șÚÁÏÉçÇű

US names career diplomat for Gaza ceasefire monitor

US names career diplomat for Gaza ceasefire monitor
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio listens to military personnel as he visits the Civil-Military Coordination Center in southern Israel on Friday. (AP)
Short Url
Updated 21 sec ago

US names career diplomat for Gaza ceasefire monitor

US names career diplomat for Gaza ceasefire monitor
  • Steve Fagin, who served as ambassador to Yemen and Iraq, will be the civilian lead at the Civil-Military Coordination Center
  • Appointment announced as Marco Rubio visited the center in southern Israel

KIRYAT GAT, Israel: The United States named a veteran diplomat on Friday as the civilian lead in a body monitoring the Gaza ceasefire, seeking to push forward a durable end to the war.
The State Department said that Steve Fagin, a career diplomat, will work alongside US Army Lt. Gen. Patrick Frank, the military head already appointed to the hub set up after the October 10 ceasefire.
The Civil-Military Coordination Center was set up in southern Israel on October 17 to observe the ceasefire for any violations and handle logistics including aid delivery into war-ravaged Gaza.
Some 200 US troops were sent to the center, set up in a rented warehouse, where they work with soldiers from Israel and European countries, representatives of the United Arab Emirates and Jordan, and personnel from the United Nations and aid groups.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio visited the site, which is a short drive from Gaza, on Friday and called it a “historic” undertaking.
“There’s going to be ups and downs and twists and turns, but I think we have a lot of reason for healthy optimism about the progress that’s being made,” Rubio said.
Fagin has long experience in the Middle East.
He has served since 2022 as ambassador to Yemen, managing relations at a turbulent time as the United States bombed Houthi rebels that have lobbed missiles at Israel in professed solidarity with Palestinians in Gaza.
And it is just the latest time Fagin has taken a major concurrent position.
He served for three months until recently as the top US diplomat in Baghdad while remaining ambassador to Yemen, a job in which he has been based primarily in șÚÁÏÉçÇű.


One killed in Israeli strike in south Lebanon

One killed in Israeli strike in south Lebanon
Updated 53 min 35 sec ago

One killed in Israeli strike in south Lebanon

One killed in Israeli strike in south Lebanon
  • Israel claims it killed Hezbollah logistics commander Abbas Hassan Karky
  • He was targeted by an Israeli drone with a guided missile driving, Lebanese media reports

BEIRUT: An Israeli air strike killed one person in southern Lebanon on Friday, state media reported, with Israel’s military saying the man was a Hezbollah “logistics commander.”
According to Lebanon’s official National News Agency (NNA), the man “was targeted by an Israeli drone with a guided missile while he was driving” along the road to the village of Toul, not far from Nabatieh.
It identified the slain man as Abbas Hassan Karky.
In a statement, the Israeli army said it “struck and eliminated” Karky, calling him “the logistics commander of Hezbollah’s Southern Front headquarters.”
The military said Karky had “led efforts to rebuild Hezbollah’s combat capabilities” following last year’s war with Israel, and that he had also been responsible “for managing the transfer and storage of weapons in southern Lebanon.”
Israel has repeatedly bombed Lebanon despite the November 2024 truce that sought to end more than a year of hostilities with Hezbollah that culminated in two months of open war.
The latest attack comes a day after Israeli strikes on southern and eastern Lebanon killed four people, including an elderly woman.
The Israeli army said on Thursday that it “struck several terrorist targets,” including “a camp used for training Hezbollah militants.”
As part of that ceasefire deal, Israeli troops were to withdraw from southern Lebanon and Hezbollah was to pull back north of the Litani river and dismantle any military infrastructure in the south.
Under US pressure and fearing an escalation of Israeli strikes, the Lebanese government has moved to begin disarming Hezbollah, a plan the movement and its allies oppose.
During a meeting on Thursday with US General Joseph Clearfield, the head of the ceasefire monitoring committee, Prime Minister Nawaf Salam stated that “Lebanon is committed to completing the arms monopoly process south of the Litani River before the end of the year.”
He demanded, in return, that Israel fulfil “its duties and obligations to withdraw from occupied Lebanese territories and cease its ongoing attacks.”
Despite the terms of the truce, Israel has kept troops deployed in five border points it deems strategic.


