Syrian authorities arrest drug kingpin from Assad clan near Lattakia

Syrian authorities arrest drug kingpin from Assad clan near Lattakia
Internal Security Forces captured Nomair Al-Assad alongside several members of a criminal gang in the city of Qardaha. (X/@syrianmoi)
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Syrian authorities arrest drug kingpin from Assad clan near Lattakia

Syrian authorities arrest drug kingpin from Assad clan near Lattakia
  • Internal Security Forces captured Nomair Al-Assad alongside several members of a criminal gang in the city of Qardaha
  • Ministry of Interior emphasized that the arrest reflects the forces’ commitment to pursuing remnants of the Assad regime

LONDON: Syrian authorities arrested a prominent drug dealer on Thursday in the coastal province of Lattakia.

Nomair Al-Assad is regarded as one of the country’s most prominent drug dealers and has been involved in several crimes during the era of the Bashar Assad regime, according to the Ministry of Interior.

Internal Security Forces captured Al-Assad alongside several members of a criminal gang in the city of Qardaha, famously known as the hometown of the Assad family.

Brig. Gen. Abdulaziz Al-Ahmad of the ISF told SANA that Al-Assad used his kinship with the Assad regime to “form and manage organized terrorist networks, which were involved in murders, kidnapping, extortion and armed robbery against civilians in a number of governorates.”

Al-Ahmad added that Al-Assad oversaw drug production and smuggling to neighboring countries and participated in an armed attack on Syria’s forces early this year.

The ministry emphasized that the arrest reflects the ISF’s commitment to pursuing remnants of the Assad regime, combating crime, and achieving justice.

Since the fall of the regime last December, the new government in Damascus has arrested several suspects, including army officers, for crimes committed against Syrians during the country’s civil conflict.

Additionally, Syrian authorities continue to fight against drug trafficking, cooperating with neighboring countries such as Jordan, Turkiye, and Iraq to dismantle criminal networks.


Oman receives prestigious award from Japan’s top university

The award was based on the role played by the Sultan Qaboos Chair for Middle Eastern Studies.
The award was based on the role played by the Sultan Qaboos Chair for Middle Eastern Studies.
Updated 15 sec ago

Oman receives prestigious award from Japan’s top university

The award was based on the role played by the Sultan Qaboos Chair for Middle Eastern Studies.
  • The award was received by Oman’s Ambassador to Japan Dr. Mohammed bin Said Al Busaidi on behalf of the government of Oman

TOKYO: The University of Tokyo has announced that it has awarded the prestigious Shokomon Award to the government of the Sultanate of Oman in recognition of its contribution to supporting scientific research and academic and cultural exchange in the field of Middle Eastern studies.

The award was received by Oman’s Ambassador to Japan Dr. Mohammed bin Said Al Busaidi on behalf of the government of Oman.

The award was based on the role played by the Sultan Qaboos Chair for Middle Eastern Studies, which was inaugurated at the university in 2011.

It is the highest honor bestowed by the University of Tokyo on individuals and institutions who have made significant and influential contributions to enriching the university’s progress and serving its academic goals.

Oman is the first Arab government to receive it.

The University of Tokyo has a significant academic relationship with Oman, primarily through the University of Tokyo Centre for Middle Eastern Studies (UTCMES), which was established with funding from Oman. The relationship includes academic exchange, research, and events such as seminars, lectures, and exhibitions focusing on Oman.

The university also works with institutions like Sultan Qaboos University and has received book donations from Oman.

UTCMES conducts and disseminates research on the Middle East and organizes events like public lectures, symposia, and exhibitions that focus on Oman.


