UN says time is short to stop famine spreading as Israel bombards Gaza City

Palestinians line up to receive donated food at a community kitchen in Deir Al-Balah, southern Gaza Strip, Saturday, Sept. 6, 2025. (AP)
Palestinians line up to receive donated food at a community kitchen in Deir Al-Balah, southern Gaza Strip, Saturday, Sept. 6, 2025. (AP)
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Updated 5 min 22 sec ago

UN says time is short to stop famine spreading as Israel bombards Gaza City

Palestinians line up to receive donated food at a community kitchen in Deir Al-Balah, southern Gaza Strip, Saturday, Sept. 6.

JERUSALEM: There is a “narrow window” to prevent famine from spreading further in Gaza, a top UN official said on Sunday, calling on Israel to allow unimpeded aid delivery in the territory, where it is fighting Palestinian militant group Hamas.
According to a global hunger monitor, hundreds of thousands of Palestinians are already experiencing or at risk of famine in areas including Gaza City, the enclave’s largest urban center, where Israel has launched a new offensive against Hamas.
Israel, which stopped all aid for 11 weeks from March until mid-May, says it is doing more to let aid enter and be distributed in the enclave to prevent food shortages, though international agencies say far more is needed.
“There is a narrow window – until the end of September – to prevent famine from spreading to Deir al Balah (in central Gaza) and Khan Younis (southern Gaza). That window is now closing fast,” said United Nations aid chief Tom Fletcher.
COGAT, the Israeli defense agency that deals with humanitarian issues, said on Sunday that over the past week aid from more than 1,900 trucks, most supplying food, was distributed in Gaza.
“We will continue facilitating humanitarian aid into Gaza for the civilian population — not Hamas,” COGAT said in a statement.
Israel last month launched an assault on the outskirts of Gaza City and its forces are now just a few kilometers from the city center, where it issued warnings over the weekend to civilians to evacuate high rise buildings it says are being used by Hamas, before bombing them.
Israel did not provide evidence to show Hamas was using the buildings, an accusation the militant group denied.
Overnight, strikes killed 14 people across the city, local health officials said, including a strike on a school in southern Gaza City sheltering displaced Palestinians.
The Israeli military said it had struck a Hamas militant and that civilians had been warned before the strike was carried out.
The military on Saturday also warned Gaza City’s civilians to leave for the south, including Khan Younis, where hundreds of thousands of Palestinians are already sheltering in cramped tent encampments along the coast.
“Enough is enough”
With hundreds of thousands of people remaining in Gaza City, pressure is growing to end the war.
“We say to Hamas, we want a ceasefire, end this war before Gaza City is turned into ruins like Rafah,” said Gaza City resident Emad, referring to a southern Gaza City that Israel destroyed earlier in the war.
“We want an end to this war. How long is this going to go on? How many lives are going to be wasted? Enough is enough,” he said by phone, asking for his surname not to be published.
The war has grown increasingly unpopular among Israelis too. On Saturday night, tens of thousands of protesters joined families of hostages at rallies, calling for an end to the war and demanding the release of the hostages.
Twenty of the 48 hostages still in Gaza are believed to still be alive.
Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar said that the war could end immediately if Hamas released the hostages and laid down its weapons.
“We will be more than happy to reach this objective with political means,” he told a press conference in Jerusalem.
In response, senior Hamas official Basem Naim said the group would not disarm but would release all hostages if Israel ended the war and withdrew all its forces from Gaza, reiterating Hamas’ long-standing position.
More than 64,000 Palestinians have been killed by Israel’s military assault, launched after Hamas-led militants carried out the surprise October 7, 2023 attack that killed 1,200 people and saw another 251 abducted and taken into Gaza.
Danish Foreign Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen, speaking to reporters in Jerusalem alongside his Israeli counterpart, called on Israel to “change course” and stop its military campaign.
“We are extremely concerned about the humanitarian (situation),” he said, also calling for the hostages to be freed.


