Iran’s capital, surrounding province will shut for a day due to heat wave

A man crosses an intersection on a hot summer day in downtown Tehran, Iran, Monday, July 21, 2025. (AP)
A man crosses an intersection on a hot summer day in downtown Tehran, Iran, Monday, July 21, 2025. (AP)
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Updated 6 min 25 sec ago

Iran’s capital, surrounding province will shut for a day due to heat wave

A man crosses an intersection on a hot summer day in downtown Tehran, Iran, Monday, July 21, 2025. (AP)
  • With temperatures in the capital exceeding 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit), the government has advised citizens to stay indoors during peak heat hours

TEHRAN: Iranian government offices, banks and businesses in the capital province of Tehran will shut down on Wednesday due to an intense heat wave and the need to conserve energy, state-run media reported.
With temperatures in the capital exceeding 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit), the government has advised citizens to stay indoors during peak heat hours.
IRAN daily on Monday quoted government spokesperson Fatemeh MoHajjerani urging residents to take measures to reduce electricity and water consumption. The report said that all governmental offices, banks and businesses in Tehran province will be closed on Wednesday.
In July 2024, Iran ordered one-day national holiday due to high temperatures, following a two-day holiday in 2023.
Borazjan in southern Bushehr province was the hottest city in the last 24 hours with a maximum temperature of 50 C (122 F).


UN chief warns development goals will fail if wars continue to rage, condemns killings in Gaza

Updated 3 min 33 sec ago

UN chief warns development goals will fail if wars continue to rage, condemns killings in Gaza

UN chief warns development goals will fail if wars continue to rage, condemns killings in Gaza
  • Speaking at High-Level Political Forum on Monday, UN secretary-general calls on nations to transform ‘sparks of progress into a blaze of transformation’
  • Only 35% of SDG targets are on track, while nearly half are moving too slowly, 18% regressing

NEW YORK: UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Monday condemned Israel’s killing of civilians seeking humanitarian aid in Gaza over the weekend, calling it “an atrocious and inhumane act,” and demanded an immediate ceasefire along with the release of the Israeli hostages held by Hamas and unimpeded aid access to the starving enclave.

“These were people seeking UN assistance for their families,” Guterres said in remarks opening the High-Level Political Forum in New York.

“We need an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, the immediate release of all hostages, and full humanitarian access as a first step toward achieving a two-state solution,” he added.

Guterres also called for the fragile ceasefire between Iran and Israel to hold and reiterated his call for a just and lasting peace in Ukraine, rooted in the UN Charter, international law, and UN resolutions. He urged an end to the conflict in Sudan and pointed to continued violence in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Somalia, the Sahel and Myanmar, warning that war and instability are “pushing the Sustainable Development Goals further out of reach.”

The secretary-general linked these conflicts directly to the core development agenda, stressing that “sustainable peace requires sustainable development.” He warned that the world is far off track to meet the SDGs by 2030 and said the erosion of peace and rising geopolitical tensions are among the biggest threats to that progress.

The UN chief’s address came at a time of growing frustration among developing nations and civil society groups over the lack of progress toward the SDGs, a set of 17 global targets adopted in 2015 to end poverty, protect the planet, and promote peace and prosperity by 2030.

While the world has seen gains, such as increased access to electricity, internet, and education, only 35 percent of SDG targets are on track or making moderate progress, according to UN data. Nearly half are moving too slowly, and 18 percent are regressing.

“We cannot sugarcoat these facts,” Guterres said. “But we must not surrender to them either.”

He linked peace and development, arguing that sustainable peace is impossible without sustainable development. Despite multiple setbacks, Guterres pointed to recent multilateral breakthroughs as evidence that international cooperation can still deliver results.

He cited three key achievements: the adoption of a Pandemic Agreement in Geneva aimed at building a fairer global health system; new ocean protection commitments made in Nice to fight pollution and illegal fishing; and the so-called Seville Commitment, a financial pact aimed at expanding fiscal space for developing countries, improving access to capital, and reforming the global financial architecture.

“This shows that transformation is not only necessary — it is possible,” he said.

The HLPF, held annually at UN headquarters, is the central platform for reviewing progress toward the SDGs. This year’s forum spotlights five interconnected goals: health, gender equality, decent work, marine ecosystems, and global partnerships.

On health, Guterres urged governments to invest in universal care and prevention, particularly for the most vulnerable. On gender equality, he acknowledged persistent barriers but noted growing grassroots momentum, and called for real financing, accountability, and rights-based policies to drive systemic change.

On decent work, he warned that over 2 billion people remain in informal employment and youth joblessness is high. But he cited the UN’s Global Accelerator initiative as helping countries create jobs and expand social protections, especially in green industries.

