Trump vows ‘firm’ stance with Netanyahu on ending Gaza war

US President Donald Trump shakes hands with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as Netanyahu departs the White House in Washington, DC, on April 7, 2025. (AFP)
US President Donald Trump shakes hands with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as Netanyahu departs the White House in Washington, DC, on April 7, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 02 July 2025

Trump vows ‘firm’ stance with Netanyahu on ending Gaza war

US President Donald Trump shakes hands with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as Netanyahu departs the White House.
  • Asked at the detention center how firm he will be with Netanyahu on ending the war, Trump replied: “Very firm”
  • The visit next Monday will be Netanyahu’s third since Trump returned to power in January

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump vowed Tuesday to be “very firm” in his stance on ending the war in Gaza when he meets next week with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
The remarks by the president, made during a tour of a migrant detention center in Florida, came after he said earlier that he was hoping for a truce in the nearly 21-month conflict by “sometime next week.”
The Republican leader is set to host Netanyahu at the White House on July 7 and the swift resolution of Israel’s 12-day war with Iran has revived hopes for a halt to the Gaza fighting.
Almost relentless combat in the Palestinian territory since Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attack on Israel has created dire humanitarian conditions for the population of more than two million.
Trump was asked Tuesday by reporters if a ceasefire could be in place before Netanyahu’s visit.
“We hope it’s going to happen, and we’re looking for it to happen sometime next week,” he said before departing for Florida.
Trump has previously urged Israel to “make the deal in Gaza,” but on the ground, Israel has continued to pursue its offensive across the Palestinian territory.
The end of Israel’s 12-day war with Iran — which followed a US bombing mission on Tehran’s nuclear sites — has provided a window of opportunity for a deal, with Trump keen to add another peace agreement to a series of recent deals he has brokered.
Asked at the detention center how firm he will be with Netanyahu on ending the war, Trump replied: “Very firm.”
“But he wants it too.... He wants to end it too,” Trump added.
The visit next Monday will be Netanyahu’s third since Trump returned to power in January, and comes on the heels of the US president making a rare intervention into domestic Israeli politics.
Trump appeared over the weekend to threaten US aid to Israel as he called in a social media post for prosecutors to drop long-running corruption charges against Netanyahu.
Netanyahu became the first foreign leader to visit Trump in his second term in February, when the US president surprised him by suddenly announcing a plan for the United States to “take over” Gaza.
The Israeli premier visited again in April.


Qatari emir and Turkish president discuss Gaza ceasefire in Doha

Qatari emir and Turkish president discuss Gaza ceasefire in Doha
Updated 9 min 36 sec ago

Qatari emir and Turkish president discuss Gaza ceasefire in Doha

Qatari emir and Turkish president discuss Gaza ceasefire in Doha
  • The two leaders co-chaired the Qatari-Turkish Supreme Strategic Committee meeting in Doha
  • Sheikh Tamim and Erdogan witnessed the signing of several memoranda of understanding at the Amiri Diwan at the conclusion of the meeting

LONDON: Emir of Qatar Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani co-chaired the 11th meeting of the Qatari-Turkish Supreme Strategic Committee with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Doha on Wednesday.

During the meeting, they discussed strategies for cooperation across various areas, particularly in defense, trade, investment, energy, and information technology.

They discussed key regional and international issues, focusing on the Gaza Strip and occupied Palestinian territories, including the ceasefire in Gaza, peace efforts, and humanitarian aid flow, the Qatar News Agency reported.

Sheikh Tamim and Erdogan witnessed the signing of several memoranda of understanding in defense, trade, and strategic development planning at the Amiri Diwan at the conclusion of the meeting.

On the sidelines of the meeting, Qatari Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman bin Jassim Al-Thani discussed several topics with his Turkish counterpart, Hakan Fidan, including the ceasefire in Gaza.


La Liga chief laments Miami match collapse as others celebrate

La Liga chief laments Miami match collapse as others celebrate
Updated 10 min 55 sec ago

La Liga chief laments Miami match collapse as others celebrate

La Liga chief laments Miami match collapse as others celebrate
  • La Liga said their promoter for the match decided to cancel the organization of the event because of “uncertainty generated in Spain in recent weeks“
  • Tebas took to X to express regret at not being able to seize “this historic opportunity”

