Israeli jets pound Haret Hreik as Netanyahu’s home targeted in drone attack

Update Israeli jets pound Haret Hreik as Netanyahu’s home targeted in drone attack
Thick smoke billows over buildings following an Israeli airstrike on Beirut’s southern suburb of Haret Hreik on October 19, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hezbollah. (AFP)
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Updated 19 October 2024
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Israeli jets pound Haret Hreik as Netanyahu’s home targeted in drone attack

Israeli jets pound Haret Hreik as Netanyahu’s home targeted in drone attack
  • Avichay Adraee, the Israeli military spokesman, warned residents of Haret Hreik to evacuate before the area was struck
  • An Israeli target map included the building of the Islamic Charitable Emdad Committee affiliated with Hezbollah

BEIRUT: Israeli jets on Saturday pounded Haret Hreik in southern Beirut as Hezbollah announced it had targeted the residence of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu using drones.
Avichay Adraee, the Israeli military spokesman, warned residents of Haret Hreik to evacuate before the area was struck.
An Israeli target map included the building of the Islamic Charitable Emdad Committee affiliated with Hezbollah.
The area has been hit with consecutive days of airstrikes over the past three weeks, with residents evacuating in the wake of the assassination of Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah on Sept. 27.
Fighting between the Israeli army and Hezbollah entered a new phase on Saturday with the Israeli announcement that drones had been launched at Netanyahu’s home in Caesarea, south of Haifa.
Meanwhile, Israeli expanded its air campaign against Hezbollah to new areas, including Chtaura in central Bekaa and the coastal town of Jounieh in Mount Lebanon.
The development in Caesarea was kept under wraps for some time, with three drones said to have crossed into Israel from Lebanon in the morning.
Israel blamed Hezbollah for the attack, though the party has yet to claim responsibility.
One drone crashed in Caesarea, where Netanyahu owns a private residence.
Netanyahu’s office said: “A drone was launched toward his home in Caesarea, but the prime minister and his wife were not there, and no injuries were reported.”
The Israeli Broadcasting Corporation said that the drone “flew 70 km from Lebanon and directly hit a building in Caesarea,” while Israeli media reported that “shrapnel hit a nearby building.”
In an official statement, the Israeli army acknowledged that it “detected three drones crossing from Lebanon into Israeli territory, two of which were intercepted.”
The military operations room of Hezbollah a day earlier had announced a “transition to a new and escalatory phase in the confrontation with the Israeli enemy.”
This would “be reflected in the developments and events of the coming days,” it added.
In August this year, Hezbollah released footage captured by an observer drone that had infiltrated Israeli airspace, showing Netanyahu’s residence in Caesarea.
Meanwhile, an Israeli military drone on Saturday struck a residential apartment in the Qataya building in Chtaura at 5 a.m, killing one man and injuring two other people.
A reporter, who requested to remain anonymous, told Arab News that the dead man was affiliated with Hezbollah, “but we are unaware of his military rank.”
Hours later, another Israeli military drone tracked a vehicle traveling from northern Lebanon toward Beirut along the Jounieh highway.
It launched a missile at the car but missed, before firing a second missile that prompted the driver to flee the vehicle with his wife.
The pair ran into a nearby forest but were struck by the drone and killed.
Initial reports suggested that they were from the Al-Burj Al-Shamali area in southern Lebanon.
The Al-Hadath TV channel reported from sources that the target was a “military leader in Hezbollah’s intelligence.”
The Ministry of Health said: “The Israeli airstrike on a vehicle in Jounieh resulted in the deaths of two individuals.”
The Israeli army previously employed the same drone-launched missile during the assassination of a driver in the Kahala area three weeks ago.
The target was killed as his family, who accompanied him in the vehicle, were left unharmed.
Eyewitnesses at the time described the incident as a “silent targeting.”
The assassination on Saturday caused significant confusion in Jounieh, a Christian area with no Hezbollah presence, and which has rarely drawn Israeli attention.
Israeli airstrikes intensified in the southern region and the Bekaa, coinciding with Hezbollah’s targeting of northern Israel.
The strikes on western Bekaa killed Haidar Shahla, the mayor of Sohmor, after a raid targeted the town of Baaloul.
In southern Lebanon, Israeli jets raided the surroundings of a building previously used by the demining organization “MAG” in Kfar Joz in Nabatieh, as well as Chkeif, Kfarkila and Srifa.
Kfarshouba, Khiam and the Marjayoun valley were targeted by Israeli artillery.
A raid targeted and completely destroyed a building on the Zefta-Nabatieh highway, while other raids struck the town of Ebba.
A raid on a building in Jal Al-Bahr, Tyre, near a medical center, injured six people, one critically. The targeted region includes commercial shops, medical clinics and residential buildings.
A raid on Kharayeb injured three civilians.
Meanwhile, ground fighting continued in the border region, notably on the outskirts of Aita Al-Shaab, Ramieh and Kafra, where violent clashes are taking place for the third consecutive day.
In Bekaa, Israeli raids reached the town of Khodor in western Bekaa, Mecherfeh on the northeastern border of Hermel, Bouday, the barrens of Shmistar, the surroundings of Qasr and Hosh Sayyid Ali in Hermel on the Syrian border.
In a series of statements, Hezbollah announced that it targeted Safed, Haifa, Israeli military bases and gatherings in Rosh Pinna, east of the Malkia settlement, and Jal Al-Deir, northeast of the Avivim settlement.
Hezbollah also said that it launched “a swarm of attack drones” toward the Ein Shemer base of Israel’s air force, as well as a regional brigade base east of Hadera.
Israel’s Channel 12 reported that “several missiles landed in Tiberias and its lake,” adding that “three drones were fired from Lebanon toward Nahariya, Akka and the Haifa Bay, one of which was intercepted by the Israeli army.”


