Lebanese president orders army to confront Israeli incursions after deadly raid in south

Update Lebanese president orders army to confront Israeli incursions after deadly raid in south
A Lebanese military vehicle drives, after Israeli troops withdrew from most of south Lebanon, in Mays al-Jabal, near the border with Israel. (Reuters)
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Lebanese president orders army to confront Israeli incursions after deadly raid in south

Lebanese president orders army to confront Israeli incursions after deadly raid in south
  • Hezbollah condemned the Israeli attack and praised President Aoun’s order to the army

DUBAI/BEIRUT: An Israeli military raid in southern Lebanon early Thursday killed a municipal employee in the border town of Blida, prompting Lebanese President Joseph Aoun to order the army to confront such incursions.

Lebanon’s National News Agency said Israeli forces, backed by armored vehicles and ATVs, crossed more than a kilometer into Lebanese territory and stormed the Blida municipality building around 1:30 a.m., where employee Ibrahim Salameh was sleeping. He was killed inside the premises.

Residents told local media they heard screams and cries for help during the several-hour raid, which ended around dawn before Israeli troops withdrew. An AFP journalist later saw bullet holes in the building’s walls and windows, with bloodstains and personal belongings scattered in the room where Salameh had been sleeping.

President Aoun instructed the military to “confront any Israeli incursion into liberated southern territory” during a meeting with the army chief, while Prime Minister Nawaf Salam condemned the raid as a “flagrant aggression against Lebanese state institutions and sovereignty.”

The Israeli military confirmed the operation, saying its forces were targeting Hezbollah infrastructure in the Blida area and had fired on a “suspect” after identifying an “immediate threat.” The military said the incident was under review and accused Hezbollah of using the municipal building “for terrorist activity under the guise of civilian infrastructure.”

Hezbollah condemned what it called a “new Israeli crime,” saying the “Zionist enemy continues its series of crimes on Lebanese territory” and had “cold-bloodedly executed” Salameh while he slept. The group accused the United States of complicity in Israeli aggression, saying Washington had given “the green light to every Israeli escalation.”

The statement called on the Lebanese government to adopt a “unified and firm national stance” against continued Israeli attacks and praised President Aoun’s order to the army. Hezbollah urged the state to strengthen the military’s defensive capabilities and provide political cover to confront “this brutal enemy.”

In a separate strike early Thursday, Israeli forces also blew up a hall for religious ceremonies in the nearby border village of Adaisseh, Lebanon’s NNA reported.

Despite a ceasefire agreed with Hezbollah in November 2024, Israel maintains troops in several parts of southern Lebanon and continues to carry out regular air strikes, saying it is targeting Hezbollah positions. The UN says more than 100 civilians have been killed in Lebanon since the ceasefire came into effect.

(With AFP)


German foreign minister to make first visit to Syria

German foreign minister to make first visit to Syria
Updated 30 October 2025

German foreign minister to make first visit to Syria

German foreign minister to make first visit to Syria
  • German FM Johann Wadephul will on Thursday make his first visit to Syria to meet representatives of the new government including Al-Sharaa

BERLIN: German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul will on Thursday make his first visit to Syria to meet representatives of the new government including President Ahmed Al-Sharaa, his ministry said.
“With the overthrow of the Assad dictatorship, the people of Syria have entered a new era,” Wadephul said in a statement released by his ministry, referring to ousted leader Bashar Assad.
Wadephul and a German parliament delegation will meet Sharaa and Syrian Foreign Minister Asaad Al-Shaibani before traveling on to Lebanon and Bahrain, his ministry said.
Syria has been ruled by a new Islamist-led government since the overthrow of Assad in December.
The country’s relations with the west have warmed, with the United States lifting sanctions and European governments developing closer ties.
However Syria has seen continued unrest with clashes between different ethnic groups.
“Syria faces immense challenges,” Wadephul said.
“It needs a government that guarantees all citizens, regardless of gender, religious, ethnic or social affiliation, a life of dignity and security.”
Germany has a large Syrian community as hundreds of thousands settled there after fleeing the country’s civil war.
“Many have not only found protection here, but also a new home,” Wadephul said.
“Some are also considering returning to Syria to rebuild their country. I would like to deepen this special relationship between our countries together with our partners in Syria.”
As the German government looks to crack down on migration to curb the rise of the far-right AfD, its leaders have sought to resume deportations to Syria.
Wadephul’s predecessor Annalena Baerbock, from the Green party which was part of Germany’s last government, had visited Syria.


