Survivors of Israel’s pager attack on Hezbollah last year struggle to recover

Survivors of Israel’s pager attack on Hezbollah last year struggle to recover
Ali Abbas, 11, who was wounded in the pagers attack carried out by Israel on Sept. 17, 2024, plays at his parents' house in the village of Barish, southern Lebanon, Monday, April 28, 2025. (AP)
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Updated 06 August 2025

Survivors of Israel’s pager attack on Hezbollah last year struggle to recover

Survivors of Israel’s pager attack on Hezbollah last year struggle to recover
  • On Sept. 17, 2024, thousands of pagers distributed to the Hezbollah group were blowing up in homes, offices, shops and on frontlines across Lebanon, remotely detonated by Israel

BAZOURIEH: Her head heavy with a cold, Sarah Jaffal woke up late and shuffled into the kitchen. The silence of the apartment was pierced by the unfamiliar buzzing of a pager lying near a table.
Annoyed but curious, the 21-year-old picked up the device belonging to a family member. She saw a message: “Error,” then “Press OK.”
Jaffal didn’t have time to respond. She didn't even hear the explosion.
“Suddenly everything went dark,” she said. “I felt I was in a whirlpool.” She was in and out of consciousness for hours, blood streaming from her mouth, excruciating pain in her fingertips.
At that moment on Sept. 17, 2024, thousands of pagers distributed to the Hezbollah group were blowing up in homes, offices, shops and on frontlines across Lebanon, remotely detonated by Israel. Hezbollah had been firing rockets into Israel almost daily for nearly a year in solidarity with Palestinians in Gaza.
After years of planning, Israel had infiltrated the supply chain of Hezbollah, the most powerful of Iran’s armed proxies in the Middle East. It used shell companies to sell the rigged devices to commercial associates of Hezbollah in an operation aimed at disrupting the Iran-backed group’s communication networks and harming and disorienting its members.
The pager attack was stunning in its scope. It wounded more than 3,000 people and killed 12, including two children.
Israel boasts of it as a show of its technological and intelligence prowess. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu recently presented U.S. President Donald Trump with a golden pager as a gift.
Human rights and United Nations reports, however, say the attack may have violated international law, calling it indiscriminate.
Hezbollah, also a major Shiite political party with a wide network of social institutions, has acknowledged that most of those wounded and killed were its fighters or personnel. The simultaneous explosions in populated areas, however, also wounded many civilians like Jaffal, who was one of four women along with 71 men who received medical treatment in Iran. Hezbollah won't say how many civilians were hurt, but says most were relatives of the group's personnel or workers in Hezbollah-linked institutions, including hospitals.
Ten months later, survivors are on a slow, painful path to recovery. They are easily identifiable, with missing eyes, faces laced with scars, hands with missing fingers — signs of the moment when they checked the buzzing devices. The scars also mark them as a likely Hezbollah member or a dependent.
Rare interviews
For weeks after the attack, The Associated Press attempted to reach survivors, who stayed out of the public eye. Many spent weeks outside Lebanon for medical treatment. Most in the group’s tight-knit community remained quiet while Hezbollah investigated the massive security breach.
The AP also contacted Hezbollah and its association treating those affected by the attacks to see if they could facilitate contacts. The group, at war with Israel for decades, is also one of the most powerful political factions in Lebanon, with members holding nearly 10% of parliament seats and two ministerial posts. It has its own security apparatus and offers extensive health, religious and other social and commercial services in southern and eastern Lebanon and parts of Beirut.
A representative of Hezbollah’s Association of Wounded did share with AP the contacts of eight people who had expressed readiness to share their stories. The AP independently contacted them, and six agreed to be interviewed. They included Jaffal and another woman, two 12-year-old children and two men, one a preacher, the other a fighter.
All are family members of Hezbollah officials or fighters. All lost fingers. Shrapnel lodged under their skin. The men were blinded. The women and children each lost one eye, with the other damaged.
There were no minders present, and no questions were off-limits. Some declined to answer questions about the identity or role of the pager’s owner, identifying them only as relatives.
The hours of interviews offered a rare glimpse into the attack's human toll. Survivors described how the incessantly buzzing pagers exploded when picked up, whether they pressed a button or not. Some said their ears still ring from the blast.
”I’ve put up with so much pain I never imagined I could tolerate,” said Jaffal, a university graduate.
The survivors expressed ongoing support for Hezbollah but acknowledged the security breach. They blamed Israel for their wounds.
Rights groups have argued the attack was indiscriminate because the pagers detonated in populated areas, and it was nearly impossible to know who was holding the devices or where they were when they exploded. The preacher, Mustafa Choeib, recalled that his two young daughters used to play with his pager and he sometimes found it among their toys.
Israel’s Mossad spy agency declined to comment on AP questions about those allegations. But Israeli security officials have rejected that the attack was indiscriminate, saying the pagers were exclusively sold to Hezbollah members and that tests were conducted to ensure that only the person holding the pager would be harmed.
A turning point for Hezbollah
The pagers were the opening strike in an Israeli campaign that would cripple Hezbollah.
The day after the pager bombings, Hezbollah walkie-talkies exploded in another Israeli attack that killed at least 25 people and injured over 600, according to Lebanon’s health ministry. Israel then launched a campaign of airstrikes that killed Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah and hundreds of other militants and civilians. The war ended with a ceasefire in November.