Jordanian king rejects any Israeli move to annex West Bank

Jordanian king rejects any Israeli move to annex West Bank
Updated 18 sec ago

Jordanian king rejects any Israeli move to annex West Bank

Jordanian king rejects any Israeli move to annex West Bank
  • King Abdullah rejected any plans to displace Palestinians from Gaza
  • UAE warned this week that an Israeli annexation of Palestinian territories would be a “red line”

AMMAN: King Abdullah II of Jordan on Sunday reaffirmed his “absolute refusal” toward any efforts by Israel to annex the occupied West Bank during a visit to the UAE, the royal palace said.
The message came after several Israeli officials suggested that the country could proceed with the annexation of large tracts of the territory in response to moves by Western governments to recognize Palestinian statehood this month.
According to a palace statement, King Abdullah reiterated “Jordan’s absolute refusal of any Israeli measures aimed at annexing the West Bank and forcing Palestinians to leave.”
He also rejected any plans to displace Palestinians from Gaza or to separate the two Palestinian territories.
He was joined by the UAE President Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al-Nahyan in expressing opposition to Israeli plans to expand settlements in the West Bank, occupied by Israel since 1967.
They also rejected “Israeli plans aimed at perpetuating the occupation of Gaza and expanding military control.”
The UAE warned this week that annexation would be a “red line.”
The issue was a key point during the US-led negotiations for Abu Dhabi to normalize relations with Israel in the Abraham Accords of 2020.
The Jordanian king has on multiple occasions said that Jordan would never be a “substitute country” for Palestinians, amid suggestions from the US and Israel that third countries could take in displaced Gazans.
Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar on Sunday warned that Western nations recognizing a Palestinian state could trigger “unilateral” measures by Israel.
Far-right finance minister Bezalel Smotrich called this week for the West Bank’s annexation in response.


Israel issues fresh evacuation order ahead of strike on Gaza City tower

A Palestinian woman mourns the death of a relative killed earlier in an Israeli strike, in the yard of Al-Shifa hospital in Gaza
A Palestinian woman mourns the death of a relative killed earlier in an Israeli strike, in the yard of Al-Shifa hospital in Gaza
Updated 07 September 2025

Israel issues fresh evacuation order ahead of strike on Gaza City tower

A Palestinian woman mourns the death of a relative killed earlier in an Israeli strike, in the yard of Al-Shifa hospital in Gaza
  • Israel has not publicly announced the start of a major offensive to seize Gaza City but troops have intensified bombings and operations in the area for weeks

GAZA CITY: The Israeli army issued a fresh evacuation order for a residential tower in Gaza City on Sunday ahead of a planned bombing of the high-rise building, a day after it issued a similar warning.
“The (army) will strike the building soon due to the presence of Hamas terrorist infrastructure inside or nearby,” army spokesman Avichay Adraee said in a statement.
On Saturday, the military had issued a similar warning for the same building, the Al-Roya Tower, after the air force had demolished two other residential high-rises this week.
The Al-Roya Tower was not struck on Saturday.
“For your safety, you must evacuate the building immediately and move south toward the humanitarian zone in Al-Mawasi” area of Khan Yunis in southern Gaza, the army spokesman added.
The warning came as the Israeli army pushed inside Gaza City in a bid to step up pressure on the Palestinian militant group Hamas.
“We are deepening the maneuver on the outskirts of Gaza City and within Gaza City itself,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyuahu told ministers at the start of a cabinet meeting on Sunday.
Israel has not publicly announced the start of a major offensive to seize Gaza City, which Netanyahu’s cabinet approved last month, but troops have intensified bombings and operations in the area for weeks.
The Israeli military has claimed that the two high-rises flattened in recent strikes were used by Hamas to “monitor” Israeli troops — an accusation denied by the Palestinian group.


Jordanian Armed Forces bring down drug-laden balloons on eastern border

Jordanian Armed Forces bring down drug-laden balloons on eastern border
Updated 07 September 2025

Jordanian Armed Forces bring down drug-laden balloons on eastern border

Jordanian Armed Forces bring down drug-laden balloons on eastern border
  • Border Guard forces detect, seize items
  • Jordan is known as transit point for drug smuggling in Middle East, criminals using drones alongside conventional methods to smuggle narcotics

LONDON: Security forces in Jordan’s Eastern Military Zone foiled a drug smuggling attempt early on Sunday along the country’s eastern border, as part of efforts to protect national security.

