Palestinian boy arrives in UK for vital medical treatment

Palestinian boy arrives in UK for vital medical treatment
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Updated 17 sec ago

Palestinian boy arrives in UK for vital medical treatment

Palestinian boy arrives in UK for vital medical treatment
  • Majd Alshagnobi, 15, lost much of his face due to an Israeli shell in February 2024
  • Mother: ‘We’ve lost our home, we’ve lost our memories, we’ve lost our dreams. Nothing is left in Gaza’

LONDON: A 15-year-old Palestinian has spoken of his happiness after being taken to the UK for medical treatment from Gaza. 

Majd Alshagnobi suffered severe injuries in February 2024 after an Israeli tank shell exploded near him, causing him to lose much of his face, including all of his jaw and teeth.

His mother Islam told Sky News: “When Majd first got to the hospital, they thought he was dead because of the severities of the injuries on his face and leg, but when he raised his arm, they realized he was still alive.

“All the operating rooms were busy, so they carried out the operation in the kitchen to save him.

“It was very difficult for him to breathe, and they had to feed him through tubes and syringes through his nose. He really suffered.”

He was greeted with flowers, gifts and banners by well-wishers when he, his mother and two of his sisters arrived at London’s Heathrow Airport.

“Thank God I have the opportunity to receive treatment here … That’s the reason I’ve come, to get treatment,” he told Sky.

“Since I arrived, I’ve felt so much happier. We’ve been greeted in such a nice way, with gifts and things to help us.”

His mother said: “Right now my family in Gaza live in tents. We’ve lost our home, we’ve lost our memories, we’ve lost our dreams. Nothing is left in Gaza.

“My two children who are still in Gaza with their father, every day I wake up in fear that they’ve been killed. Anything could happen to them in Gaza.”

He is the third Gazan child to be medically evacuated to the UK since the outbreak of the war in October 2023, with the assistance of the Project Pure Hope charity.

So far, more than 5,000 children have been taken from Gaza for medical treatment abroad, most of them heading to Egypt and the Gulf.

Omar Din, co-founder of Project Pure Hope, said the UK government needs to do more to help children in Gaza in need of medical assistance. 

Last week, Prime Minister Keir Starmer said he was “accelerating efforts” to bring more to the UK.

“We’re hoping following the prime minister’s announcement last Friday, that in the coming days we’ll have some concrete actions,” Din said. “The more we wait, the more children die who we could be saving.

“We’ve done this privately because there was no other option available, but myself and members of my founding team have done lots of this work for Ukrainian refugees previously. There’s no reason we shouldn’t be doing that for Gazans.”


Finnish president says ready to recognize Palestinian state

Updated 13 sec ago

Finnish president says ready to recognize Palestinian state

Finnish president says ready to recognize Palestinian state
HELSINKI: Finland’s President Alexander Stubb has said he is ready to approve a recognition of a Palestinian state if the government moves forward with such a proposal.
Many countries, including France and Canada, have pledged to recognize a Palestinian state alongside the 80th UN General Assembly in September.
“The decisions by France, the United Kingdom and Canada reinforce the trend toward recognizing Palestine as part of efforts to breathe new life into the peace process,” Stubb said in a post to X Thursday.
Finland’s president, elected for six years, has limited powers but helps coordinate the country’s foreign policy in close cooperation with the government.
“If I receive a proposal to recognize the Palestinian state, I am prepared to approve it,” Stubb said, deploring an “inhumane” situation in Gaza.
He said he understood that Finns had “different opinions on the recognition of Palestine, and that there is also concern,” calling for an “open” and “honest” debate.
The far-right Finns Party and the Christian Democrats oppose recognizing a Palestinian state.
Finland’s Prime Minister Petteri Orpo on Friday reiterated Helsinki’s support for a two-state solution, without specifying whether the government was ready to recognize a Palestinian state.
Discussions on foreign policy and the Middle East with the president would continue up to the UN conference at the end of September, he said.
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Lebanon says four killed in Israeli strikes on Thursday

Lebanon says four killed in Israeli strikes on Thursday
Updated 4 min 36 sec ago

Lebanon says four killed in Israeli strikes on Thursday

Lebanon says four killed in Israeli strikes on Thursday
  • The Israeli strikes on Thursday evening led to the death of four people, said the health ministry
  • Katz described one of the targets as Hezbollah’s “biggest precision missile manufacturing site“

BEIRUT: A series of Israeli air strikes killed four people in south and east Lebanon, the health ministry said Friday, referring to strikes that occurred the previous evening.

