Israeli police officers detain former Arab member of Knesset Haneen Zoabi 

Israeli police officers detain former Arab member of Knesset Haneen Zoabi 
Arab-Israeli Knesset member Haneen Zoabi (L), arrives to support fellow parliament member Basel Ghattas, at the Israeli Rishon Lezion Justice court, near Tel Aviv. (File/AFP)
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Updated 39 sec ago

Israeli police officers detain former Arab member of Knesset Haneen Zoabi 

Israeli police officers detain former Arab member of Knesset Haneen Zoabi 
  • She was arrested at her home in Nazareth, taken to Tiberias
  • Zoabi being detained on suspicion of incitement to terrorism, support for proscribed organizations

LONDON: Israeli police officers have detained former Knesset member Haneen Zoabi after arresting her at her home in Nazareth, in the north of Israel, on suspicion of “incitement to terrorism.”

She was taken to Tiberias for questioning, according to Hassan Jabareen, director of the Haifa-based Adalah Legal Center. He said that she was being investigated on suspicion of incitement to terrorism and support for organizations designated as terrorists by the Israeli authorities.

“It is clear to me that this detention is unlawful,” Jabareen added, according to the Palestinian News and Information Agency. “She could have been summoned in a regular and proper way, with a scheduled time and place for questioning, instead of being detained at her family home in the early morning, accompanied by six police officers, over such allegations.”

He noted that the legality of the detention would be central to proceedings if the authorities sought to extend it, WAFA added.

Zoabi is a prominent Palestinian political figure, known for her strong criticism of Israeli policies and her advocacy for the 1.6 million Palestinian citizens of Israel, who make up 20 percent of the population.

She served as a member of the Knesset for the Palestinian nationalist Balad Party from 2009 to 2019.


Syria to select new parliament on October 5

Syria to select new parliament on October 5
Updated 4 sec ago

Syria to select new parliament on October 5

Syria to select new parliament on October 5
DAMASCUS: Syria is set to hold the selection process for a transitional parliament on October 5, in accordance with a constitutional declaration announced earlier this year, the electoral commission said Sunday.
The People’s Assembly of Syria was dissolved by the country’s new authorities who seized power after ousting longtime ruler Bashar Assad in a lightning offensive last December.
The upcoming legislature, which will serve for a five-year transitional period, will comprise 210 lawmakers — 140 designated by local committees supervised by the electoral commission and 70 directly nominated by interim President Ahmed Al-Sharaa.
The process will be held on October 5 “in the electoral districts of Syria’s provinces,” the commission wrote on its Telegram channel.
It did not specify if all provinces would take part.
In late August, the government announced that the selection would be delayed in the Druze-majority province of Sweida — the site of deadly clashes in July — and in the Kurdish-held regions of Raqqa and Hasakah, due to the security and political situation.
The system for appointing the interim parliament has been a target of major criticism by the opposition and civil society groups, which have denounced the concentration of powers in the president’s hands and insufficient representation of the country’s ethnic and religious minorities.
According to the constitutional declaration adopted in March, the transitional parliament will have a renewable mandate of 30 months.
It will excercize its role until a permanent constitution is adopted and new elections are held.

Two Israeli far-right ministers urge West Bank annexation as Western countries recognize Palestinian state

Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich (R-L). (File/AFP)
Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich (R-L). (File/AFP)
Updated 21 September 2025

Two Israeli far-right ministers urge West Bank annexation as Western countries recognize Palestinian state

Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich (R-L). (File/AFP)
  • Recognition by UK, Canada, and Australia of a Palestinian state requires “countermeasures: the swift application of sovereignty in Judea and Samaria” Ben Gvir said

JERUSALEM: Two Israeli far-right ministers on Sunday called for the annexation of the Israeli-occupied West Bank following Britain, Canada and Australia’s recognition of a Palestinian state.
“The recognition by Britain, Canada, and Australia of a Palestinian state... requires immediate countermeasures: the swift application of sovereignty in Judea and Samaria and the complete dismantling of the Palestinian Authority,” National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir said in a statement, using the Israeli name for the Palestinian territory.
“I intend to submit a proposal for applying sovereignty at the upcoming cabinet meeting.”
Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, who has also repeatedly called for the annexation of the West Bank, made a similar statement.
“The days when Britain and other countries would determine our future are over. The mandate is over, and the only response to this anti-Israeli move is sovereignty over the historic homeland of the Jewish people in Judea and Samaria, and permanently removing the folly of a Palestinian state from the agenda,” Smotrich said on X.
“Mr prime minister, the time is now and it is in your hands,” he wrote.


