How Israel’s prolonged Gaza war and failure to free hostages has exposed deep divisions in society

Analysis How Israel’s prolonged Gaza war and failure to free hostages has exposed deep divisions in society
A demonstrator poses above another lying on the ground while depicting an Israeli hostage, during an anti-government protest in Tel Aviv. (AFP)
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Updated 26 August 2025

How Israel’s prolonged Gaza war and failure to free hostages has exposed deep divisions in society

How Israel’s prolonged Gaza war and failure to free hostages has exposed deep divisions in society
  • Deep societal divisions are emerging in Israel, driven by ideological differences, religious tensions and competing visions for the nation’s future
  • Analysts say the ongoing conflict in Gaza, societal fractures, and ultra-Orthodox demographic trends could increase risks of internal unrest

LONDON: At precisely 6:29 a.m. on Tuesday, Israel’s Hostages and Missing Families Forum launched a “day of struggle” in towns and cities across the country.

It was the biggest mass protest to date against what many in Israel now see as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s willful determination to escalate the war in Gaza at all costs — including the potential sacrifice of the remaining hostages who have been held by Hamas since the attack on Israel, which began at 6:29 a.m. on Oct. 7, 2023.

It was also the most dramatic demonstration yet of an increasingly obvious reality: that the war in Gaza is exposing deep fractures within Israeli society.

Global outrage over the war in Gaza reached new heights on Monday following an Israeli strike on a hospital that killed 20 people, including five journalists working for international news outlets.

But opposition to the war is also rising inexorably within Israel itself, even as the Israel Defense Forces press ahead with Netanyahu’s plan to broaden the war and attack Gaza City in the face of international condemnation.




Israeli troops stand guard during a weekly settlers’ tour in Hebron, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. (Reuters)

“Almost every day and every night there are massive protests that block roads,” Rabbi Noa Sattath, head of the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, told Arab News.

“The protestors include hostage families, people demanding an end to the war and atrocities in Gaza, ultra-Orthodox men who have staged huge protests against plans to draft them into the army, and other people who feel it’s unfair that the ultra-Orthodox are not serving yet. It is all pretty chaotic for everyday life.”

Sattath is speaking from her car, and her conversation with Arab News is briefly interrupted. “I was just stopped by a nice woman who gave me an anti-war sticker,” she said.

Last week, the Israeli Cabinet approved plans for an assault on Gaza City despite Hamas agreeing to mediators’ proposals for a 60-day ceasefire, which would have seen half of the surviving hostages released.

Israeli peace campaigners say this broadening of the war, in tandem with increasing attacks on Palestinians in the West Bank by radical Israeli settlers, benefits only Netanyahu and the far-right members of his coalition government.

In May, thousands gathered in Jerusalem for a two-day People’s Peace Summit, organized by It’s Time, a coalition of more than 60 Jewish and Arab peacebuilding and shared-society organizations founded last year “to end the Israeli-Palestinian conflict through a political agreement that will ensure both peoples’ right to self-determination and secure lives.”

The coalition accuses Netanyahu’s government of conducting “a criminal war for political reasons that are certainly not in the interest of the Israeli people.”




Protesters block a main road during a demonstration demanding the immediate end of the war and the release of all hostages. (Reuters)

Leading establishment figures, from high-ranking former members of the military to politicians, have expressed concern about the direction in which Netanyahu and his Cabinet are taking Israel.

On Tuesday, in an interview with public radio, Gadi Eisenkot, the former IDF chief of staff, whose soldier son Gal was killed in Gaza, said Netanyahu’s government “is not worthy of Gal (and) many combat soldiers and, unfortunately, also the hostages, who lost their lives because of cowardice and … political and ideological considerations of those who want to return to the settlement of the Gaza Strip.”

Appearing on the Arab News current affairs program “Frankly Speaking” on Sunday, former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert spoke of the “deep division between a major part of public opinion which is in favor of changing course, and a part which is now governed by the Netanyahus and the group of thugs which are known to be the Cabinet ministers.”

