Syria welcomes US decision to lift sanctions, sees ‘new page’ in relations

Syria welcomes US decision to lift sanctions, sees ‘new page’ in relations
Syria's interim President Ahmad al-Sharaa (R) receives US Special Envoy to Syria Thomas Barrack, at the presidential palace in Damascus on July 9, 2025. (File/AFP)
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Syria welcomes US decision to lift sanctions, sees ‘new page’ in relations

Syria welcomes US decision to lift sanctions, sees ‘new page’ in relations
  • Sanctions dating back to 2004 and expanded during years of conflict will no longer apply, officially allowing American companies to conduct business with Damascus

DAMASCUS: Syria on Monday welcomed the US Treasury Department’s decision to remove it from the sanctions list under the Code of Federal Regulations, describing it as a “positive development” that could ease humanitarian and economic hardships.

The Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) announced that the Syrian Sanctions Regulations will be lifted as of Tuesday following President Donald Trump’s June order to terminate the national emergency underpinning the restrictions. 

Sanctions dating back to 2004 and expanded during years of conflict will no longer apply, officially allowing American companies to conduct business with Damascus.

In a statement, Syria’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said the move will “directly reflect on the humanitarian and economic conditions of the Syrian people” by facilitating trade, financial transactions and US exports, while opening “new horizons for economic and trade cooperation between the two countries.”

The ministry noted the timing of the decision coincided with the visit of a second official US congressional delegation to Damascus, led by Senator Jeanne Shaheen and Representative Joe Wilson, accompanied by Ambassador Tom Barrack, the US president’s special envoy for Syria.

President Ahmad al-Sharaa received the delegation in the presence of senior Syrian ministers, with talks focusing on strengthening bilateral ties and exploring areas of cooperation. 

The ministry said the meetings signaled growing support within Congress for the full lifting of sanctions, including efforts to repeal the 2019 Caesar Act before the end of this year.

“For his part, President al-Sharaa expressed appreciation for the efforts made in Congress, stressing that these simultaneous developments, the lifting of restrictions and the resumption of official visits, constitute a continuation of a practical and realistic path that serves the interests of the Syrian people and enhances stability in the region,” the statement said.

US officials have said that while sanctions are being removed, Congress must still act to formally repeal the Caesar Act. 

The Syrian government affirmed its readiness to continue dialogue with international partners on the basis of sovereignty and mutual respect, with the aim of ensuring stability and prosperity for the Syrian people and the wider region.


The 189 Palestinian journalists killed in the war in Gaza endured hunger and grief

Updated 17 sec ago

The 189 Palestinian journalists killed in the war in Gaza endured hunger and grief

The 189 Palestinian journalists killed in the war in Gaza endured hunger and grief
Since the war began in Gaza, 189 Palestinian journalists have been killed, according to the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists. They include men and women, freelancers and staffers, veterans with years in the field and young reporters on some of their first assignments. Some were killed with their families at home, others were in vehicles marked “PRESS,” or in tents near hospitals, or out covering the violence. Many endured the same conditions as those they covered — hunger, displacement, and grief.
Among them:
— Mariam Dagga, 33. A visual journalist and a 33-year-old mother, she was known for human-centered reporting from southern Gaza, including at Nasser Hospital, where she was killed in an Israeli strike in August 2025. During the war, she worked for The Associated Press and Independent Arabia. The strike that killed her also claimed the lives of rescuers and four other journalists.
— Anas Al-Sharif, 28. The father of two was killed in an Israeli strike on a tent outside Shifa hospital in August 2025, days after he wept on air while reporting on starvation deaths in Gaza. The strike — which also killed five other journalists — prompted an outpouring of condemnation from press freedom groups and foreign officials.
— Hamza Dahdouh, 27. The son of Al Jazeera’s Gaza City bureau chief, he was killed in a January 2024 drone strike after leaving a reporting assignment at the site of an earlier strike in southern Gaza. He was the fifth member of his family to be killed.
— Ayat Khadoura, 27. The Al Quds University graduate shed light on the hardships families faced in the first weeks of the war. She became known for reporting on bombs striking her northern Gaza neighborhood, including one video in which she said Israeli forces had ordered residents to evacuate moments before a strike hit her home and killed her in November 2023.
— Hossam Shabat, 23. A freelancer from northern Gaza, he was killed while reporting for Al Jazeera in March 2025. Before the war, he told a Beirut-based advocacy group he hoped to start a media company or work in his family’s restaurants.
— Fatima Hassouna, 25. The photojournalist was killed in an April 2025 Israeli airstrike a day after a documentary about her efforts to film daily life amid war in Gaza was accepted at a Cannes Film Festival program promoting independent films.
Israel has accused some of the journalists killed of involvement with militant groups, including Hamas and Islamic Jihad — charges that journalists and their outlets have dismissed as baseless. Israel’s military did not respond to an Associated Press request for comment about the CPJ data.
Figures and methodologies may differ among groups that track journalist deaths. CPJ said it “independently investigates and verifies the circumstances behind each death,” including to verify journalists’ lack of involvement in militant activities.

