Israel military says it intercepted another missile fired by Houthis

Israel military says it intercepted another missile fired by Houthis
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A man works next to damaged building near the site where a missile launched from Yemen landed Jaffa district, in Tel Aviv, Israel, on Dec. 31, 2024. (AP Photo)
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Updated 05 January 2025
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Israel military says it intercepted another missile fired by Houthis

Israel military says it intercepted another missile fired by Houthis
  • Yemen’s Houthi militia have been firing missiles and drones at Israel as well as at ships in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden
  • The militia said its campaign is in solidarity with Palestinians during the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza

JERUSALEM: The Israeli military said Sunday that it had intercepted a missile launched from Yemen, shortly after sirens sounded.
“Following the sirens that sounded a short while ago in Talmei Elazar, a missile launched from Yemen was intercepted prior to crossing into Israeli territory,” the military said in a statement posted to Telegram.
On Friday, Israel’s military said it shot down a drone launched from Yemen after it crossed into Israeli territory.
Yemen’s Houthi militia have been firing missiles and drones at Israel — as well as at ships in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden — in what they say is a solidarity campaign with Palestinians during the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza.
The Houthis have stepped up their attacks since November’s ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah in Lebanon.
Israel has also struck Yemen, including targeting Sanaa’s international airport at the end of December.

 

 


Israel vows to bring hostages home as new truce deal proposed

Israel vows to bring hostages home as new truce deal proposed
Updated 16 sec ago
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Israel vows to bring hostages home as new truce deal proposed

Israel vows to bring hostages home as new truce deal proposed
  • Israel has stepped up a renewed offensive to destroy Hamas, drawing international condemnation as aid trickles in following a blockade since early March

GAZA CITY, Palestinian Territories: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday vowed to bring back all hostages, “living and dead,” as rescuers in Gaza said Israeli strikes killed at least 52 people.
Netanyahu’s remarks came after a Palestinian source said that mediators proposed a 70-day ceasefire and the release of 10 Israeli hostages alongside some Palestinian prisoners, though US envoy Steve Witkoff later said Hamas had not agreed to a proposed deal.
“If we don’t achieve it today, we will achieve it tomorrow, and if not tomorrow, then the day after tomorrow. We are not giving up,” Netanyahu said of the duty to free the captives.
“We intend to bring them all back, the living and the dead,” he added, but made no mention of a proposed deal.
His remarks came after a Hamas source said on Monday that the group had accepted a ceasefire proposal that would see 10 captives released.
A spokesman for Witkoff nonetheless told AFP that he disputed Hamas’s claim that the group had agreed to his proposed deal and quoted the envoy as saying “What I have seen from Hamas is disappointing and completely unacceptable.”
Fighting meanwhile raged in Gaza, where civil defense agency spokesman Mahmud Bassal said that an early-morning Israeli strike on the Fahmi Al-Jarjawi school, where displaced people were sheltering, killed “at least 33, with dozens injured, mostly children.”
The Israeli military said it had “struck key terrorists who were operating within a Hamas and Islamic Jihad command and control center embedded” in the area, adding that “numerous steps were taken to mitigate the risk of harming civilians.”
Another strike killed at least 19 people in Jabalia in the northern Gaza Strip, Bassal said.
Israel has stepped up a renewed offensive to destroy Hamas, drawing international condemnation as aid trickles in following a blockade since early March that has sparked severe food and medical shortages.

It has also triggered international criticism, with European and Arab leaders meeting in Spain calling for an end to the “inhumane” and “senseless” war, while humanitarian groups said the trickle of aid was not nearly enough.
Spanish Foreign Minister Jose Manuel Albares called for an arms embargo on Israel.
He also called for humanitarian aid to enter Gaza “massively, without conditions and without limits, and not controlled by Israel,” describing the territory as humanity’s “open wound.”
In Germany, Chancellor Friedrich Merz voiced unusually strong criticism of Israel, saying: “I no longer understand what the Israeli army is now doing in the Gaza Strip, with what goal.”
The impact on Gazan civilians “can no longer be justified,” he added.
Nevertheless, German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul said Berlin would continue selling weapons to Israel.
The Israeli military said on Monday that over “the past 48 hours, the (air force) struck over 200 targets throughout the Gaza Strip.”
It also said it had detected three projectiles launched from Gaza toward communities in Israel Monday, as the country prepared to celebrate Jerusalem Day, an annual event marking its capture of the city’s eastern sector in the 1967 Arab-Israeli war.
“Two projectiles fell in the Gaza Strip and one additional projectile was intercepted,” it said.
Later on Monday, it issued an evacuation order for areas of Khan Yunis, saying they had been the site of rocket launches.