Authorities reported that smugglers used balloons guided by rudimentary devices to transport narcotics into Jordan.

Border Guard forces, in coordination with security agencies, detected and brought down the balloons and seized them. The materials have been turned over to the authorities for legal action, the Jordan News Agency reported.

Jordan is known as a transit point for drug smuggling in the Middle East, with criminals using drones alongside conventional methods to smuggle narcotics into the country from neighboring Syria and Iraq.

The Jordanian Armed Forces intercepted on average 51 drones each month from January to July, nearly two per day, all carrying narcotics destined for Jordanian territory, according to an investigative report by Petra.


Saudi energy delegation visits major oil refineries in Syria

Saudi energy delegation visits major oil refineries in Syria
Updated 07 September 2025

Saudi energy delegation visits major oil refineries in Syria

Saudi energy delegation visits major oil refineries in Syria
  • Syrian officials briefed their Saudi counterparts about capabilities at the Baniyas and Homs refineries
  • In June, Syria resumed exports from the country's largest refinery

LONDON: A Saudi energy delegation visited the oil refineries in Baniyas and Homs, two cities in the northwest of the Syrian Arab Republic, as part of cooperation between the two countries in the oil sector.

Syrian officials briefed their Saudi counterparts from the Ministry of Energy about the technical and technological capabilities at the Baniyas refinery on the Mediterranean coast and in Homs. They discussed cooperation in the oil industry, the Syrian News Agency reported.

The delegation held a video conference with the Syrian Oil Transport Company in Baniyas to review the company’s operations and plans for improving the transport system and production, the SANA added.

In June, Syria resumed exports from the Baniyas refinery, sending an initial shipment of 30,000 tonnes of non-crude petroleum products to international markets.

Baniyas, 35 km north of Tartus, is Syria’s largest refinery with a specialized oil port. Since the fall of the Assad regime in December, the new administration in Damascus has been in talks with neighboring countries to support its energy sector.

The cooperation between Syria and has progressed rapidly since then, especially in the energy and investment sectors, the SANA added.


Baghdad clashes kill six, including four police: ministry

Baghdad clashes kill six, including four police: ministry
Updated 07 September 2025

Baghdad clashes kill six, including four police: ministry

Baghdad clashes kill six, including four police: ministry
  • Clashes between members of two local tribes in Iraq’s capital Baghdad have killed at least six people, including four policemen who intervened in the violence, the interior ministry said on Sunday
  • Iraqi security officials said that the clashes late Saturday erupted over increased fees for a private power generator

BAGHDAD: Clashes between members of two local tribes in Iraq’s capital Baghdad have killed at least six people, including four policemen who intervened in the violence, the interior ministry said on Sunday.
Iraqi security officials, speaking to AFP on condition of anonymity, said that the clashes late Saturday erupted over increased fees for a private power generator.
The vast majority of Iraqis rely on private generators to compensate for daily long power cuts to public electricity.
The violence Saturday in Baghdad’s Saada area resulted in the deaths of four police officers, two of them commanders, after they had intervened to disperse a “tribal dispute,” the interior ministry said, revising an earlier toll.
A security official, requesting anonymity because he was not authorized to brief the media, said the toll was updated after two policemen succumbed to their injuries.
Another nine officers were wounded, the ministry said.
It said the force was attacked by “those who started the clashes,” and returned fire that killed two people.
Five of those involved in the clashes were wounded and several arrested, the ministry said.
Tribal feuds are common in Iraq, a war-scarred country awash with weapons, where the pettiest row can turn into deadly tribal clashes.
Tribes wield significant influence and often operate under their own moral and judicial codes, and they possess huge caches of arms.
Iraq has only recently begun to regain a sense of stability after decades of violence that followed the 2003 US-led invasion that ousted long-time ruler Saddam Hussein.