Netanyahu to expand settlements in the West Bank

A man reacts as he carries the body of a child killed by reported Israeli bombardment on al-Bureij, outside al-Awda Hospital in Nuseirat in the central Gaza Strip on September 21, 2025. (AFP)
A man reacts as he carries the body of a child killed by reported Israeli bombardment on al-Bureij, outside al-Awda Hospital in Nuseirat in the central Gaza Strip on September 21, 2025. (AFP)
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Netanyahu to expand settlements in the West Bank

Netanyahu to expand settlements in the West Bank
  • Netanyahu added: “A Palestinian state will not be established west of the Jordan River”
  • Gaza and displacement of most of its population during nearly two years of conflict, which has seen more than 65,000 people killed in Gaza, displaced around 90 percent of the population and caused a catastrophic humanitarian crisis

JERUSALEM: Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed on Sunday to expand Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank after Britain, Canada and Australia recognized a Palestinian state.
"For years, I have prevented the creation of this terror state despite enormous pressure both domestically and internationally," he said in a statement.
"We have done so with determination and political wisdom. Moreover, we have doubled Jewish settlements in Judea and Samaria and we will continue on this path," he said using the Biblical name for the West Bank.
Netanyahu on Sunday accused foreign leaders of giving a “prize” to Hamas.

BACKGROUND

Last week, independent experts commissioned by the UN’s Human Rights Council concluded that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza.

He put out an angry statement after Britain and other Western allies said they were unilaterally recognizing a Palestinian state in a step seen as a show of displeasure with Israel.
Netanyahu added: “A Palestinian state will not be established west of the Jordan River.”
Netanyahu said he would announce Israel’s response after a trip to the US, where he is to meet President Donald Trump at the White House.
He is set to give a speech to the General Assembly on Friday before heading to see Trump.
The UK has for decades supported an independent Palestinian state alongside Israel, but insisted recognition must come as part of a peace plan to achieve a two-state solution.
However, the government has become increasingly worried that such a solution is becoming all but impossible – and not only because of the razing of Gaza and displacement of most of its population during nearly two years of conflict, which has seen more than 65,000 people killed in Gaza, displaced around 90 percent of the population and caused a catastrophic humanitarian crisis.
Last week, independent experts commissioned by the UN’s Human Rights Council concluded that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza.
Also vexing the UK is Israel’s government has been aggressively expanding settlements in the West Bank, land Palestinians want for their future state.
Much of the world regards Israel’s occupation of the West Bank, which is ostensibly run by the Palestinian Authority, as illegal.
“This move has symbolic and historic weight, makes clear the U.K.’s concerns about the survival of a two-state solution, and is intended to keep that goal relevant and alive,” said Olivia O’Sullivan, director of the UK in the World Programme at the London-based think tank, Chatham House.
For the Palestinians, President Mahmoud Abbas stressed that Sunday’s moves constituted an important and necessary step toward achieving a just peace in accordance with international law.
Husam Zomlot, the Palestinian head of mission in the UK, said that recognition would right a colonial-era wrong.
“The issue today is ending the denial of our existence that started 108 years ago, in 1917,” he said.
“And I think today, the British people should celebrate a day when history is being corrected, when wrongs are being righted, when recognition of the wrongs of the past are beginning to be corrected.”
A senior Hamas official hailed Britain, Canada and Australia's recognition of a Palestinian state, describing it as a victory for the rights of Palestinians.
"These developments represent a victory for Palestinian rights and the justice of our cause, and send a clear message: no matter how far the occupation goes in its crimes, it will never be able to erase our national rights," Mahmoud Mardawi said


France’s Macron says no embassy in Palestine until Gaza hostages freed

France’s Macron says no embassy in Palestine until Gaza hostages freed
Updated 16 sec ago