Israel last week partially eased an aid blockade on Gaza that had exacerbated widespread shortages of food and medicine.
COGAT, the Israeli defense ministry body that coordinates civilian affairs in the Palestinian territories, said that “170 trucks... carrying humanitarian aid including food, medical equipment, and pharmaceutical drugs were transferred” into Gaza on Monday.
While Israel has restricted aid into Gaza, the war has made growing food next to impossible, with the UN saying on Monday just five percent of Gaza’s farmland was now useable.
A top World Health Organization official deplored Monday that none of the agency’s trucks with medical aid had been allowed to enter the Gaza Strip since Israel ended its blockade.
For more than 11 weeks, “there has been no WHO trucks entering into Gaza for medical care support,” the WHO’s Eastern Mediterranean regional director Hanan Balkhy said, adding that “the situation is devastating.”
The health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza said on Monday that at least 3,822 people had been killed in the territory since a ceasefire collapsed on March 18, taking the war’s overall toll to 53,977, mostly civilians.
Hamas’s October 2023 attack on Israel that triggered the war resulted in the deaths of 1,218 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures.
Militants also took 251 hostages, 57 of whom remain in Gaza, including 34 who the Israeli military says are dead.


A new aid system in Gaza has started operations, a US-backed group says

Palestinians displaced by the Israeli military offensive take shelter in tents near Gaza's seaport, in Gaza City May 26, 2025.
Palestinians displaced by the Israeli military offensive take shelter in tents near Gaza's seaport, in Gaza City May 26, 2025.
Updated 19 min 41 sec ago
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A new aid system in Gaza has started operations, a US-backed group says

Palestinians displaced by the Israeli military offensive take shelter in tents near Gaza's seaport, in Gaza City May 26, 2025.
  • The UN and aid groups have pushed back against the new system, which is backed by Israel and the United States

DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip: A new aid system in Gaza opened its first distribution hubs Monday, according to a US-backed group that said it began delivering food to Palestinians who face growing hunger after Israel’s nearly three-month blockade to pressure Hamas.
The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation is taking over the handling of aid despite objections from United Nations. The desperately needed supplies started flowing on a day that saw Israeli strikes kill at least 52 people in Gaza.
The group said truckloads of food — it did not say how many — had been delivered to its hubs, and distribution to Palestinians had begun. It was not clear where the hubs were located or how those receiving supplies were chosen.
“More trucks with aid will be delivered tomorrow, with the flow of aid increasing each day,” the foundation said in a statement.
The UN and aid groups have pushed back against the new system, which is backed by Israel and the United States. They assert that Israel is trying to use food as a weapon and say a new system won’t be effective.
Israel has pushed for an alternative aid delivery plan because it says it must stop Hamas from seizing aid. The UN has denied that the militant group has diverted large amounts.
The foundation began operations a day after the resignation of its executive director. Jake Wood, an American, said it had become clear the foundation would not be allowed to operate independently. It’s not clear who is funding the group, which said it had appointed an interim leader, John Acree, to replace Wood,
The organization is made up of former humanitarian, government and military officials. It has said its distribution points will be guarded by private security firms and that the aid would reach a million Palestinians — around half of Gaza’s population — by the end of the week.
Under pressure from allies, Israel began allowing a trickle of humanitarian aid into Gaza last week after blocking all food, medicine, fuel or other goods from entering since early March. Aid groups have warned of famine and say the aid that has come in is nowhere near enough to meeting mounting needs.
Hamas warned Palestinians on Monday not to cooperate with the new aid system, saying it is aimed at furthering those objectives.
Airstrikes hit shelter
The Israeli airstrikes killed at least 36 people in a school-turned-shelter that was hit as people slept, setting their belongings ablaze, according to local health officials. The military said it targeted militants operating from the school.
Israel renewed its offensive in March after ending a ceasefire with Hamas. It has vowed to seize control of Gaza and keep fighting until Hamas is destroyed or disarmed, and until it returns the remaining 58 hostages, a third of them believed to be alive, from the Oct. 7, 2023, attack that ignited the war.
Hamas-led militants killed some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and abducted 251 people in the 2023 attack. Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed around 54,000 Palestinians, according to the Gaza Health Ministry. It says more than half the dead are women and children but does not distinguish between civilians and combatants in its count.
Israel says it plans to facilitate what it describes as the voluntary migration of over 2 million people in Gaza, a plan rejected by Palestinians and much of the international community.
Israel’s military campaign has destroyed vast areas of Gaza and internally displaced some 90 percent of its population. Many have fled multiple times.
Rescuers recover charred remains
The strike on the school in the Daraj neighborhood of Gaza City also wounded dozens of people, said Fahmy Awad, head of the ministry’s emergency service. He said a father and his five children were among the dead. The Shifa and Al-Ahli hospitals in Gaza City confirmed the overall toll.
Awad said the school was hit three times while people slept, setting fire to their belongings. Footage circulating online showed rescuers struggling to extinguish fires and recovering charred remains.
The military said it targeted a militant command and control center inside the school that Hamas and Islamic Jihad used to gather intelligence for attacks. Israel blames civilian deaths on Hamas because it operates in residential areas.
A separate strike on a home in Jabalya in northern Gaza killed 16 members of the same family, including five women and two children, according to Shifa Hospital, which received the bodies.
Palestinian militants meanwhile fired three projectiles from Gaza, two of which fell short within the territory and a third that was intercepted, according to the Israeli military.
Ultranationalists march in east Jerusalem, break into UN compound
Ultranationalist Israelis gathered Monday in Jerusalem for an annual procession marking Israel’s 1967 conquest of the city’s eastern sector. Some protesters chanted “Death to Arabs” and harassed Palestinian residents.
Police kept a close watch as demonstrators jumped, danced and sang. The event threatened to inflame tensions that are rife in the restive city amid nearly 600 days of war in Gaza.
Hours earlier, a small group of protesters, including an Israeli member of parliament, stormed a compound in east Jerusalem belonging to the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, which Israel has banned. The compound has been mostly empty since January, when staff were asked to stay away for security reasons. The UN says the compound is protected under international law.