Palestinian factions agree to hand Gaza to technocrat committee

Palestinian factions agree to hand Gaza to technocrat committee
Updated 24 October 2025

Palestinian factions agree to hand Gaza to technocrat committee

Palestinian factions agree to hand Gaza to technocrat committee
  • Committee will manage basic services in cooperation with Arab countries and international institutions, Hamas statement says

CAIRO:  The main Palestinian political factions, including Hamas, said Friday they had agreed that an independent committee of technocrats would take over the running of post-war Gaza.
During a meeting in Cairo, according to a joint statement published on the Hamas website, the groups agreed to hand “over the administration of the Gaza Strip to a temporary Palestinian committee composed of independent technocrats.”
It said the committee would “manage the affairs of life and basic services in cooperation with Arab brothers and international institutions.”
The statement also said the factions had agreed to work on unifying a common position “to confront the challenges facing the Palestinian cause.”
It called for a meeting of all forces and factions to “agree on a national strategy and to revitalize the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) as the sole legitimate representative of the Palestinian people.”
Hamas is not part of the PLO, which is dominated by its longtime rival Fatah.
An informed source told AFP on Thursday that delegations from Hamas and Fatah met in Cairo to discuss the second phase of a US-backed ceasefire plan in Gaza.
The source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said that both sides agreed to “continue meetings in the coming period and to work on organizing the Palestinian internal front in the face of the challenges posed by the Israeli government.”
Alongside the Hamas-Fatah talks, Egypt’s intelligence chief Hassan Rashad met senior officials from key Palestinian factions.
They included Islamic Jihad, an ally of Hamas, as well as the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine — both factions within the PLO.
Hamas and Fatah have a history of deep political rivalry, which flared into fighting for a time after a 2006 election, and which has hindered efforts at Palestinian national unity.
In December 2024, they agreed to create a committee to jointly administer post-war Gaza. The agreement was criticized, particularly by members of Fatah.
Hamas, which seized power in the territory in 2007, has already made it clear that it does not wish to govern the post-war territory, but has pushed back against the insistence that it disarm its fighters.


US will end support for Israel if West Bank annexed: Trump

US will end support for Israel if West Bank annexed: Trump
Updated 24 October 2025

US will end support for Israel if West Bank annexed: Trump

US will end support for Israel if West Bank annexed: Trump
  • President: Parliament vote will not become law because he ‘gave his word to the Arab countries’
  • Preliminary reading passed in favor of legislation on Wednesday

LONDON: The US will end its support for Israel if its parliament votes to pass a bill giving it sovereignty over the West Bank, President Donald Trump has said.

The bill refers to the region in its Biblical terms, imposing “Israeli sovereignty across Judea and Samaria.”

A preliminary reading — the first of four stages — passed in favor of the legislation on Wednesday with 25 votes for and 24 against. 

Trump is adamant that the bill will not pass into law. “It won’t happen because I gave my word to the Arab countries,” he told Time magazine. “Israel would lose all of its support from the United States if that happened.”

He told reporters on Thursday: “Don’t worry about the West Bank. Israel’s not going to do anything with the West Bank.”

On Wednesday, Israel’s parliament also voted to apply Israeli law to an illegal settlement near Jerusalem, Maale Adumim, in legislation put forward by an ultraconservative parliamentarian, Avi Maoz. 

It came despite a decision by the parliament’s legislation committee to postpone all coalition votes while US Vice President JD Vance is in Israel on an official visit. 

Vance hit out at the decision to press on with the votes, telling reporters that they were “stupid” and that “the policy of the Trump administration is that the West Bank will not be annexed by Israel.”


Israeli man sentenced to 5 years for illegally selling Greek Cypriot land in breakaway north

Israeli man sentenced to 5 years for illegally selling Greek Cypriot land in breakaway north
Updated 24 October 2025

Israeli man sentenced to 5 years for illegally selling Greek Cypriot land in breakaway north

Israeli man sentenced to 5 years for illegally selling Greek Cypriot land in breakaway north
  • The case is one of several where Cypriot authorities seek to bust developers and realtors
  • The three-judge panel said it was compelled to hand down a tough sentence because of the seriousness of the crime

