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Family of US-Palestinian killed in West Bank want State Department probe

Update Rocks scattered across a road block access for Palestinians in the West Bank village of Sinjil on Wednesday, July 9, 2025, following an attack by Israeli settlers last week, according to local residents. (AP)
Rocks scattered across a road block access for Palestinians in the West Bank village of Sinjil on Wednesday, July 9, 2025, following an attack by Israeli settlers last week, according to local residents. (AP)
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Updated 12 July 2025

Family of US-Palestinian killed in West Bank want State Department probe

Family of US-Palestinian killed in West Bank want State Department probe
  • Musalat, born and based in Florida, traveled to the West Bank last month to spend time with relatives
  • Rights groups have denounced a rise in violence committed by settlers in the West Bank

WASHINGTON: A US-Palestinian man has been killed in an Israeli settler attack in the occupied West Bank, his family said on Saturday, demanding that Washington launch a probe into his death.

Saif Al-Din Kamil Abdul Karim Musalat was beaten to death on Friday in Sinjil, a village north of Ramallah, the Palestinian health ministry said.

Musalat, born and based in Florida, traveled to the West Bank last month to spend time with relatives, his family said in a statement issued by lawyer Diana Halum following the deadly attack.

The Palestinian health ministry said a second man, Mohammed Rizq Hussein Al-Shalabi, 23, died after being shot during the attack and “left to bleed for hours.”

Israel’s military said violence flared after Palestinians threw rocks at a group of Israelis, lightly injuring two, the latest in a spate of clashes involving settlers in the West Bank.

Musalat’s family said they were “devastated” at his death, describing the 20-year-old as a “kind, hard-working and deeply respected” man who was deeply connected to his Palestinian heritage.

They said he was “protecting his family’s land from settlers who were attempting to steal it.”

According to the family’s statement, settlers blocked an ambulance and paramedics from reaching Musalat as he lay injured, and he died before making it to hospital.

His death was “an unimaginable nightmare and in justice that no family should ever have to face,” they added.

“We demand the US State Department lead an immediate investigation and hold the Israeli settlers who killed Saif accountable for their crimes. We demand justice.”

The US State Department on Saturday confirmed to AFP that an American citizen had died in the West Bank and offered its “sincerest condolences to the family and loved ones on their loss.”

The department “has no higher priority than the safety and security of US citizens overseas,” a spokesperson said, referring “questions on any investigation to the Government of Israel.”

Rights groups have denounced a rise in violence committed by settlers in the West Bank, which Israel has occupied since 1967. The United Nations has said that such attacks against Palestinians are taking place in a climate of “impunity.”

Last week, AFP journalists witnessed clashes between dozens of Israeli settlers and Palestinians in Sinjil, where a march against settler attacks on nearby farmland had been due to take place.

Israeli authorities recently erected a high fence cutting off parts of Sinjil from Road 60, which runs through the West Bank from north to south.

Violence in the territory has surged since the October 2023 attack on Israel by Palestinian militant group Hamas triggered war in the Gaza Strip.

Since then, Israeli troops or settlers in the West Bank have killed at least 955 Palestinians — many of them militants, but also scores of civilians — according to Palestinian health ministry figures.

At least 36 Israelis, including both troops and civilians, have been killed in Palestinian attacks or Israeli military operations, according to Israeli official figures.


Russia condemns Israeli strike on Qatar as ‘gross violation’ of UN charter

Updated 11 sec ago

Russia condemns Israeli strike on Qatar as ‘gross violation’ of UN charter

Russia condemns Israeli strike on Qatar as ‘gross violation’ of UN charter
“Russia considers this incident a gross violation of international law and the UN Charter,” the Russian Foreign Ministry said
Lavrov said there was a danger the Israeli action could “lead to further destabilization in the Middle East“

