Sisi meets UAE leader in Egypt’s coastal city of Alamein

Sisi meets UAE leader in Egypt’s coastal city of Alamein
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El-Sisi affirmed the special standing Sheikh Mohamed holds in the hearts of Egypt and its people. (WAM)
Sisi meets UAE leader in Egypt’s coastal city of Alamein
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Sheikh Mohamed was received upon his arrival at El Alamein International Airport by his counterpart Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi. (WAM)
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Sisi meets UAE leader in Egypt’s coastal city of Alamein

Sisi meets UAE leader in Egypt’s coastal city of Alamein
  • Sheikh Mohamed was received upon his arrival at El Alamein International Airport by his counterpart Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi

DUBAI: UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed arrived in Egypt’s coastal city of Alamein on Monday on a fraternal visit, WAM News Agency reported. 

Sheikh Mohamed was received upon his arrival at El Alamein International Airport by his counterpart Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi.

“The two leaders engaged in cordial conversation, underscoring the deep-rooted and historical relations between the two countries,” WAM added.

El-Sisi affirmed the special standing Sheikh Mohamed holds in the hearts of Egypt and its people, which is an extension of the relationship nurtured by the UAE’s Founding Father, the late Sheikh Zayed.


Israeli protesters call for hostage deal ahead of cabinet meeting

Updated 2 sec ago

Israeli protesters call for hostage deal ahead of cabinet meeting

Israeli protesters call for hostage deal ahead of cabinet meeting
TEL AVIV: Protesters calling for an end to the war in Gaza and the return of hostages being held there took to the streets in Israel early Tuesday morning ahead of a security cabinet meeting scheduled for the evening.
AFP journalists saw protesters blocking roads in Tel Aviv, waving Israeli flags and holding up pictures of the hostages.
Israeli media reported others rallying near a US embassy branch in the city, as well as outside the houses of various ministers across the country.
“There is an offer on the table. We demand that our leaders sit at the negotiation table and not get up until there is an agreement,” said Hagit Chen, whose son was abducted by militants in October 2023, according to a statement released by a forum representing the families of hostages.
The agenda of the security cabinet meeting has not been officially disclosed, but local reports suggest it could be to discuss renewed negotiations for a ceasefire and hostage release deal.
The cabinet approved in early August a plan for the military to take over Gaza City, triggering fresh fears for the safety of the hostages and a new wave of protests that has seen tens of thousands take to the country’s streets in recent weeks.
Netanyahu last week had ordered immediate talks aimed at securing the release of all remaining captives in Gaza, while also doubling down on the plans for a new offensive to seize Gaza’s largest city.
That came days after Hamas said it had accepted a new ceasefire proposal put forward by mediators that would see the staggered release of hostages over an initial 60-day period in exchange for Palestinian prisoners held by Israel.

Amnesty urges war crimes probe into Israeli destruction in Lebanon

Amnesty urges war crimes probe into Israeli destruction in Lebanon
Updated 26 August 2025

Amnesty urges war crimes probe into Israeli destruction in Lebanon

Amnesty urges war crimes probe into Israeli destruction in Lebanon
  • The rights group’s Erika Guevara Rosas said in the statement that the destruction had “rendered entire areas uninhabitable and ruined countless lives”

BEIRUT, Lebanon: Amnesty International said Tuesday that the Israeli army’s extensive destruction of civilian property in south Lebanon, including after a ceasefire with Hezbollah was struck, should be investigated as a war crime.
The November 27 truce largely ended more than a year of hostilities between Israel and Hezbollah that culminated in two months of open war during which Israel sent in ground troops and conducted a major bombing campaign.
“The Israeli military’s extensive and deliberate destruction of civilian property and agricultural land across southern Lebanon must be investigated as war crimes,” Amnesty said in a statement.
The rights group’s Erika Guevara Rosas said in the statement that the destruction had “rendered entire areas uninhabitable and ruined countless lives.”
Israel has said its military action targeted Hezbollah sites and operatives, and it continues to strike Lebanon despite the ceasefire.
Under the truce, Hezbollah was to pull its fighters back from near the border, with the Lebanese army deploying to the south and dismantling the militant group’s infrastructure there.
Israel was to fully withdraw its troops from Lebanon, but it has kept them in several border areas it deems strategic.
Amnesty said it sent Israeli authorities questions in late June about the destruction but had not received a response.
The group said its analysis covered from October 1 of last year — around the start of Israel’s ground offensive — until late January of this year, and showed “more than 10,000 structures were heavily damaged or destroyed during that time.”
It noted that “much of the destruction took place after November 27,” when the truce took effect.
“Israeli forces used manually laid explosives and bulldozers to devastate civilian structures, including homes, mosques, cemeteries, roads, parks and soccer pitches, across 24 municipalities,” it said.
The rights group said it used verified videos, photographs and satellite imagery to investigate the destruction.
“In some videos, soldiers filmed themselves celebrating the destruction by singing and cheering,” it said.
It added much of the destruction was done “in apparent absence of imperative military necessity and in violation” of international humanitarian law.
Amnesty noted that “the previous use of a civilian building by a party to the conflict does not automatically render it a military objective.”
In March, the World Bank put the war’s total economic cost on Lebanon at $14 billion, including $6.8 billion in damage to physical structures.
Authorities in cash-strapped Lebanon have yet to launch reconstruction efforts, and are hoping for international support, particularly from Gulf countries.
 