Israel making progress on Syria pact but deal still far off: Netanyahu

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. (File/Reuters)
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. (File/Reuters)
Updated 21 September 2025

Israel making progress on Syria pact but deal still far off: Netanyahu

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. (File/Reuters)
  • “We are holding talks with the Syrians, there is some progress, but there was still a ways to go,” Netanyahu said
  • Syrian president said Wednesday that a security pact was a “necessity” and that it would need to respect Syria’s airspace and territorial unity

JERUSALEM: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Sunday there has been progress on a security deal with Syria but an agreement was not imminent.
Speaking at the outset of a cabinet meeting, Netanyahu said victory against Hezbollah in Lebanon had opened up the possibility of peace with Israel’s northern neighbors.
“We are holding talks with the Syrians, there is some progress, but there was still a ways to go,” he said. “In any case these discussions, as well as the contacts with Lebanon, would not have been possible without our decisive victories on the northern front and others.”
Syria’s President Ahmed Al-Sharaa said on Wednesday that ongoing negotiations with Israel to reach a security pact could lead to results “in the coming days.”
He said a security pact was a “necessity” and that it would need to respect Syria’s airspace and territorial unity and be monitored by the United Nations.
Syria and Israel are in talks to reach an agreement that Damascus hopes will secure a halt to Israeli airstrikes and the withdrawal of Israeli troops who have pushed into southern Syria.


Egyptians outraged after ancient pharaoh’s bracelet was stolen from Cairo museum and melted down

Egyptians outraged after ancient pharaoh’s bracelet was stolen from Cairo museum and melted down
Updated 21 September 2025

Egyptians outraged after ancient pharaoh’s bracelet was stolen from Cairo museum and melted down

Egyptians outraged after ancient pharaoh’s bracelet was stolen from Cairo museum and melted down
  • Egyptians have expressed outrage after a 3,000-year-old bracelet belonging to an ancient pharaoh was stolen from Cairo’s Egyptian Museum and melted down for gold
  • Tourism and Antiquities Minister Sherif Fathy said Saturday that the bracelet was stolen on September 9 while being prepared for an exhibit in Italy

CAIRO: Egyptians reacted with outrage this week after officials said that a 3,000-year-old bracelet that had belonged to an ancient pharaoh was stolen from Cairo’s famed Egyptian Museum and then melted down for gold.
Tourism and Antiquities Minister Sherif Fathy said in televised comments late Saturday that the bracelet was stolen on Sep. 9 while officials at the museum were preparing artifacts for an exhibit in Italy. He blamed “laxity” in implementing procedures at the facility and said that prosecutors were still investigating.
The bracelet, containing a lapis lazuli bead, belonged to Pharaoh Amenemope, who reigned about 3,000 years ago. Authorities said it was taken from a restoration lab at the museum and then funneled through a chain of dealers before being melted down. The minister said the lab didn’t have security cameras.
Four suspects have been arrested and questioned, including a restoration specialist at the museum, the Interior Ministry said.
According to the Interior Ministry, the restoration specialist who was arrested confessed to giving the bracelet to an acquaintance who owns a silver shop in Cairo’s Sayyeda Zainab district. It was later sold to the owner of a gold workshop for the equivalent of about $3,800. It was eventually sold for around $4,000 to a worker at another gold workshop, who melted the bracelet down to make other gold jewelry.
The suspects confessed to their crimes and the money was seized, the ministry said in a statement on Thursday.
The ministry also released security camera video showing a shop owner receiving a bracelet, weighing it, and then paying one of the suspects.
The loss of a treasure that had survived for three millennia was painful to many people in Egypt, where there is great esteem for the nation’s ancient heritage.
Some questioned security measures at the museum and called for tightening these measures around the country’s treasures.
Monica Hanna, a prominent Egyptian archaeologist, called for suspending oversees exhibits “until better control” is implemented to secure the artifacts. Hanna is the dean at the Arab Academy for Science, Technology & Maritime Transport, and campaigns for the return of Egyptian artifacts exhibited in museums overseas.
Malek Adly, an Egyptian human rights lawyer, called the theft “an alarm bell” for the government and said better security is needed for antiquities in exhibition halls and those in storage.
Amenemope ruled Egypt from Tanis in the Nile Delta during Egypt’s 21st Dynasty. The Tanis royal necropolis was discovered by the French archaeologist Pierre Montet in 1940, according to the Egyptian Museum.
The necropolis’ collection exhibits about 2,500 ancient artifacts, including golden funerary masks, silver coffins and golden jewels. The collection was restored in 2021 in cooperation with the Louvre Museum in Paris.
The theft reminded some of past cultural losses, including the brief disappearance of a Vincent van Gogh’s “Poppy Flowers” — then valued at $50 million — from another Cairo museum in 2010. That painting was recovered within hours.