Guterres also emphasized the need to reform the global financial system, which he said no longer reflects current geopolitical or economic realities. The Seville Commitment, he said, sets out concrete steps: strengthening domestic resource mobilization through tax reform, improving debt relief frameworks, and tripling the lending capacity of multilateral development banks.

Guterres urged greater investment in science, data, and digital tools, including artificial intelligence, as well as deeper partnerships with civil society, the private sector, and local governments.

With five years remaining to meet the 2030 deadline, he called on nations to transform “sparks of progress into a blaze of transformation,” saying: “Let’s deliver on development — for people and for the planet.”


UNRWA says some Gaza staff starving as malnutrition soars

Mother of Yahya Fadi Al-Najjar, an infant who died due to malnourishment, mourns as she holds his body during the funeral.
Mother of Yahya Fadi Al-Najjar, an infant who died due to malnourishment, mourns as she holds his body during the funeral.
Updated 21 July 2025

UNRWA says some Gaza staff starving as malnutrition soars

Mother of Yahya Fadi Al-Najjar, an infant who died due to malnourishment, mourns as she holds his body during the funeral.
  • UNRWA said that shortages in the Palestinian territory had caused food prices to increase by 40 times
  • Aid stockpiled in its warehouses outside Gaza could feed “the entire population for over three months,” agency says

GAZA CITY: The UN agency for Palestinian refugees said on Monday that it was “receiving desperate messages of starvation” from its Gaza staff, as the Palestinian territory experiences surging levels of hunger.
Gaza’s population of more than two million people are facing severe shortages of food and other essentials, with doctors, the civil defense agency and medical charity Doctors Without Borders (MSF) reporting a spike in malnutrition cases in recent days.
In a post on X, UNRWA said that shortages in the Palestinian territory had caused food prices to increase by 40 times, while the aid stockpiled in its warehouses outside Gaza could feed “the entire population for over three months.”
“The suffering in Gaza is manmade and must be stopped,” it wrote. “Lift the siege and let aid in safely and at scale.”
After talks to extend a six-week ceasefire broke down, Israel imposed a full blockade on Gaza on March 2, allowing nothing in until trucks were again permitted at a trickle in late May.
The civil defense agency on Sunday reported at least three infant deaths from “severe hunger and malnutrition” in the past week.
Eighteen reportedly died of starvation within 24 hours between Saturday and Sunday, the ministry said.
“Infants under one year of age suffer from a lack of milk, which leads to a significant decrease in their weight and a decrease in their immunity that makes them vulnerable to diseases,” said Mohammed Abu Salmiya, the director of Gaza’s Al-Shifa Hospital.
Israel on Monday said there was “no ban or restriction on the entry of baby formula or baby food into Gaza.”
COGAT, the Israeli defense ministry body that oversees civilian affairs in the Palestinian territories, said that “over 2,000 tons of baby food and infant formula were delivered into Gaza,” without specifying the time frame.
“We urge international organizations to continue coordinating with us to ensure the entry of baby food and formula without delay. Our commitment remains firm: to support humanitarian aid for civilians — not for Hamas,” COGAT wrote on X.
The war was sparked by Hamas’s 2023 attack on Israel which resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, most of them civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures.
Israel’s military campaign in Gaza has killed 59,029 Palestinians, mostly civilians, according to the health ministry in the Hamas-run territory.


Jordanian field hospital begins operations in Gaza, treats over 1,000 patients

Jordanian field hospital begins operations in Gaza, treats over 1,000 patients
Updated 21 July 2025

Jordanian field hospital begins operations in Gaza, treats over 1,000 patients

Jordanian field hospital begins operations in Gaza, treats over 1,000 patients
  • Facility boasts clinics for dermatology, orthopedics, pediatrics, maxillofacial surgery, internal medicine, gynecology
  • Hospital team this week supplied 11 trucks of humanitarian aid, relief items, medical supplies to support Gaza’s health infrastructure

LONDON: The Jordanian Field Hospital 7 in southern Gaza has started receiving patients and providing medical and therapeutic services as part of a humanitarian mission to support Palestinians in the territory.

Its field hospital director said that medical and nursing teams had treated over 1,000 patients in specialized clinics that operate round the clock to address various medical needs.

“We take pride in our presence in Gaza and our unwavering commitment to serve our Palestinian brothers and sisters with distinction and professionalism,” the hospital’s force commander told the Jordan News Agency.

The facility includes clinics for dermatology, orthopedics, pediatrics, maxillofacial surgery, internal medicine, and gynecology. It also provides neonatal intensive care and operates a mobile prosthetic limb support unit, in addition to offering facilities for general surgery, vascular surgery, neurosurgery, plastic surgery, and burns treatment.

The hospital team this week supplied 11 trucks of humanitarian aid, relief items, and medical supplies to support Gaza’s health infrastructure, as part of the Jordanian Armed Forces’ broader efforts to help Palestinians.