Nine months later, Israel stunned and weakened Iran with a campaign of airstrikes that targeted Iranian nuclear sites, senior military officials and symbols of the Islamic Republic’s grip.
Hezbollah, meanwhile, has been left reeling. Besides the military blow, the group is left with the financial and psychological burden of thousands who need long-term medical treatment and recovery.
Pagers are widely seen as outdated, but they were a main part of Hezbollah’s communication network. Nasrallah had repeatedly warned against cellphones. Israel could easily track them, he said.
With old pagers breaking down, the group ordered new ones. Israel sold the rigged devices through shell companies.
According to a Hezbollah official, the group had ordered 15,000 pagers. Only 8,000 arrived, and nearly half were distributed to members. Others destined for Lebanon were intercepted in Turkey days after the attack when Hezbollah tipped off officials there.
Hezbollah's investigation into how its communications networks were infiltrated found that the purchase of the rigged pagers resulted from negligence, and its officials were cleared of suspicions of collaborating with Israel, the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss the probe.
Some Hezbollah members had complained the new pagers were too bulky. Some didn’t use them because batteries died quickly or heated up.
Hospitals were like a ‘slaughterhouse’
The simultaneous explosions spread chaos and panic in Lebanon. Hospitals were overwhelmed.
It was like a “slaughterhouse,” Zeinab Mestrah said.
Until she reached a hospital, Mestrah thought an explosion in an electricity cable had blinded her, not the pager of a relative, a Hezbollah member.
“People didn’t recognize each other. Families were shouting out their relatives’ names to identify them,” she recalled from her home in Beirut.
Doctors mainly stopped her bleeding. Five days later, the 26-year-old interior decorator and event planner traveled to Iran for treatment. Her right eye was saved, with shrapnel removed.
The first thing she saw after 10 days of darkness was her mother. She also lost the tips of three fingers on her right hand. Her ears still ring today.
Mestrah said her recovery has delayed plans to find a new career. She realizes she cannot resume her old one.
The next thing she looks forward to is her wedding, to her fiance of eight years.
“He is half my recovery,” she said.
The representative of Hezbollah’s Association of Wounded said none of those injured has fully recovered. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to address the media.
A Hezbollah fighter struck
Mahdi Sheri, a 23-year-old Hezbollah fighter, had been ordered back to the frontline on the day of the attack. Before leaving, he charged his pager and spent time with family. For his security, no mobile phones were allowed in the house while he was there.
There were many drones in the sky that day.
His pager usually vibrated. This time, it beeped. He approached to check for Hezbollah warnings or directives. He saw the message: “Error,” then “Press OK.” He followed the prompt.
He felt a sharp pain in his head and eyes. His bed was covered in blood. Thinking he had been hit by a drone, he stumbled outside and passed out.
He was first treated in Syria, then in Iraq as hospitals in Lebanon struggled to handle the high number of patients. Shrapnel was removed from his left eye socket and he had a prosthetic eye installed.
For a while, he could see shadows with his remaining eye. With time, that dimmed. He can no longer play football. Hezbollah is helping him find a new job. Sheri realizes it's impossible now to find a role alongside Hezbollah fighters.
He asked his fiancée if she wanted to move on. She refused. They married during a video call while he was in Iraq, a month after his injury.
“Nothing stood in our way,” Sheri said. He moves between southern Lebanon and Beirut’s southern suburbs, where his wife lives and studies to be a nurse.
The community is shaken. Some children fear coming near their fathers, he said.
“It not only affects us but also those around us.”
A boy with a face full of scars
In southern Lebanon, 12-year-old Hussein Dheini picked up the pager that belonged to his father, a Hezbollah member. The explosion cost the boy his right eye and damaged his left. It blew off the tips of two fingers on his right hand. On his left hand, the pinky and middle finger remain.
His teeth were blown out. His grandmother picked them off the couch, along with the tip of his nose.
“It was a nightmare,” said his mother, Faten Haidar.
The boy, a member of Hezbollah scouts, the group’s youth movement, had been talented at reciting the Quran. Now he struggles to pace his breathing. He can read with one eye but is quickly exhausted. The family has moved to a ground-floor apartment so he climbs fewer stairs.
He wears glasses now. Pink scars crisscross his face and his reconstructed nose. He spends more time with other children injured like him, and only goes to school for exams. Dheini can’t go swimming with his father, since sea or river water could harm his wounds.
“Before, I used to spend a lot of time on my phone. I used to run and go to school,” the boy said. “Now I go to Beirut” for treatment.
Impatience to rebuild a life
Jaffal has had 45 surgeries in nine months. More will come, including reconstructive surgery on her face and fingers. Two fingers are fused. Four are missing.
She is waiting for a prosthetic right eye. Further surgeries on her left one have been delayed. She can recognize people and places she knows, though she relies more on memory than vision.
The loss of sensation in her fingertips is disorienting. The nerve pain elsewhere is sharp. Weekly physiotherapy reminds her of how much is still ahead.
The driven, inquisitive woman leans on her faith to summon patience.
“God only burdens us with what we can bear,” she said.
She has spoken in religious gatherings at Hezbollah’s invitation about her recovery and resilience. Her biggest fear is becoming dependent.
An information technology graduate, she used to produce videos of family celebrations and events — a career she wanted to explore. Now she watches videos on her phone, though they are blurry.
She giggles to ease the discomfort, and enjoys taking the lead when meeting with fellow victims because she can see better than most.
“I forget my wounds when I see another wounded,” she said.