Netanyahu’s war, he added, “is an unneeded and unnecessary war … There is not any national interest of Israel which can be served by continuing the war. And therefore, the inevitable conclusion is that it serves the personal interests of the prime minister.”

Civil groups in Israel are not shying away from using the word “genocide” to describe what is happening.

On July 28, the Israeli human rights organization B’Tselem published a powerful report, titled “Our Genocide,” condemning the “genocidal regime in Israel.”

The report concluded that “an examination of Israel’s policy in the Gaza Strip and its horrific outcomes, together with statements by senior Israeli politicians and military commanders about the goals of the attack, leads us to the unequivocal conclusion that Israel is taking coordinated action to intentionally destroy Palestinian society in the Gaza Strip.”

The report came with a stark statement from B’Tselem Executive Director Yuli Novak. “Nothing prepares you for the realization that you are part of a society committing genocide. This is a deeply painful moment for us,” she said.




A Palestinian inspects the damage on houses destroyed during an Israeli military operation, in Deir Al-Balah. (Reuters)

The genocide, she added, is rooted in part in the existential fear among Israelis created by the Hamas-led attack on Oct. 7, 2023 — a fear now being exploited by “the extremist, far-right messianic government … to promote an agenda of destruction and expulsion.”

“Messianic” is a word that has increasing resonance in, and consequences for, Israeli society.

Messianism, said Sattath, “is really dangerous. What they are trying constantly to achieve is to ignite another front in the war, either in the West Bank or in East Jerusalem or inside Israel.”

For the messianic element in Israeli society, major disasters in Jewish history — from the Holocaust to the Oct. 7 attack and the subsequent war — are interpreted as painful but divinely guided stages on the path toward ultimate redemption.

In this view, such events are part of a larger historical process leading to the full resettling of what they believe to be the biblical Land of Israel, extending beyond today’s borders to include all of Palestine and parts of Jordan, Syria, and Lebanon.

Many in Israel, said Sattath, are looking toward the country’s next election, half in hope, half in fear. “We don’t know when the elections will be,” she said. “The full term for the government would be November 2026, but we have not had a government that completed a full term since 1981.”

The Association for Civil Rights in Israel and other organizations, she said, have multiple concerns about the upcoming election.

“One is changes to election laws in order to disqualify Arab candidates and parties from running. There’s legislation that hasn’t been advanced yet, but it could get advanced very quickly, and that would have dramatic effects on the elections.

“We are also worried about police harassment of voters, because the police have been so taken over by National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, or voter harassment by thugs in which the police would not intervene.




Palestinians rush for cover as smoke billows after an Israeli strike on a building in Jabalia in the northern Gaza Strip. (AFP)

“Everybody’s looking towards the next elections. But we are very worried about whether free and fair elections are even possible under the current system.”

Another issue fragmenting Israeli society is whether or not ultra-Orthodox Jews should be drafted into the military. This is something they bitterly oppose, while other Israelis resent having to send their sons and daughters to die while the ultra-Orthodox are exempt.

A recent survey found “a sharp drop in support for the current situation of exempting ultra-Orthodox” — only 9 percent compared with 22 percent 10 months earlier. Meanwhile, support for conscripting the ultra-Orthodox rose from 67 percent last year to more than 84.5 percent, with a third of respondents backing economic penalties for those who refuse to serve.

In a special research paper for Arab News, Yossi Mekelberg, a professor of international relations and a senior consulting fellow of the MENA Program at the UK-based Chatham House think-tank, highlighted the “mutual opportunism” that had seen Netanyahu join forces with two ultra-Orthodox parties in order to maintain his grip on power.

It was, wrote Mekelberg, “a measure of how far to the right the political discourse in Israel has shifted” that in 2022 the parties Religious Zionism and Otzma Yehudit (Jewish Power) had gained nearly 11 percent of the vote and 14 seats in the Knesset.

The parties are led by settlers, Bezalel Smotrich and Itamar Ben-Gvir, whose rewards for supporting Netanyahu were jobs in his Cabinet, as finance minister and national security minister, respectively.