MADRID: The cancelation of La Liga’s plan to hold a Barcelona match in Miami in December is a “missed opportunity” for Spanish football, the league’s president said Wednesday, while elsewhere its collapse was celebrated.
Champions Barca were set to face Villarreal in the United States on December 20, which would have been the first European league fixture to be played abroad.
The match will now be held at Villarreal’s Estadio de la Ceramica home as normal.
La Liga said their promoter for the match decided to cancel the organization of the event because of “uncertainty generated in Spain in recent weeks.”
The league’s president Javier Tebas took to X to express regret at not being able to seize “this historic opportunity,” adding that Spanish football had missed a chance to “develop, to project itself in the world and reinforce its future.”
Villarreal were furious about the timing of the announcement to cancel the plans — the news breaking during their Champions League defeat by Manchester City on Tuesday — and also blasted La Liga’s management of the whole event.
“(We) wish to express our deep displeasure with La Liga over the poor handling of the match scheduled to be played in Miami,” said the club in a statement.
Villarreal said there had been “no progress” in terms of organization and the club would have “withdrawn from the project” themselves later in the week if various issues were not resolved to their satisfaction at a planned meeting with La Liga.
The plan to hold the match in the United States had also been criticized by various parties within Spain, contributing toward its cancelation.
The Spanish Footballers’ Association (AFE) organized protests against it last weekend, with players from every team remaining immobile for 15 seconds at the start of each league match.
Spanish giants Real Madrid also railed against it institutionally, while goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois said Tuesday it would adulterate the competition.
Madrid captain Dani Carvajal told Tebas the game being held abroad would be “a stain” on the competition.
Tebas added: “We are appealing to the ‘integrity of the competition’ from those who have been questioning this same integrity for years, putting pressure on referees and managers, constructing distorted narratives or using political and media pressure as a sporting tool.”
The president of Spain’s Sports Council (CSD), Jose Manuel Rodriguez Uribes, said La Liga had not gone the right way about trying to arrange the game.
“The episode we experienced with Miami... shows that this is not the way to do things,” he said on Wednesday.
“Before taking an initiative of this nature — a decision so significant that it could undoubtedly have affected the integrity of the competition — it was necessary to have dialogue, an agreement among the participants, all the clubs.
“Of course, the players should be considered, as well as the fans.”
- ‘Seismic victory’ -

Rodriguez Uribes said “absolute transparency” was necessary, as well as “appropriate regulations” in place for this kind of game, which do not currently exist.
“At the CSD we will always prefer — as we have said from the very beginning — to bring sporting events to Spain rather than take them out,” he added.
The AFE released a statement highlighting “the lack of transparency, dialogue, and coherence” from La Liga around the game.
“The players spoke out unanimously on the pitch last week to send a powerful message: without players, there is no football,” added the footballers’ association.
In February, Serie A still plan to hold a match between AC Milan and Como in Perth, Australia, despite a similar backlash from both fans and players.
Football Supporters Europe (FSE), a representative body on fan issues, celebrated the cancelation of the Miami match as a “seismic victory,” and warned the Italian top flight to abandon their plans.
“Doubling down on this failed idea would be an act of self-inflicted damage to the league’s reputation, to Italian football, and to the game as a whole,” said FSE in a statement.


During cold and flu season, the youngest kids really are the germiest

During cold and flu season, the youngest kids really are the germiest
Updated 42 min 38 sec ago

During cold and flu season, the youngest kids really are the germiest

During cold and flu season, the youngest kids really are the germiest
  • “Young children can have up to 10 respiratory viruses a year as their immune systems are introduced to different infections for the first time,” said Dr. Goldman, a pediatrician
  • Preventing illness in children at school or at home can be tough, experts acknowledge

BEIRUT: Forget colorful leaves. Any caregiver knows that the real signs of fall are kids with coughs, sneezes and sniffles.
Autumn marks the start of respiratory virus season, when colds, flu and other bugs start circulating — especially among the very young.
A recent study confirmed what many families intuitively know: The littlest students harbor the most germs.
Children in pre-kindergarten and elementary school showed highest rates of virus detection compared with older students and staff, according to research published in the journal Pediatrics.
“Young children can have up to 10 respiratory viruses a year as their immune systems are introduced to different infections for the first time,” said Dr. Jennifer Goldman, a pediatrician at Children’s Mercy hospital in Kansas City, Missouri, who co-led the study.
Younger kids were more likely to have virus detected
Goldman and her colleagues analyzed nasal swabs and symptom reports from more than 800 students and staff in a large school district in Kansas City from November 2022 to May 2023.
They found that overall, more than 85 percent of all participants had at least one respiratory virus detected during that time and more than 80 percent had an episode of acute respiratory illness — though not necessarily at the same time.
More telling, 92 percent of pre-K and elementary school kids had a virus detected, compared with about 86 percent of middle school students, about 77 percent of high school students and 76 percent of staff.
The pre-K kids, ages 3 to 5, had the highest rates of actual illness, too, the study found.
Most of the viruses were the kinds that cause the common cold, including rhinovirus, which was found in 65 percent of participants, and types of seasonal coronavirus detected in about 30 percent. The virus that causes COVID-19 was found in about 15 percent of those studied.
Study confirms the experiences of pediatricians who are parents
The new study provides a baseline look at the burden of viruses in school settings, Goldman said.
It also confirms the real-world experience of pediatricians who are parents, like Dr. Nicole Torres of the University of Miami Health System.
“I can say this for my own children, who are now in their teens: They were sicker when they were younger,” she said.
The study also squares with older research that found that young kids play a key role in spreading respiratory viruses at home. Dr. Carrie Byington was co-author of a University of Utah study, published in 2015, that recruited 26 households to take nasal samples from everyone living in a home, every week, for a year.
That study found that children younger than 5 had virus detected for half of the weeks of the year, recalled Byington, who is now with the University of California, San Diego.
“And if you live in a household with multiple children, that proportion just goes higher, so it can appear as if someone is always sick,” she said.
How to prevent illness — or at least try to
Preventing illness in children at school or at home can be tough, experts acknowledge.
Being up to date on vaccinations for COVID-19 and influenza is important, they said. So is frequent handwashing, learning to cover coughs and keeping hands away from the eyes, nose and mouth. Cleaning and sanitizing frequently touched surfaces and objects and optimizing fresh air are also key.
When little ones do get sick, the best treatment is often supportive care like extra fluids and rest. In serious cases, medical providers may recommend medications to reduce fever or antiviral drugs.
It can take a couple weeks, however, for lingering symptoms like coughs to completely resolve. By then, the child may well have another cold.
“I do tell parents of younger children to expect them to be ill once every month, every month and a half,” Torres said. “It’ll seem that way.”