 


Tunisia rights groups denounce closure of freedom of information agency

Tunisia rights groups denounce closure of freedom of information agency
Updated 25 August 2025

Tunisia rights groups denounce closure of freedom of information agency

Tunisia rights groups denounce closure of freedom of information agency
  • The journalists union described the measure as “the demolition of one of the fundamental pillars” of Tunisia’s fragile democracy

TUNIS: Tunisian rights groups on Monday condemned the dissolution of an authority that sought to guarantee access to information for citizens and journalists.
The groups denounced as a setback for freedoms the closure of the National Authority for Access to Information (INAI), an independent body established in 2016 in the aftermath of the Arab Spring uprising of 2011, aiming to safeguard rights to access information.
The government told AFP it had shut down the agency earlier this month and reassigned its staff to other government roles.
The National Syndicate of Tunisian Journalists (SNJT) said the move was made “in secret” with no major public announcement, criticizing the government’s tighter restrictions on information.
“Access to information is increasingly locked now,” SNJT head Zied Dabbar told AFP.
“We cannot speak of press freedom if there is no access to information,” he added. “From now on, there will only be the official narrative, which will lead to propaganda.”
The journalists union described the measure as “the demolition of one of the fundamental pillars” of Tunisia’s fragile democracy.
President Kais Saied, elected in 2019, has ruled Tunisia by decree since a 2021 power grab, with local and international organizations decrying a decline in freedoms in the North African country.
Many of Saied’s critics are currently behind bars, including dozens of journalists and public figures who have been prosecuted under a 2022 law incriminating “spreading false news.”
“It has become clear that the authorities want to lock all sources of information,” said Romdhane Ben Amor, head of the Tunisian Forum for Economic and Social Rights. “This is a political choice to break with the constitutional bodies.”
“The space of rights and freedoms is more and more suffocated,” Ben Amor told AFP, warning that other institutions could also face closure.
 

 


Libya’s coast guard shoots at a vessel seeking to rescue migrants in distress, group says

Libya’s coast guard shoots at a vessel seeking to rescue migrants in distress, group says
Updated 25 August 2025

Libya’s coast guard shoots at a vessel seeking to rescue migrants in distress, group says

Libya’s coast guard shoots at a vessel seeking to rescue migrants in distress, group says
  • The patrol boat used by the Libyan coast guard was a 2023 gift from Italy to Libya as part of the European Union’s support for border management program, SOS Mediterranee said