Israel's National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir dances as he attends a convention calling for Israel to rebuild settlements in the Gaza Strip. (AFP)

The ultra-Orthodox, once a small, isolated element in society, now pose a long-term demographic threat to the very future of Israel.

With a fertility rate among the ultra-Orthodox, or Haredim, of 6.1 children per woman, compared with 2.3 among non-Haredi Jews, the growth rate of Haredi society is about 4 percent a year — double the rest of Israel’s population.

In 2024, the 1.26 million Haredi Jews accounted for 16 percent of the total Jewish population of Israel. At the current rate of growth, a quarter of Israel’s population will be Haredim by 2065.

According to Israel’s Central Bureau of Statistics, one-third of the 480,000 Jews living in West Bank settlements or outposts are Haredim.

As Israel’s war in Gaza drags on, there is increasing pressure on the government to call up Haredim youth to serve in the military — a red line for a religious group that until now has been exempt from military service on the historical basis that they can best protect Israel by studying the Torah, the first five books of the Hebrew bible.

The exemption was granted in 1948 by Israel’s first Prime Minister David Ben Gurion. Since then, however, the number of ultra-Orthodox Jews has grown dramatically and in June last year, Israel’s Supreme Court ruled that the IDF should begin drafting Haredim.

Israel needs more troops for its latest Gaza campaign. As part of its controversial plan, the IDF is currently calling up 60,000 reservists , but very few Haredim are answering the call — each year, fewer than 10 percent of the 13,000 eligible ultra-Orthodox youths enlist.

Protests against conscription have seen thousands of Haredim take to the streets, driving a wedge between mainstream Israeli society and a once small and marginal faction that has now become disproportionately influential.




Protesters demand the immediate end of the war and the release of all hostages who were kidnapped during the October 7, 2023 Hamas attack on Israel. (Reuters)

“What we are seeing now is the Israeli tribes fighting each other,” Dr. Ahron Bregman, a senior teaching fellow in the Department of War Studies at King’s College London and a former officer in the IDF, told Arab News.

The Israeli “tribes,” he said, “are pulling in different directions, and it is hard for me to see how they could come together again.

“The small but influential settler tribe wants to expand into the West Bank and expel the West Bankers. The Tel Aviv liberal camp is wary of the consequences of the occupation.

“The Haredi tribe doesn’t really care much about what Israel does or doesn’t do as long as they don’t have to serve in the military and as they keep getting their money from the state.”

Israelis should, he added, be careful what they wish for.

“There is a growing effort to put pressure on the Haredim to join the military. I believe that they will be enlisted in the end, because there is a real need for more manpower as the IDF is too small and the missions too big.

“But personally, I would not like them to be enlisted, as they will make the military even more religious than it already is.”




Palestinian mother Alaa Al-Najjar mourns her three-month-old baby Yehia, who died due to malnutrition amid a man-made starvation in Gaza. (AFP)

Bregman believes Israeli society has become so fractured — by the war, the ideological settlement of Palestinian lands, and demographic changes under way — that he fears the worst.

“Tensions within Israeli society are so high that the situation could easily deteriorate into an open civil war,” he said.

“What could spark such a war? For example, the refusal of Netanyahu to accept the results of the forthcoming general elections. Or maybe even a political assassination.”


Sudan’s diaspora steps up as millions displaced by war look for survival and hope

Sudan’s diaspora steps up as millions displaced by war look for survival and hope
Updated 16 September 2025

Sudan’s diaspora steps up as millions displaced by war look for survival and hope

Sudan’s diaspora steps up as millions displaced by war look for survival and hope
  • Amid the world’s largest displacement crisis, Sudanese abroad are keeping families alive with remittances, soup kitchens and aid networks
  • Doctors, activists and community groups in the UK and other countries are mobilizing to fill the gaps caused by dwindling international aid

LONDON: When Dr. Marwa Gibril left her medical practice in the UK to return to Port Sudan in January, she knew she was entering a country in collapse. Cholera was spreading, health workers were fleeing, and millions had been displaced from their homes.