France’s Macron says no embassy in Palestine until Gaza hostages freed

France’s Macron says no embassy in Palestine until Gaza hostages freed
WASHINGTON: France’s planned recognition of a Palestinian state will not include the opening of an embassy until Hamas frees the hostages it is holding in Gaza, President Emmanuel Macron said in an interview that aired Sunday.
“It will be, for us, a requirement very clearly before opening, for instance, an embassy in Palestine,” Macron told CBS News in an interview taped Thursday.
The interview was aired as Britain, Australia and Canada on Sunday recognized a Palestinian state in a coordinated, seismic shift from decades of Western foreign policy.
The move triggered swift anger from Israel, which finds itself under huge international pressure over its war against Hamas in Gaza and the dire humanitarian situation in the besieged territory.
Portugal was also set to recognize Palestinian statehood later Sunday, while France says it will do so along with other countries Monday at the United Nations.
Macron also spoke out strongly against any plans to displace Palestinians from Gaza — which they want to be part of a future sovereign state — when rebuilding the territory.
“But if the precondition of such a plan is to push them out, this is just a craziness,” Macron said on “Face the Nation.”
“We should not be — for the credibility of the United States, for the credibility of France — we cannot be implicitly or explicitly complacent with such a project.”

Syrian president heading to US: state media

Syrian president heading to US: state media
Updated 7 min 9 sec ago

Syrian president heading to US: state media

Syrian president heading to US: state media
  • Ahmed Al-Sharaa is the first Syrian leader to speak at the UN General Assembly in New York since 1967
  • He already met US President Donald Trump in Riyadh and French President Emmanuel Macron in Paris this year

DAMASCUS: Syrian President Ahmed Al-Sharaa has departed for the United States, state media reported Sunday, on a landmark trip that will see the former insurgent address the United Nations General Assembly.
State television said Sharaa was en route “to the United States of America to participate in the affairs of the 80th session of the United Nations General Assembly in New York,” citing a presidency statement.
Sharaa seized power in December after his Islamist group led a lightening offensive that toppled longtime ruler Bashar Assad after nearly 14 years of civil war and more than half a century of brutal Assad family rule.
He is set to speak at the UN General Assembly in New York, the first Syrian leader to do so since Nureddin Al-Atassi in 1967.
Sharaa has undergone a dramatic transformation since taking power, meeting foreign leaders including US President Donald Trump in Riyadh and French President Emmanuel Macron in Paris on his first trip to the West.
In a pre-recorded interview broadcast on Sunday, Sharaa told US broadcaster CBS that “President Trump took a big step toward Syria by lifting the sanctions with a quick, courageous and historic decision.”
“He recognized that Syria should be safe, stable and unified.”
Trump lifted most US sanctions on Syria, which date back to the Syrian war and earlier, in the spring.
Sharaa added that anyone seeking to maintain sanctions on Syria “would be complicit in killing the Syrian people once again.”
He moreover criticized the international community for failing to halt the brutalities committed by Assad’s government.
He said “we should be the one asking others, why did you stand silent as these terrible crimes were taking place in Syria?“
Syria-Israel talks
The Syrian leader remains under UN sanctions and a travel ban due to his “jihadist past” and must request exemptions for all foreign trips.
His foreign minister, Asaad Al-Shaibani, is already in Washington for an official visit.
Shaibani’s office said he held a series of meetings since his arrival, including with US senators and state department officials.
He also met with the US Commission on International Religious Freedom, as the international community presses Syria’s new authorities to protect minorities in the multi-confessional country, which has seen sectarian bloodshed in recent months.
A foreign ministry official had said Shaibani aimed to discuss ongoing negotiations with Israel and the lifting of the remaining US sanctions on Syria.
Syria and Israel remain technically at war, but opened direct negotiations after Assad’s overthrow, and Syrian and Israeli officials have met on several occasions.
The foreign ministry official had said Syria expected to finalize security and military agreements with Israel this year, in what would be a breakthrough.
Israel has demanded a demilitarised zone in southern Syria.
Last week, Sharaa said Syria was negotiating with Israel to reach a security agreement that would see Israel leave the areas it occupied in recent months.