“Have you seen a state attack negotiators like that?” Qatar PM slams Israeli strike on Doha at UN

“Have you seen a state attack negotiators like that?” Qatar PM slams Israeli strike on Doha at UN
Updated 12 September 2025

“Have you seen a state attack negotiators like that?” Qatar PM slams Israeli strike on Doha at UN

“Have you seen a state attack negotiators like that?” Qatar PM slams Israeli strike on Doha at UN
  • Sheikh Mohammed called the strikes a” targeted effort to sabotage diplomacy, to perpetuate suffering, and to silence those seeking a way out of the bloodshed.”
  • He warned that “if the United Nations remains silent, it legitimizes the law of the jungle”

NEW YORK:  “Have you seen a state attack negotiators like that?” Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman bin Jassim Al Thani asked the United Nations Security Council on Thursday, following an Israeli airstrike on a diplomatic compound in Doha that killed several people, including a Qatari security officer.
Addressing an emergency meeting convened at the request of Algeria, Somalia, and Pakistan, the Qatari Prime Minister described the September 9 strike as a “criminal assault” and a “clear violation of Qatar’s sovereignty,” warning that it threatened to derail ongoing ceasefire negotiations and peace efforts in Gaza.
The airstrike hit a residential complex in Doha housing members of Hamas’s political bureau and their families. The location, Sheikh Mohammed emphasized, was widely known to diplomats, journalists, and others involved in the mediation process. 
The Prime Minister said the Hamas delegation had been meeting to discuss the latest U.S. ceasefire proposal when the missiles struck at approximately 15:45 local time. “This was no accident,” he told Council members. “This was a targeted effort to sabotage diplomacy, to perpetuate suffering, and to silence those seeking a way out of the bloodshed.”
Under-Secretary-General for Political and Peacebuilding Affairs Rosemary DiCarlo, delivering the Secretary-General’s message, described the Israeli action as “an alarming escalation” and a direct violation of Qatar’s territorial integrity. 
“This strike potentially opens a new and perilous chapter in this devastating conflict,” she said. “Any action that undermines mediation weakens confidence in the very mechanisms we rely on to resolve conflicts.”
Israel took responsibility for the attack, with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu calling it “a wholly independent Israeli operation” in response to a deadly Hamas-claimed attack in Jerusalem the day prior. Hamas confirmed that the son of its chief negotiator, Khalil al-Hayya, was among those killed, though the senior leadership reportedly survived.
The United Kingdom condemned Israel’s airstrikes on Doha as a flagrant violation of Qatar’s sovereignty, warning they risk further regional escalation and jeopardize ceasefire negotiations. Ambassador Barbara Woodward praised Qatar’s “resolute commitment” to diplomacy and dialogue, commending the leadership of His Highness Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani.in championing peace efforts.
Woodward reiterated that Hamas must release all hostages, agree to a ceasefire, and disarm, but also criticized Israel’s ongoing military operation in Gaza City, stating, “The Israeli government’s decision to further escalate its offensive in Gaza is wrong.” She called for an immediate increase in humanitarian aid and urged Israel to lift all restrictions, reaffirming the UK’s support for a two-state solution as the only path to lasting peace.