US discussions with Hamas were recent, Trump envoy says

Updated 2 min 30 sec ago
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US discussions with Hamas were recent, Trump envoy says

US discussions with Hamas were recent, Trump envoy says
Witkoff also said the US does not believe Hamas has been forthright
Witkoff said he will travel to the Middle East next week

WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff said that direct US discussions with Hamas militants were in recent days and the message to the Palestinian militant group was that the United States wants to get hostages home.
Witkoff also said the US does not believe Hamas has been forthright. He spoke a day after reports surfaced that the top US hostage negotiator, Adam Boehler, had met in Doha with Hamas representatives to try to obtain the release of hostages held in Gaza.
Witkoff told reporters at the White House that gaining the release of Edan Alexander, the 21-year-old man from New Jersey believed to be the last living American hostage held by Hamas in Gaza, is a “top priority for us.”
Witkoff said he will travel to the Middle East next week with stops planned in four countries.

Hamas armed wing says still committed to truce with Israel

Hamas armed wing says still committed to truce with Israel
Updated 8 sec ago
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Hamas armed wing says still committed to truce with Israel

Hamas armed wing says still committed to truce with Israel
  • Abu Obaida said Hamas 'still prefers to adhere to the agreement in order to spare the blood of our people'
  • Of the 251 hostages taken during Hamas’s October 2023 attack on Israeli towns and military bases, 58 remain in captivity

GAZA CITY: The armed wing of Palestinian militant group Hamas said Thursday it remained committed to its fragile ceasefire with Israel, even after the first phase drew to a close at the weekend.
“Despite all the enemy’s attempts at evasion, lies and deception... we preferred and still prefer to adhere to the agreement in order to spare the blood of our people,” Abu Obaida, spokesman for the Ezzedine Al-Qassam Brigades, said in a video statement.
The first phase of the fragile truce, which largely halted more than 15 months of fighting in Gaza, drew to a close at the weekend after six weeks of relative calm that included exchanges of Israeli hostages for Palestinian prisoners.
While Israel has said it wants to extend the first phase until mid-April, Hamas has insisted that the second phase go ahead as planned.
Israel has ramped up its rhetoric and halted the flow of goods and supplies into Gaza.
On Wednesday, US President Donald Trump warned the people of Gaza that they would be “DEAD” unless all the remaining hostages were released.
Hamas has said Trump’s comments will encourage Israel to ignore the terms of the ceasefire.
Abu Obaida warned against any escalation.
“We warn the families of the (hostages) that until today we have proof of life for those who remain alive among the prisoners,” the spokesman said.
“Any escalation of aggression against our people will likely lead to the death of some enemy prisoners, as has happened in many cases in the past.”
Of the 251 hostages taken during Hamas’s October 2023 attack on Israeli towns and military bases, 58 remain in captivity, including 34 the Israeli military says are dead.
The attack resulted in the deaths of 1,218 people on the Israeli side, most of them civilians, while Israel’s retaliation in Gaza has killed at least 48,446 people, also mostly civilians, according to figures from the two sides.


Yemeni women, girls facing ‘perfect storm’ of hunger, violence, UN officials tell Security Council

A Yemeni woman cooks on an outdoor clay stove at a makeshift camp in the northern Hajjah province. (File/AFP)
A Yemeni woman cooks on an outdoor clay stove at a makeshift camp in the northern Hajjah province. (File/AFP)
Updated 30 min 12 sec ago
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Yemeni women, girls facing ‘perfect storm’ of hunger, violence, UN officials tell Security Council

A Yemeni woman cooks on an outdoor clay stove at a makeshift camp in the northern Hajjah province. (File/AFP)
  • Women first to bear the brunt of rising conflict, aid shortfall, humanitarian chief warns
  • 9.6m women, girls need life-saving assistance amid collapsing healthcare system, meeting told

NEW YORK: UN officials on Thursday warned of growing challenges in Yemen amid severe cuts in aid funding and a rising risk of renewed conflict, warning that Yemeni women and girls are bearing the brunt of the escalation.

