Red Cross says five volunteers killed in Sudan’s Kordofan

Red Cross says five volunteers killed in Sudan’s Kordofan
The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies said Tuesday it was "horrified" after five Sudanese Red Crescent volunteers were killed while on duty in Bara, North Kordofan state. (AFP/File)
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Red Cross says five volunteers killed in Sudan’s Kordofan

Red Cross says five volunteers killed in Sudan’s Kordofan
  • Three other volunteers are missing following Monday’s attack, the IFRC said
  • The Sudanese Red Crescent unit was on an official mission in Bara as part of a food distribution team

GENEVA: The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies said Tuesday it was “horrified” after five Sudanese Red Crescent volunteers were killed while on duty in Bara, North Kordofan state.
Three other volunteers are missing following Monday’s attack, the IFRC said.
The oil-rich Kordofan region has been a major battleground in Sudan’s civil war between the regular army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces.

The RSF claimed Saturday to have regained control of Bara, a strategic city on a key crossroads to the Darfur region. United Nations agencies have voiced alarm about the reported level of violence in the city.
The Sudanese Red Crescent unit was on an official mission in Bara as part of a food distribution team, the IFRC said in a statement.
“They were clearly identified by wearing Red Crescent vests, which are supposed to provide them with full protection, and carried identification cards issued by the local branch.
“Any attack on humanitarian teams is unacceptable.”
The IFRC said the Sudanese Red Crescent has lost 21 colleagues on duty since the conflict broke out in April 2023.
The IFRC, the world’s largest humanitarian network, said that so far this year, 25 Red Cross and Red Crescent staff and volunteers from across the globe have lost their lives while carrying out their humanitarian duties.

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A war-monitoring group has reported widespread massacres in Kordofan, including in Bara after the RSF claimed to have regained control.
Furthermore, the UN rights office said Monday that summary executions of civilians by RSF fighters were being reported in Bara after its recapture.
“The victims were reportedly accused of supporting the Sudanese Armed Forces. Reports suggest that dozens of civilians have been killed,” it said.
Jacqueline Parlevliet, the UN refugee agency’s Port Sudan sub-office chief, said Tuesday that “violence and human rights violations have been reported by survivors” following the fall of Bara.
This has triggered “further displacement of thousands” within North Kordofan, she told reporters in Geneva.
“We are concerned about a possible siege of the town of El Obeid, hosting tens of thousands of internally displaced Sudanese, which would further exacerbate humanitarian needs in the region,” she added, speaking from Amsterdam.


US envoy Ortagus affirms Washington’s commitment to Lebanon’s security, official source tells Arab News

US envoy Ortagus affirms Washington’s commitment to Lebanon’s security, official source tells Arab News
Updated 28 October 2025

US envoy Ortagus affirms Washington’s commitment to Lebanon’s security, official source tells Arab News

US envoy Ortagus affirms Washington’s commitment to Lebanon’s security, official source tells Arab News
  • US envoy’s Lebanon visit centers on progress in consolidating state control over weapons, advancing ceasefire with Israel
  • Egyptian intelligence chief informs Aoun of his country’s readiness to help establish stability in southern Lebanon

BEIRUT: US envoy Morgan Ortagus on Tuesday praised the Lebanese army’s efforts in implementing the government-approved plan to centralize control over weapons under the state’s authority.

“Ortagus affirmed the US administration’s commitment to Lebanon’s security and stability,” an official source told Arab News.

Having arrived in Beirut Monday evening, Ortagus held meetings Tuesday afternoon with Lebanese officials, including President Joseph Aoun, Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, and Prime Minister Nawaf Salam.

She is scheduled to attend a session of the Mechanism Committee at the headquarters of the UN Interim Force in Lebanon in Naqoura on Wednesday.

According to an official, Ortagus refrained from making public statements during her meetings.

The source described the atmosphere of her meeting with President Aoun as positive, noting that she viewed the Mechanism Committee’s work as progressing.

They emphasized the need to find ways to implement the ceasefire agreement between Israel and Lebanon, in effect since Nov. 27, as a contribution to Lebanon’s stability.

Berri’s office explained that the meeting with Ortagus focused on “Israeli violations and the work of the five-member technical committee monitoring the ceasefire.”

Following her meeting with Berri, media reports indicated Ortagus proposed expanding the Mechanism Committee to include civilian members, as the current committee is limited to military officers.

Ortagus also reported “an Israeli account of weapons being smuggled from Syria to Lebanon, noting that the US administration has not yet confirmed this matter.”

From his end, President Aoun stressed to Ortagus “the need to activate the work of the Mechanism Committee to stop the ongoing Israeli violations and attacks on Lebanon and to implement Resolution 1701 in the south, enabling the Lebanese army to complete its deployment to the southern international border.”