The United States expressed concern over the incident while reaffirming its commitment to Israel’s security and the removal of Hamas. Acting U.S. Ambassador Dorothy Shea conveyed condolences to the family of the fallen Qatari officer, calling Qatar a “sovereign nation bravely taking risks to broker peace.” Still, she urged Council members not to use the attack to “question Israel’s commitment to bringing their hostages home.”
President Donald Trump, who spoke to both Netanyahu and Qatar’s Emir after the strike, believes the incident could serve as “an opportunity for peace,” according to Shea. The U.S., she said, remains committed to securing a ceasefire, facilitating humanitarian access, and pushing Hamas to disarm and release all hostages.
But Qatar’s Prime Minister was unequivocal in his condemnation, saying that the strike had “uncovered the true intention of Israel’s extremist leadership,” which he accused of undermining any prospect of peace. Drawing parallels to the U.S.-Taliban talks hosted in Doha, Sheikh Mohammed said the targeting of Hamas negotiators directly contradicted the norms of conflict mediation. “The United States never once struck the Taliban negotiators in Doha,” he said. “On the contrary, it was through those channels that we ended the longest war in U.S. history. Why is Israel trying to destroy the very possibility of a negotiated peace?”
He added that Qatar remains committed to mediation and humanitarian efforts, having helped secure the release of 148 hostages and facilitate aid corridors into Gaza. “This attack is not only on Qatar—it is on every country striving for peace,” he said. “The international community is being tested. If the United Nations remains silent, it legitimizes the law of the jungle.”
DiCarlo said that  “durable and just solutions in the Middle East will not emerge from bombs, but from diplomacy,” she said.
Qatar has pledged to continue its efforts in partnership with Egypt and the U.S. to reach a ceasefire in Gaza and secure the release of hostages. “We call for peace, not war,” Sheikh Mohammed concluded. “But we will not condone attacks on our sovereignty. We reserve the right to respond within the framework of international law.”
Israeli Ambassador to the UN, Danny Danon, addressed Prime Minister Al Thani directly and said: “Prime Minister Al Thani, history will not be kind to accomplices. Either Qatar condemns Hamas, expels Hamas, and brings Hamas to justice. Or Israel will.” The ambassador emphasized: “There will be no immunity for terrorists.” 
Danon added: “Today, on September 11, the world remembers the brutal and murderous terrorist attack in the United States. When bin Laden was eliminated in Pakistan, the question asked was not ‘Why was a terrorist attacked on foreign soil?’, but ‘Why was he given sanctuary in the first place?’ There was no immunity for bin Laden and there can be no immunity for Hamas.”


Yemen’s national museum damaged during Israeli airstrikes, death toll rises to 46

Yemen’s national museum damaged during Israeli airstrikes, death toll rises to 46
Updated 12 September 2025

Yemen’s national museum damaged during Israeli airstrikes, death toll rises to 46

Yemen’s national museum damaged during Israeli airstrikes, death toll rises to 46
  • The Israeli airstrikes in Yemen that killed at least 35 people and wounded more than 130 others also caused damaged to Yemen’s national museum and other historical sites in its capital city

SANAA: Yemen’s Houthi Health Ministry said on Thursday the number of casualties in Israel’s Wednesday attacks rose to 46 people killed and 165 wounded.

Israel struck the Yemeni capital Sanaa and the northern province of Al-Jawf, the latest in a series of attacks and counterstrikes between Israel and the Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen, part of a spillover from the war in Gaza.

