UAE says Israeli annexation of West Bank would cross a ‘red line’

UAE says Israeli annexation of West Bank would cross a ‘red line’
UAE's Minister of State within the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Khalifa Shaheen al-Marar attends an Extraordinary Session of the Council of Foreign Ministers of the Member States of The Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) in Jeddah on March 7, 2025. (FILE/AFP)
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UAE says Israeli annexation of West Bank would cross a ‘red line’

UAE says Israeli annexation of West Bank would cross a ‘red line’

DUBAI: The UAE has warned Israel that any move to annex parts of the occupied Palestinian territories would cross a “red line” and destabilize the region, underscoring the UAE’s support for Palestinian statehood despite its normalization of ties with Israel in recent years.

The Emirates News Agency (WAM) reported that Khalifa Shaheen Al-Marar, a UAE minister of state, confirmed the Emirati stance on Thursday following the conclusion of the 164th session of the Council of Arab Foreign Ministers.

The rebuke had been circulating in the press after statements made by Emirati special envoy Lana Nusseibeh in a Times of Israel interview earlier in the week.

“Israel’s annexation of the West Bank or any part of the occupied Palestinian territories represents a red line, and taking such a step would undermine regional security,” Al-Marar said.

He said the Emirates were committed to protecting Palestinian rights and pursuing a two-state solution as the only viable path to a comprehensive peace.

He added that the Cairo meetings, chaired by the UAE, produced a consensus among Arab states on the urgent need to halt the war in Gaza, reject Israeli displacement policies, and prevent any attempt to erase the Palestinian cause through annexation.

“The UAE continues to deliver humanitarian aid to the Gaza Strip and is proceeding, within the framework of its relations with sisterly Arab states, to find a solution that ensures halting the war and restoring stability in the Strip, followed by necessary political and humanitarian arrangements,” Al-Marar said.

The UAE normalized relations with Israel in 2020 under the US-brokered Abraham Accords, becoming the first Gulf state to formally establish diplomatic ties with the Jewish state. The move opened avenues for trade, investment, and technology cooperation, according to WAM, non-oil bilateral trade volume between the UAE and Israel reached more than $2.5 billion in 2022.

But the relationship has been complicated by Israel’s military campaigns in Gaza and the stalled peace process with the Palestinians.

Emirati officials have repeatedly balanced deepening economic and diplomatic engagement with Israel against firm rhetorical support for Palestinian rights.

In recent years, the UAE has also used its position as a regional mediator — engaging with the US, European powers, and Arab states to press for de-escalation in Gaza and for renewed international commitment to a two-state solution.

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Gaza civil defense says 19 killed in Israeli strikes

Gaza civil defense says 19 killed in Israeli strikes
Updated 05 September 2025

Gaza civil defense says 19 killed in Israeli strikes

Gaza civil defense says 19 killed in Israeli strikes
  • Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed at least 64,231 Palestinians, most of them civilians, according to figures from the health ministry in Hamas run Gaza that the United Nations considers reliable

GAZA CITY: Gaza’s civil defense agency said 19 people were killed on Friday in a series of Israeli strikes in and around Gaza City, which the Israeli military is planning to conquer.
Civil defense spokesman Mahmud Bassal said the attacks hit buildings and tents housing displaced Gazans in several neighborhoods and on the outskirts of the city, where the United Nations says more than a million people are facing famine.
Contacted by AFP, the Israeli military requested timeframes and coordinates to comment on specific incidents.
Israel has stepped up its bombardment of Gaza City since saying it would launch a full-scale offensive to capture it. Army spokesman Nadav Shoshani said Thursday the start of the campaign would not be announced in order to “maintain the element of surprise.”
Another army spokesman, Effie Defrin, said Thursday that Israeli troops already controlled 40 percent of the city.
Israel expects its new offensive will displace around a million people toward the south.
Media restrictions in Gaza and difficulties in accessing many areas mean AFP is unable to independently verify the tolls and details provided by the civil defense agency or the Israeli military.
The war in Gaza was sparked by Hamas’s October 2023 attack on Israel, which resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli figures.
Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed at least 64,231 Palestinians, most of them civilians, according to figures from the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza that the United Nations considers reliable.