MOSCOW: Russia on Wednesday condemned an Israeli attack against Hamas members in Qatar’s capital Doha and urged all parties to refrain from actions that would further escalate the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
“Russia considers this incident a gross violation of international law and the UN Charter, an encroachment on the sovereignty and territorial integrity of an independent state, and a step leading to further escalation and destabilization of the situation in the Middle East,” the Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement.
“Such methods of fighting those whom Israel considers its enemies and opponents deserve the strongest condemnation.”
US President Donald Trump said he was “very unhappy about every aspect” of the Israeli strike and would be giving a full statement on the issue on Wednesday.
“The rocket attack on Qatar ... cannot be perceived as anything other than an action aimed at undermining international efforts to find peaceful solutions,” Russia said.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, in a later telephone call with Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani, described the attack as “a violation of international law and an unacceptable encroachment on the sovereignty and territorial integrity of friendly Qatar.”
A Russian Foreign Ministry statement quoted Lavrov as saying there was a danger the Israeli action could “lead to further destabilization in the Middle East.”
The statement said the Qatari prime minister noted Russia’s “clear and principled position” in support of Qatar’s sovereignty and independence.

Israeli ambassador threatens to kill Hamas leaders in future

Israeli ambassador threatens to kill Hamas leaders in future
Updated 8 min 41 sec ago

Israeli ambassador threatens to kill Hamas leaders in future

Israeli ambassador threatens to kill Hamas leaders in future
  • Israeli military targets Houthi Defense Ministry in Yemen, kills 30 in Gaza Strip

JERUSALEM: If Israel failed to kill Hamas leaders in an airstrike on Qatar on Tuesday, it would succeed next time, the Israeli ambassador to the US said after the operation, which raised concerns it would torpedo efforts to secure a ceasefire in Gaza.

“Right now, we may be subject to a little bit of criticism. They’ll get over it. And Israel is being changed for the better,” Yechiel Leiter told Fox News’ “Special Report” program late on Tuesday.

Israel attempted to kill the political leaders of Hamas with the attack in the Qatari capital Doha on Tuesday, escalating its military action in the Middle East in what the US described as a unilateral attack that does not advance American and Israeli interests.

The widely condemned Doha operation was especially sensitive because Qatar has been hosting and mediating in negotiations aimed at securing a ceasefire in the Gaza war.

“If we didn’t get them this time, we’ll get them the next time,” Leiter said.

On Wednesday, Israel struck the Yemeni capital Sanaa, after killing Houthi Prime Minister Ahmad Ghaleb Al-Rahwi and other senior figures in an attack in late August.

Witnesses said the Wednesday attack targeted the Houthi Defense Ministry, while Israeli Army Radio reported that Houthi headquarters and military camps were among the targets.

The Israeli military confirmed it had attacked Yemen in a statement.

The Houthis have attacked vessels in the Red Sea in what they describe as acts of solidarity with the Palestinians since the beginning of the war in Gaza.

Hamas said five of its members were killed in the Doha attack, including the son of its exiled Gaza chief and top negotiator Khalil Al-Hayya. It said its top leaders survived.

The Doha airstrike followed an Israeli warning to Palestinians to leave Gaza City, an area once home to about a million people, as it tries to destroy what is left of Hamas.

Residents there expressed alarm the Doha strike might destroy chances for a ceasefire.

Families, some carrying their belongings on vehicles, donkey carts and rickshaws, continued to stream out of Gaza City along the coastal road in anticipation of a major Israeli offensive. 

“Does this mean there is no hope a ceasefire can be reached? I am afraid that now Israel would speed up its occupation of Gaza City,” said Um Tamer, 65, a mother of five.

At least 30 people were killed across the enclave on Wednesday, according to medics.

Asked how the strike would affect ceasefire negotiations, US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee said: “The honest answer is, we simply don’t know. Hamas has rejected everything so far. They continually reject every offer that’s put on the table.”

Israel has killed over 64,000 people in Gaza, mostly civilians, according to local health authorities, and reduced the Palestinian enclave to rubble.