Yet for Gibril — a family physician trained in Britain with a master’s degree in public health from Harvard — the decision was clear. She wanted to be with her family, use her medical skills, and support Sudan’s health system in crisis.

“I had all this knowledge and skills and I thought it’s time to put them in the right place,” she told Arab News from Port Sudan, the relatively secure coastal city and de facto capital where her mother and brother have chosen to remain.

“It’s a combination of all this together that I have to pay part of it back to the country.”

Gibril’s return comes against the backdrop of Sudan’s most severe displacement crisis in modern history. The war between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), which began in April 2023, has devastated the country.

Now in its third year, the conflict has caused widespread damage to civilian infrastructure. Both parties have been responsible for thousands of deaths and face accusations of rape, looting, and destruction of property. 

Sudan's army chief Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan gestures to soldiers inside the presidential palace after the Sudanese army said it had taken control of the building, in the capital Khartoum, Sudan March 26, 2025. (Reuters)

As of August 2025, more than 12 million people had been displaced: 7.7 million internally and 4.3 million as refugees or returnees in neighboring countries, making it the world’s largest displacement crisis, according to UN data.

Millions have lost homes, livelihoods, savings, and possessions. To survive, they rely on whatever resources they can preserve, the generosity of host communities, humanitarian assistance, and, critically, support from Sudanese relatives abroad.

Sudan’s modern history has been marked by cycles of migration, forced displacement, and internal upheaval, shaping both its culture and economy.

Waves of migration during Omar Bashir’s 30-year authoritarian Islamist rule sent skilled workers to Europe, North America and the Gulf, where many maintained close ties with families back home.

“The Sudanese diaspora have very strong ties with their home country of Sudan compared to other immigrants from other communities,” Gibril said.

“In general, Sudanese immigrants are recent, say, over the last 30 years, since Bashir’s time. We saw many politicians flee the country during different dictatorships. Even before this war, they went and left and sought refuge in the UK, US, and other Western countries.” 

Sudan's paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) soldiers secure a site where Lieutenant General Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, the deputy head of the military council and head of RSF, attends a meeting in Khartoum, Sudan. (Reuters/File)

From the 1970s onwards, workers migrated in significant numbers, driven by political instability, limited opportunities, and economic decline at home. The remittances they sent back became a cornerstone of Sudan’s economy and a lifeline for families.

Outward migration was sometimes described by relatives as a dispersal — or shatat — a process that could weaken kinship ties. Yet diaspora support for relatives has remained strong, as shown by the outpouring of assistance in response to the war.

Nazar Yousif Eltahir is one of the founding members of the Sudanese Community in Oxford, a diaspora group established in 1996 to support families, provide supplementary schooling in Arabic, and coordinate cultural activities to celebrate Sudanese heritage.

“I continue to support my family financially amid the ongoing conflict,” Eltahir, who has relatives in White Nile state, told Arab News. “My stepmother, three sisters, and two brothers live in Sudan, facing severe challenges due to instability and shortages.

“My mother-in-law has found refuge in Cardiff (in the UK), while my brother-in-law and his children, as well as my sister-in-law and her children, are in Egypt. Tragically, my sister-in-law lost her husband last year in a landmine accident.” 

Lieutenant General Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, deputy head of the military council and head of paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), addresses his supporters during a meeting in Khartoum, Sudan. (Reuters/File)

On the day he spoke to Arab News, Eltahir had been volunteering his time to help rehouse a recently arrived Sudanese refugee and had written to his local member of parliament seeking help in securing permission for another refugee to visit family in Egypt.

As a member of the executive committee of Sudanese Doctors for Peace and Development and a supporter of many similar causes, Eltahir says he hopes to raise awareness about the conflict in Sudan and support charitable efforts.

“My greatest hope for Sudan is the achievement of a humanitarian ceasefire, followed by a permanent truce and sustainable peace,” he said.

“I aspire to see a civilian-led government, along with judicial and security sector reforms, that will protect democracy, uphold the constitution, and guarantee equal citizenship for all.” 