President Aoun also emphasized the need to pave the way for southern citizens to return to their homes and repair damaged ones, particularly as winter approaches.

During her stay in Israel, Ortagus toured the border with Lebanon alongside Tel Aviv’s Defense Minister Israel Katz.

During the tour, Katz affirmed that Israel would continue to defend the northern regions against any threat.

On Tuesday, the Lebanese army worked to dismantle an earthen embankment erected by the Israeli army on the outskirts of the town of Markaba in Marjayoun, in southern Lebanon.

The Israeli Broadcasting Corp. quoted Israeli security sources as saying that Hezbollah succeeded in smuggling hundreds of short-range missiles from Syria to Lebanon in recent months.

While some attempts to smuggle arms have been thwarted, other shipments reportedly reached the group’s warehouses in Lebanon.

Tel Aviv has informed Washington of the details regarding these arms-smuggling operations across the Syrian-Lebanese border.

Israel Hayom reported that official Israeli estimates indicate that Hezbollah possesses approximately 10,000 missiles.

The newspaper quoted Israeli officials as saying that if the Lebanese government is unable to disarm Hezbollah, there would be no alternative but to carry out a “focused and targeted operation against Hezbollah targets.”

In parallel with Ortagus’ visit, Egyptian Intelligence Chief Maj. Gen. Hassan Rashad arrived in Beirut and met with Aoun.

Rashad, according to the media office at the Presidential Palace, “expressed his country’s readiness to help stabilize southern Lebanon and end the volatile security situation there. He also reiterated Egypt’s support for Lebanon.”

Official sources told Arab News that “Rashad conveyed Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi’s concern for Lebanon and its stability. He spoke about the Gaza agreement and the Sharm El-Sheikh summit and raised the possibility of benefiting from this experience to extend this atmosphere to Lebanon.”

Aoun, according to the media office at the Presidential Palace, welcomed “any Egyptian effort to help stop Israeli attacks on Lebanon and restore stability.”

On Monday, Egyptian Ambassador to Lebanon Alaa Moussa explained that the visit of the Egyptian intelligence chief falls within the framework of security and political coordination with Lebanon, adding that the developments in the scope and pace of Israeli attacks call for caution.


20,080 students killed in West Bank and Gaza in past 2 years, Palestinian officials say

20,080 students killed in West Bank and Gaza in past 2 years, Palestinian officials say
Updated 28 October 2025

20,080 students killed in West Bank and Gaza in past 2 years, Palestinian officials say

20,080 students killed in West Bank and Gaza in past 2 years, Palestinian officials say
  • 1,037 teachers and administrators killed, 4,757 injured and more than 228 arrested in Gaza and the West Bank
  • 179 government schools and 63 university buildings destroyed in Gaza, 18 government schools and more than 100 UN schools damaged

LONDON: A total of 19,932 students have been killed and 30,102 injured during Israel’s two-year war on Gaza, the Palestinian Ministry of Education and Higher Education said on Tuesday.

During the same period, 148 students were killed and 1,045 injured as a result of Israeli attacks in the occupied West Bank, and 846 people were arrested.

It means the combined toll in the territories now stands at 20,080 students killed and 31,147 wounded. In addition, 1,037 teachers and administrators have been killed, 4,757 injured, and more than 228 arrested in Gaza and the West Bank, the ministry said.

In Gaza, 179 government schools and 63 university buildings have been destroyed, the Palestinian Wafa news agency reported, and 18 government schools and more than 100 UN Relief and Works Agency schools were damaged by bombs or vandals.

In the West Bank, Israeli authorities demolished Amira Elementary School in the city of Yatta, south of Hebron, and Aqaba Elementary School in Tubas. Eight universities and colleges have been targeted by repeated raids and vandalism, Wafa said.

Several countries and international organizations, including a UN commission of inquiry, have accused Israeli authorities of genocide over their actions during the war in Gaza.


Unilever blocked pro-Palestine ice cream flavor: Ben & Jerry’s co-founder

Unilever blocked pro-Palestine ice cream flavor: Ben & Jerry’s co-founder
Updated 28 October 2025

Unilever blocked pro-Palestine ice cream flavor: Ben & Jerry’s co-founder

Unilever blocked pro-Palestine ice cream flavor: Ben & Jerry’s co-founder
  • Ben Cohen accuses owner of ‘corporate attack on free speech’
  • He and co-founder Jerry Greenfield have clashed with Unilever over Israel

LONDON: A Ben & Jerry’s co-founder has said plans for the ice cream brand to produce a special flavor to support the Palestinian people have been blocked by its owner.

