaza in mid-March to fulfill far-right politician Itamar Ben-Gvir’s requirement for rejoining the ruling coalition, which allowed it to pass the budget and avoid an election.

They remarked that the Israeli government broke the ceasefire agreement with Hamas instead of engaging in a deal guaranteed by the US, Qatar and Egypt that would lead to the release of Israeli hostages.

“Since then, no hostages have returned. Hundreds and hundreds more Palestinians have been killed; food, fuel and medical supplies have once again been blocked from entering Gaza,” they wrote.

The Israeli war in the Gaza Strip has killed more than 50,000 people since late 2023, a situation that leading human rights groups are describing as genocide. In the UK, numerous national rallies were organized to express solidarity with the Palestinians in Gaza and call for a ceasefire.

The UK’s Jewish community has been adamant in supporting Israel since the Hamas attacks on October 7, 2023, which resulted in 1,200 deaths and 250 hostages. A small minority of British Jews oppose the war in the Gaza Strip, according to the FT.

The 36 signatories to the letter represent nearly 12 percent of the 300 members of the Board of Deputies of British Jews. They are wary of the changes that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is introducing to the country’s institutions, including the judicial system.

“The (Israeli) police increasingly resembling a militia and repressive laws are being advanced as provocative partisan populism is bitterly dividing Israeli society,” they wrote.

“Israel’s soul is being ripped out and we, members of the Board of Deputies of British Jews, fear for the future of the Israel we love and have such close ties to.”

The signatories said they stand against the war in Gaza, “acknowledge and mourn the loss of Palestinian life,” and yearn to see an end to the conflict.


Some leaders at UN condemn ‘sick expression of joy,’ ‘macabre response’ to Charlie Kirk’s killing

Some leaders at UN condemn ‘sick expression of joy,’ ‘macabre response’ to Charlie Kirk’s killing
Updated 11 sec ago

Some leaders at UN condemn ‘sick expression of joy,’ ‘macabre response’ to Charlie Kirk’s killing

Some leaders at UN condemn ‘sick expression of joy,’ ‘macabre response’ to Charlie Kirk’s killing
  • Decrying the “sick expression of joy for the crime committed against an innocent person,” Serbian President Alexsandar Vucic told assembled leaders on Wednesday

The reaction over Charlie Kirk’s assassination touched yet another constituency this week: the collection of world leaders gathered at the United Nations.
Two weeks after Kirk was shot and killed in Utah, several of the world leaders gathered at for the UN General Assembly this week referenced the conservative activist’s slaying — and some of the divisive outpouring of reaction to it — as evidence of deeper fissures in global society.
Decrying the “sick expression of joy for the crime committed against an innocent person,” Serbian President Alexsandar Vucic told assembled leaders on Wednesday that reaction to Kirk’s death represents “the best confirmation of that.”
Social media lit up in the days after Kirk’s Sept. 10 death with people mourning his loss — some of whom said they disagreed with Kirk’s ideological stances but supported his right to voice them — as well as those celebrating it.
It set off a national discussion about freedom of speech. Comments led to the firings of numerous people, from political analysts and opinion writers to school employees. Several conservative activists sought to identify social media users whose posts about Kirk they viewed as offensive or celebratory, targeting everyone from journalists to teachers.
On Wednesday, Vucic said reaction to the conservative activist’s assassination was demarcated “less by ideological but much more by emotional hate driven differences.”
“Such a development devastates in a deepest and clearest way the world political community much more than conflicts with clear and visible actors,” Vucic said, remarking on how such a seemingly singular event can evoke such strong reactions across the globe.
“He was savagely assassinated just because his killer did not like his ideas,” Vucic said of Kirk, suggesting that some of the reaction in the slaying’s aftermath caused yet more damage in terms of the division it sowed. “He was shot even after death by the same ones who had prepared political and media grounds for his assassination.”
Kirk was assassinated during a Sept. 10 event at Utah Valley University. US President Donald Trump and other administration leaders gathered Sunday at a memorial service, where other speakers noted the worldwide reaction to Kirk’s death, mentioning areas around the world where memorials had sprung up.
Paraguayan President Santiago Peña also mentioned Kirk in his speech Wednesday, saying in Spanish that he was “shaken, saddened, and distressed” by Kirk’s killing and arguing that the “macabre response must awaken us from our sleepy state of complacency.”
Earlier in the day, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky mentioned Kirk, as well as last month’s stabbing death of Ukrainian refugee Iryna Zarutska on Charlotte’s light rail system, as representative of “headlines about violent attacks happening all around the world.”
“Sadly, his life was short by a bullet,” Zelensky said of Kirk. “Once again, violence with a rifle in hand.”


Brazil’s president discuss Russia conflict with Zelensky on UN sidelines

Brazil’s president discuss Russia conflict with Zelensky on UN sidelines
Updated 24 min 54 sec ago

Brazil’s president discuss Russia conflict with Zelensky on UN sidelines

Brazil’s president discuss Russia conflict with Zelensky on UN sidelines
  • Lula advocated for greater UN involvement in reaching a negotiated solution, says Brazil statement
  • Zelensky said Lula assured him he “will try his best to do everything to bring peace closer to Ukraine”

SAO PAULO: Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and his Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelensky met on Wednesday on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly, according to a statement from the Brazilian government.
During the meeting, Lula expressed his belief that a military response will not bring an end to the conflict with Russia, and that an agreement on the terms of a ceasefire should be the first step in negotiations, the statement said.
The Brazilian leader advocated for greater involvement by the United Nations in reaching a negotiated solution that takes into account the security concerns of Ukraine and Russia, according to the statement.
Zelensky, writing on the Telegram messaging app, described his meeting with Lula as “meaningful” and said “strong international pressure was needed on Russia to remove blockages on the path to dialogue.”
“I told the president about the real situation at the front and Russia’s manipulative attempts to depict military victories,” he wrote. Zelensky said he appreciated Lula’s “readiness to play a role in the peace process.”
Speaking to journalists after the meeting, Zelensky said: “It’s good that there are signals from Brazil that they support, most of all, a ceasefire and peace for the Ukrainian people.”
According to the Ukrainian president, the meeting with Lula lasted around one hour, and was their first lengthy conversation in several years.
“President Lula told me that he will try his best to do everything to bring peace closer to Ukraine. I’m thankful to him for his clear position.”
The two left several topics on the table for future conversations, including on trade and economy, Zelensky said. 