“The series of strikes launched by the Israeli enemy Thursday evening led to the death of four people,” the Lebanese health ministry said.

The Israeli military said Thursday that it had targeted Hezbollah “infrastructure that was used for producing and storing strategic weapons” in south Lebanon and the eastern Bekaa Valley.

Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz described one of the targets as Hezbollah’s “biggest precision missile manufacturing site.”

More than a year of hostilities — including two months of all-out war between Israel and Hezbollah which largely ended with a November ceasefire — left the militant group badly weakened.

Israel has nonetheless kept up near-daily air strikes in Lebanon despite the ceasefire, and has threatened to continue them until the group has been disarmed.

“Any attempt by the terrorist organization to recover, re-establish or threaten will be met with relentless intensity,” Katz said on Thursday.

Under the terms of the truce, Hezbollah was to withdraw its fighters north of the Litani river, about 30 kilometers (20 miles) from the Israeli border.

Israel was meant to withdraw all its troops from Lebanon, but has kept them in five areas it deems strategic.

In a speech on Thursday, Lebanese President Joseph Aoun said he was determined to disarm Hezbollah, a step he has come under heavy US pressure to take, despite the group’s protests that doing so would serve Israeli goals.


Australian activists reveal ‘brutal’ treatment after being detained by Israel

Australian activists reveal ‘brutal’ treatment after being detained by Israel
Updated 39 min 56 sec ago

Australian activists reveal ‘brutal’ treatment after being detained by Israel

Australian activists reveal ‘brutal’ treatment after being detained by Israel
  • Tania Safi, Robert Martin accuse military of playing ‘psychological game’ with flotilla activists trying to take aid to Gaza
  • Pair were deemed too weak to fly home due to their treatment in custody after being released, taken to Jordan

LONDON: A pair of Australian pro-Palestine activists have complained of being “brutalized psychologically” after the boat they were on was stopped by the Israeli military trying to reach Gaza, The Guardian reported on Friday.

Tania Safi, Robert Martin and 19 others were detained aboard the boat, named Handala, as it tried to deliver aid as part of the Freedom Flotilla Coalition.

Safi and Martin said they were treated “like criminals” after their arrest, including being shackled and subjected to strip-searches.

After arriving back in Australia on Friday, Safi told reporters: “It feels like a bit of a dream at the moment to be honest … It’s been a rough ride.”

She added: “We were dehydrated and exhausted. We’ve been disconnected from the world.”

Safi said the Handala was boarded by at least 30 Israeli soldiers, all heavily armed, and they tried to film the activists receiving assistance from them.

“They were playing this odd psychological game of offering water and food with the camera crew, trying to get us to accept things from them, but none of us would,” she said. “We don’t want to take anything from an entity that is starving babies to death.”

The activists were taken to the city of Ashdod, where they had their possessions confiscated and were placed in an interrogation room. One of them, US citizen Chris Smalls, was assaulted by Israeli soldiers.

“Chris, the only black man, was pinned down by seven or eight men,” Safi said. “When I asked about him, they came into the room and dragged me out by my arms. I’m still bruised from it.

“They pulled me out and threw me down on the floor, they made me take off all my clothes, they strip-searched me right there, made me squat up and down … They treated us like we were criminals.”

Safi continued: “In these prisons, we saw face-to-face the soullessness and the cruelty and brutality.”

She added: “There were moments where they’d handcuff me and grab the handcuffs and just throw me against the wall.”

Martin told reporters: “We had no rights … I have a lot of medication — they didn’t allow any medication at all.”

He added: “The Australian government demanded I be able to make phone calls to my loved ones — they didn’t allow me to do that either, (or) anybody else.”