Gazans hail, Israelis condemn Western recognition of Palestinian state

Gazans hail, Israelis condemn Western recognition of Palestinian state
Updated 25 min 20 sec ago

Gazans hail, Israelis condemn Western recognition of Palestinian state

Gazans hail, Israelis condemn Western recognition of Palestinian state
  • In Gaza, many saw the recognition as an affirmation of their existence
  • Israelis saw the move to recognize Palestinian statehood as “dangerous” and “premature”

GAZA CITY: Recognition of a Palestinian state by Britain, Canada and Australia on Sunday drew sharply contrasting reactions, with Palestinians in Gaza hailing it as a sign of hope while Israelis voiced anger and concern.
In Gaza, many saw the recognition as an affirmation of their existence after nearly two years of war between Hamas and Israel.
“We shouldn’t just be numbers in the news,” said Salwa Mansour, 35, displaced from Rafah to Al-Mawasi, which the Israeli military has declared a humanitarian zone.
“This recognition shows that the world is finally starting to hear our voice and that in itself is a moral victory.
“Despite all the pain, death and massacres we’re living through, we cling to anything that brings even the smallest bit of hope,” she added.
Britain and Canada became the first members of the Group of Seven advanced economies to take the step to recognize a Palestinian state in a bid to pressure Israel to end the war in Gaza.
In an effort to seize Gaza City, the territory’s largest urban center, the Israeli military has recently intensified its air assaults and launched a major ground offensive.
So far, more than 550,000 people have fled the city and moved southward, the military said on Sunday.
On Sunday, at least 32 people were killed in Gaza City in Israeli strikes, according to the territory’s civil defense agency, a rescue force operating under Hamas authority.
Mohammed Abu Khousa, a resident of Deir el-Balah, said he hoped that other countries would also follow suit in recognizing a Palestinian state.
“When a country like Britain and Canada recognize us, it chips away at Israel’s legitimacy and gives our cause a new spark of hope,” he said.
“This could push more countries to recognize us, and hopefully bring an end to the war.”
‘Not enough’
But not all Palestinians were positive about the decision, with some expressing skepticism over its ultimate outcome.
Recognition alone “is not enough, because there are countries that have previously recognized Palestine. They recognized years ago, but it did not lead to any results,” said Mohammed Azzam, a resident of Ramallah in the occupied West Bank.
“On the contrary, every day the settlers’ attacks increase, the killing increases, the arrests increase, the raids and thefts increase, and the checkpoints fill the entire West Bank.
“They have cut off the West Bank, its cities and villages. Even if the European countries recognized (Palestine), in reality this does not help us at all,” he said.
Following the move by Britain, Canada and Australia, far-right Israeli minister Bezalel Smotrich and Itamar Ben Gvir both called for the annexation of the West Bank, which Israel has occupied since 1967, in contravention of international law.
Since the start of the Gaza war in October 2023, violence has soared in the West Bank, and Israel has expanded settlements throughout the Palestinian territory.
‘BٳٱԱ’
In Jerusalem, Israelis saw the move as dangerous and premature.
“I don’t feel that a terrorism place like Gaza, where even their own people don’t get what they need, should be a country,” said Tamar Lomonosov, a resident of Beit Shemesh.
“They’re just trying to find a solution to kill and fight with Israel.”
Muriel Amar, a 62-year-old Franco-Israeli who was speaking ahead of France’s own planned recognition, warned that the move would ignore key realities, including the fate of hostages still held in Gaza.
“As long as they haven’t returned home, I don’t see how we can consider turning the page,” she said.
“It would also be a confirmation for terrorist groups like Hamas that they are in the right, and it would cause... bitterness on the Israeli side.”
The war in Gaza was sparked by Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attack on Israel.
The attack resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people on the Israeli side, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.
During their attack Palestinian militants also took 251 hostages, of which 47 still remain in Gaza, including 25 the Israeli military says are dead.
Since then Israel’s retaliatory military response has killed at least 65,283 people in Gaza, also mostly civilians, according to the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry, figures which the United Nations finds reliable.