UN calls for end to Sudan siege after mass hospital killings

UN calls for end to Sudan siege after mass hospital killings
Updated 30 October 2025

UN calls for end to Sudan siege after mass hospital killings

UN calls for end to Sudan siege after mass hospital killings
  • The capture of El-Fasher, the last army holdout in the vast western region of Darfur, comes after more than 18 months of brutal siege
  • International powers have struggled for months to mediate an end to the fighting between the paramilitaries and the regular army

PORT OF SUDAN: UN chief Antonio Guterres called for an immediate end to military escalation in Sudan on Thursday after reports that more than 460 people were shot dead in a maternity hospital by paramilitary forces.
Mohammad Hamdan Dagalo, the head of the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) paramilitaries which recently seized the city of El-Fasher from army forces, has vowed the country would be unified by “peace or through war.”
The capture of El-Fasher, the last army holdout in the vast western region of Darfur, comes after more than 18 months of brutal siege, sparking fears of a return to the ethnically targeted atrocities of 20 years ago.
Accusations of mass killings have mounted, with the World Health Organization (WHO) condemning reports that 460 people were killed at the Saudi Maternity Hospital, the last partially functional hospital in El-Fasher.
The WHO said the hospital was on Sunday “attacked for the fourth time in a month, killing one nurse and injuring three other health workers.”
Two days later, “six health workers, four doctors, a nurse and a pharmacist, were abducted” and “more than 460 patients and their companions were reportedly shot and killed in the hospital,” the organization said.
Guterres said in a statement he was “gravely concerned by the recent military escalation” in El-Fasher, calling for “an immediate end to the siege & hostilities.”
International powers have struggled for months to mediate an end to the fighting between the paramilitaries and the regular army, raging since April 2023.
Dagalo’s paramilitaries now control most of western Sudan, Africa’s third-largest country, while the regular army under Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan dominates the north, east and center.
While the army regained full control over the capital Khartoum in March, the RSF has set up a parallel administration in the southwestern city of Nyala.
Analysts warn that the country is now de facto partitioned and may prove very hard to piece back together.
‘Systemic killing’ 
Dagalo said in a speech Wednesday that he was “sorry for the inhabitants of El-Fasher for the disaster that has befallen them” and that civilians were off limits.
The RSF — descended from Janjaweed militias that attacked non-Arab communities in Darfur two decades ago — has again been accused of carrying out ethnic genocide against civilians, with graphic videos circulating on social media.
Sudanese Arabs are the dominant ethnic group in the country, but the majority in Darfur are from non-Arab communities such as the Fur people.
The Sudanese government has accused the RSF of killing more than 2,000 civilians and targeting mosques and Red Crescent aid workers in the city.
Yale University’s Humanitarian Research Lab said Tuesday that satellite imagery showed “mass killing events” with “corroboration of alleged executions around Saudi Hospital and a previously unreported potential mass killing at an RSF detention site at the former Children’s Hospital in eastern El-Fasher.”
It said there was also ongoing “systematic killing” at one location outside the city.
The lab had warned earlier of a “systematic and intentional process of ethnic cleansing” of non-Arab communities.
Thousands displaced
The seizing of El-Fasher has left the RSF in control of a third of Sudan, with fighting now concentrated in the central Kordofan region.
On Tuesday, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies reported five Sudanese volunteers killed and three missing in Bara, a city in Kordofan captured by the RSF last week.
More than 33,000 people have fled El-Fasher since Sunday for the town of Tawila, about 70 kilometers (40 miles) to the west, which has already welcomed more than 650,000 displaced people.
AFP images from Tawila showed displaced people, some of them with bandages, carrying their belongings and setting up temporary shelters.
Around 177,000 people remain in El-Fasher, which had a population of more than one million before the war.
Access routes to El-Fasher and satellite-based communications in the city remain cut off — though not for the RSF, which controls the Starlink network there.
Truce talks stalled
Sudan’s war has killed tens of thousands of people, displaced millions and triggered the world’s largest displacement and hunger crisis.
The so-called Quad group — comprising the United States, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates and — held talks over several months toward securing a truce.
But those talks have reached an impasse, an official close to the negotiations said, with “continued obstructionism” from the army-aligned government.
 


