Attack on Darfur hospital kills one: MSF

Attack on Darfur hospital kills one: MSF
People sit outside the cholera isolation centre in at the refugee camps of western Sudan, in Tawila city in Darfur, on August 14, 2025. (File/AFP)
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Updated 20 August 2025

Attack on Darfur hospital kills one: MSF

Attack on Darfur hospital kills one: MSF
  • The hospital in Zalingei, capital of Central Darfur state, was attacked by armed relatives of a patient who had died of a gunshot wound

KHARTOUM: An armed assault on a hospital in the war-ravaged Darfur region of Sudan killed one person, medical charity Doctors Without Borders (MSF) said Wednesday, adding it had been forced to suspend operations.
Five people were also wounded in last week's attack, one of them a health worker supported by MSF, it added.
Since the war between Sudan's regular army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces began in April 2023, more than 120 aid workers have been killed, according to the United Nations.
"Humanitarian needs in Sudan have reached unprecedented levels. Yet those who step forward to help -- our frontline aid workers -- are being attacked, detained, harassed and even killed," UN humanitarian coordinator Luca Renda said Tuesday.
The hospital in Zalingei, capital of Central Darfur state, was attacked by armed relatives of a patient who had died of a gunshot wound. They then clashed with other armed individuals.
A hand grenade went off in front of the emergency room, causing the casualties.
The facility was the only referral hospital serving the area's population of around half a million, who are currently facing a deadly cholera outbreak.
According to Sudan's doctors' union, 90 percent of the country's hospitals have been forced to close at some point during the war. Many have been repeatedly bombed, stormed by fighters and looted of all supplies.
Doctors have themselves been attacked and forced to operate on fighters at gunpoint.
Nearly 25 million people in Sudan face dire hunger, with millions cut off from life-saving aid.


UAE evacuates 57 Palestinian patients from Gaza, dispatches water tanks

UAE evacuates 57 Palestinian patients from Gaza, dispatches water tanks
Updated 19 sec ago

UAE evacuates 57 Palestinian patients from Gaza, dispatches water tanks

UAE evacuates 57 Palestinian patients from Gaza, dispatches water tanks
  • The mission was conducted through Ramon Airport in Israel and through the Karam Abu Salem crossing
  • Since October 2023, under “Operation Chivalrous Knight 3,” the UAE has evacuated 2,961 Palestinian patients and their companions from Gaza

LONDON: The UAE evacuated dozens of patients from the Gaza Strip to receive medical treatment as part of its humanitarian efforts to assist Palestinians.

On Wednesday, a mission was conducted to evacuate 57 patients from Gaza, along with their family members, via Ramon Airport in Israel and through the Karam Abu Salem crossing, to receive medical treatment in the UAE.

Since October 2023, under “Operation Chivalrous Knight 3,” the UAE has evacuated 2,961 patients and their companions from Gaza, according to the Emirates News Agency.

The UAE International Aid Agency conducted its 29th medical evacuation on Wednesday, aiming to treat 1,000 wounded Palestinians and 1,000 cancer patients in hospitals across the country.

Sultan Mohammed Al-Shamsi, vice chairman of the agency, affirmed the UAE’s commitment to easing the suffering of the Palestinian people in Gaza.

His agency is coordinating with international organizations to provide healthcare, medical treatment, medications and essential supplies to patients in Gaza and the wounded at the UAE’s floating hospital off the coast of Arish, Egypt. It collaborates with a UAE-operated field hospital in southern Gaza to address the humanitarian crisis caused by the war, which has affected children, women and the elderly.

The UAE also sent the largest convoy of water tankers to northern Gaza on Wednesday to help alleviate the worsening humanitarian crisis and address the acute shortage of drinkable water, the WAM added.

The initiative seeks to restore safe water access where infrastructure is damaged, while also providing food parcels and aid to displaced families in northern Gaza.


Doha ready to host 8,000 delegates at UN social development summit, Qatari envoy says

Doha ready to host 8,000 delegates at UN social development summit, Qatari envoy says
Updated 7 min 23 sec ago

Doha ready to host 8,000 delegates at UN social development summit, Qatari envoy says

Doha ready to host 8,000 delegates at UN social development summit, Qatari envoy says
  • Sheikha Alya Ahmed Saif Al-Thani, Qatar’s ambassador to the UN, predicts event next week will be a ‘defining moment for global social development’
  • The international community is ‘coming together in Doha to recommit to social justice and put people at the center of sustainable development,’ she adds