The duo were eventually taken to Jordan where, after receiving diplomatic support and a medical evaluation, they were deemed unfit to fly due to the physical condition their ordeal had left them in.

Safi said after she was hooked up to an IV drip, “I just passed out and slept for like 16 hours.”

She added: “I couldn’t sleep (in prison) … They shine the torch in your face until you wake up, or they bang on the door every time you fall asleep.

“We didn’t commit any crimes. They tried to get us to sign documents that said we’d entered Israel illegally, which isn’t true … We were taken completely against our will and brutalized psychologically in every way.”

The Freedom Flotilla Coalition has sent a number of vessels in a bid to deliver aid to Gaza and raise awareness of the dire situation facing Palestinian civilians trapped in the enclave.

On June 9, the last boat to make the journey, the Madleen, was stopped by Israel in international waters.

Twelve campaigners were arrested, including Swedish environmental activist Greta Thunberg.


Turkiye’s Erdogan to meet Italy’s Meloni and Libya’s Dbeibah in Istanbul, presidency says

Turkiye’s Erdogan to meet Italy’s Meloni and Libya’s Dbeibah in Istanbul, presidency says
Updated 01 August 2025

Turkiye’s Erdogan to meet Italy’s Meloni and Libya’s Dbeibah in Istanbul, presidency says

Turkiye’s Erdogan to meet Italy’s Meloni and Libya’s Dbeibah in Istanbul, presidency says
  • Erdogan will hold separate meetings with Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and Libyan Prime Minister Abdulhamid Al-Dbeibah in Istanbul on Friday

ANKARA: Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan will hold separate meetings with Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and Libyan Prime Minister Abdulhamid Al-Dbeibah in Istanbul on Friday, Turkiye’s presidency said in a statement.


Gaza civil defense says 11 killed by Israeli fire

Gaza civil defense says 11 killed by Israeli fire
Updated 01 August 2025

Gaza civil defense says 11 killed by Israeli fire

Gaza civil defense says 11 killed by Israeli fire
  • Thousands of Gazans have gathered each day near aid distribution points in Gaza
  • The UN says Gaza requires at least 500 trucks of aid per day

GAZA CITY, Palestinian Territories: Gaza’s civil defense agency said 11 people were killed by Israeli gunfire and air strikes on Friday, including two who were waiting near an aid distribution site inside the Palestinian territory.

Civil defense spokesman Mahmud Bassal said that five people were killed in a strike near the southern city of Khan Younis, and four more in a separate strike on a vehicle in central Gaza’s Deir El-Balah.

The Israeli army said it could not confirm the strikes without specific coordinates.

Two other people were killed and more than 70 injured by Israeli fire while waiting for aid near a food distribution center run by the US- and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) between Khan Younis and the nearby city of Rafah, the civil defense said.

The army did not immediately respond to the report.

Thousands of Gazans have gathered each day near aid distribution points in Gaza, including the four managed by GHF, whose operations have been marred by chaotic scenes and near-daily reports of Israeli forces firing on people waiting to collect rations.

GHF has denied that fatal shootings have occurred in the immediate vicinity of its aid points.

Media restrictions in Gaza and difficulties in accessing many areas mean AFP is unable to independently verify the tolls and details provided by the civil defense agency and other parties.

Israeli restrictions on the entry of goods and aid into Gaza since the start of the war nearly 22 months ago have led to shortages of food and essential goods, including medicine, medical supplies and fuel, which hospitals rely on to power their generators.

The shortages were exacerbated by a more than two-month total blockade on aid imposed by Israel, which began easing the stoppage in late May as GHF was beginning its operations.

Israel’s defense ministry body overseeing civil affairs in the Palestinian territories, COGAT, said Friday that more than 200 trucks of aid had been collected and distributed by the UN and international organizations the previous day.

The UN says Gaza requires at least 500 trucks of aid per day.

COGAT added that four tankers of fuel for the UN had entered the Palestinian territory, and that 43 pallets of aid were airdropped in cooperation with the United Arab Emirates, Egypt and Jordan.