Cradle of civilization at risk of erosion in Iraq due to climate change

Cradle of civilization at risk of erosion in Iraq due to climate change
Updated 30 October 2025

Cradle of civilization at risk of erosion in Iraq due to climate change

Cradle of civilization at risk of erosion in Iraq due to climate change
  • Harsh, dry weather is increasing salinity in the soil and damaging the historical monuments in the ruins of cities such as Ur, the birthplace of the Biblical patriarch Abraham, and Babylon, once-magnificent capital of empires

UR: Iraqi officials are sounding the alarm to save monuments of the cradle of civilization, with thousands of years of history at risk of disappearing as Iraq’s ancient southern cities face erosion because of climate change.
Harsh, dry weather is increasing salinity in the soil and damaging the historical monuments in the ruins of cities such as Ur, the birthplace of the Biblical patriarch Abraham, and Babylon, once-magnificent capital of empires.
Sand dunes are causing the deterioration of the northern side of the majestic Ziggurat of Ur, a massive stepped pyramid temple that was dedicated more than 4,000 years ago to the moon god, Nanna.
“The combination of wind and sand dunes leads to the erosion of the northern sections of the structure,” said Abdullah Nasrallah, an archaeologist at the antiquities department in Dhi Qar province — where the city of Ur is located.

SALT EATS AWAY AT ANCIENT MUD BRICKS
The shrine, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, remains one of the best-preserved examples of ancient Mesopotamian architecture that offers an insight into religious practices and sacred rituals of the Sumerian empire, where one of the world’s first civilizations flourished.
“While the third layer (of the Ziggurat) had already deteriorated due to weathering and climate change, erosion has now begun to affect the second layer,” Nasrallah said.
Nearby, salt deposits have been eating away the mud bricks of the Royal Cemetery of Ur, discovered by British archaeologist Sir Leonard Woolley in the 1920s and now at risk of collapsing.
“These salt deposits appeared due to global warming and climate change — which led to the destruction of important parts of the cemetery,” said Dr. Kazem Hassoun, an inspector at the antiquities department in Dhi Qar.
“Eventually, the deposits will cause the complete collapse of the mud bricks that make up this cemetery,” Hassoun said.
Iraq is battling rising temperatures and heavy droughts that have increased the salinity levels in its south, where the mighty Tigris and Euphrates rivers converge as they approach the Gulf.
Further up the Euphrates, the archaeological sites of ancient Babylon are in danger as well. They urgently require attention and restoration, but the lack of funding remains a challenge, Dr. Montaser Al-Hasnawi, the director general of Iraq’s Ministry of Culture and Tourism, told Reuters.
The country has already endured decades of warfare that threatened its historical structures — from war with Iran in the 1980s, to the Gulf War of the early 1990s, the 2003 US-led invasion followed by insurgent violence and the rise and fall of the Daesh group.
Its latest challenge is climate change altering the country’s whole ecosystem, not only putting its agricultural future at risk, but also endangering its historical footprint.
In Babylon, high salinity levels are endangering the clay-based materials of ancient structures, on which elaborate Sumerian drawings are still visible.
The materials were sourced directly from the land which had lower salinity at the time. That could have made them less vulnerable to climate change, but improper restoration practices in previous decades made the old structures more susceptible, Hasnawi said. Rising salinity makes the need to redo the flawed restoration more pressing.
“The salinity problem is increasing in both surface and groundwater. This will lead to the destruction of many cities that are beneath the earth,” Hasnawi said.