IN NUMBERS:

• 51.7m Estimated total population of Sudan.

• 60.7% Adult literacy rate (ages 15+).

• $989 GDP per capita in 2024.

The Sudanese Community in Oxford is one of countless mutual aid organizations across the UK and the world that seek to balance the pressures of integration with efforts to preserve language, faith, and cultural traditions.

Beyond financial support, diaspora networks such as these have mobilized politically, arranging protests, lobbying governments, and raising international awareness during moments of crisis.

During the 2019 uprising that toppled Bashir, the diaspora played a “major and essential role in moving things,” said Gibril, helping to put Sudan at the center of global attention.

Today, however, she says their impact is less visible, partly because competing crises in Ukraine and Gaza dominate international headlines, and partly because narratives framing Sudan’s conflict as a war between two generals obscure the human cost.

Many in the diaspora are also now consumed with sustaining extended families displaced by the conflict. Gibril says this shift has affected their capacity to mobilize politically. 

A general view shows large plume of smoke and fire rising from fuel depot after what military sources told Reuters is a Rapid Support Forces (RSF) drone attack in Port Sudan targeting fuel storage facilities in Port Sudan, Sudan May 5, 2025. (Reuters)

“This is why I think many of us ask, where are the people? Where are the people who used to care in thousands in Sudan, in millions in the streets? Most people are consumed by just living — day by day living to provide for these displaced families.”

As international aid has evaporated, diaspora communities have stepped in to provide relief. Soup kitchens in cities like Khartoum and El-Fasher, for instance, are largely funded by Sudanese abroad.

“The Sudanese diaspora continued throughout to try to fill the gap,” said Gibril.

“These soup kitchens are mostly supported by initiatives from the UK, from the US, from the Gulf … Where they will say ‘today the food of the soup kitchen is being funded by the Sudanese diaspora in London.’ And then the next day it’ll be the Sudanese group in Brighton.”

Beyond the hunger crisis in Sudan, the war has also shaken the country’s fragile health system. Many professionals have fled, and attacks on health workers have intensified the shortage of skilled staff. Gibril says these gaps were what motivated her return. 

Displaced Sudanese sit at a shelter after they were evacuated by the Sudanese army to a safer area in Omdurman, on May 13, 2025, amid the ongoing war in Sudan. (AFP)

“This gap led me to think that it is an opportunity for me to come back, since I am someone who gained skills and had the opportunity to train in very prestigious medical institutions, and learn and have skills to come back and put them where they’re most needed.”

She now applies her expertise in family medicine and public health to Sudan’s cholera outbreak and broader humanitarian efforts. Her experience abroad, she says, equips her to advise authorities on the unique challenges of Sudan’s health landscape.

Gaps in the humanitarian response are also being filled by grassroots, community-led volunteer networks known as the Emergency Response Rooms (ERR), which emerged from the resistance committees that led the uprising against Bashir.

Sudan’s roughly 700 ERRs organize rapid, hyperlocal humanitarian aid — including evacuations, medical support, water delivery, community kitchens, and protection — especially where formal state systems have collapsed or are inaccessible. 

“The cuts in aid from the US, UK, and other governments have been a blow just at a time when innocent civilians including children face grave threats from violence, disease, and hunger,” Dr. Majdi Osman, a University of Cambridge scientist originally from Nubia, told Arab News.

“The youth-founded ERRs are a lifeline for millions of people in Sudan. They provide community-led assistance with food, healthcare, and basic supplies.

“They are there in the neighborhoods most impacted by the war. What they have built is so important and provides a way for those in the diaspora to give directly to assist those in the country.”

Osman has himself established a program called Nubia Health to support communities long neglected by the state and to meet the needs of displaced families heading north toward Egypt.

“Nubia Health is a community health program based in Wadi Halfa, near the Sudan-Egypt border, that was founded just before the war,” said Osman. “Since the war started we have built a community health center and community health worker program. 