Tom Fletcher, the UN’s under-secretary-general for humanitarian affairs, painted a grim picture of the humanitarian situation in Yemen, emphasizing the devastating impact, particularly on women and girls.

He said that both the gravity of the crisis and growing constraints on humanitarian work have worsened, adding that “now severe funding cuts have been a body blow to our work to save lives.

“It is, of course, for individual countries to decide how to spend their money. But it is the pace at which so much vital work has been shut down that adds to the perfect storm that we face.”

Fletcher told a meeting of the Security Council to discuss developments in Yemen that over 9.6 million women and girls are in desperate need of life-saving assistance, facing extreme hunger, violence, and a collapsing healthcare system.

The humanitarian crisis is compounded by Yemen’s maternal mortality rate, the highest in the Middle East. With 1.3 million pregnant women and new mothers suffering from malnutrition, the future of many young children is at serious risk, Fletcher said.

Additionally, 1.5 million girls are out of school, perpetuating the cycle of poverty and violence. The worsening lack of funds has already led to the closure of 22 safe spaces, depriving over 11,000 women and girls of critical services and support.

“As your funding for Yemen evaporates, the numbers in my next briefings will be worse,” warned Fletcher.

“What does that mean for the women and girls behind those numbers? More will die. More will be left with no choice but to adopt dangerous coping mechanisms: survival sex, begging, coerced prostitution, human trafficking, and selling their children.”

He emphasized the vital role of women in Yemen’s recovery and humanitarian response, citing examples of women-led organizations that are crucial to delivering services despite the funding shortfall.

The humanitarian chief asked council members to “back our effort to get access to civilians at greatest risk; the money to save as many lives as we can; and public and private pressure to release humanitarians who have been arbitrarily detained while working to deliver your instructions.”

He warned: “This is a tough time to be a humanitarian. But it is much tougher for the people we serve. And, right now, it is getting even tougher for the women and girls of Yemen.

“The decisions you take will determine whether it gets worse.”

Meanwhile, Hans Grundberg, the UN special envoy for Yemen, has warned against the rising rhetoric from the conflict’s warring parties, which could further destabilize the region.

While large-scale ground operations have not resumed since the UN-mediated truce of April 2022, military activity persists, with reports of shelling, drone attacks, infiltration attempts, and mobilization campaigns, more recently witnessed in Marib, as well as in other areas such as Al-Jawf, Shabwa, and Ta’iz.

Grundberg called for restraint, urging both sides to avoid military posturing and to focus on creating a conducive environment for peace.

He also noted that the country’s economic collapse, exacerbated by a 50 percent depreciation of the Yemeni riyal and the suspension of civil servant salaries, is driving widespread poverty.

“Words matter. Intent matters. Signals matter. Mixed messaging and escalatory discourse can have real consequences, deepening mistrust and fueling tensions at a time when de-escalation is crucial,” Grundberg said, warning that the deepening crisis and failure to secure a lasting peace deal could plunge Yemen back into full-scale conflict.

Grundberg again emphasized the necessity of a Yemeni-led peace process, focusing on a nationwide ceasefire and political compromises.

“The path to peace requires difficult concessions, particularly on the country’s economic situation, and an inclusive political process,” he said.

As the month of Ramadan begins, Grundberg also called for the immediate and unconditional release of detainees, including humanitarian workers, many of whom remain arbitrarily detained by the Houthi rebel group. He expressed deep frustration with the continued detentions, stressing the importance of protecting the space for peace negotiations and humanitarian work.

The Security Council meeting comes ahead of International Women’s Day on March 8, with both officials recognizing the disproportionate impact the conflict continues to have on women and girls in Yemen.

With Yemen’s future uncertain, both officials called on the international community to urgently address the humanitarian disaster, stressing that without immediate action, the situation will continue to worsen for Yemen’s most vulnerable populations.


Switzerland cancels Geneva Conventions meeting on Palestinian areas

Switzerland cancels Geneva Conventions meeting on Palestinian areas
Updated 30 min 48 sec ago
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Switzerland cancels Geneva Conventions meeting on Palestinian areas

Switzerland cancels Geneva Conventions meeting on Palestinian areas
  • “In the absence of a consensus between the High Contracting Parties, (Switzerland), as depositary State, decided not to convene the meeting,” Bideau said
  • The cancelation amounted to a diplomatic blow for neutral Switzerland