The airstrikes caused damaged to Yemen's national museum and other historical sites in its capital city, the Houthi Ministry of Culture said Thursday.

The status of the artifacts inside the museum is still unclear but thousands of historical artifacts are at risk of damage, according to the ministry. Associated Press photos and video footage from the site of the strike showed damage to the building’s facade.

The ministry called on the UN cultural agency UNESCO to condemn the attack and to intervene to help protect this historical building and its artifacts.

Most of those killed were in Sanaa, the capital, where a military headquarters and a fuel station were hit on Wednesday, the Houthi-run health ministry said.

Israel has previously launched waves of airstrikes in response to the Houthis’ firing of missiles and drones at Israel. The Iran-backed Houthis say they are supporting Hamas and the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, and on Sunday they sent a drone that breached Israel’s multilayered air defenses and slammed into a southern airport.

It was the latest in a series of attacks and counterstrikes between Israel and the Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen, part of a spillover from the war in Gaza.

The attack followed an August 30 strike on Sanaa that killed the prime minister of the Houthi-run government and several ministers, in the first such assault to target senior officials.
“The strikes were carried out in response to attacks led by the Houthi terror regime against the State of Israel, during which unmanned aerial vehicles and surface-to-surface missiles were launched toward Israeli territory,” the Israeli military said.
Earlier on Thursday, the Israeli military said it intercepted two launches from Yemen, a missile and a drone, operations the Houthis claimed responsibility for later.
The group’s military spokesperson said the operation was also “within the framework of responding to the Israeli aggression against our country.”
Houthis, who control the most populous parts of Yemen, have attacked vessels in the Red Sea in what they describe as acts of solidarity with the Palestinians in Gaza.
They have also fired missiles toward Israel, most of which have been intercepted. Israel has responded with strikes on Houthi-controlled areas of Yemen, including the vital Hodeidah port.
 


Why Gaza’s brightest students risk losing scholarships at top Western universities

Why Gaza’s brightest students risk losing scholarships at top Western universities
Updated 10 min 54 sec ago

Why Gaza’s brightest students risk losing scholarships at top Western universities

Why Gaza’s brightest students risk losing scholarships at top Western universities
  • Thousands of Gaza students offered places abroad remain stranded as closed borders and stalled visas block their academic futures
  • Campaigners warn talented students may lose scholarships — or their lives — without urgent action by governments to secure safe passage

DUBAI: When Balsam received an unconditional offer from a UK university to continue her studies in artificial intelligence, it felt as though a door had opened offering a way out of war-torn Gaza to a parallel universe.

Lancaster University waived its usual English-language proficiency test and offered the 27-year-old an unconditional place to pursue a master’s degree in a field she loves.

Her ambition is to design accessible learning tools for children in conflict zones who have lost access to classrooms.

That goal, however, may yet remain out of reach, as Balsam remains trapped in Gaza, where Israel’s blockades and bombardment have sealed nearly every exit.

Palestinian student Balsam s one of many talented young Gazans who earned places at universities in Europe and the US, only to see their futures deferred by closed borders, stalled visas and a grinding war. (Supplied)

Speaking to Arab News via WhatsApp, she described her admission as “a beacon of hope amid the devastation.”

“This acceptance means a great deal to me,” she said. “It’s not just an academic opportunity; it’s a light in the darkness we are currently living in.”

Her struggle is far from unique. Balsam is one of many talented young Gazans who earned places at universities in Europe and the US, only to see their futures deferred by closed borders, stalled visas and a grinding war.

With the academic year already underway at many institutions, students risk losing scholarships if they cannot leave soon. Campaigners warn that every delay wastes both money and human potential.

Maha Ali looks at the destruction of the Islamic University of Gaza, where she now shelters, in Gaza City, on June 1, 2025. (REUTERS)

“Evacuations have been challenging and hard-won since the borders have closed, leaving students and scholars with no way to take up opportunities offered abroad,” a spokesperson for Scholars at Risk, an international network that promotes academic freedom, told Arab News.

The organization stressed it is “not directly engaged in evacuation efforts,” but continues to provide assistance to scholars while monitoring academic freedom conditions in the occupied Palestinian territories.

Even so, it notes there have been limited successes, thanks to the “intensive efforts of governments, university leaders, and civil society organizations,” particularly in Ireland, France, Finland and the UK in recent months.

The UK alone has offered about 40 fully funded places, including the prestigious Chevening Scholarships. Nonetheless, all remain stranded in the enclave.