Palestinian death toll passes 64,000, health officials say, as Israel and Hamas dig in on demands

Palestinian death toll passes 64,000, health officials say, as Israel and Hamas dig in on demands
Updated 04 September 2025

Palestinian death toll passes 64,000, health officials say, as Israel and Hamas dig in on demands

Palestinian death toll passes 64,000, health officials say, as Israel and Hamas dig in on demands
  • Shifa Hospital in Gaza City received 25 bodies, including nine children and six women
  • Gaza’s Health Ministry said that 64,231 Palestinians have been killed since the start of the war

DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip: More than 64,000 Palestinians have been killed in the nearly two-year war in the Gaza Strip, local health officials said Thursday, as Hamas and Israel reiterated their incompatible demands for ending the fighting sparked by the militant group’s 2023 attack.
Israeli strikes killed 28 people, mostly women and children, overnight and into Thursday, according to hospitals, as Israel pressed ahead with its offensive in famine-stricken Gaza City.
The latest strikes came as Israeli troops were operating in parts of Gaza City with plans to take over all of it. The most populous Palestinian city is home to around a million people many of whom have already been displaced multiple times.
Shifa Hospital in Gaza City received 25 bodies, including nine children and six women, after Israeli strikes hit tents housing displaced people, according to hospital records. Among those killed was a 10-day-old baby. Another three people were killed in southern Gaza, according to Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis.
Maha Afana said the strikes woke her up in the middle of the night as she slept in a tent in Gaza City with her children. When she checked on them she found the bodies of her son and daughter, drenched with blood. “I started screaming,” she said.
Associated Press footage of the aftermath showed charred tents and debris. The sound of further Israeli bombardment echoed in the background.
“What did those children do to the state of Israel? They didn’t carry a knife or artillery. They were just sleeping,” said Hayam Basous, who lost a relative in the strike.
There was no immediate comment from the Israeli military, which says it only targets militants and tries to avoid harming civilians. It blames civilian deaths on Hamas, saying militants are entrenched in densely-populated areas.
Death toll rises
Gaza’s Health Ministry said that 64,231 Palestinians have been killed since the start of the war. The latest update includes around 400 who were presumed missing but whose deaths it says have been confirmed.
The ministry doesn’t say how many of those killed in the war were militants or civilians. It says women and children make up around half the dead.
The ministry is part of the Hamas-run government and staffed by medical professionals. Its figures are seen as a reliable estimate of wartime deaths by UN agencies and many independent experts. Israel has disputed them without providing its own toll.
Hamas-led militants killed around 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and abducted 251 people in their attack on southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. Most have since been released in ceasefires or other agreements.


Last refuge for Gaza families now a ‘city of fear, flight and funerals’ where childhood cannot survive

Last refuge for Gaza families now a ‘city of fear, flight and funerals’ where childhood cannot survive
Updated 04 September 2025

Last refuge for Gaza families now a ‘city of fear, flight and funerals’ where childhood cannot survive

Last refuge for Gaza families now a ‘city of fear, flight and funerals’ where childhood cannot survive
  • After spending 9 days in the territory, UNICEF official warns of repeated displacements, children separated from parents, mothers grieving children lost to starvation
  • She tells of youngsters maimed by shrapnel she met in hospitals and warns: ‘The unthinkable is not looming — it is already here’

NEW YORK CITY: Once a refuge for families, Gaza City is now a place where “childhood cannot survive,” a leading UNICEF official said on Thursday.

“It is a city of fear, flight and funerals,” said Tess Ingram, the organization’s communications manager for the Middle East and North Africa, speaking from Gaza.

“The world is sounding the alarm about what an intensified military offensive in Gaza City could bring: a catastrophe for nearly 1 million people. But we cannot wait for the unthinkable to happen to act.”

After spending nine days in the territory, Ingram recounted stories of repeated displacement, children separated from parents, mothers grieving children lost to starvation, and others who fear their children will be next.