Apartment building collapse in Turkiye kills 4 members of a family

Apartment building collapse in Turkiye kills 4 members of a family
Updated 30 October 2025

Apartment building collapse in Turkiye kills 4 members of a family

Apartment building collapse in Turkiye kills 4 members of a family

ISTANBUL: A seven-story apartment building in Turkiye’s northwestern city of Gebze collapsed early Wednesday, trapping a family of five under the rubble and killing four of them.
State-run TRT news channel identified those who died as members of the Bilir family: father Levent, 43, mother Emine, 37, daughter Hayrunnisa, 14, and son Muhammed Emir, 12.
Rescue personnel saved the eldest sibling, 18-year-old Dilara Bilir, and recovered the bodies of the younger children by Wednesday evening, but the search for the parents continued. Deputy Interior Minister Mehmet Aktas told reporters Thursday morning the bodies of the parents were recovered overnight.
TRT said 627 rescuers were deployed on-site.
While state-run Anadolu Agency stated the cause of the collapse was unknown, Mayor Zinnur Büyükgöz suggested to local media the cause might be related to nearby metro construction.
Gebze also lies along the north Anatolian fault line and was one of the main centers hit during 1999’s magnitude 7.6 earthquake, which killed an estimated 18,000 people in total.
Experts have long warned that Turkiye’s failure to enforce modern construction codes poses significant risks in earthquake-prone areas.
In January, the collapse of a four-story building in Konya led to two deaths. Shopkeepers who rented the ground floor are currently on trial to determine whether they dismantled supporting columns for more space, a common practice despite severe penalties. They could face up to 22 years in prison if convicted.


The Grand Egyptian Museum showcasing 50,000 artifacts is finally opening

The Grand Egyptian Museum showcasing 50,000 artifacts is finally opening
Updated 30 October 2025

The Grand Egyptian Museum showcasing 50,000 artifacts is finally opening

The Grand Egyptian Museum showcasing 50,000 artifacts is finally opening
  • The museum, located just outside Cairo, is set to open on Saturday. It highlights ancient Egyptian civilization and aims to boost tourism, a crucial source of foreign currency for Egypt
  • The museum has faced multiple delays, with construction beginning in 2005 and interruptions due to political instability