Funded by the UK government, the Chevening Scholarships provides fully funded scholarships to qualified students from various countries. (Supplied)

In early August, the British government told nine Gaza students awarded Chevening Scholarships that it was working to facilitate their evacuation, the BBC reported. The former home secretary, Yvette Cooper, also approved plans to help about 30 more students with private, fully funded scholarships.

“This remains a complex and challenging task, but the home secretary has made it crystal clear to her officials that she wants no stone unturned in efforts to ensure there are arrangements in place to allow this cohort of talented students to take up their places at UK universities as soon as possible,” a Home Office source told The Guardian in late August.

On Sept. 1, Cooper told the UK Parliament the Home Office was in the process of putting in place “systems to issue expedited visas with biometric checks” for the 40 Gaza students.

“Later this year, we will set out plans to establish a permanent framework for refugee students to come and study in the UK,” she added.

The breakthrough followed months of lobbying by MPs, academics and campaigners urging the government to defer biometric checks for Gaza students.

IN NUMBERS

88,000 University-age students enrolled in Gaza before October 2023.

19 Higher education institutions damaged or destroyed by the conflict.

(Source: Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics)

Since October 2023, Gaza’s visa application center has been closed. Without biometric data, students cannot secure the visas they need.

But leaving Gaza also requires Israeli approval to exit and for onward travel through Jordan or Egypt to complete visa biometrics. With no end to the conflict in sight, safe passage remains elusive.

Gaza40, a UK-based campaign advocating for the 40 scholarship students, warned that time was running out.

“We emphasize the urgency of our students’ situations, with many who feel they may die before receiving concrete support for evacuation, and some risk losing scholarships if the government does not evacuate them before deadlines,” the group said in a statement.

A drone view shows the exterior of the Islamic University of Gaza (IUG) which was destroyed in Israeli strikes during the war, amid a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, in Gaza City, January 24, 2025. (REUTERS)

Scholars at Risk has likewise urged governments to increase efforts “in collaboration with higher education institutions when possible, to facilitate the safe passage of individuals out of Gaza.”

Since October 2023, Israel’s offensive has killed at least 64,600 Palestinians and wounded more than 163,300 others, according to Gaza’s health authority. Urban areas have been destroyed, while ceasefire talks remain fragile and inconclusive.

Israel mounted operations in Gaza in retaliation for the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas-led attack on southern Israel, which saw some 1,200 people killed, the majority of them civilians, and around 250 taken hostage, a handful of which are thought to remain alive in Gaza.

Scholars at Risk said Gaza’s academic infrastructure was now “effectively devastated.”

Displaced 19-year-old Palestinian student of Gaza's Azhar Institute, Saja Adwan, studies at a damaged school building being used as a shelter for displaced families, in Gaza City, May 28, 2025. (REUTERS)

“Palestinian students, scholars, and universities have faced extreme challenges in the context of Israel’s ongoing military action in Gaza and raids in the West Bank,” the organization’s spokesperson said.

“By 2024-25, Gaza’s higher education infrastructure had been largely destroyed.”

Before October 2023, about 88,000 students were enrolled in higher education, according to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics. Today, all 19 institutions lie in ruins.

Israa University was the last to be demolished by Israeli forces in January 2024, according to the UN Human Rights Office.

Major campuses, including the Islamic University of Gaza, Al-Azhar University, and Al-Quds Open University, have been bombed, leveled or repurposed as Israeli military sites.

A picture taken on February 15, 2024 shows the heavily damaged building of Al-Azhar University in Gaza City, amid the continuing war between Israel and the Palestinian Hamas movement. (AFP)

Balsam has been fortunate. Her university offer was initially conditional upon passing English language requirements — a routine step in most countries but nearly impossible in Gaza, where all test centers are shuttered.

“All English test centers have been destroyed, and there is no safe environment to take an exam,” she said. “We lack basic necessities — electricity, a stable internet connection, and even physical safety.”

Her initial attempts to prove her proficiency through prior coursework and professional experience were rejected. Without unconditional admission, she was unable to obtain a Confirmation of Acceptance for Studies, the document needed for a student visa.

“I was very frustrated and had lost hope of getting an unconditional offer,” she said. “But in the end, after many attempts and with the support of the Gaza40 students organizers, I got it. I want to give hope to many students who have not yet received an unconditional offer.”