Algeria buys about 400,000 tons durum wheat in tender, traders say

Algeria buys about 400,000 tons durum wheat in tender, traders say
Updated 41 min 3 sec ago

Algeria buys about 400,000 tons durum wheat in tender, traders say

Algeria buys about 400,000 tons durum wheat in tender, traders say
  • The tender sought a nominal 50,000 metric tons but Algeria frequently purchases more than the volumes initially sought.
  • Algeria does not disclose the results of its tenders

HAMBURG: Algeria’s state grains agency OAIC is believed to have purchased about 400,000 metric tons of durum wheat in an international tender which closed on Wednesday, European traders said on Thursday.
The tender sought a nominal 50,000 metric tons but Algeria frequently purchases more than the volumes initially sought.
Initial estimates of the purchase price were around $324 a ton cost and freight (c&f) included for larger Panamax shipments and around $334 a ton c&f for smaller Handymax shipments.
About 90,000 tons of the purchase was believed to involve US-origin durum with much of the rest believed to involve Canadian-origin of type 3 Canada western amber durum (No.3 CWAD).
The tender sought shipment in four periods: November 1-15, November 16-30, December 1-15 and December 16-31.
Algeria does not disclose the results of its tenders and results reported are based on trader assessments. More detailed estimates of prices and volume are possible later.


Houthis confirm death of chief of staff in Israeli airstrike

Houthis confirm death of chief of staff in Israeli airstrike
Updated 13 min 55 sec ago

Houthis confirm death of chief of staff in Israeli airstrike

Houthis confirm death of chief of staff in Israeli airstrike
  • Houthis confirm that their chief of staff, Mohammed al-Ghamari, was killed in an Israeli airstrike, along with his son and several companions

LONDON: The Houthis confirmed on Thursday the death of Major General Mohammed AbdulKareem Al-Ghamari, their chief of staff and one of the group’s most prominent military figures, following an Israeli airstrike.

An announcement from the group’s Armed Forces also reported the deaths of several of his companions and his 13-year-old son, Hussein, according to Houthi news agency SABA. 

Al-Ghamari had been previously reported wounded in the strike, but the group’s official statement on Thursday confirmed his death. 

Major General Mohammed AbdulKareem Al-Ghamari. (SABA)

Israeli officials said in June that Al-Ghamari was the target of an airstrike.

Since the onset of Israel’s military operations in Gaza in October 2023, which have been widely condemned as acts of genocide, the Houthi movement in Yemen has escalated its retaliatory attacks on Israeli targets. 

Their actions have been framed as acts of solidarity with Palestinians under siege. 

In response, Israel has conducted multiple airstrikes on Houthi-controlled areas in Yemen, intensifying the regional conflict.


UK charity group urges public to donate to ‘save lives’ in Gaza

UK charity group urges public to donate to ‘save lives’ in Gaza
Updated 16 October 2025

UK charity group urges public to donate to ‘save lives’ in Gaza

UK charity group urges public to donate to ‘save lives’ in Gaza
  • Disasters Emergency Committee, comprising 15 charities, cites ‘catastrophic levels of need’
  • DEC has begun to scale up operations in Palestinian enclave following ceasefire

LONDON: A group of 15 charities in the UK has appealed for donations from the British public for the people of Gaza to address its “catastrophic levels of need.”

A ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, announced last week, has seen an increase in aid supplies into the Palestinian enclave, where much of the population faces the threat of famine.

However, the 15 charities comprising the Disasters Emergency Committee say more is needed to meet demand.

The DEC said it has begun to scale up operations in Gaza, with several of its members — including the British Red Cross and Plan International UK — confirming that aid trucks have reached their destinations. 

The group, which raised more than £50 million ($67.19 million) since launching the Middle East Humanitarian Appeal a year ago, has asked for further donations, saying £10 could provide blankets for two people, and £50 could feed five families for a week.

“Your support could save lives,” the DEC said on its website, adding that it is providing cash to residents to use as markets return, as well as handing out food, clean water and medical resources.


