Greek airline will run direct flights to Baghdad starting in December

Greek airline will run direct flights to Baghdad starting in December
1 / 2
Iraqi Foreign Minister Fuad Hussein, right, shakes hands with his Greek counterpart George Gerapetritis, in Baghdad, Oct. 30, 2025. (AP)
Greek airline will run direct flights to Baghdad starting in December
2 / 2
Greek foreign minister Giorgos Gerapetritis said that Greek air carrier Aegean Airlines will run its first flight from Athens to Baghdad on Dec. 16. (X/@aegeanairlines)
Short Url
Updated 10 sec ago

Greek airline will run direct flights to Baghdad starting in December

Greek airline will run direct flights to Baghdad starting in December
  • Giorgos Gerapetritis said that Greek air carrier Aegean Airlines will run its first flight from Athens to Baghdad on Dec. 16
  • No other European airlines are currently running direct flights to the Iraqi capital

BAGHDAD: An airline in Greece will start running direct flights from the European Union country to Baghdad before the end of the year, the Greek foreign minister announced Thursday during a visit to Iraq.
Giorgos Gerapetritis said that Greek air carrier Aegean Airlines will run its first flight from Athens to Baghdad on Dec. 16. No other European airlines are currently running direct flights to the Iraqi capital.
“I think this will substantially boost our people-to-people, economic, but also cultural, ties,” Gerapetritis said at a news conference alongside his Iraqi counterpart.
Aegean Airlines and a handful of other carriers already run direct flights from Europe to Irbil, the capital of Iraq’s semiautonomous Kurdish region in the north, but carriers had largely steered clear of Baghdad because of security concerns.
After the fall of Iraq’s longtime autocratic leader, Saddam Hussein, in a US-led invasion in 2003, the ensuing security vacuum spawned years of sectarian violence and the rise of armed extremist groups, including the Daesh group.
In the years since IS lost control of the territory that it once held in Iraq and neighboring Syria, the security situation has stabilized.
Iraqi Foreign Minister Fuad Hussein, in a statement, welcomed the launch of direct flights, and said that the two countries are discussing “cooperation in the fields of agriculture, investment, and tourism.”
He said that a series of recent visits to Iraq by European leaders “reflect the stability the country is experiencing” and “its growing standing on the international stage.”
Plans are underway to upgrade Baghdad’s international airport. Iraq recently awarded a $764 million contract to rehabilitate, expand and operate the airport to a global consortium made up of Corporacion America Airport, a Luxembourg-based airport operator, and Iraqi investment company Amwaj International.


Lebanon accuses Israel of responding to negotiation offer by ‘intensifying’ attacks

Lebanon accuses Israel of responding to negotiation offer by ‘intensifying’ attacks
Updated 8 sec ago

Lebanon accuses Israel of responding to negotiation offer by ‘intensifying’ attacks

Lebanon accuses Israel of responding to negotiation offer by ‘intensifying’ attacks
“Lebanon is ready for negotiations to end the Israeli occupation, but any negotiation... requires mutual willingness, which is not the case,” Aoun said
Israel “is responding to this option by carrying out more attacks against Lebanon...”

BEIRUT: Lebanese President Joseph Aoun on Friday accused Israel of responding to its offer to negotiate by intensifying its air strikes, the latest of which killed a man riding a motorbike in southern Lebanon.
Despite a November 2024 ceasefire with the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah, Israel maintains troops in five areas in southern Lebanon and has kept up regular air strikes.
Aoun had called for negotiations with Israel in mid-October, after US President Donald Trump brokered a ceasefire in Gaza.
“Lebanon is ready for negotiations to end the Israeli occupation, but any negotiation... requires mutual willingness, which is not the case,” Aoun said on Friday.
Israel “is responding to this option by carrying out more attacks against Lebanon... and intensifying tensions,” he added during a meeting with German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul.
Lebanon’s official National News Agency (NNA) said an Israeli drone targeted a man on a motorbike in the village of Kunin on Friday. The health ministry reported one death and one person wounded.
The Israeli military said it had “eliminated... a Hezbollah maintenance officer” who was working to reestablish the Iran-backed group’s infrastructure sites in southern Lebanon.
The strike came a day after the Israeli military killed a municipal worker in a raid in the Lebanese border village of Blida.
Aoun ordered the army on Thursday to confront such incursions.
Hezbollah first began launching cross-border fire at Israel following the outbreak of the war in Gaza in October 2023, kicking off a more than year-long conflict that culminated in two months of open war before last year’s ceasefire was agreed.
Israel, however, has never stopped carrying out air strikes on Lebanon — usually saying it is targeting Hezbollah positions — and has stepped up the attacks in recent days.
Israeli attacks on Lebanon have killed at least 25 people in October, including one Syrian, according to an AFP toll based on figures from the Lebanese health ministry.
On Tuesday, the spokesman for the UN rights commission, Jeremy Laurence, said Israeli forces had killed 111 civilians in Lebanon since the ceasefire went into effect.
Lebanese Foreign Minister Youssef Raggi asked his visiting German counterpart on Friday to “help put pressure on Israel to stop its attacks.”
“Only a diplomatic solution, not a military one, can ensure stability and guarantee calm in the south,” Raggi was quoted by the NNA as saying.
He added that “the Lebanese government is continuing to gradually implement its decision to place all weapons under its control.”
Hezbollah was badly weakened during the war, and the United States has intensified pressure on Lebanese authorities to disarm the group.
Hezbollah and its allies oppose the plan.