Despite the unconditional offer to study in safety, Balsam’s family faces an ongoing ordeal after their house was destroyed on July 28. “We have now lost our home and all our memories,” she said. “My family and I are in the street, trying to comprehend what has happened to us.”

Palestinians, displaced by the Israeli offensive, shelter in a tent camp on a beach amid summer heat in Gaza City, August 12, 2025. (REUTERS)

Yet the loss has only hardened her resolve: “I want to go abroad, get an education, and return to lift up my society and prove that a person can rise from under the rubble and build a bright future.

“Hope is my only fuel right now, and I am confident that knowledge will light my path and the path of my generation.”

Her perseverance echoed that of Huthayfa, another Gazan student who received an unconditional offer to study city planning at the UK’s University of Glasgow. However, he cannot leave.

“The crossings, which are the only way out of Gaza, are completely closed under strict control, and no one can leave the Strip,” the 24-year-old told Arab News via WhatsApp. Israel’s bombardment has wiped out the very institutions needed to process travel documents, he added.

A view of the main gate on the Palestinian side of the Kerem Shalom border crossing from the Gaza strip leading to the Israeli side. (AFP file photo)

For many families stripped of their livelihoods, the financial cost of studying abroad has become almost impossible to meet.

Famine was confirmed in Gaza City on August 22 by UN-backed food security experts, although aid teams had long warned of mass starvation across the enclave under the Israeli blockade. By the end of September, famine is expected to spread into Deir Al-Balah and Khan Yunis, according to Tom Fletcher, the UN emergency relief coordinator.

Yet, like Balsam, Huthayfa refuses to surrender his dream. “Despite the blockade, the destruction, and the suffering we endure, I am still holding on to my dream,” he said. “Education is the only way to rebuild Gaza and create a better future for our generations to come.”

Huthayfa prepared his applications in hospital corridors, encouraged by doctors and driven by persistence. For him, urban planning is not just a career path but a mission to rebuild Gaza on a human scale.

A picture taken from a position at the Israeli border with the Gaza Strip shows the destruction due to Israeli bombardment in the besieged Palestinian territory on May 18, 2025. (AFP)

“Urban planning is not just about designing new buildings, but about designing the future of a city that has lost so many of its essential elements,” he said. “Rebuilding Gaza will not just be a professional task; it will be a humanitarian mission.

“At the end of each session in the corridors, I would stand and tell myself, ‘I will come back here again and again until I get what I want,’ because all of these people deserve life, and they deserve a future,” he said.

While the UK weighs its options, other European countries have moved more decisively. Ireland evacuated 52 Gaza students last month, allowing them to resume studies in Dublin and Cork after completing biometrics in Jordan and Turkiye. France, Italy, and Belgium have adopted similar measures.

For now, the ambitions of Gaza’s brightest minds remain suspended between promise and devastation. Universities lie in rubble, academic deadlines loom, and the few routes out of the enclave are sealed by war and bureaucracy.
 

 


Palestinians face new dilemma as Israeli forces advance

Palestinians face new dilemma as Israeli forces advance
Updated 11 September 2025

Palestinians face new dilemma as Israeli forces advance

Palestinians face new dilemma as Israeli forces advance
  • Deaths from malnutrition, starvation rise to at least 411

GENEVA: Palestinians in the relatively unscathed Nasser area of Gaza City were having to decide whether to stay or go on Thursday after the Israeli military dropped leaflets warning that troops would take control of the western neighborhood.