Israel kills civilians, including children with US citizenship, in Bint Jbeil raid

Israel kills civilians, including children with US citizenship, in Bint Jbeil raid
Updated 37 min 3 sec ago

Israel kills civilians, including children with US citizenship, in Bint Jbeil raid

Israel kills civilians, including children with US citizenship, in Bint Jbeil raid
  • Aoun from New York: No peace above the blood of our children

BEIRUT: An Israeli drone targeted a motorcycle and a car on Sunday in the densely populated town of Bint Jbeil, south of the Litani River, Lebanon, killing five people, including three children and their father.

Their mother was critically injured, in addition to the motorcycle driver, according to the operations center at the Lebanese Ministry of Health. 

The president of the country, who is in New York to participate in the UN General Assembly, condemned the killings.

Pro-Hezbollah news websites reported that the family targeted by the raid was “the family of Shadi Sobhi Marwa, who was martyred along with his children, Celine, Hadi and Aseel.” (Supplied)

“While we are in New York to discuss issues of peace and human rights, here is Israel persisting in its ongoing violations of international resolutions, most notably the Cessation of Hostilities Agreement, by committing a new massacre in Bint Jbeil, which claimed the lives of five martyrs, including three children,” he said. 

Aoun called on “the international community, whose leaders are present in the halls of the United Nations, to exert every effort to stop violations of international resolutions, especially the states sponsoring the Nov. 27, 2024 Declaration, and to pressure Israel to withdraw from Lebanese territory and abide by the aforementioned declaration. There is no peace above the blood of our children.” 

Pro-Hezbollah news websites reported that the family targeted by the raid was “the family of Shadi Sobhi Marwa, who was martyred along with his children, Celine, Hadi and Aseel.” The family holds American citizenship. The motorcycle driver who was also killed is Mohammed Majed Marwa. The websites confirmed that he had no political affiliations. 

Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri said: “The blood of Lebanese citizens with American citizenship is for those who gathered in Naqoura and for the global demonstration that began at the United Nations. 

“Does Lebanese childhood represent an existential threat to the Israeli entity, or is this entity’s behavior of killing without deterrence that constitutes a threat to international peace and security?”

Prime Minister Nawaf Salam considered what happened “a flagrant crime against civilians and a message of intimidation targeting our people returning to their villages in the south.” 

Salam called on “the international community to condemn Israel for its repeated violations of international resolutions, and on the countries sponsoring the agreement to cease Israeli attacks to pressure it to immediately halt its attacks and withdraw from the occupied Lebanese territories and the release of prisoners.”

Members of the Lebanese Army Engineering Regiment blew up an Israeli drone operating on the outskirts of the Aita Al-Shaab town. 

Meanwhile, an Israeli force penetrated the border town of Ramya on Saturday night, blowing up more homes before withdrawing at dawn. 

Over the past week, Israel killed several Hezbollah members with its drones: Ammar Hayel Qusaybani, the commander of Hezbollah’s Sinai Complex, was killed in an airstrike on his hometown of Ansar; Hussein Hassan Ramadan, a Hezbollah member, was killed in an airstrike on Tibnin; Hassan Shahrour was killed in an Israeli airstrike on a car in the Khardali-Marjayoun area; and Muhammad Yassin was killed in an airstrike targeting his car between the towns of Toulin and Burj Qalawieh in southern Lebanon. 

The new Israeli escalation came hours after US envoy Morgan Ortagus left Beirut for New York, following her participation in a meeting of the Mechanism for the Supervision of the Implementation of the Ceasefire Agreement between Beirut and Tel Aviv in Naqoura, southern Lebanon. 

A source said that Ortagus “expressed broad American interest in providing unconditional support to the Lebanese army, affirming Washington’s commitment to stability in Lebanon.” 

The Lebanese side informed Ortagus that “repeated Israeli violations hinder any serious efforts to restrict arms control to the state, and the American delegation expressed understanding for Lebanese concerns.” 

As Hezbollah prepares to commemorate the first anniversary of the assassination of its two secretaries-general, Hassan Nasrallah and Hashem Safieddine, next week, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said during a Cabinet meeting on Sunday that “Israel’s victories over Hezbollah have opened a window to a possibility that was not even imaginable: The possibility of peace with our northern neighbors,” referring to Syria. 

 

 


Frankly Speaking: The most dangerous era for aid workers?