Mud covers the ground around tents at the Abu Al-Naja camp for displaced Sudanese in the eastern Gedaref State on July 16, 2025. (AFP)

“Our aim is to be a center of excellence for community health in Sudan. Wadi Halfa has become a busy, populated city after the war started and displaced people seek refuge there. It is led by a group of inspiring doctors and healthcare workers.”

For many Sudanese abroad, the pain of separation runs deep. The ability to help, even in a small way, is a welcome salve. “Every Sudanese person is dealing with their own displacement, fearing for those still in Sudan, or grieving loss of loved ones and a way of life,” said Osman.

Yet, despite their own burdens, countless others “are doing the difficult work of engaging with politicians to keep Sudan on the agenda. The war in Sudan has been ignored by the international community and those in the diaspora speaking up and organizing are playing a critical role.”

Despite immense challenges, Gibril retains hope in Sudan’s youth and their capacity to rebuild a unified nation. She believes meaningful change will require youth leadership, diaspora engagement, and an inclusive vision with human rights and social justice at its heart. 

Cholera infected patients receive treatment in the cholera isolation center at the refugee camps of western Sudan, in Tawila city in Darfur, on August 14, 2025. (AFP)

“The hope is that we have this spark in many of the people that I see in Sudan,” she said. “Many are supporting the SAF, but they are not supporting a country run by the military.

“They think the SAF and this state is essential as an institution to fight back against the RSF so they can go to their homes and start to rebuild.

“But also they see an important element for Sudan actually to come out of this is to transition to a civil-led government, to transition to democracy, where the SAF and all other security apparatus is reformed as part of this transition.”

Gibril believes the diaspora is uniquely positioned to support this process, with its members drawing on their experience of democracy, civic engagement, and organized advocacy.

“Without that hope,” she said, “I would not have come back.”

 


Syrian organization launches virtual museum on prison experiences

Syrian organization launches virtual museum on prison experiences
Updated 15 September 2025

Syrian organization launches virtual museum on prison experiences

Syrian organization launches virtual museum on prison experiences
  • Virtual museum documenting experiences of detainees in prisons during Assad family rule launched in Damascus
  • The Syria Prisons Museum offers 3D virtual tours of prisons, documented testimonies from former prisoners

DAMASCUS: A Syrian organization launched a virtual museum in Damascus on Monday documenting the experiences of detainees in the country’s prisons, used for decades to hold opponents to Assad family rule.
The Syria Prisons Museum offers 3D virtual tours of prisons, documented testimonies from former prisoners about their experiences, and studies, research, and investigative reports related to prisons and detention centers.
“The museum seeks to preserve the dark Syrian memory associated with violence, murder, and prisons,” project founder Amer Matar told AFP on the sidelines of a launch ceremony at Damascus’ national museum.
According to estimates from the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitor, more than two million Syrians have experienced imprisonment under the Assad family, who ruled Syria for over 50 years until the fall of Bashar Assad in December.
Half were detained in the years after the peaceful protests of 2011 whose violent suppression by the authorities sparked the country’s 14-year civil war.
More than 200,000 people have died in Syria’s prisons, including by execution and under torture, according to the Observatory.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


One prison, Saydnaya, was called a “human slaughterhouse” by Amnesty International.
The Prisons Museum Foundation, the organization behind the new project, based their methodology on their previous work in 2017, which documented the experiences of people in Islamic State (IS) prisons.
Following the toppling of Assad by Islamist-led rebels, the group worked with Syrian and international organizations specializing in missing persons and criminal justice to create the virtual museum.

‘Living digital archive’

The museum involves field documentation, testimonies from survivors and families of missing persons, and a digital archive that reconstructs scenes from inside prisons.
“We were afraid that these prisons would be destroyed before we could document them, but to date we have been able to enter 70 prisons,” Matar said.
According to the organizers, the museum aims to “honor the victims, amplify the voices of survivors, and prepare evidence files to hold perpetrators accountable and achieve justice.”
Matar said the museum was “trying to build a living digital archive.”
The Assads often used their prisons as a tool to intimidate opponents and silence dissent. Many people who entered the facilities over the years were never heard from again, their fates uncertain even after the prisons were liberated with the ouster of Assad.
In May, Syria’s new Islamist authorities announced the creation of a national commission for missing persons and another for transitional justice.
While rights groups and activists welcomed the announcements, they believe the road to justice remains long, insisting all parties in the Syrian conflict be held accountable for their violations and that investigations must be independent.