UN says Israeli probes into Gaza killings must ‘yield results’

UN says Israeli probes into Gaza killings must ‘yield results’
Updated 26 August 2025

UN says Israeli probes into Gaza killings must ‘yield results’

UN says Israeli probes into Gaza killings must ‘yield results’

GENEVA: The UN insisted Tuesday that Israel must not only investigate alleged unlawful killings in Gaza like the hospital strike that killed 20 people, including journalists, the previous day, but also ensure those probes yield results.
“There needs to be justice,” United Nations rights office spokesman Thameen Al-Kheetan told reporters in Geneva, adding that the large number of media workers killed in the Gaza war “raises many, many questions about the targeting of journalists.”
His comments came after an Israeli strike on the Nasser Hospital in the southern Gaza town of Khan Yunis on Monday killed at least 20 people, including five journalists, sparking an international outcry.
Reuters, the Associated Press and Al Jazeera all issued statements mourning their slain contributors, while the Israeli military said it would investigate the incident.
“The Israeli authorities have, in the past, announced investigations in such killings,” Kheetan said.
“It’s of course the responsibility of Israel, as the occupying power, to investigate — but these investigations need to yield results,” he said.
“We haven’t seen results or accountability measures yet. We have yet to see the results of these investigations, and we call for accountability and justice.”
Kheetan said at least 247 Palestinian journalists have been killed in Gaza since the war was triggered by militant group Hamas’s unprecedented attack on Israel on October 7, 2023.
“These journalists are the eyes and the ears of the whole world and they must be protected,” he said.
Asked if Monday’s attack could amount to a so-called “double-tap” strike, in which an initial strike is followed by a second hitting rescue workers and other civilians, Kheetan said this needed to be investigated.
“We can say that the Israeli military reportedly launched multiple air strikes on the Nasser Medical Complex, and there were two air strikes in a short period of time,” he said.
“We know that one of the five journalists appears to have been killed in the first air strike while three others, including the woman journalist, appear to have been killed in the second air strike,” he added, describing this as “a shock” and “unacceptable.”
“This incident and the killing of all civilians, including journalists, must be thoroughly and independently investigated, and justice must follow.”


US envoy: , Qatar to invest in Lebanon economic zone for disarmed Hezbollah

US envoy: , Qatar to invest in Lebanon economic zone for disarmed Hezbollah
Updated 26 August 2025

US envoy: , Qatar to invest in Lebanon economic zone for disarmed Hezbollah

US envoy: , Qatar to invest in Lebanon economic zone for disarmed Hezbollah
  • The US-backed Lebanese army is preparing a plan for Hezbollah’s disarmament that should be ready by the end of August
  • Barrack also said on Tuesday that his country would approve the extension of United Nations peacekeepers’ mandate in Lebanon for one more year