Frankly Speaking: The most dangerous era for aid workers?
Updated 21 September 2025

Frankly Speaking: The most dangerous era for aid workers?

Frankly Speaking: The most dangerous era for aid workers?
  • Aid chief Tom Fletcher highlights both the deadly physical risks for humanitarians, especially in Gaza, and the severe underfunding crisis
  • UN under-secretary-general for humanitarian affairs and emergency relief coordinator says critics are right to call for renewal and reform

RIYADH: Tom Fletcher, the UN under-secretary-general for humanitarian affairs and emergency relief coordinator, paints a stark picture of the current humanitarian landscape, warning this year may surpass the previous as the deadliest for aid workers.

Appearing on the Arab News current affairs program “Frankly Speaking,” Fletcher described the brutal conditions humanitarians face worldwide amid intensifying conflicts and crises — especially in Gaza, which has been under Israeli siege and bombardment for almost two years.

“Last year was the deadliest year to be a humanitarian worker. And of course, it’s much easier than being a civilian under the bombs in these places we work,” Fletcher told “Frankly Speaking” host Ali Itani, who was filling in for Katie Jensen.

“I fear that this may well be the most dangerous year in recorded history for aid workers.”

Appearing on the Arab News current affairs program “Frankly Speaking,” Tom Fletcher described the brutal conditions humanitarians face worldwide amid intensifying conflicts and crises — especially in Gaza. (AN Photo)

A record 383 aid workers were killed worldwide in 2024, according to UN figures released on August 19 to mark World Humanitarian Day. Nearly half of those deaths — 181 — occurred in Gaza.

So far in 2025, at least 265 aid workers have been killed globally, representing a 54 percent increase compared to the same period last year. Around 65 percent of the aid workers killed in 2025 have been in Gaza.

Fletcher highlighted the relentless physical and mental toll faced by aid workers, citing ongoing attacks that have cost lives, especially in hotspots like Gaza.

“It’s brutal and there’s not enough accountability. No one is being held to account for what’s happening to us. Where are these weapons coming from which are killing our people and killing those that we serve?” he asked.

Fletcher also paid tribute to the bravery of humanitarian teams who “continue to go into danger, towards the sound of gunfire in order to save lives” everywhere from Haiti to the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Alongside these risks, Fletcher stressed that aid organizations face severe underfunding. “We are massively underfunded. The appeals right now are only 19 percent funded,” he said, exposing a vast gap between global need and available resources.

Being candid about the UN itself, Fletcher acknowledged its flaws, yet insisted it remains the best mechanism humanity has to foster global cooperation.

The UN “of course is not perfect,” Fletcher said. “I work in it. This can be even better. That’s why the Secretary-General has set out the reform program. But it’s still the best model we have for global coexistence.”

A woman receives a package of non-food items after arriving at the Dougui refugee settlement. (UNHCR)

He said that those critics who are pushing for renewal and reform are correct, describing ongoing efforts as “defining much more clearly our work around saving lives,” reducing bureaucracy, and devolving power closer to communities in need.

Addressing the humanitarian funding crisis, Fletcher painted a sobering picture. “We’re taking a battering right now,” he said. “And we will fight for the system. We won’t let this go easily. This is a hill we will die on, that we will defend at all costs.

“The appeals are only 19 percent funded. Hundreds of millions of people are not getting the life-saving support they need.”

Yet he offered a clear, precise call to global governments and citizens alike. “All we’re asking, in order to save over 100 million lives, if we got just 1 percent of what the world currently spends on arms, on defense, then we could do it,” he said.

“Somewhere along the line, the priorities are out of place. And we’ve got to get those priorities back where they should be. And we’ve got to fund this effort.”

Fletcher spoke forcefully on the ongoing humanitarian crisis in Gaza. He slammed Israel’s blockade, demanding “full, unequivocal access so that we can stop that starvation and reach all those civilians inside Gaza.”

Aid distribution in the embattled enclave is currently managed by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation — a private aid organization established in early 2025, backed by the Israeli and US governments.