CAIRO: After two decades of anticipation and countless delays, the Grand Egyptian Museum is finally having its grand reveal.
The museum, which is set to officially open Saturday, highlights Egypt’s ancient civilization and is a centerpiece of the government’s drive to boost the tourist industry, a major source of foreign currency in the cash-strapped country.
Located just outside Cairo next to the famed Giza Pyramids, the $1 billion mammoth facility is poised to become the world’s largest museum dedicated to a single civilization with over 50,000 artifacts detailing the life in ancient Egypt. By comparison, the Louvre Museum in Paris has about 35,000 pieces on display.
The museum is one of the mega-projects championed by President Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi, who since taking office in 2014 embarked on massive investments in infrastructure with the aim of reviving an economy weakened by decades of stagnation and battered by the unrest that followed the 2011 Arab Spring uprising.
The museum’s construction began in 2005, but work stopped for three years during the political turmoil that followed the 2011 uprising.
The grand opening was postponed multiple times, most recently in July this year because of conflicts in the Middle East. World leaders are expected to attend the opening ceremony Saturday.
Giant building with a view of the Giza Pyramids
Designed by the Irish firm Heneghan Peng Architects, the museum, known as GEM, boasts a towering, triangular glass façade imitating the nearby pyramids.
In its entrance atrium stands the granite colossus of one of Egypt’s most famed pharaohs, Ramesses the Great. The 3,200-year-old, 11-meters-tall (36-foot-tall) statue was moved to the museum after decades of standing in the center of a traffic-clogged roundabout in front of Cairo’s main train station.
From the atrium, a grand six-story staircase lined with ancient statues leads up to the main galleries and a view of the nearby pyramids. A bridge links the museum to the pyramids, allowing tourists to move between them either on foot or via electric, environment-friendly vehicles, according to museum officials.
The museum includes 24,000 square meters (258,000 square feet) of permanent exhibition space, a children’s museum and conference and educational facilities, and a commercial area as well as a large conservation center.
The 12 main galleries, which opened last year, exhibit antiquities spanning from prehistoric times to the Roman era, organized by era and by themes.
Many of the 50,000 artifacts in the GEM were moved from the Egyptian Museum, a packed, century-old building in downtown Cairo’s Tahrir Square. Others were recently unearthed from ancient cemeteries, including the Saqqara necropolis, another complex of pyramids and tombs about 14 miles (22 kilometers) south of the museum.
The halls are equipped with advanced technology and feature multimedia presentations including mixed-reality shows to help explain ancient Egypt to new generations, said Ahmed Ghoneim, the museum’s CEO.
“We’re using the language that the Gen Z uses right now,” he said in an interview. “Gen Z doesn’t use anymore the labels that we read as old people but rather use technology.”
Tutankhamun collection in one place for the first time
Saturday’s grand opening will include the inauguration of two halls dedicated to the 5,000 artifacts from the collection of King Tutankhamun.
The collection is being displayed in its entirety for the first time since British archaeologist Howard Carter discovered King Tut’s tomb in 1922 in the southern city of Luxor. The old Egyptian Museum didn’t have enough space to show all the tomb’s treasures at once.
Some masterpieces were restored at the museum’s conservation center, including the boy pharaoh’s three funeral beds and six chariots, said Jailan Mohamed, chief restorer at the conservation center.
They will be displayed along with his golden throne, his gold-covered sarcophagus and his burial mask, made of gold, quartzite, lapis lazuli and colored glass. The mask’s beard was accidentally knocked off and hastily glued back on with epoxy in 2014, before a German-Egyptian team of experts fixed it the following year.
Another centerpiece of the museum is the 4,600-year-old solar boat of King Khufu, the pharaoh who is credited with building the Great Pyramid of Giza. The 43-meter-long (140-foot) wooden boat, discovered in the 1950s, was buried next to the Great Pyramid for Khufu — or Cheops as he is also known — to use in the afterlife. In 2021, it was moved from its display site by the pyramids into the Grand Egyptian Museum on a remote-controlled vehicle imported from Belgium.
The government hopes that the museum will revitalize tourism
The government hopes the museum will draw more tourists who will stay for a while and provide the foreign currency Egypt needs to shore up its economy.
The tourism sector suffered from years of political turmoil and violence following the 2011 Arab Spring uprising. In recent years, the sector has started to recover from the coronavirus pandemic, and the effects of Russia’s war on Ukraine. Both Russia and Ukraine are a major source of tourists visiting Egypt.
A record number of 15.7 million visited the country in 2024, according to official figures, and the government aims to attract 30 million visitors by 2032.
Authorities overhauled the whole area around the museum and the pyramids. Roads were paved and a metro station is being constructed outside the museum gates to ease access to the sites. An airport, Sphinx International Airport, was also opened west of Cairo — 40 minutes from the museum.
Hassan Allam, CEO of Hassan Allam Holding, the firm administering the museum, said they’re expecting between 15,000 and 20,000 visitors a day at the museum.
“The world has been waiting … Everyone’s excited,” he said.