BEIRUT:  and Qatar are ready to invest in an economic zone in south Lebanon near the border with Israel that would create jobs for members of the militant Hezbollah group and its supporters once they lay down their weapons, President Donald Trump’s envoy to the Middle East said Tuesday.
Tom Barrack made his comments in Beirut after trips to Israel and Syria where he discussed with officials there the ongoing situation in Lebanon following this month’s decision by the Lebanese government to disarm Hezbollah by the end of the year. Hezbollah’s leader rejected the government’s plan, vowing to keep the weapons.
On Monday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israeli forces could begin withdrawing from territory they hold in southern Lebanon after the Lebanese government’s “momentous decision” to disarm Hezbollah.
The US-backed Lebanese army is preparing a plan for Hezbollah’s disarmament that should be ready by the end of August. The government is expected to discuss the army’s plan and approve it during a meeting scheduled for Sept. 2.
“We have to have money coming into the system. The money will come from the Gulf,” Barrack told reporters after meeting President Joseph Aoun. “Qatar and are partners and are willing to do that for the south (of Lebanon) if we’re asking a portion of the Lebanese community to give up their livelihood.”
“We have 40,000 people that are being paid by Iran to fight. What are you gonna do with them? Take their weapon and say ‘by the way, good luck planting olive trees’? It can’t happen. We have to help them,” Barrack said. He was referring to tens of thousands of Hezbollah members who have been funded since the early 1980s by Tehran.
“We, all of us, the Gulf, the US, the Lebanese are all gonna act together to create an economic forum that is gonna produce a livelihood,” Barrack said.
When asked why the US doesn’t go to discuss the Hezbollah issue directly with Iran rather than traveling to Israel and Syria, Barrack said: “You think that’s not happening? Goodbye.” Barrack then ended his news conference and walked out of the room.
Speaking on the UN peacekeeping force that has been deployed in south Lebanon since Israel first invaded the country in 1978, Barrack said the US would rather fund the Lebanese army than the force that is known as UNIFIL. Speaking about this week’s vote at the United Nations in New York, Barrack said the US backs extending UNIFIL’s term for one year only.
Hezbollah was severely weakened by a war with Israel last year in which many of the group’s leaders and fighters were killed. A US-brokered peace agreement that ended that conflict requires the Lebanese state to disarm armed groups.
Qassem said Hezbollah and its ally Amal had postponed street protests against the US-backed disarmament initiative, allowing room for dialogue with the government, but that future protests could target the US Embassy in Beirut.
Israel signaled it would reduce its military presence in southern Lebanon if the Lebanese Armed Forces acted to disarm Hezbollah, according to a statement from the Israeli prime minister’s office.

With Agencies 


Jordanian army intercepts balloons loaded with drugs on eastern border

Jordanian army intercepts balloons loaded with drugs on eastern border
Updated 26 August 2025

Jordanian army intercepts balloons loaded with drugs on eastern border

Jordanian army intercepts balloons loaded with drugs on eastern border
  • The balloons were tracked and brought down as they entered Jordanian territory

DUBAI: Security forces in Jordan’s Eastern Military Zone have thwarted an attempt to fly illegal drugs into the country attached to balloons equipped with rudimentary guidance systems.

The suspicious activity was detected by border guard units working closely with security agencies and the country’s anti-narcotics department, state news agency Petra reported.

The balloons were tracked and brought down as they entered Jordanian territory, and the drugs were seized and handed over to the appropriate authorities for further investigation, the report added.

Western anti-narcotics officials have said that Jordan has become a transit point to the Gulf states for captagon, an addictive, amphetamine-type stimulant that for years has been mass-produced in Syria.

Jordan and Syria agreed in January to form a joint security committee to secure their border, combat arms and drug smuggling and work to prevent the resurgence of Daesh.


China says ‘shocked’ by Israel strike on Gaza hospital

China says ‘shocked’ by Israel strike on Gaza hospital
Updated 26 August 2025

China says ‘shocked’ by Israel strike on Gaza hospital

China says ‘shocked’ by Israel strike on Gaza hospital
  • Foreign ministry spokesman: ‘We are shocked and condemn the fact that medical personnel and journalists have once again unfortunately lost their lives in the conflict’

BEIJING: China said on Tuesday it was “shocked” by an Israeli strike on a Gaza hospital in which five journalists were among at least 20 people killed.
“We are shocked and condemn the fact that medical personnel and journalists have once again unfortunately lost their lives in the conflict,” foreign ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun said when asked about the strikes.
“We express our condolences to the victims and our sympathies to their families.”
Reuters, the Associated Press and Al Jazeera all issued statements mourning their slain contributors, while the Israeli military said it would investigate the incident.
The ongoing war in Gaza has been one of the deadliest for journalists, with around 200 media workers killed over the course of the nearly two-year Israeli assault, according to media watchdogs.
“China is highly concerned about the current situation in the Gaza Strip,” Guo said, adding China condemns “all actions that harm civilians... including acts of violence against journalists.”
“Israel should immediately stop its military operations in Gaza, achieve a comprehensive and lasting ceasefire as soon as possible, fully restore the entry of humanitarian supplies, prevent a larger-scale humanitarian crisis, and work to ease tensions as quickly as possible.”