NEW YORK CITY: More than 8,000 representatives of governments, the UN, civil society, academia and the private sector are expected to attend the second World Summit for Social Development in Doha next week, the Qatari envoy to the UN, Sheikha Alya Ahmed Saif Al-Thani, said on Tuesday.
Speaking at a joint briefing with president of the UN General Assembly, Annalena Baerbock, Sheikha Alya said the three-day gathering, which begins on Nov. 4, would mark a “defining moment for global social development,” coming as it does 30 years after the first summit in Copenhagen.
“The State of Qatar is delighted to welcome the international community … all coming together in Doha to recommit to social justice and put people at the center of sustainable development,” she said.
At the heart of the summit will be the “Doha Political Declaration on Social Development,” which Sheikha Alya said reaffirms as essential components of sustainable development the “interlinked priorities” of poverty eradication, full and productive employment and decent work for all, and social inclusion.
The declaration also underscores the principle that social justice cannot exist without peace and security, or without respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms, she added. It sends out a “clear call to action” that recommits governments to the creation of the conditions necessary for social development for all, and includes strong provisions relating to implementation, follow-up and review of efforts to achieve this to ensure accountability and measurable progress.
Sheikha Alya thanked Sophie De Smedt and Omar Hilale, respectively the Belgian and Moroccan envoys to the UN, for their “skillful leadership” in steering negotiations among member states toward consensus on the text of the declaration.
The summit, she added, will feature several high-level events, including the first leaders’ meeting of the Global Alliance Against Hunger and Poverty; the Doha Solutions Forum for Social Development; and a high-level event focused on education as the new foundation of the social contract, with the participation of UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres.
Specific forums for the private sector and civil society will help to “underscore the summit’s inclusive and principled position,” Sheikha Alya added.
Qatar, she noted, continues to build on its legacy as host of major UN conferences in recent decades, including the 2008 Financing for Development Conference; the UN Climate Change Conference, COP18, in 2012; the 13th UN Congress on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice in 2015; and, in 2023, the fifth UN Conference on the Least Developed Countries.
“Doha has emerged as a symbol of dialogue and global solidarity,” Sheikha Alya said. “We are confident the summit will deliver hopeful and actionable commitments; not just statements of intent but real pledges of partnership, implementation and accountability.”
Baerbock said that three decades after the Copenhagen summit, the world is facing mounting social and economic pressures, with more than 800 million people still living in extreme poverty.
“Families are taking loans simply to afford food or housing,” she said. “In every region, people are asking urgent questions: Will I make rent next month? Will I have to choose between school fees and groceries?”
She said the leaders who gather in Doha must act “with purpose” to reduce poverty, expand universal social protections and create decent jobs, especially for youth.
“The world is not waiting for more promises,” Baerbock said. “It is waiting for delivery — for action that improves people’s lives and makes dignity a lived reality for all.”


UN condemns ‘horrific’ massacre of hundreds at El-Fasher hospital as Sudan crisis escalates

UN condemns ‘horrific’ massacre of hundreds at El-Fasher hospital as Sudan crisis escalates
Updated 4 min 19 sec ago

UN condemns ‘horrific’ massacre of hundreds at El-Fasher hospital as Sudan crisis escalates

UN condemns ‘horrific’ massacre of hundreds at El-Fasher hospital as Sudan crisis escalates
  • More than 460 patients and their companions reportedly killed at the Saudi Maternity Hospital in the besieged city
  • Tens of thousands fleeing escalating violence ‘are living in the open with no shelter, sanitation or protection,’ UN spokesperson says

NEW YORK CITY: The UN on Wednesday condemned what it described as “horrific” violations of international humanitarian law in Sudan, following reports that hundreds of people were massacred at a maternity hospital in the besieged city of El-Fasher amid escalating violence and mass displacement across the war-torn country.
UN spokesperson Stephane Dujarric said the organization was “horrified by the reports of the tragic killing of more than 460 people, both patients and their companions, at the Saudi Maternity Hospital in El-Fasher.”
The attack followed recent assaults and abductions targeting health workers in the area, he added, as fighting between warring military factions continues to devastate the Darfur region of the country.
According to the World Health Organization, prior to the latest incident there had been 185 verified attacks on health care facilities in Sudan since the civil war erupted in April 2023, resulting in 1,204 deaths and 416 injuries among health workers and patients. Of those attacks, 49 took place this year, killing 966 people, Dujarric said.
The escalating violence in the city has driven tens of thousands of people from their homes; the International Organization for Migration reported that more than 36,000 people fled El-Fasher on Sunday and Monday alone, many of them seeking refuge on the outskirts of the city and in nearby areas including Kebkabiya, Mellit and Tawila.
“Families are living in the open with no shelter, sanitation or protection,” Dujarric said. Women and girls in particular face heightened risks of violence and abuse, he warned.
Thousands more, including the elderly, people with disabilities and the wounded, remain trapped in El-Fasher as a result of the insecurity and lack of transport, according to local sources.
The UN’s humanitarian agencies are coordinating relief operations in Tawila, where overcrowded displacement sites are hosting newly arrived families.
“Urgent needs include shelter, food, water, health care and protection,” Dujarric said.
In neighboring North Kordofan state, meanwhile, fighting has forced between 24,000 and 27,000 people to flee the Um Dam Hajj Ahmed area, the International Organization for Migration reported.
In the same region, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies said it was “horrified” that five Sudanese Red Crescent volunteers were killed and three went missing while distributing food in Barah. Twenty-one Red Crescent employees and volunteers have been killed since the conflict began, Dujarric said.
“We can’t stress enough that civilians, humanitarian workers and medical personnel must always be protected,” he added, calling on all parties “to immediately halt hostilities, guarantee safe passage for civilians and aid workers, and ensure sustained humanitarian access wherever it is needed.”
Dujarric also confirmed that Sudan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs ordered two senior World Food Programme officials, the organization’s country director and its emergency coordinator, to leave the country within 72 hours without offering an explanation.
“This decision comes at a pivotal time,” he said, noting that more than 24 million people in Sudan are facing acute food insecurity, with some communities already affected by famine.
“WFP and senior UN officials are engaging with authorities to protest this action, and seeking clarification,” Dujarric added.
“All parties in Sudan must prioritize the lives and well-being of millions who depend on emergency food and nutrition assistance for their survival.
“WFP, and the whole UN family, remain unwavering in our commitment to ensuring that the people of Sudan can access vital assistance during this period of unprecedented hunger, insecurity and humanitarian need.”