Arab, Muslim leaders urge review of Israel ties after Qatar attack

Arab, Muslim leaders urge review of Israel ties after Qatar attack
Updated 15 September 2025

Arab, Muslim leaders urge review of Israel ties after Qatar attack

Arab, Muslim leaders urge review of Israel ties after Qatar attack
  • Arab League and OIC joint session, which brought together nearly 60 countries, sought to take firm action after Israel’s attack on Qatar-hosted Hamas officials
  • A joint statement from the summit urged ‘all States to take all possible legal and effective measures to prevent Israel from continuing its actions against the Palestinian people’

DOHA: Arab and Muslim leaders called for a review of ties with Israel after emergency talks in Doha on Monday following last week’s deadly strike on Hamas members in the Qatari capital.
The Arab League and Organization of Islamic Cooperation joint session, which brought together nearly 60 countries, sought to take firm action after Israel’s attack on Qatar-hosted Hamas officials as they discussed a Gaza ceasefire proposal.
A joint statement from the summit urged “all States to take all possible legal and effective measures to prevent Israel from continuing its actions against the Palestinian people,” including “reviewing diplomatic and economic relations with it, and initiating legal proceedings against it.”
Qatar’s fellow Gulf nations the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain, along with Egypt, Jordan and Morocco, were among those present that recognize Israel.
The leaders of the UAE, Bahrain and Morocco, which signed the Abraham Accords recognizing Israel five years ago to the day, did not attend Monday’s talks, sending senior representatives instead.
The statement also urged member states to “coordinate efforts aimed at suspending Israel’s membership in the United Nations.”
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio will arrive in Qatar on Tuesday, after pledging “unwavering support” for Israel’s goal of eradicating Hamas during a visit to the country.
The attack strained ties between Washington and key allies in the Gulf, raising concerns over US security guarantees in a region housing major US assets including a major military base in Qatar.
The State Department said Rubio would “reaffirm America’s full support for Qatar’s security and sovereignty” after last week’s strike.

Mounting pressure over Gaza

Qatar had called for a coordinated regional response after the Israeli attack, which stunned the usually peaceful, wealthy peninsula.
The summit aimed to pile pressure on Israel, which is facing mounting calls to end the war and humanitarian crisis in Gaza.
The host country’s emir, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, accused Israel of trying to scupper ceasefire talks by firing on Hamas negotiators in Qatar, a key mediator.
Hamas says top officials survived last week’s air strike in Doha, which killed six people and triggered a wave of criticism.
“Whoever works diligently and systematically to assassinate the party with whom he is negotiating, intends to thwart the negotiations,” the emir told the summit.
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman was among those present on Monday, as were Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian, Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al-Sudani, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas.
“Tomorrow, it could be the turn of any Arab or Islamic capital,” said Pezeshkian, whose country fought a 12-day war with Israel in June, at one point attacking a US base in Qatar in retaliation for strikes on its nuclear facilities.
“The choice is clear. We must unite.”
President Abdelfattah El-Sisi of Egypt, the first Arab country to recognize Israel, warned its attack in Qatar “places obstacles in the way of any opportunities for new peace agreements and even aborts the existing peace agreements with countries in the region.”
Israel and its main backer Washington have been trying to expand the Abraham Accords, signed during US President Donald Trump’s first term, notably courting .
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan accused Israel of adopting a “terrorist mentality,” as countries took turns slamming it over Gaza.
The rich Gulf countries also met on the sidelines of the summit, urging the US to use its “leverage and influence” to rein in Israel, Gulf Cooperation Council Secretary General Jasem Mohamed Al-Budaiwi told a press conference.