Rights groups file case in Germany against German-Israeli soldier over suspected Gaza war crimes

Rights groups file case in Germany against German-Israeli soldier over suspected Gaza war crimes
Updated 16 min 37 sec ago

Rights groups file case in Germany against German-Israeli soldier over suspected Gaza war crimes

Rights groups file case in Germany against German-Israeli soldier over suspected Gaza war crimes
  • The human rights groups said targeted sniper shootings were documented near Gaza’s Al Quds and Nasser hospitals between November 2023 and March 2024

BERLIN: Human rights lawyers filed a lawsuit against an Israeli soldier of German origin over suspected involvement in the targeted killing of unarmed Palestinian civilians in Gaza.
The European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights and three Palestinian human rights organizations said they filed a criminal complaint with Germany’s federal prosecutor against a sniper in the Israeli Defense Forces.
ECCHR said the 25-year-old soldier was born and raised in Munich and had a registered residence in Germany until recently, but could not confirm that the man had dual citizenship.
In a 130-page complaint, ECCHR said the groups submitted evidence, including investigative research and audiovisual recordings, alleging that the soldier belonged to the so-called “Ghost Unit” of the 202nd Paratroopers Battalion.
The ECCHR statement said its evidence indicated that members of the unit deliberately killed civilians in Gaza.
The Israeli military and foreign ministry and Germany’s federal prosecutor’s office did not respond to Reuters’ requests for comment.
The human rights groups said targeted sniper shootings were documented near Gaza’s Al Quds and Nasser hospitals between November 2023 and March 2024, adding that legal proceedings against members of the same unit were also underway in France, Italy, South Africa and Belgium.
The case was filed under German laws that allow prosecutors to pursue international crimes if the accused persons were born in Germany or German nationals, ECCHR said.
“There must be no double standards – even if the suspects are members of the Israeli armed forces,” ECCHR’s lawyer Alexander Schwarz said in a statement.


Israeli strike ‘killed any hope’ for Gaza hostages: Qatar PM to CNN

Israeli strike ‘killed any hope’ for Gaza hostages: Qatar PM to CNN
Updated 37 min 3 sec ago

Israeli strike ‘killed any hope’ for Gaza hostages: Qatar PM to CNN

Israeli strike ‘killed any hope’ for Gaza hostages: Qatar PM to CNN
  • “I think that what Netanyahu has done yesterday, he just killed any hope for those hostages,” Al Thani told CNN
  • Families are “counting on this (ceasefire) mediation. They have no other hope for that“

WASHINGTON: Qatar’s prime minister said Wednesday that an Israeli strike in Doha on Hamas killed hope for hostages in Gaza as he called for his Israeli counterpart Benjamin Netanyahu to be “brought to justice.”
“I think that what Netanyahu has done yesterday, he just killed any hope for those hostages,” Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani told CNN.
Qatar has served as the key intermediary in the nearly two-year war. The prime minister described the Hamas presence in Doha as open.
Al Thani said that he had been meeting one of the hostage families the very morning that Israel on Tuesday struck Hamas officials in his country.
The families are “counting on this (ceasefire) mediation. They have no other hope for that,” he said.
He pointed to the indictment against Netanyahu by the International Criminal Court.
“He needs to be brought to justice,” Al Thani said.


Airstrike interrupts Palestinian aid worker discussing Israel’s Gaza City offensive

Airstrike interrupts Palestinian aid worker discussing Israel’s Gaza City offensive
Updated 52 min 40 sec ago

Airstrike interrupts Palestinian aid worker discussing Israel’s Gaza City offensive

Airstrike interrupts Palestinian aid worker discussing Israel’s Gaza City offensive
  • Salma Altaweel from the Norwegian Refugee Council was addressing a press briefing on Gaza City offensive when the explosions went off
  • Blast illustrates the concerns of humanitarian workers after Israel ordered the city’s entire population to leave

LONDON: Palestinian aid worker Salma Altaweel was midway through answering a question about how the war in Gaza has affected her four children when she was interrupted by two deafening explosions.

Barely flinching, she paused briefly before uttering, matter of factly: “That’s a bomb very close to me,” and continuing where she left off. She later apologized for the interruption.