Israel’s Netanyahu says determined to secure return of all hostages

Israel’s Netanyahu says determined to secure return of all hostages
Updated 16 October 2025

Israel’s Netanyahu says determined to secure return of all hostages

Israel’s Netanyahu says determined to secure return of all hostages
  • The remains of 19 hostages are still unaccounted for, with Hamas saying it would need specialist recovery equipment to retrieve the rest from the ruins of Gaza

JERUSALEM: Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Thursday that he was determined to ensure that Hamas hands back the remains of hostages still in Gaza, adding that the fight “is not over yet.”
Under a ceasefire agreement spearheaded by US President Donald Trump, Hamas returned the last 20 surviving hostages to Israel, and said it had handed back all the bodies of deceased captives that it could access.
The ceasefire also saw the war, sparked by Hamas’s unprecedented October 7, 2023 attack on Israel, grind to a halt after two years of agony for the families of hostages, and bombardment and hunger in Gaza.
The remains of 19 hostages are still unaccounted for, with Hamas saying it would need specialist recovery equipment to retrieve the rest from the ruins of Gaza.
At a state ceremony to mark the second anniversary of the October 7 attack, Netanyahu said Israel was “determined to secure the return of all hostages.”
“The fight is not over yet, but one thing is clear — whoever lays a hand on us knows they will pay a very heavy price,” he said.
Earlier, an Israeli group campaigning for the return of the hostages demanded that the government delay implementing the next stages of the truce if Hamas fails to return the remaining captives’ bodies.
During the war, the Hostages and Missing Families Forum consistently demanded an end to the fighting to allow the return of those taken hostage during the October 7 attack.
“As long as Hamas breaches the agreements and continues to hold 19 hostages, there can be no unilateral progress on Israel’s part,” the Hostages and Missing Families Forum said.

‘Total defeat’ 

It urged the government to “immediately halt the implementation of any further stages of the agreement as long as Hamas continues to blatantly violate its obligations regarding the return of all hostages and the remains of the victims.”
According to Trump’s 20-point plan for Gaza, the next phases of the truce should include the disarming of Hamas, the offer of amnesty to Hamas leaders who decommission their weapons and establishing the governance of post-war Gaza.
Israel’s Defense Minister Israel Katz on Wednesday threatened to resume fighting if Hamas does not honor the terms of the agreement.
“If Hamas refuses to comply with the agreement, Israel, in coordination with the United States, will resume fighting and act to achieve a total defeat of Hamas, to change the reality in Gaza and achieve all the objectives of the war,” a statement from his office said.
But Trump appeared to call for patience in order to safeguard the deal.
“It’s a gruesome process, I almost hate to talk about it, but they’re digging, they’re actually digging,” he said of Hamas’s search for hostages’ remains.
“There are areas where they are digging and they’re finding a lot of bodies. Then they have to separate the bodies, you wouldn’t believe this. And some of those bodies have been in there a long time, and some of them are under rubble.”
The families of surviving hostages were able, after two long years without their loved ones, to rejoice in their return.

‘My children are home’ 

“My children are home! Two years ago, one morning, I lost half of my family. Two of my children, two of my daughters-in-law, and two of my granddaughters were lost on the face of the earth. The world collapsed on me and my family in an instant,” said Sylvia Cunio, mother of Ariel and David Cunio who were released from captivity.
“For two years, I didn’t breathe. For two years, I felt like I had no air. And today, I stand here, in front of you, and I want to shout out loud, David and Ariel are here!“
Kobi Kalfon, father of released hostage Segev Kalfon, said his son had suffered emotional and physical abuse while in captivity.
“We now start a new journey, his journey to rehabilitation. It will not be simple, but we will be with him, hand in hand,” he said.
For many in Gaza, while there was relief that the bombing had stopped, the road to recovery felt impossible, given the sheer scale of the devastation.
“There’s no water — no clean water, not even salty water, no water at all. No essentials of life exist — no food, no drink, nothing. And as you can see, all that’s left is rubble,” said Mustafa Mahram, who returned to Gaza City after the ceasefire.
“An entire city has been destroyed.”
The war killed at least 67,938 people in Gaza, according to the health ministry in the Hamas-run territory, figures the United Nations considers credible.
The data does not distinguish between civilians and combatants but indicates that more than half of the dead are women and children.
The war was sparked by Hamas’s October 7 attack on Israel, which resulted in the deaths of 1,221 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.