Jordanian army chief, foreign diplomats discuss military ties in Amman

Jordanian army chief, foreign diplomats discuss military ties in Amman
Updated 15 September 2025

Jordanian army chief, foreign diplomats discuss military ties in Amman

Jordanian army chief, foreign diplomats discuss military ties in Amman
  • Maj. Gen. Yousef Huneiti meets envoys from Australia, Sweden, France
  • Ambassadors praise Jordan’s role in promoting peace

LONDON: The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff of the Jordanian Armed Forces on Monday held meetings with the ambassadors of Australia, Sweden and France to review security cooperation.

Maj. Gen. Yousef Huneiti met the envoys separately at the General Command in Amman.

The talks, which were attended by several other officers from the JAF, focused on enhancing military and security cooperation and exchanging expertise, the Petra news agency reported.

The diplomats praised Jordan’s role, under King Abdullah II, in promoting peace and recognized the JAF’s humanitarian and medical contributions.

Huneiti and Swedish Ambassador Maria Sargren discussed security cooperation and mutual regional as well as international issues, the report said.

The army chief emphasized the strong Franco-Jordanian relations and military partnership in his talks with French Ambassador Franck Gellet, while his meeting with Australian Ambassador Bernard Lynch focused on enhancing cooperation in training and expertise exchange.


Israel police say Palestinian killed while trying to climb over barrier

Israel police say Palestinian killed while trying to climb over barrier
Updated 15 September 2025

Israel police say Palestinian killed while trying to climb over barrier

Israel police say Palestinian killed while trying to climb over barrier
  • Sanad Hantouli, 25, was killed by Israeli gunfire near the West Bank town of Al-Ram, north of Jerusalem
  • Israeli authorities revoked Palestinian work permits since late 2023, prompting laborersfrom the West Banktocross theseparation barrier “illegally”

JERUSALEM: Israeli police said border officers shot dead a Palestinian man on Monday as he tried to enter Jerusalem by climbing over the barrier separating the city from the occupied West Bank.
The Palestinian health ministry in Ramallah identified the man as Sanad Najeh Mohammed Hantouli, 25, saying he was killed by Israeli gunfire near the West Bank town of Al-Ram, north of Jerusalem.
An Israeli police spokesperson reported that border police officers “foiled an infiltration attempt through the security barrier in Jerusalem.”
“The suspect was shot and neutralized,” the spokesperson said in a statement, adding he was later pronounced dead by medical teams.
Hantouli’s body was transferred to the Palestine Medical Complex in Ramallah before being taken to his hometown, Silat Al-Dhahr.
Many Palestinians have attempted to cross the separation barrier illegally in recent months, seeking work inside Israel after authorities there revoked thousands of work permits following the outbreak of the Gaza war.
Many have died fleeing from Israeli forces, Palestinian officials say.
Israel began building the barrier at the height of the second Palestinian intifada, which began in 2002, saying it was needed to maintain security amid Palestinian suicide bombings in Jerusalem and Israeli cities.
The barrier cuts into many parts of the West Bank, and Palestinians see it as a land grab and a de facto border, illegal under international law.
Palestinians say the barrier has further deepened the economic crisis in the West Bank.
Israel maintains tight restrictions on the movement of the West Bank’s roughly three million residents, who require special permits to cross checkpoints into East Jerusalem or Israel.
Al-Ram, located near the Qalandiya checkpoint, is separated from Jerusalem by a section of the barrier reinforced with barbed wire.
A joint World Bank, EU and UN report released in February 2025 said just 27,000 Palestinians were working in Israel and West Bank settlements, down from 177,000 before the Gaza war broke out in October 2023.
Israel has occupied the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, since 1967.
Violence has sharply escalated in the Palestinian territory since the Gaza war began.
At least 977 Palestinians — both militants and civilians — have been killed by Israeli forces or settlers in the West Bank since October 2023, according to AFP figures based on Palestinian Authority data.
In the same period, at least 42 Israelis, including soldiers and civilians, have been killed in attacks or military operations in the West Bank, Israeli official figures show.