Syrian authorities arrest two prominent Assad-era gang leaders in Homs

Syrian authorities arrest two prominent Assad-era gang leaders in Homs
Updated 29 October 2025

Syrian authorities arrest two prominent Assad-era gang leaders in Homs

Syrian authorities arrest two prominent Assad-era gang leaders in Homs
  • Former Assad regime relied on militarized criminal gangs to suppress civilian uprisings, alongside official forces and paramilitary groups
  • The Maroufs are accused of serious offences against civilians in Homs under previous regime

LONDON: Syrian authorities announced the arrest of two prominent gang leaders in the northern region of Homs, who are accused of crimes against civilians during Bashar Assad’s regime.

The ministry of interior said on Wednesday that forces from the counter-terrorism branch and the directorate of internal security had captured Faisal Ahmed Marouf and his son, Ahmed Faisal Marouf, in the eastern province of Homs Governorate, in western Syria.

The former Assad regime, which fell in December last year, relied on militarized criminal gangs known as Shabiha to suppress civilian uprisings, alongside official forces and paramilitary groups, including the Iran-backed Hezbollah.

The ministry said that the Maroufs are accused of involvement in grave violations against Syrian civilians in Homs during the rule of the bygone regime.

“Investigations revealed that the criminals held leadership positions in groups responsible for killings, armed robberies, and unlawful arrests against people in peaceful areas and Abu Hakfa during the rule of the defunct regime,” the ministry of interior announced on Telegram.

Last week, Syrian authorities arrested a former military official accused of executing detainees at Saydnaya prison during the former regime.

Since December, the new government in Damascus has arrested several suspects, including Assad-era army officers, for crimes committed against Syrians during the country’s civil conflict.


Syria nets $28bn in investments this year, president tells FII

Syria nets $28bn in investments this year, president tells FII
Updated 6 sec ago

Syria nets $28bn in investments this year, president tells FII

Syria nets $28bn in investments this year, president tells FII
  • Ahmad Al-Sharaa tells session in Riyadh he wants to rebuild Syria by investments
  • Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman attended the dialogue session

RIYADH: Syria has attracted overseas investment totaling around $28 billion so far this year, President Ahmad Al-Sharaa said on Wednesday at the Future Investment Initiative (FII) in Riyadh.
Sharaa said in a session attended by ’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman that Syrian laws have been amended to allow foreign investors to transfer funds out of the country.
“We want to rebuild Syria via investments,” Al-Sharaa said, adding the world can benefit from it as a “trade corridor.”
Al-Sharaa led opposition fighters to overthrow Bashar Al-Assad late last year, bringing an end to 14 years of civil war.
Al-Sharaa has conducted a series of foreign trips as his transitional government seeks to re-establish Syria’s ties with world powers that shunned Damascus during Assad’s rule.
In May, Riyadh hosted a historic meeting between Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Al-Sharaa and US President Donald Trump, who praised Al-Sharaa and said Washington would lift all sanctions on Syria to help give the country a chance to rebuild.
Despite Trump’s pledge and widespread exemptions now granted to Syria, the toughest sanctions — known as the Caesar sanctions — require a repeal from the US Congress.
US lawmakers have been divided on the issue, but are expected to make a decision by the end of the year.
While Syria has already drawn international interest in major development projects, a full repeal is expected to trigger increased appetite for investments.
In August, Syria signed 12 investment deals worth $14 billion, including infrastructure, transportation and real estate projects aimed at reviving the war-damaged economy.
A World Bank report predicted the cost of Syria’s reconstruction at $216 billion, saying the figure was a “conservative best estimate.”