Ben Cohen accused Unilever of a “corporate attack on free speech” after its ice cream wing Magnum did not pursue the move despite it being approved by Ben & Jerry’s independent board.

Cohen told The Guardian that “companies and anyone who believes in justice, freedom and peace” need to stand up, and that it is “the moment when it is most needed for Ben & Jerry’s to be able to raise its voice.”

He said a group of investors who prioritize social causes have been sounded out to buy Ben & Jerry’s from Unilever, after he started a “Free Ben & Jerry’s” campaign to force the group to sell up.

Ben & Jerry’s, founded in the US state of Vermont in 1978 with an ambition to “advance human rights and dignity,” has a history of social activism.

It has launched special flavors in the past to champion various causes, including “Save Our Swirled” ahead of the 2015 Paris climate meetings, and “Home Sweet Honeycomb” to support refugees seeking asylum in Europe.

Unilever bought Ben & Jerry’s in 2000 in a deal worth $326 million, and agreed to let the brand preserve an independent board to continue supporting social justice issues.

However, Cohen and co-founder Jerry Greenfield have had a fractious relationship with Unilever over the Gaza war.

Greenfield resigned as an employee in September, saying Ben & Jerry’s was no longer able to operate independently.

Ben & Jerry’s previously refused to allow its products to be sold in Palestinian territories occupied by Israel, took legal action against Unilever selling its Israel operation to a local company, and denounced the Gaza war as genocide.

Cohen told The Guardian that the company can no longer make “ice cream with purpose,” and that he will instead make a flavor in solidarity with Palestine from his own kitchen under his personal Ben’s Best brand.

He invited the public to contribute their ideas, and said it will be based on watermelon to bring attention to “rebuilding, and peace and dignity for the people of the region.” 

Magnum said Ben & Jerry’s is “not for sale,” adding: “The independent members of Ben & Jerry’s board are not, and have never been, responsible for the Ben & Jerry’s commercial strategy and execution.”

Regarding a pro-Palestine flavor, a Magnum spokesperson said: “Recommendations are considered by Ben & Jerry’s leadership, and management has determined it is not the right time to invest in developing this product.”

Magnum said: “We remain committed to Ben & Jerry’s unique three-part mission — product, economic and social — and look forward to building on its success as an iconic, much-loved brand.”

A Unilever spokesperson told The Guardian: “We have always sought to work constructively with the Ben & Jerry’s teams to make sure we stayed true to the original agreement around the progressive, non-partisan social mission.”


EU ‘deeply concerned’ by intensified violence in Sudan

EU ‘deeply concerned’ by intensified violence in Sudan
Updated 28 October 2025

EU ‘deeply concerned’ by intensified violence in Sudan

EU ‘deeply concerned’ by intensified violence in Sudan
  • “We are closely monitoring the situation with our partners,” El Anouni said

BRUSSELS: The EU on Tuesday said it was “deeply concerned” by intensified violence in the western Sudanese city of El-Fasher after its capture by paramilitaries and urged “all warring parties to de-escalate.”
“We are closely monitoring the situation with our partners and ensuring that all violations of international humanitarian and human rights law are documented,” foreign affairs spokesman Anouar El Anouni said.
“There can be no impunity.”


Gunmen kill two on coach in Syrian Druze-majority province

Gunmen kill two on coach in Syrian Druze-majority province
Updated 28 October 2025

Gunmen kill two on coach in Syrian Druze-majority province

Gunmen kill two on coach in Syrian Druze-majority province
  • Local outlet Sweida 24 identified the victims as a woman and a young man.
  • The outlet said that the coach was on its way back from Damascus, “within the area where General Security checkpoints are deployed“

DAMASCUS: Gunmen killed at least two people when they opened fire on a coach along the road between Damascus and Druze-majority Sweida in southern Syria on Tuesday, state media reported, months after deadly sectarian clashes in the area.
State news agency SANA reported that “a passenger coach... on the Damascus-Sweida road was fired upon by unidentified gunmen, killing two people and wounding others.”
Local outlet Sweida 24 identified the victims as a woman and a young man.
The outlet said that the coach was on its way back from Damascus, “within the area where General Security checkpoints are deployed.”
Sweida province witnessed a week of bloodshed that began on July 13 with clashes between Druze fighters and Sunni Bedouin but rapidly escalated, drawing in government forces, armed groups from other parts of Syria and Israeli intervention.
Syrian security forces have been deployed in and around Sweida province since a ceasefire ended the clashes, while Druze factions remained in control of the city of the same name.
A monitor alleged that all the coach passengers were reportedly Druze.
In September, the Syrian government announced a plan backed by Jordan and the United States to restore calm and to hold “those who attacked civilians” accountable, but the situation remains unstable.