Altaweel, the northern Gaza office manager for the Norwegian Refugee Council, was speaking during an online press briefing by humanitarians working in the territory.

The blasts outside her window in Gaza City provided a clear illustration of the warnings delivered by the aid workers of the devastation expected from the latest phase of Israel’s military campaign on the territory.

On Tuesday, Israel ordered the 1 million people living in Gaza City — the territory’s largest urban center — to leave for the south ahead of an anticipated vast ground offensive.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned that the airstrikes destroying highrise buildings throughout the city in recent days were “only the beginning of the main intensive operation.”

The campaign, which Israel claims is to remove Hamas from its last urban stronghold, has sparked an angry international response.

For Gaza’s beleaguered population, which has already been displaced multiple times, the military assault will lead to a further deterioration of the already desperate humanitarian situation.

“Since the military operation was announced in Gaza City, people have been living in fear and confusion, including us as aid workers,” Altaweel told the briefing. 

“The displacement order made this even worse as so many families do not want to leave because there is no safe place all over the Gaza Strip.” 

She said that the Israeli bombing of buildings in the city had “intensified significantly” in recent days, forcing people from their homes and on to the streets, often leaving them with no shelter at all.

“Conditions are extremely overcrowded and unsafe,” she said. 

Mahmoud Alsaqqa, who works for Oxfam in Gaza City, said that he believes that less than 10 percent of the city’s population had fled to what Israel claims is a “safe zone” in the south of the territory.

People were unwilling to leave as they are already exhausted from 23 months of war and many are too weak to make the journey, he said.

He added that the cost of relocating could reach thousands of dollars and that some who had tried to relocate had returned to Gaza City because they could not find space.

“What we are witnessing here is not just an inhuman act from the Israelis in committing this genocide, but also 
 it’s unfeasible and illogical,” Alsaqqa said.

Israel’s orders for Gaza City’s residents to leave come amid what aid workers describe as one of the world’s most catastrophic humanitarian crises.

A UN-backed panel declared last month that famine was underway in Gaza City and is expect to spread to the entire Gaza Strip.

Dozens of Palestinians are killed each day from air strikes or being shot as they attempt to reach aid supplies, with nearly 65,000 people killed in the territory since the conflict began in October 2023.

Gaza’s health system has also collapsed with many hospitals forced to shut down and facilities and health workers targeted by Israel’s military.

Dr. Rami Al-Shaya, said that Al-Awda Hospital in Gaza City, where he works as head of the emergency department, had been threatened with evacuation.

“This is madness,” he said. “Hospitals that have been fully equipped for decades are being asked to completely empty and be evacuated.”

He added: “Those people who will remain in the north, will be left without any type of health services.”

Save the Children’s Gaza humanitarian director, Rachael Cummings, said that the scale of Israel’s attempted forced displacement from Gaza City was on a scale not seen before.

“There is nowhere safe for people to go across the whole of Gaza,” she said. “What we are seeing is people being forcibly displaced from Gaza City, who are on the brink of famine, or in famine.”

She said there may be up to 500,000, to 600,000 children forced to leave the city who are already exhausted from living in extreme fear for the past 23 months.

Cummings said that she had driven on Wednesday from where she is based in Deir Al-Balal to Khan Younis, near to where Israel’s “so-called” humanitarian zone of Al-Mawasi is located. She said the area was already “extremely overcrowded.”

All of those speaking during the briefing organized by the Crisis Action group pleaded with the international community to pressure Israel to halt its campaign and implement a ceasefire.

For Altaweel, displacement from Gaza City is the latest fear that she has to help her children through.

“They feel very afraid and they are scared to sleep at night,” she said. “They lie next to me just to feel a little safer.

“Even though I know I can not protect them from these heavy weapons and airstrikes, I try to emotionally support them all the time.”

Altaweel said that they ask her why children are being targeted in Gaza.

“I’m sure that no one can also this question,” she said.

Seconds later, the explosions hit outside.