CAIRO: Libya’s coast guard fired upon a vessel belonging to a humanitarian group as it searched for a migrant boat in distress in the Mediterranean Sea, the nonprofit said on Monday.
The attack, which took place the day before, appeared to be one of the most violent involving a European rescue ship and the Libyan coast guard, which receives training, equipment and funding from the European Union.
SOS Mediterranee said the confrontation took place about 40 nautical miles north of the Libyan coast, and released details and images of the incident. No casualties were reported, although the group said the vessel sustained significant damage.
The nonprofit charters the Norwegian-flagged Ocean Viking in partnership with the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.
A spokesperson for the Libyan coast guard didn’t respond to a request for comment.
The patrol boat used by the Libyan coast guard was a 2023 gift from Italy to Libya as part of the European Union’s support for border management program, SOS Mediterranee said.
Before it was attacked, the Ocean Viking had rescued 87 people from two migrant boats, including many from war-torn Sudan.
While searching for a third migrant boat in distress, the Ocean Viking was approached by a Libyan patrol vessel in international waters, Angelo Selim, the search and rescue coordinator on board told The Associated Press. When they were very close, he said, they started shooting for 15 to 20 minutes.
“In the beginning, I didn’t understand the noise of the shots but when the first windows exploded on my head, we all got on the floor,” Selim recalled. He added that some of the shots appeared to come from automatic weapons.
Selim said he instructed the migrants and non-essential crew members to lock themselves inside the safety room while he and the captain remained on the bridge.
Eventually, he said, the shooting stopped but the threats continued. Selim recalled the Libyan coast guard warning the Ocean Viking in Arabic over the radio: “If you don’t leave the area we will come and kill you all.”
In video and photos of the incident released by SOS Mediterranee, two men can be seen pointing weapons at the boat and several rounds of gunshots are heard. Broken windows and damaged equipment are also seen.
“This incident was not only an outrageous and unacceptable act,” SOS Mediterranee said in a statement. “This is far from isolated: the Libyan Coast Guard has a long history of reckless behavior that endangers people at sea, flagrantly violates human rights and shows total disregard for international maritime law.”
SOS Mediterranee said it issued a mayday after it was fired upon and sought protection from an Italian navy ship nearby, but didn’t receive any answer.
Frontex, the European Union’s border protection agency that often spots boats in distress and shares coordinates with the competent maritime authorities, called the incident “deeply concerning” and urged “the proper authorities to investigate the events swiftly and thoroughly.”
“Frontex remains fully committed to saving lives at sea and acts in line with international maritime law at all times. No rescuer should ever be put in danger while carrying out life-saving work,” it added.
The Ocean Viking was on its way to Italy on Monday with 87 migrants it had rescued before the attack. The group had no news of the migrants at sea they were searching for when they came under fire.
A spokesperson for the Italian ministry of interior declined to comment on the incident while the Italian coast guard did not respond to a request for comment.
“We demand a full investigation into the events of yesterday afternoon and that those responsible for these life–threatening attacks be brought to justice,” said Soazic Dupuy, director of operations at SOS Mediterranee.

 


Iraq seeks to deport hundreds of detained women and children

The largest number of prisoners comes from Turkiye, Azerbaijan and Russia. (AFP)
The largest number of prisoners comes from Turkiye, Azerbaijan and Russia. (AFP)
Updated 25 August 2025

Iraq seeks to deport hundreds of detained women and children

The largest number of prisoners comes from Turkiye, Azerbaijan and Russia. (AFP)
  • Around 625 foreigners and 60 of their children are held in prisons in Iraq, a judicial source said, most of them linked to Daesh

BAGHDAD: Iraq wants to return hundreds of foreign women and their children detained in the country, though two foreign diplomats told AFP on Monday the process would be a lengthy one.
The initiative would exclude women condemned to death, but encompass those affiliated with the Daesh group as well as those found guilty of common crimes, an Iraqi security official told AFP.
The largest number of prisoners comes from Turkiye, Azerbaijan and Russia, he said.
There are also two French women, including Djamila Boutoutaou, who was jailed for 20 years in 2018 for her links to Daesh.
The Iraqi authorities created a committee “charged with establishing a plan for the repatriation of foreign and Arab detainees, as well as their children,” Iraqi justice ministry spokesman Ahmed Laibi said on Saturday, according to state media.
“We have hundreds of women and children in our penitentiary establishments,” he said, adding that the committee was headed by the justice minister.
Deporting the women and children would also reduce prison overcrowding, Laibi said.
Prisons in Iraq are currently at 150 percent capacity, the ministry said in July.
Around 625 foreigners and 60 of their children are held in prisons in Iraq, a judicial source said, most of them linked to Daesh.
There are also thousands of Iraqis jailed for links to the group, often following hasty trials according to NGOs.
The jihadists were routed in 2017 in Iraq, having overrun much of the north and west of the country three years before.
The justice ministry brought together several foreign diplomats on Thursday to discuss the matter.
“I’m not sure this can happen very quickly,” one European diplomat told AFP, requesting anonymity due to the sensitivity of the matter.
Repatriations “will only be possible in the case of bilateral agreements between two countries,” they said.
An Arab diplomat said “such procedures cannot be completed quickly.”
“To accelerate the process with countries that don’t have (bilateral) agreements, Iraqi authorities have proposed using memorandums of understanding,” the diplomat said.
He added that this would allow the executive power to act without waiting for parliamentary ratification.