Israel has ordered the hundreds of thousands of people living in Gaza City to leave as it intensifies its all-out war on Hamas, but with little safety, space, and food in the rest of Gaza, people face dire choices.
“It has been almost two years, with no rest, no settling down, not even sleep,” said Ahmed Al-Dayeh, a father, as he and his family prepared to flee the city in a truck pulled by a motorcycle, laden with some of their belongings.
“We can’t sit with our children ... just to sit with them. Our life revolves around war,” he said. 
“We have to go from this area to that area. We can’t take it anymore, we are tired.”
Israeli forces killed 18 people across the territory on Thursday, according to medics and local health authorities, including 11 in strikes on various parts of Gaza City, five in a strike on a single location in Beach refugee camp, and two who were searching for food near Rafah in the south.
Israeli ground troops had operated in parts of the Nasser area at the start of the war in October 2023, and the leaflets dropped late on Wednesday left residents fearful that tanks would soon advance to occupy the entire neighborhood.
In the past week, Israeli forces have been operating in three Gaza City neighborhoods further east — Shejaia, Zeitoun, and Tuffah — and sent tanks briefly into Sheikh Radwan, which is adjacent to Nasser. It said last Thursday it controlled 40 percent of the city.
On Wednesday, the Israeli military said it struck 360 targets in Gaza in what it said was an escalation of strikes that targeted “terrorist infrastructure, cameras, reconnaissance operations rooms, sniper positions, anti-tank missile launch sites, and command and control complexes.”
It added that in the coming days, it would intensify attacks in a focused manner to strike Hamas infrastructure, “disrupting its operational readiness, and reducing the threat to our forces in preparation for the next phases of the operation.”
Gaza City families continued to stream out of their homes in areas targeted by Israeli aerial and ground operations, heading either westward toward the center of the city and along the coast, or south toward other parts of the Strip.
But some were either unwilling or unable to leave.
“We don’t have enough money, enough to flee. We don’t have any means to go south like they say,” said Abu Hani, who was attending the funeral of one of the people killed in Thursday’s strikes, who was his friend.
The war was triggered by attacks launched from Gaza on southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023.
Israel’s military assault on Gaza has killed over 64,000 people, also mostly civilians, according to local health authorities, caused a hunger crisis and wider humanitarian disaster, and reduced much of the enclave to rubble.
Seven more Palestinians, including a child, have died of malnutrition and starvation in Gaza in the past 24 hours, the territory’s Health Ministry said on Thursday, raising the number of deaths from such causes to at least 411, including 142 children.
Israel says it is taking steps to prevent food shortages in Gaza, letting hundreds of trucks of supplies into the enclave, though international agencies say far more is needed.


Invasive plants and bacteria threaten Iraq’s Euphrates

Invasive plants and bacteria threaten Iraq’s Euphrates
Updated 12 September 2025

Invasive plants and bacteria threaten Iraq’s Euphrates

Invasive plants and bacteria threaten Iraq’s Euphrates

BAGHDAD: Iraq’s Euphrates River is running at historically low levels as the drought-stricken country faces its worst water scarcity in living memory.
Its 46 million people face rising temperatures, chronic water shortages, and year-on-year droughts, in a country intensely impacted by climate change.
The impact has been felt most acutely in the south, where reduced flow is fueling water pollution and the rapid spread of algae.
The once-mighty Tigris and Euphrates, which have irrigated the country for millennia, originate in Turkey, and authorities in Iraq have repeatedly blamed upstream Turkish dams for significantly reducing river flows.
“In recent weeks, the Euphrates has seen its lowest water levels in decades,” particularly in the south, said Hasan Al-Khateeb, an expert from the University of Kufa.
Iraq currently receives less than 35 percent of its allocated share of the Tigris and Euphrates, according to authorities.
To maintain the flow of the Euphrates, Iraq is releasing more water from its dwindling reservoirs than it receives, a measure that may not be sustainable.
Khaled Shamal, spokesman of the Water Resources Ministry, said that water reserves in artificial lakes “are at their lowest in the history of the Iraqi state.”
Reserves have fallen from 10 billion cubic meters in late May to less than 8 billion, which is less than 8 percent of their capacity.

BACKGROUND

Iraq’s 46 million people face rising temperatures, chronic water shortages, and year-on-year droughts, in a country intensely impacted by climate change.

Reduced water flow has resulted in poor water quality and poses a threat to the Euphrates ecosystem.
Khateeb said that releasing water from aging reserves to feed the river has led to the spread of algae, which depletes oxygen and endangers aquatic life.
The environment ministry warned Sunday of increased bacterial pollution and large areas of algae in Karbala province.
Authorities have also warned of “very poor” water quality in the neighboring province of Najaf.
In Lake Najaf, a photographer said the once-lush lake has been reduced mainly to stagnant pools scattered across the basin.
In Nasiriyah, the capital of Dhi Qar province, a photographer saw water hyacinth blooming in the Euphrates.
Water hyacinths, present in Iraq since the 1990s, have become more prevalent due to the low water flow, which also worsen their impact, according to Al-Khateeb.
This invasive plant can absorb up to 5 liters of water per plant per day and obstructs sunlight and oxygen, which are vital for aquatic life.
The Environment Ministry said Monday it purifies water to strict standards, and the quality is so far “acceptable” and safe for use in cities in south and central Iraq.