Trump envoy Witkoff expects Mideast ‘breakthrough’ in coming days

Trump envoy Witkoff expects Mideast ‘breakthrough’ in coming days
Updated 54 min 21 sec ago

Trump envoy Witkoff expects Mideast ‘breakthrough’ in coming days

Trump envoy Witkoff expects Mideast ‘breakthrough’ in coming days

NEW YORK: US envoy Steve Witkoff said Wednesday he expected a breakthrough related to Gaza in the coming days, saying President Donald Trump had presented a plan to regional countries.
Witkoff, a real estate friend of Trump who has become his roving ambassador, said the US president shared ideas when meeting with a group of Arab and Islamic countries Tuesday on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly.
“We presented what we call the Trump 21-point plan for peace in the Mideast and Gaza,” Witkoff said.
“I think it addresses Israeli concerns as well as the concerns of all the neighbors in the region,” he told the Concordia summit on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly.
“We’re hopeful, and I might say even confident, that in the coming days we’ll be able to announce some sort of breakthrough.”
French President Emmanuel Macron, who also met with Trump on Tuesday, said he expected the plan, which Witkoff did not detail, to include elements he presented to the US president.
Macron has promoted a plan that would include the dismantling of Hamas and an international force to stabilize war-ravaged Gaza.
“The United States is now going to absorb that, so to speak,” Macron said in an interview jointly with France 24 and Radio France Internationale.
“I think that if we can align everyone — the United States, the Arabs, the Europeans — around this peace plan, we can have a result,” Macron said.
Macron also on Monday led a summit that recognized a Palestinian state, an initiative strongly opposed by Trump and Israel.
But Macron said that Trump shared opposition to Israeli annexation of the West Bank, a threat made by right-wing Israeli ministers to scuttle the prospects for a Palestinian state.
“What President Trump told me yesterday was that the Europeans and Americans have the same position,” Macron said.
Witkoff and Trump have repeatedly voiced hope for ending the devastating nearly two-year war.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio was more somber on a trip last week to Israel, which has launched a massive new offensive to seize Gaza City.


23 miners rescued after 43 hours trapped in Colombian gold mine

23 miners rescued after 43 hours trapped in Colombian gold mine
Updated 24 September 2025

23 miners rescued after 43 hours trapped in Colombian gold mine

23 miners rescued after 43 hours trapped in Colombian gold mine

BOGOTA, Colombia: Twenty-three workers were rescued Wednesday after spending 43 hours trapped in a collapsed underground gold mine in northern Colombia. The miners were met with applause as they emerged from the La Reliquia mine, located in the Antioquia department.
Colombia’s National Mining Agency reported that the main entrance to the mine had collapsed on Monday due to a “geomechanical failure.” A video released by the ANM shows the first rescued miners walking out under their own power, using a rope to climb the steep entrance to the shaft. Their health status was not immediately disclosed.
The miners’ families had been waiting for hours and celebrated their rescue with tears and applause.
The mine is on land belonging to Canada’s Aris Mining Corp. but is operated by a local mining cooperative. Aris Mining said earlier that it had provided the trapped workers with food, water and ventilation during the rescue efforts. The mine has about 60 employees and accounts for a “small portion” of the company’s total gold production in the area.
Aris runs two mining concessions in Colombia, which last year produced about 6.6 tons of gold. Colombia’s gold production climbed to 67 tons per year in 2024, supported by high prices for the precious metal.
A report published in 2023 by Colombia’s Human Rights Ombudsman said that more than 80 percent of Colombia’s gold is mined by informal operators with no licenses, including artisanal miners but also members of rebel groups.
The precarious conditions at some gold mines in Colombia have led to fatal accidents. On Saturday the bodies of seven miners were found at an illegal mine in Cauca province. Rescue teams took nine days to reach the trapped workers.


Trump will sign TikTok executive order on Thursday, source says

Trump will sign TikTok executive order on Thursday, source says
Updated 24 September 2025

Trump will sign TikTok executive order on Thursday, source says

Trump will sign TikTok executive order on Thursday, source says

WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump will sign an executive order on Thursday that declares a deal being negotiated by the White House to sell TikTok’s US operations will meet requirements set out in a 2024 law, a White House source with knowledge of the matter said.
Earlier this week, the White House said Trump will declare that a deal to divest TikTok’s US operations from its Chinese owner ByteDance will meet requirements set out in a law passed by Congress that bans the short video app unless its Chinese owner is ended.
Trump has credited TikTok, which has 170 million US users, with helping him win re-election last year and has 15 million followers on his personal account. The White House also launched an official TikTok account last month.
Trump has delayed enforcement of the law through mid-December amid efforts to extract TikTok’s US assets from the global platform, line up American investors and ensure that the new ownership qualifies as a full divestiture needed under the 2024 law.
A further extension is expected in the executive order on Thursday.