GENEVA: Switzerland has canceled a conference on the application of the Geneva Conventions to the occupied Palestinian territories for want of participants, its Foreign Affairs Ministry confirmed on Thursday, after some countries expressed dissatisfaction.
The country had invited 196 parties to the conventions to participate in the March 7 conference in Geneva on the situation of civilians living in the West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem, but then told them the gathering had been canceled, four diplomatic sources told Reuters earlier.
“In the absence of a consensus between the High Contracting Parties, (Switzerland), as depositary State, decided not to convene the meeting,” Foreign Affairs Ministry spokesperson Nicolas Bideau said on X.
The conference was set to address the Fourth Geneva Convention, part of a series of international treaties agreed in 1949 after World War Two, which defines humanitarian protections for civilians living in areas of armed conflict or occupation.
The cancelation amounted to a diplomatic blow for neutral Switzerland, which prides itself on conflict mediation and frequently hosts summits and peace talks.
The Palestinian ambassador to the United Nations in Geneva, Ibrahim Khraishi, told Reuters earlier that his delegation did not plan to attend the event, criticizing a draft declaration circulated among participants.
“We want the international community to take concrete measures and this fell short of expectations,” he told Reuters, saying such measures could include economic or diplomatic steps against Israel. “What we want is for the Geneva Conventions to be implemented.”
A member of The Organization of Islamic Cooperation said that the group had also planned to miss the event, saying the document “did not reflect the gravity of the situation.”
Israel, whose war with Palestinian militant group Hamas has devastated Gaza, and which has been expanding settlements in the West Bank, stirring fears of annexation, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
It also criticized the Swiss conference, calling it “part of the legal warfare against Israel.”
Britain felt that, along with many other states, it could not fully support a proposed declaration as a precondition for attending the conference, according to a statement from its diplomatic mission.
Diplomats from other Western states that back Israel also privately expressed concerns about the meeting, although at least some European countries were planning to attend.


Jordan highlights women’s growing role across wide range of social sectors

Jordan highlights women’s growing role across wide range of social sectors
Updated 06 March 2025
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Jordan highlights women’s growing role across wide range of social sectors

Jordan highlights women’s growing role across wide range of social sectors
  • Female participation in social, economic, political spheres shows ‘notable growth,’ latest figures reveal
  • Progress in education drives advancement, with proportion of educated women rising to 93.2 percent

AMMAN: Women’s participation in Jordan’s social, economic, and political spheres has seen significant growth, with notable improvements in education, employment, and leadership roles, according to the latest figures from the kingdom’s Department of Statistics.

To mark International Women’s Day on March 8, the department revealed that Jordan’s female population stood at just over 5.5 million by the end of 2024, accounting for 47.1 percent of the total population, the Jordan News Agency reported.

The majority — 60.7 percent — fall within the working-age group of 15-64 years, while 35.4 percent are under 15, and 3.9 percent are 65 and above. Women in Jordan also enjoy a higher life expectancy than men by an average of 3.2 years.

Education has been a driving force in women’s advancement, with illiteracy rates among Jordanian women aged 15 and above dropping from 16.5 percent in 2000 to just 6.8 percent in 2024. Meanwhile, the proportion of educated women has climbed to 93.2 percent.

Enrolment figures reflect steady progress, with female participation in basic education rising from 90 percent in 2000 to 94.8 percent in 2023.

Similarly, secondary education enrolment increased from 77 percent to 83.1 percent in the same period. Women now hold leadership positions in education, making up 76.4 percent of primary school principals and 61.5 percent of secondary school principals.

Higher education also continues to see strong female representation, with women constituting 54.7 percent of undergraduate students, 58.5 percent of master’s students, and 56 percent of doctoral candidates.

Women’s participation in Jordan’s workforce has also grown over the past 12 months, with the female economic participation rate rising from 14 percent in 2023 to 14.9 percent in 2024.

The vast majority (95.4 percent) of working women are paid employees, with nearly half (48.6 percent) employed in the private sector. Professional, technical, and specialist roles have become increasingly dominated by women, with their share rising from 73 percent to 75.9 percent over the past year.

Property ownership among women has also improved, with female land ownership increasing from 15.8 percent in 2015 to 19.2 percent in 2023.

Joint land ownership grew from 32.9 percent to 37.5 percent, while female apartment ownership climbed from 23 percent to 25.9 percent, with joint ownership also rising from 16 percent to 20.4 percent.

Financial independence has been another area of progress, with 82.8 percent of married women aged 15-49 actively participating in financial decision-making alongside their husbands, while 13.8 percent make independent financial choices.

Women’s political representation has expanded significantly, with female members in Jordan’s Lower House of Parliament increasing from 6.4 percent in 2008 to almost 20 percent in 2024. Nine women secured parliamentary seats through party lists, while 18 won through the gender quota system.

In the judiciary, the proportion of female judges has surged from 6.2 percent to 29.5 percent. Women also hold nearly a quarter of ministerial positions and 25.6 percent of diplomatic roles, including 15.4 percent serving as ambassadors.