Jordan was among the first countries to conduct airlift missions in the early days of the conflict and has delivered relief to Gaza since late 2023.

It has partnered with several humanitarian organizations, including the World Health Organization, the World Food Programme, and World Central Kitchen, to implement food and medical projects aimed at assisting Palestinians in Gaza.


War in Gaza ‘must end now’, urge UK and 24 allies

Smoke and flames rise from a residential building hit by an Israeli strike, in Gaza City July 21, 2025. (Reuters)
Smoke and flames rise from a residential building hit by an Israeli strike, in Gaza City July 21, 2025. (Reuters)
Updated 21 July 2025

War in Gaza ‘must end now’, urge UK and 24 allies

Smoke and flames rise from a residential building hit by an Israeli strike, in Gaza City July 21, 2025. (Reuters)
  • “Further bloodshed serves no purpose. We reaffirm our complete support to the efforts of the US, Qatar and Egypt to achieve this,” grouping said in joint statement

LONDON: Britain and 24 Western allies, including Australia, Canada, France and Italy, declared on Monday that the war in Gaza “must end now,” arguing that civilians’ suffering had “reached new depths.”
“We urge the parties and the international community to unite in a common effort to bring this terrible conflict to an end, through an immediate, unconditional and permanent ceasefire,” the grouping added in a joint statement.
“Further bloodshed serves no purpose. We reaffirm our complete support to the efforts of the US, Qatar and Egypt to achieve this.”
The signatories — which also included Japan, several EU countries, Switzerland and New Zealand — added they were “prepared to take further action to support an immediate ceasefire.”
The wide-ranging statement branded the controversial Israeli-supported relief effort in Gaza as “dangerous” and said it deprives Gazans of “human dignity.”
“We condemn the drip feeding of aid and the inhumane killing of civilians, including children, seeking to meet their most basic needs of water and food,” the statement said.
“The Israeli government’s denial of essential humanitarian assistance to the civilian population is unacceptable,” it added, urging Israel to “comply with its obligations under international humanitarian law.”
The statement called for the Israeli government “to immediately lift restrictions on the flow of aid and to urgently enable the UN and humanitarian NGOs to do their life saving work safely and effectively.”
The UN said last week that it had recorded 875 people who had been killed in Gaza while trying to get food via the US- and Israel-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF).
It has replaced UN agencies as the main distributor of aid in the territory.
The 25-nation statement also condemned the continued detention of hostages in Gaza by Hamas militants, demanding “their immediate and unconditional release” and noting a negotiated ceasefire “offers the best hope of bringing them home.”
Meanwhile, the signatories said they “strongly oppose any steps toward territorial or demographic change in the Occupied Palestinian Territories” and said an Israeli plan to shift Palestinians into a so-called “humanitarian city” was unacceptable.
“Permanent forced displacement is a violation of international humanitarian law,” they warned.
The statement was also signed by EU Commissioner for Equality, Preparedness and Crisis Management Hadja Lahbib.


Eye hospital in Gaza reports 1,200 new cases of vision loss in July

Eye hospital in Gaza reports 1,200 new cases of vision loss in July
Updated 21 July 2025

Eye hospital in Gaza reports 1,200 new cases of vision loss in July

Eye hospital in Gaza reports 1,200 new cases of vision loss in July
  • Dr. Abdel Salam Sabah said severe malnutrition causes vitamin and mineral deficiencies, which increase the risk of vision impairment
  • He warned that 4,000 to 5,000 patients who regularly visited the eye hospital before the war are now without follow-up or treatment

LONDON: An eye hospital in Gaza reported on Monday nearly 1,200 new cases of complete or partial vision loss in July in the Palestinian coastal enclave as Israel continues its attacks and medical resources deplete.

Dr. Abdel Salam Sabah, the director of the Eye Hospital in Gaza, reported that medical staff addressed nearly 1,200 new cases of complete or partial vision loss in Gaza City and the Al-Nasr neighborhood over the past two weeks.

The hospital had previously recorded approximately 1,500 cases of total or partial blindness due to eye injuries, he said, while many others face progressive vision loss from untreated chronic illnesses.

Dr. Sabah warned that 4,000 to 5,000 patients who regularly visited the hospital before the war in October 2023 are now without follow-up or treatment, putting them at serious risk of losing their sight.

He added that severe malnutrition causes vitamin and mineral deficiencies, which increase the risk of vision impairment, particularly in patients with diabetes.

Since March 2, 2025, Israeli forces have closed all border crossings with Gaza, greatly limiting the quantities of food and medical aid entering the enclave, which has led to a widespread famine. Since Israel’s attack on Gaza in late 2023, there have been 58,895 Palestinian deaths, mainly among women and children, and 140,980 injuries.