Unlike the UN and traditional humanitarian agencies, which operate numerous smaller distribution points, the GHF runs a limited number of heavily secured aid hubs mostly in southern Gaza, guarded by Israeli military oversight and armed private contractors.

The GHF says it prevents aid being diverted to Hamas. Critics argue the GHF militarizes aid, breaks humanitarian principles of neutrality, independence, and impartiality, and concentrates aid delivery in restricted locations that force civilians to travel despite evacuation orders.

Its distribution sites have been associated with repeated deadly incidents and mass killings allegedly linked to Israeli military actions, raising serious safety concerns.

Asked whether UN agencies would ever consider working with the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, Fletcher said his colleagues were far better placed to distribute aid.

“We’ve been clear that we won’t be working through the GHF mechanism,” he said. “We know we can do this at scale. We have the trucks. We have the convoys. We have the community networks. We have the experience.”

A Palestinian carries a bag containing aid near a Gaza Humanitarian Foundation distribution center operated by the US-backed organization, Netzarim, central Gaza Strip, in August. (AP/File Photo)

He called on Israeli authorities to “let us in, let us deliver,” underscoring the urgency of removing bureaucratic obstacles and the barriers holding aid trucks at the borders.

Returning to a broader theme, Fletcher described the UN’s plan to strengthen global cooperation. “This really is, I think, the most consequential High-Level Week for a generation,” he said, highlighting Secretary-General Antonio Guterres’ bold reform agenda.

“We are reforming, we’re regrouping, particularly bringing in the voices of those who miss out, lose out in this strongman, survival-of-the-fittest world.

“But also that we’re renewing, that we’re imagining what we can be alongside defending what we do. I think this is the week that the UN and the multilateral system and global coexistence fight back.”

Syria’s new leadership is attending the UN General Assembly for the first time since the fall of the Assad regime in December last year. Fletcher said there is a collective responsibility to engage with and support the country’s development.

“It is on all of us now to demonstrate a sustained, patient, ambitious commitment to Syria’s development, long-term development, that we get behind the Syrian leadership,” he said.

Fletcher recalled an earlier visit after President Ahmad Al-Sharaa took power when Syrians expressed a desire to transition “from a position where it still needs humanitarian support to one where it is really leading its own recovery with that international backing” — a goal rooted in Syrian aspirations to regain dignity and normalcy.

Fletcher also identified Sudan as a key humanitarian concern for this year’s High-Level Week, stressing the need for increased aid access and urgent support.

“We have to keep hammering away for access to all of Sudan. We’ve got to get properly into Darfur... I’m very worried at the moment about El-Fasher, so we’ve got to get the convoys of aid moving at scale.”

During his appearance on Frankly Speaking, Fletcher also paid tribute to the bravery of humanitarian teams who “continue to go into danger, towards the sound of gunfire in order to save lives.” (AN Photo)

On September 12, , the US, Egypt, and the UAE announced a joint roadmap aiming to bring peace to Sudan, which has endured conflict since April 2023.

Their plan called for a three-month humanitarian ceasefire, followed by an immediate permanent ceasefire, and then a nine-month political transition process to establish a civilian-led government.

Fletcher praised the opening created by the quad. “We’ve got to push through that opening and make sure we’re really surging humanitarian support, because Sudan is the big one — 30 million people need our help right now.”

As High-Level Week gets underway, Fletcher underscored the challenges facing the UN system amid rising global polarization and power struggles.

“There’s a danger that as we move further from the middle of the 20th century... people forget why these institutions were created,” he said.

“They forget the horror that you get if you leave polarization, extremism, radicalism, nationalism just to take root and to spread.”

He stressed the necessity of recommitting to the values that underpin the UN and acknowledged the calls for reform as both justified and vital.

“That’s why the secretary-general has set out the reform program. But it’s still the best model we have for global coexistence.” Fletcher urged member states and the global community to rally in defense of these institutions and ideals.

His message to world leaders was both urgent and hopeful.

“We need member states, everyone coming to New York right now, to show where they stand and to stand for coexistence, to stand for those without a voice, and to get to work, to roll up their sleeves, to stop conflicts and save lives.”