Turkiye sentences 11 people to life in prison over ski resort hotel fire

Turkiye sentences 11 people to life in prison over ski resort hotel fire
Updated 35 min 46 sec ago

Turkiye sentences 11 people to life in prison over ski resort hotel fire

Turkiye sentences 11 people to life in prison over ski resort hotel fire
  • Thirty-four children were among those killed in the fire
  • There were a total of 32 defendants in the trial, 20 of them in pre-trial detention

ISTANBUL: A Turkish court sentenced 11 people to life in prison on Friday over a fire that killed 78 people at a ski resort in northwest Turkiye’s Bolu mountains in January, state media reported.
Halit Ergul, owner of the Grand Kartal Hotel where the blaze erupted, was among the 11 defendants given aggravated life sentences by the court in Bolu province, according to state-run broadcaster TRT Haber.
Thirty-four children were among those killed in the fire, which occurred during school holidays when many families from nearby Istanbul and Ankara head to the Bolu mountains to ski. Another 137 people suffered injuries.
There were a total of 32 defendants in the trial, 20 of them in pre-trial detention, TRT said. Besides Ergul, the accused included hotel board members, managers and staff, as well as a deputy mayor and fire brigade personnel.
The disaster had triggered calls for accountability and reform. Independent experts said the hotel, at the Kartalkaya ski resort, lacked basic fire safety measures.
The blaze started in the restaurant floor of the 12-story building, where 238 guests were staying. It forced panicked hotel guests to jump from windows in the middle of the night.


ICRC says ‘pattern of violence’ targeting aid workers in Gaza, Sudan: AFP interview

ICRC says ‘pattern of violence’ targeting aid workers in Gaza, Sudan: AFP interview
Updated 31 October 2025

ICRC says ‘pattern of violence’ targeting aid workers in Gaza, Sudan: AFP interview

ICRC says ‘pattern of violence’ targeting aid workers in Gaza, Sudan: AFP interview
  • The International Committee of the Red Cross’s director-general told AFP Friday that humanitarian workers were being targeted in Gaza and in Sudan, where five volunteers were killed this week

MANAMA: The International Committee of the Red Cross’s director-general told AFP Friday that humanitarian workers were being targeted in Gaza and in Sudan, where five volunteers were killed this week.
“It is now becoming a pattern of violence against humanitarian workers in Sudan, in Gaza, and others, that we find very dramatic,” Pierre Krahenbuhl told AFP in Bahrain.


Israel launches more strikes on Gaza overnight, testing fragile truce

Israel launches more strikes on Gaza overnight, testing fragile truce
Updated 31 October 2025

Israel launches more strikes on Gaza overnight, testing fragile truce

Israel launches more strikes on Gaza overnight, testing fragile truce

GAZA: The Israeli military attacked the Gaza Strip for a third day on Thursday night, killing two people, the Palestinian Authority’s official news agency said, in another test of a fragile ceasefire agreement.
One Palestinian was killed by Israeli shelling and another was shot dead by Israeli forces, WAFA said on Friday.
The Israeli military did not immediately reply to a Reuters request for comment.
A third Palestinian died of wounds sustained from previous Israeli shelling, the news agency reported.
The US-brokered ceasefire, which left thorny issues like the disarmament of Hamas and a timeline for Israeli withdrawal from the Gaza Strip unresolved, has been tested by periodic outbreaks of violence since it came into place three weeks ago.
Between Tuesday and Wednesday, Israel retaliated for the death of an Israeli soldier with bombardments that Gaza health authorities said killed 104 people.
Israel said on Wednesday that it remained committed to the ceasefire despite its retaliation.
Israel says the soldier was killed in an attack by gunmen on territory within the “yellow line” where its troops withdrew under the truce. Hamas has rejected the accusation.
Palestinian militant group Hamas handed over two bodies of deceased Israeli hostages on Thursday.
Under the ceasefire accord, Hamas released all living hostages held in Gaza in return for nearly 2,000 Palestinian prisoners and wartime detainees, while Israel agreed to pull back its troops, halt its offensive and increase aid.
Hamas also agreed to hand over the remains of all 28 dead hostages in exchange for 360 Palestinian militants killed in the war. After Thursday’s release, it had handed over 17 bodies.
Hamas has said that it will take time to locate and retrieve the bodies of all the remaining hostages. Israel has accused Hamas of violating the truce by stalling in handing over bodies.
Two years of conflict in Gaza have killed over 68,000 Palestinians, according to Gazan health authorities and left the enclave in ruins.


Israel returns remains of 30 more Palestinians to Gaza

Israel returns remains of 30 more Palestinians to Gaza
Updated 31 October 2025

Israel returns remains of 30 more Palestinians to Gaza

Israel returns remains of 30 more Palestinians to Gaza
  • The Nasser Medical Complex in Khan Younis said that ‘the bodies of 30 Palestinian prisoners were received from the Israeli side as part of the exchange deal’

GAZA CITY, Palestinian Territories: Israel has returned the bodies of 30 more Palestinians to Gaza as part of an ongoing exchange deal under a US-brokered ceasefire plan, a hospital said on Friday.
The Nasser Medical Complex in Khan Younis said that “the bodies of 30 Palestinian prisoners were received from the Israeli side as part of the exchange deal.”
Under the truce, Israel is to return 15 Palestinian remains for every deceased Israeli hostage returned by Hamas. Friday’s transfer brings the number returned to Gaza to 225.