 


Jordan eyes new economic partnership with Syria during official visit

Jordan eyes new economic partnership with Syria during official visit
Updated 26 May 2025
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Jordan eyes new economic partnership with Syria during official visit

Jordan eyes new economic partnership with Syria during official visit
  • Chambers of commerce discuss greater cooperation in key sectors
  • Talks aim to revive Jordanian-Syrian Joint Business Council

DAMASCUS: The Jordan Chamber of Commerce has used a visit to the Syrian Arab Republic to lay the groundwork for a renewed economic partnership, with a focus on deepening cooperation and supporting Syria’s reconstruction and economic recovery.

During an official visit to Damascus on Monday, Senator Khalil Al-Haj Tawfiq, head of the Jordanian delegation, said his country was mobilizing its capabilities and private sector expertise to aid Syria’s economic development, the Jordan News Agency reported.

The JCC held talks with the Federation of Syrian Chambers of Commerce to explore collaboration across key sectors, including trade, transport, logistics, agriculture, industry, food, banking and shipping.

The two sides agreed to draft a comprehensive road map to guide future cooperation, with an emphasis on investment, joint ventures and reconstruction initiatives.

“Our delegation seeks to launch a new phase of economic cooperation that serves both countries’ interests,” Tawfiq said.

“We are committed to facilitating trade and transport and enhancing private sector engagement to support Syria’s path forward.”

The Jordanian delegation, comprising leaders from the commercial and service sectors, will also hold a series of meetings with Syrian officials and business representatives over three days.

The talks aim to revive the Jordanian-Syrian Joint Business Council and set the stage for an upcoming economic forum in Amman.

FSCC President Alaa Ali welcomed Jordan’s support, highlighting the strong historic ties between the two countries, the report said.

He called for boosting product competitiveness and reevaluating trade agreements, particularly in light of recent moves to ease international sanctions on Syria.

Ali praised the recent signing of a memorandum of understanding between the Jordanian and Syrian governments to establish a Higher Coordination Council, describing it as a vital step toward enhanced economic integration.

The visit was coordinated with Jordan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Jordanian Embassy in Damascus and marks a significant step toward rebuilding economic bridges between the two neighbors.


Departing Gaza aid foundation chief says group not neutral in conflict

Departing Gaza aid foundation chief says group not neutral in conflict
Updated 26 May 2025
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Departing Gaza aid foundation chief says group not neutral in conflict

Departing Gaza aid foundation chief says group not neutral in conflict

CAIRO: The head of a US-backed foundation set to supply aid in Gaza quit unexpectedly on Sunday, a day before the group was due to begin operations.

Jake Wood, executive director of the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation for the past two months, said he resigned because he could not adhere “to the humanitarian principles of humanity, neutrality, impartiality, and independence.”

His departure underscores the confusion surrounding the foundation, which has been boycotted by the UN and the aid groups supplying aid to Gaza before Israel imposed a total blockade on the enclave in March.

The groups say the new system will undermine the principle that aid should be overseen by a neutral party. Israel, which floated a similar plan earlier this year, says it will not be involved in distributing aid but it had endorsed the plan and would provide security for it.