She also spoke of youngsters maimed by shrapnel she met in hospitals and warned: “The unthinkable is not looming — it is already here.”

Among the gravest emergencies in Gaza is the soaring rate of child malnutrition. Of 92 UNICEF-supported outpatient nutrition centers in Gaza City, only 44 remain operational.

“This is what famine in a war zone looks like,” Ingram said, describing overcrowded clinics filled with starving children and parents in despair. She told how many families survive on a single daily bowl of lentils or rice, shared among all members, with mothers skipping meals so that their children can eat.

She shared in particular the story of Nesma, a mother she first met in April 2024. Nesma’s daughter, Jana, was evacuated from Gaza for medical treatment for malnutrition and recovered. But following the brief ceasefire in Gaza, and the family’s return to the north of the territory, the blockade resumed. Nesma’s younger son, Jouri, died last month from malnutrition, Ingram said, and Jana, now critically ill once again, is barely holding on.

“I am crushed after raising my child only to lose him in my arms,” Nesma told Ingram. “I beg not to lose Jana too.”

UNICEF continues to operate across Gaza, delivering life-saving aid. In the past two weeks, it supplied enough therapeutic food for 3,000 severely malnourished children, complementary food for 1,400 infants, and high-energy biscuits for 4,600 pregnant and breastfeeding women. But the needs of the people in the territory are much greater.

The statistics are stark. In February, 2,000 children were admitted to health centers for treatment for hunger. By July, the number had soared to 13,000. In the first half of August alone, a further 7,200 were admitted.

Meanwhile, access to Gaza remains tightly restricted by Israeli authorities. Only about 41 trucks of aid enter the territory each day on average, a negligible number compared with the 6,000-8,500 that are required. Even on the best days, only about 100 get through. Bureaucratic and security barriers, coupled with looting, further hinder aid-distribution efforts.

UNICEF is seeking $716 million of funding from the international community for its Gaza response but this is only 39 percent funded. Despite the famine conditions, nutritional aid is only 17 percent funded.

“We could do far more and reach every child if our operations were enabled at scale and fully funded,” Ingram said.

Essential supplies such as diapers and specialized infant formula are being delivered in limited quantities but much more is needed. Ingram said that some supplies are looted en route, a problem that could be eased if volumes of aid were sufficient to meet demand.

Beyond addressing the nutritional needs, UNICEF also provides clean water, temporary classrooms, child-protection services, mental health support, hospital equipment, and cash assistance.

But hospitals remain overwhelmed. Of the 11 that are still partially functional in Gaza City, only five have neonatal intensive care units. Forty incubators, stretched to 200 percent capacity, are sustaining the lives 80 fragile newborns but rely on inconsistent and dwindling power supplies.

Even so-called “safe zones” have turned deadly. During one recent night, a 13-year-old girl called Mona survived an Israeli strike that killed her mother, 2-year-old brother and 8-year-old sister. She now lies in a hospital bed following abdominal surgery and the amputation of her left leg.

“It hurt a lot,” Mona told Ingram. “But I’m not sad about my leg; I’m sad that I lost my mum.”

Ingram urged Israeli authorities to review their rules of engagement to better protect children in line with the principles of international humanitarian law, and called on Hamas and other armed groups to release hostages. She emphasized the need for both sides in the conflict to allow safe and sustained access for aid workers, protect civilians and critical infrastructure, and reinstate the ceasefire agreement.

“Palestinian life is being dismantled,” Ingram said. “In Gaza City, the unthinkable has already begun. The cost of inaction will be measured in the lives of children buried in rubble, wasted by hunger, and silenced before they even had a chance to speak.”