NICOSIA: A court in Cyprus on Friday sentenced an Israeli businessman to five years for developing and selling luxury apartment complexes in the breakaway northern part of the divided island without permission of the Greek Cypriots owners of the land.
The case is one of several where Cypriot authorities seek to bust developers and realtors who illegally make money off Greek Cypriot properties in the breakaway north — lands that their rightful owners cannot access because they are located in the Turkiye-backed region.
The criminal case also underscores the deeply contentious property rights in Cyprus, which was split in 1974 when Turkiye invaded in the wake of an Athens junta-backed coup aiming at uniting the island with Greece.
Some 160,000 Greek Cypriots subsequently fled the north where Turkish Cypriots declared independence that only Turkiye recognizes. At the time, around 45,000 Turkish Cypriots living in the south, where the internationally recognized government is seated, moved to the north.
Cyprus’ internationally recognized government in the south has no control over affairs in the breakaway north. Decades later, Greek Cypriots that left the north are demanding that their right to their property are respected in numerous rounds of United Nations-mediated talks that have failed to heal the rifts.
The Aykout case
Israeli businessman Shimon Mistriel Aykout, 75, who also holds Portuguese and Turkish citizenship, was arrested in June 2024 as he crossed from the north into the Greek Cypriot part of the island. Last week, he pleaded guilty to 40 counts of building and selling apartments in the north.
The three-judge panel said it was compelled to hand down a tough sentence because of the seriousness of the crime.
Between 2014 and 2024, Aykout headed the Afik Group of Companies that developed some 400,000 square meters (4.3 million square feet) of Greek Cypriot-owned properties in four villages in the north. Cypriot authorities estimate the combined value of the development exceeds 38 million euros ($44 million.)
Aykout’s supporters have campaigned for his release both in Israel and the United States on health grounds, saying he suffered from prostate cancer. The court rejected arguments for him to be released for medical examination abroad, saying Cypriot medical facilities are more than adequate.
The court said the sentence takes into account time that Aykout had served in police custody.
A ‘clear message’ to all
After the sentencing, prosecuting attorney Andreas Aristides told reporters that Cyprus’ ethnic division does not diminish the rights of the lawful owners of property in the north.
The court’s decision sends “a clear message ... that if you buy, build or otherwise use land in the occupied areas that belongs to Greek Cypriots, you’re committing serious criminal acts,” he said.
Simos Angelides, a lawyer in Nicosia, Cyprus’ capital, said Friday’s ruling and similar cases have “triggered panic” in the north’s booming real estate and construction industry and “shattered the illusion of legal impunity.”
The message is simple: “Do not exploit stolen property, as you may soon have an arrest warrant in your name,” Angelides, who was not involved in the Aykout case, told The Associated Press.
The EU’s top court and the European Court of Human Rights have affirmed Greek Cypriots’ rights to property ownership in the north. But the ECHR has also backed the establishment of a Turkish Cypriot property commission to which Greek Cypriots can apply to either be compensated for their property or reclaim it.
Other cases
Over the last year, Cyprus has prosecuted another Israeli, a Ukrainian, a German and two Hungarians in similar cases. Of them, two Hungarian women who earned commissions as real estate agents in the north were sentenced in May to 36 months and 15 months, respectively. The other cases are still pending.
Turkish Cypriot authorities have reacted angrily to the prosecutions. Tufan Erhurman, a center-left politician elected as Turkish Cypriot leader this week, has said that the issue of Greek Cypriot property in the north can only be resolved through negotiations.
Cafer Gurcafer, head of the Turkish Cypriot Contractors’ Association, warned that investors could scatter since as much as 85 percent of privately owned property in the north could become entangled in similar prosecutions.
The case of five Greek Cypriots arrested on spying charges after crossing into the north in July is widely seen as retaliation for the prosecutions.
A month before their arrest, Turkish Vice President Cevded Yilmaz said attempts to harm the Turkish Cypriot economy through politically motivated legal means would “not be tolerated.”
Greek Cypriot President Nikos Christodoulides stresses that the judiciary is independent but that Aykout’s guilty plea vindicates his government’s policy to shine a light on illicit property exploitation in the north.


Spain probes steelmaker bosses for alleged trading with Israeli arms firm

Spain probes steelmaker bosses for alleged trading with Israeli arms firm
Updated 24 October 2025

Spain probes steelmaker bosses for alleged trading with Israeli arms firm

Spain probes steelmaker bosses for alleged trading with Israeli arms firm
  • Country's top criminal court investigates Sidenor executives for alleged complicity in crimes against humanity or genocide
  • Spain stopped exchanging weapons with Israel after the Gaza conflict started in 2023

MADRID: Spain’s top criminal court said Friday it had opened an investigation for alleged complicity in crimes against humanity or genocide into executives at the steelmaker Sidenor for trading with an Israeli arms company.
Spain, one of the fiercest critics of the Israeli offensive in Gaza, said it had stopped exchanging weapons with the country after the conflict started with the October 7, 2023 Hamas attack on Israel.
The embargo formally became law this month as part of measures aiming to stop what Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez calls a “genocide” in the devastated Palestinian territory.
Sidenor’s chairman Jose Antonio Jainaga and two other executives are being investigated for alleged smuggling and complicity in crimes against humanity or genocide for selling steel to Israel Military Industries, the Audiencia Nacional court said.
The Spanish firm sold the metal without requesting the government’s permission or registering the transaction, and knew the material “was going to be used for the manufacturing of weapons,” the court said in a statement.
It said the company itself was not being investigated because of whistleblower employees who contributed to the complaint and helped “prevent the continuation of the allegedly criminal activity.”
The investigating judge has summoned the three suspects to testify on November 12 in the case, initiated after a complaint by a pro-Palestinian association.
Sidenor did not respond to an AFP request for comment.
The 2023 Hamas attack resulted in the deaths of 1,221 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.
Palestinian militants also abducted around 250 hostages, with the remaining captives still alive returned during a fragile truce that began this month.
Israel’s retaliatory campaign has killed more than 68,000 people in Gaza, mainly civilians, according to the health ministry in the Hamas-run territory, figures the UN considers credible.