Last week, under growing international pressure, Israeli authorities allowed a trickle of aid into the Palestinian enclave, but the few hundred trucks carried only a tiny fraction of the food needed by a population of 2 million at risk of famine after nearly three months of blockade.

The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, which would use private contractors working under a broad Israeli security umbrella, said it would begin deliveries on Monday, with the aim of reaching 1 million Palestinians by the end of the week.

“We plan to scale up rapidly to serve the full population in the weeks ahead,” it said in a statement.

The Switzerland-registered foundation has been heavily criticized by the UN, whose officials have said the private company’s aid distribution plans are insufficient for reaching the more than 2 million Gazans.

The new operation will rely on four major distribution centers in southern Gaza that will screen families for involvement with militants, potentially using facial recognition technology, according to aid officials.

But many details of how the operation will work remain unexplained, and it was not immediately clear whether aid groups that have refused to cooperate with the foundation would still be able to send in trucks.

Hamas condemned the new system, saying it would “replace order with chaos, enforce a policy of engineered starvation of Palestinian civilians, and use food as a weapon during wartime.”

Israel says the system is aimed at separating aid from Hamas, which it accuses of stealing and using food to impose control over the population, a charge rejected by Hamas, which says it protects aid convoys from gangs of armed looters.

While the aid system is worked out, Israel has continued to carry out strikes across the densely populated Gaza Strip, killing at least 45 people on Monday, according to local health authorities.


Jordan raps Israeli minister’s visit to Al-Aqsa compound

Jordan raps Israeli minister’s visit to Al-Aqsa compound
Updated 26 May 2025
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Jordan raps Israeli minister’s visit to Al-Aqsa compound

Jordan raps Israeli minister’s visit to Al-Aqsa compound
  • Extremist marchers scuffle with residents and hurl insults at Palestinians as they celebrate Jerusalem Day

AMMAN: Jordan condemned a visit by far-right Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir to the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound on Monday during celebrations marking Israel’s capture of East Jerusalem in 1967.

“The practices of this extremist minister and his continued incursions into the blessed Al-Aqsa Mosque ... do not negate the fact that East Jerusalem is an occupied city over which Israel has no sovereignty,” said a statement from the Foreign Ministry of Jordan, the custodian of the site.

Ben Gvir has long pushed for Jewish prayer rights at the flashpoint site. 

Most countries consider East Jerusalem to be occupied territory and do not recognize Israeli sovereignty over it. 

The annual “Flag March” on Monday drew thousands chanting, dancing and waving Israeli flags shortly after Ben Gvir visited the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound.

Witnesses said a large rally in Jerusalem descended into chaos as far-right Israeli Jews confronted and assaulted Palestinians, fellow Israelis and journalists.

A spokesperson for the Palestinian presidency based in the West Bank condemned the march and Ben Gvir’s visit to Al-Aqsa.

Israel’s ongoing war in Gaza, “repeated incursions into the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound and provocative acts such as raising the Israeli flag in occupied Jerusalem threaten the stability of the entire region,” Nabil Abu Rudeineh said in a statement.

Violence broke out in the walled Old City of East Jerusalem shortly after midday, witnesses said, when young marchers began harassing the few Palestinian shopkeepers who had yet to shutter their stores ahead of the rally.

The marchers, mostly young Israelis who live in settlements in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, then began to target Israeli left-wing activists and journalists observing the rally.

The demonstrators shouted nationalistic slogans and called for violence against Palestinians.

A Palestinian woman and journalists were spat on by a group of young settlers, and nearby Israeli police did not intervene, a Reuters witness said.

No arrests were reported as of late afternoon.

A police officer at the scene said young Israeli marchers could not be arrested because they were under the age of 18.

Moshe, a 35-year-old Israeli settler from the West Bank and supporter of the current right-wing government, walked through a Palestinian neighborhood of the Old City with a rifle slung over his shoulder and his daughter on his shoulders. 

It was a “very happy day” because all of Jerusalem was “under the government of Israel,” he said, declining to give his last name.

Left-wing opposition leader Yair Golan, a former armed forces deputy commander, described images of violence in the Old City as “shocking.”

He said in a statement: “This is not what loving Jerusalem looks like. This is what hatred, racism, and bullying look like.”

“We will keep Jerusalem united, whole, and under Israeli sovereignty,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told a Cabinet meeting held in East Jerusalem earlier on Monday.

Clashes flared throughout the day as left-wing Israeli activists intervened to escort Palestinians away from young far-right Israeli Jews threatening passersby, witnesses said.

Journalists covering the rally were repeatedly harassed and, in some instances, assaulted, the Reuters witness said.