Why removing the US Caesar Act is essential for Syria’s post-Assad era recovery

Why removing the US Caesar Act is essential for Syria’s post-Assad era recovery
Updated 04 September 2025

Why removing the US Caesar Act is essential for Syria’s post-Assad era recovery

Why removing the US Caesar Act is essential for Syria’s post-Assad era recovery
  • The US Treasury has scrapped Syria sanctions, ending restrictions in place since 2004, allowing firms to reengage
  • Experts warn keeping the Caesar Act signals hesitation to non-US investors, exposing them to secondary sanctions risk

LONDON: Marking the latest step in Washington’s policy adjustments toward Damascus, the US Treasury Department said on Aug. 25 it will remove Syria from its sanctions list, allowing American firms to conduct business there.

The change, issued by the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control, took effect on Aug. 26, ending restrictions first imposed in 2004 and later broadened during Syria’s civil war, rolling back years of measures that had cut the nation off from international markets.

“The decision to update OFAC’s regulations to remove the Syria sanctions program officially formalizes the June 30 executive order and will trigger companies to adjust their compliance programs,” Sameer Saboungi, policy officer and director of legal affairs at the Syrian American Council, told Arab News.

Saboungi said the move should encourage firms to revisit their policies on Syria, calling it “yet another step towards the reintegration of Syria into the global markets.”

US officials discussed security progress with Al-Sharaa, amid ongoing violence and hardship. (Supplied)

However, while the US government “has done a lot in a remarkably short span of time,” much now “depends on private companies and how they decide to capitalize on the economic opportunities in Syria, as well as on the Syrian government and how they choose to use these opportunities.”

In its statement, OFAC said it was “removing from the Code of Federal Regulations the Syrian Sanctions Regulations as a result of the termination of the national emergency on which the regulations were based and further changes to the policy of the United States towards Syria.”

The Treasury’s decision follows President Donald Trump’s June 30 executive order ending the sanctions program to clear the way for reconstruction. Initially designed to pressure the Bashar Assad regime, the penalties have become a barrier to economic recovery since his removal.

That same order also instructed the secretary of state to review the designation of the interim president, Ahmad Al-Sharaa, and his faction, Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham — which led the offensive that forced Assad from power — as Specially Designated Global Terrorists.

Yet uncertainty persists. The order directed the State Department “to examine whether to suspend the imposition of some or all of the sanctions required under the Caesar Act,” but those measures cannot be unilaterally revoked by the White House or extended beyond 180 days without congressional approval.

Bedouin fighters ride a motorcycle next to a burned building in the village of Al-Mazraa. (Reuters/File)

On Aug. 25, Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, the ranking member of the US Senate’s Foreign Relations Committee, and her bipartisan colleague Rep. Joe Wilson visited Syria for talks with Al-Sharaa, marking the first such visit since the Assad regime’s ouster.

Joined by US envoy Tom Barrack, they discussed Syria’s security progress, reconstruction, inclusive governance, and the potential for lifting Caesar Act sanctions.

The Caesar Syria Civilian Protection Act, enacted in 2020 to isolate Assad and deter foreign investment, remains on the books. Critics argue that despite a 180-day waiver that started on May 23, the legislation has outlived its purpose since Assad’s ouster and now deters non-US foreign investors with the threat of secondary sanctions.

“The Caesar Act was originally designed to target the Assad regime as it was in power, and now that it’s not in power anymore, it doesn’t hold anymore,” Vittorio Maresca di Serracapriola, sanctions lead analyst at the New Zealand-based Karam Shaar Advisory, told Arab News.

Keeping the act, even with a waiver, “would signal a break from the Trump administration’s current approach because it embeds a two-year monitoring requirement,” he said. “That would push the Caesar Act expiration into 2028 at the earliest, effectively locking Syria into at least three more years of sanctions regardless of compliance.”

Congress has already reopened the debate, prompted by sectarian violence in southern Syria.

A drone view of a displacement camp in Idlib, Syria. (Reuters/File)

On July 16, the House Financial Services Committee approved a draft amendment to the Caesar Act, tying sanctions relief to conditions on civilian protection and human rights. The measure, House Resolution 4427, introduced by Rep. Michael Lawler, would extend waivers for up to two years and potentially delay full suspension until 2029.