Japan-backed telescope to power Lebanon’s first astronomical observatory on Mount Makmel

Japan-backed telescope to power Lebanon’s first astronomical observatory on Mount Makmel
Updated 22 October 2025

Japan-backed telescope to power Lebanon’s first astronomical observatory on Mount Makmel

Japan-backed telescope to power Lebanon’s first astronomical observatory on Mount Makmel
  • Telescope set to be installed at the observatory is a gift from Japan’s Kochi Prefecture to Notre Dame University–Louaize (NDU)
  • Will complement the university’s existing main observatory on campus, the largest of its kind in the Middle East

BEIRUT: Mount Makmel, Lebanon’s highest mountain rising 3,093 meters above sea level, is preparing to host the country’s first astronomical observatory.

A telescope set to be installed at the observatory is a gift from Japan’s Kochi Prefecture to Notre Dame University–Louaize (NDU). It will complement the university’s existing main observatory on campus, the largest of its kind in the Middle East.

NDU recently signed a cooperation agreement with the Municipality of Bsharri, as Mount Makmel, the tallest peak in the entire Levant, geographically spans the districts of Bsharri and Danniyeh. The region is renowned for hosting some of the last remaining Cedars of Lebanon forests.

The area has been identified by the National Council for Scientific Research as the most suitable site for astronomical studies.

University President Fr. Bechara Khoury described the project as “a new framework that opens broad educational and research horizons for students in the field of astronomical sciences.”

Meanwhile, Bsharri Mayor Joe Kairouz said that the municipality “will work to secure the necessary funding to implement the astronomical observatory project on Mount Makmel in cooperation with relevant local and international bodies, ensuring that its objectives are achieved according to the highest standards.”

According to the university president, the Notre Dame University–Louaize Observatory will foster “a dynamic framework of integrated scientific cooperation” between the main observatory on the Zouk Mosbeh campus and the new site on Mount Makmel.

Khoury said it reflects “the university’s educational and research mission, and enhances its capacity to provide precise astronomical data.”

Awareness activities will also be organized to promote scientific culture and public interest in astronomy.

The collaboration between NDU and the Bsharri Municipality also focuses on efforts to declare “Mount Makmel a Dark Sky Reserve, in order to protect the nocturnal environment and preserve the purity of the night sky from light pollution,” added Khoury.


Russia holds scheduled nuclear drills, week after NATO

Russia holds scheduled nuclear drills, week after NATO
Updated 22 October 2025

Russia holds scheduled nuclear drills, week after NATO

Russia holds scheduled nuclear drills, week after NATO
  • The Russian maneuvers come with efforts faltering to solve the Ukraine war
  • Russia’s drill involved a mock intercontinental ballistic missile launch from a submarine in the Barents Sea

MOSCOW: Russia held planned strategic nuclear drills on Wednesday, a week after NATO began similar annual exercises, as tensions in Europe over the Ukraine war run high.
“Today we are conducting planned, I would like to emphasize, planned, nuclear forces training,” Russian President Vladimir Putin told generals in a televised meeting.
NATO began similar annual nuclear exercises focused on the North Sea region last Monday.


The Russian maneuvers come with efforts faltering to solve the Ukraine war, and after US President Donald Trump on Tuesday shelved planned peace talks with Putin.
Russia’s drill involved a mock intercontinental ballistic missile launch from a submarine in the Barents Sea, next to the Western bloc’s borders.
Another mock rocket was launched from a cosmodrome in northern Russia, while strategic bombers carried out air missile strikes, the Russian military said.
Videos released by the Russian Ministry of Defense showed the launches from ground, sea and aerial carriers.
Russia’s recent air incursions in Poland and Estonia, and a string of unexplained drone flights, have rattled NATO members and renewed calls to beef up the alliance’s defense.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky failed to secure US long-range Tomahawk missiles on his last visit to Washington, despite weeks of calling for them.
Moscow has repeatedly criticized potential supplies of the nuclear-capable missiles, promising a serious escalation if they were to become reality.