Israel kills 34 people in Gaza ahead of UN meeting, where countries will recognize Palestinian state

Israel kills 34 people in Gaza ahead of UN meeting, where countries will recognize Palestinian state
Updated 21 September 2025

Israel kills 34 people in Gaza ahead of UN meeting, where countries will recognize Palestinian state

Israel kills 34 people in Gaza ahead of UN meeting, where countries will recognize Palestinian state
  • Palestinians streamed out of Gaza City, though many are unwilling to be uprooted again, too weak to leave or unable to afford the cost of moving
  • Aid groups warn that forced evacuations in Gaza will worsen the humanitarian crisis

CAIRO: Israeli strikes killed at least 34 people in Gaza City overnight, including children, said health officials on Sunday, as Israel presses ahead with its offensive in the famine-stricken city and several countries prepare to recognize a Palestinian state.
Health officials at Shifa Hospital, where most of the bodies were brought, said the dead included 14 people killed in a late-night strike Saturday, which hit a residential block in the southern side of the city. Health staff said a nurse who worked at the hospital was among the dead, along with his wife and three children.
The latest Israeli operation, which began this week, further escalates a conflict that has roiled the Middle East and likely pushes any ceasefire further out of reach. The Israeli military, which says it wants to “destroy Hamas’ military infrastructure” and has urged Palestinians to leave, hasn’t given a timeline for the offensive, but there were indications it could take months.
Several countries to recognize a Palestinian State
Saturday night’s strikes come as some prominent Western countries prepare to recognize Palestinian statehood at the gathering of world leaders at the United Nations General Assembly on Monday. They include the UK, France, Canada, Australia, Malta, Belgium and Luxembourg. Portugal’s Foreign Affairs Ministry said it will recognize a Palestinian state on Sunday.
Ahead of the UN assembly, peace activists in Israel have hailed the planned recognition of a Palestinian state. On Sunday, a group of more than 60 Jewish and Arab peace and reconciliation organizations, known as It’s Time Coalition, called for an end to the war, the release of the hostages and the recognition of a Palestinian state.
“We refuse to live forever by the sword. The UN decision offers a historic opportunity to move from a death trap to life, from an endless messianic war to a future of security and freedom for both peoples,” said the coalition in a video statement.
Yet a ceasefire remains elusive. Israeli bombardment over the past 23 months has killed more than 65,000 people in Gaza, destroyed vast areas of the strip, displaced around 90 percent of the population and caused a catastrophic humanitarian crisis, with experts saying Gaza City is experiencing famine.
Israel claims killing a Hamas sniper
Israel didn’t respond to the strikes overnight Saturday. In a statement Sunday, the military said it killed Majed Abu Selmiya, who it said was a sniper for Hamas’ military wing and was preparing to carry out more attacks in the Gaza City area, without providing evidence.
The alleged militant is the brother of the director of Shifa hospital, Dr. Mohamed Abu Selmiya, who called the allegations a lie and said Israel was trying to justify the killing of civilians. Dr. Selmiya told The Associated Press that his brother, 57, suffered from hypertension, diabetes and had vision problems.
As the attacks continue, Israel has ordered hundreds of thousands of Palestinians sheltering in Gaza City to move south to what it calls a humanitarian zone and opened another corridor south of the city for two days this week to allow more people to evacuate.
Palestinians were streaming out of Gaza City by car and on foot, though many are unwilling to be uprooted again, too weak to leave or unable to afford the cost of moving.
Along the coastal Wadi Gaza route, those too exhausted to continue stopped to catch their breath and give their children a much-needed break from the difficult journey.
Aid groups have warned that forcing thousands of people to evacuate will exacerbate the dire humanitarian crisis. They are appealing for a ceasefire so aid can reach those who need it.
Families of hostages still held by Hamas are also calling for a ceasefire, accusing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of condemning their loved ones to death by continuing to fight rather than negotiating an end to the war.