The amendment also calls for tighter oversight of Syria’s central bank, a review of financial restrictions, and Treasury reports on terrorism financing and money laundering. About a week later, the committee advanced the bill, allowing Trump to lift sanctions permanently after two years if Syria’s interim government meets the conditions.

“The Al-Sharaa administration certainly has a lot of work to do to reintegrate Syria with the US and our allies,” Lawler said. However, Rep. Wilson called for an unconditional repeal of the Caesar Act, arguing it would better align with Trump’s Syria policy.

For its part, Al-Sharaa’s government has pledged to make the transitional period rights-respecting, transparent, and accountable, with commissions and legal guarantees built into policy. But renewed violence is testing the country’s prospects for stability.

Armed clashes erupted on July 12 in the southern province of Suweida between the Bedouin and Druze communities. The fighting quickly escalated into widespread violence involving militias, interim government forces, and allied groups, according to media reports.

Children sit inside a school that is used as a shelter centre, in Dael, Deraa governorate. (Reuters/File)

On July 16, Al-Sharaa said in a televised address that his priority was protecting Syria’s Druze citizens, after Israel vowed to destroy government forces, which it accused of attacking members of the minority group in Suwieda.

“We are eager to hold accountable those who transgressed and abused our Druze people because they are under the protection and responsibility of the state,” Al-Sharaa said, describing the Druze community as “a fundamental part of the fabric of this nation.”

Although a ceasefire has largely held since July 21, UN experts said on Aug. 21 that they were alarmed by accounts of killings, abductions, looting, sexual violence, and other abuses against Druze communities in the area.

They said at least 1,000 people were killed in three villages, including 539 identified as Druze civilians, with more than 196 extrajudicial executions — including eight children and 30 women — and 33 villages burned.

Maresca di Serracapriola warned that H.R. 4427 “threatens to extend the Caesar Act despite the Trump administration’s general push for sanction relief.

“The bill’s most consequential provision is that it wants to keep the Caesar Act firmly in place, and it would offer only a narrow path to suspend it — only if Syria meets nine stringent conditions for two consecutive years,” he said.

SANCTIONS TIMELINE

• Dec. 1979: Syria added to the US list of state sponsors of terrorism.

• May 2004: US imposes broader sanctions over Lebanon occupation.

• April 2011: US sanctions Syrian officials over human rights abuses.

• June 2020: Caesar Act expands sanctions over regime and supporters.

• Feb. 2025: EU suspends sanctions on banking, energy, and transport.

• May: Treasury issues General License 25, authorizing transactions.

• June: Trump signs Executive Order 14312, terminating sanctions program.

• July: State Department revokes terrorist designation for HTS.

That would carry both symbolic and practical consequences. “The Caesar Act has perhaps been the most impactful statutory sanction imposed on Syria, because it expanded the possibility of secondary sanctions,” he said.

“So, keeping it in place would still signal some reluctance from the US administration and, more broadly, from Congress to fully lift sanctions on Syria — and that could send negative signals to (non-US) investors about restoring confidence.

“The second issue,” he added, “is the potential liability of those doing business with Syria, who could become targets of the Caesar Act due to its secondary sanctions.”

Nevertheless, the bill leaves room for progress. “The bill does not necessarily have a very hawkish view on keeping sanctions on Syria because it also wants to advance Syria’s reintegration into the global financial system,” he said.

“For instance, the bill aims to strengthen anti-money laundering capacity and update sanctions policy to reflect current conditions.”

Displaced people who fled from Aleppo countryside, sit together on the back of a truck in Tabqa, Syria. (Reuters/File)

Furthermore, “section two (of the bill) requires the director of FinCEN (Financial Crimes Enforcement Network) to brief Congress within 360 days on the impact of recent regulatory relief for the Commercial Bank of Syria.”

In addition, it includes “provisions to instruct US representatives at the IMF and the World Bank to restore economic monitoring on Syria and, in general, provide technical assistance on anti-money laundering, non-proliferation, and anti-corruption.”

Saboungi of the Syrian American Council echoed the cautious optimism. “There are no sanctions, prohibitions, or other regulations that would prohibit or prevent US companies from working in Damascus now,” he said.

“There may be some leftover restrictions on some transactions with the government, due to the state sponsor of terrorism designation,” he added. “But otherwise, US companies can find many lawful ways to operate in and provide their services in Syria.

“Export controls continue to be an impediment, but they’re an impediment that can be surmounted, and we believe they will soon be eased too,” he said.

Smoke rises while Syrian security forces sit in the back of a truck, as Syrian troops enter the predominantly Druze city of Sweida. (Reuters/File)

But for ordinary Syrians, optimism feels distant, even unrealistic. Even in the capital Damascus, people continue to face hardship, lengthy power cuts, dwindling water supplies, rising crime, and soaring bread prices.

Nearly 90 percent of the population now lives below the poverty line, unable to afford basic necessities such as food, health care, clean water, or education.

Inflation, currency devaluation, and limits on banking and foreign aid continue to erode living standards, emphasizing the gap between policy shifts abroad and realities on the ground.

 


Sudanese authorities bury hundreds of victims of Darfur landslide

Sudanese authorities bury hundreds of victims of Darfur landslide
Updated 04 September 2025

Sudanese authorities bury hundreds of victims of Darfur landslide

Sudanese authorities bury hundreds of victims of Darfur landslide
  • “May the victims of this devastating incident receive mercy,” Al-Zubair said as he and dozens of others gathered at the scene of the landslide to pray for the dead
  • The UN has said that efforts have been mobilized to support the impacted area

CAIRO: Sudanese authorities said Thursday they recovered and buried the bodies of hundreds of people who died in a landslide over the weekend in Sudan’s western region of Darfur.
Mujib Al-Rahman Al-Zubair, head of the Civil Authority in the Liberated Territories, said in a video address shared with The Associated Press that the authority, along with help from local aid workers, was able to reach 375 bodies, but the remaining bodies remain trapped underground.
“May the victims of this devastating incident receive mercy,” he said as he and dozens of others gathered at the scene of the landslide to pray for the dead.
Al-Zubair is leading rescue missions, hoping to recover more bodies and find survivors despite the lack of equipment and resources.
The Aug. 31 landslide that followed days of heavy rainfall in Tarasin, in the Marrah Mountains, could have possibly killed as many as 1,000, Mohamed Abdel-Rahman Al-Nair, a spokesperson for the Sudan Liberation Movement-Army, previously told the AP. The United Nations’ Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, OCHA, had a similar death toll estimate, but said it’s hard to confirm the magnitude of the tragedy because the area is hard to reach.
The UN has said that efforts have been mobilized to support the impacted area, located more than 900 kilometers (560 miles) west of the capital, Khartoum.
UN spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric said in a briefing on Thursday that an estimated 150 people from Tarseen and neighboring villages have been displaced.
OCHA and partners launched a rapid assessment and response mission Thursday, with teams from local NGOs, UN agencies and international groups reaching the site partly by donkey due to rough terrain, according to Dujarric. Their focus is to verify the number of people affected and deliver essential aid for up to 750 people, including medical kits and food. Mobile health clinics and emergency medical teams were also deployed to the area.
Al-Nair said in a statement Thursday that the landslide caused a “catastrophic humanitarian situation” that requires a rapid response from the international community to provide food and shelter for those who have lost everything.
The Marrah Mountains region is a volcanic area with a height of more than 3,000 meters (9,840 feet) at its summit. The mountain chain is a world heritage site and is known for its lower temperature and higher rainfall than its surroundings, according to UNICEF.
A small-scale landslide hit the area in 2018, killing at least 19 people and injuring dozens of others, according to the now-disbanded United Nations-African Union mission in Darfur.
Sudan is already impacted by one of the worst humanitarian crises in the world caused by the ongoing civil war that erupted in April 2023 in the capital city, Khartoum. The conflict spread across the country after simmering tensions escalated between the Sudanese army and its rival paramilitary Rapid Support Forces. More than 40,000 people have been killed and as many as 12 million displaced.
Some areas in the country are struggling with famine and disease outbreaks such as cholera.