Israel promises revenge after Iran fires missiles at Tel Aviv

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Updated 02 October 2024
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Israel promises revenge after Iran fires missiles at Tel Aviv

Israel promises revenge after Iran fires missiles at Tel Aviv
  • Tel Aviv and Tehran trade retaliation threats as regional tensions rise

RIYADH: Israel vowed to retaliate after Iran fired missiles toward Tel Aviv on Tuesday as regional tensions grew a day after Israel said it started a ground invasion in southern Lebanon to counter the threat from Hezbollah.

Iran said they had fired 200 missiles and that 90 percent of them successfully hit their target. Most of the missiles were shot down, but some landed in central and southern Israel, according to the military.

Explosions were heard in Jerusalem with many Israelis piling into bomb shelters as sirens rang out across the country.

The Revolutionary Guard said it targeted three military bases in the Tel Aviv area and promised a “more crushing and ruinous” response if Israel retaliated.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that Tehran had made a “a big mistake” and vowed to make them pay. “Whoever attacks us, we attack them,” he said.

Iran said the attacks targeted security apparatus, including radar bases, which were used in the planning of assassinations of senior Hezbollah and Hamas figures.

The Iranian forces used hypersonic Fattah missiles for the first time, the IRGC said, describing a weapon that could travel at least five times faster than the speed of sound.

US President Joe Biden said the attack had been “defeated and ineffective”. The president, a staunch ally of Israel, said: “Make no mistake, the United States is fully, fully, fully supportive of Israel.”

The White House also promised “severe consequences” for the Iranian action and said it would work with Israel to make that happen.

Two US naval destroyers launched around a dozen interceptors against the Iranian missiles, the defense department said. The UK said that its personnel were also involved in “attempts to prevent further escalation,” without elaborating on what role the forces played.  

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian said Tehran had used its “legitimate rights” and dealt “a decisive response... to the Zionist regime’s aggression”.

At the UN General Assembly last week, Pezeshkian rebuked Israel for its actions in Gaza and Lebanon. “It is imperative that the international community should immediately ... secure a permanent ceasefire in Gaza and bring an end to the desperate barbarism of Israel in Lebanon, before it engulfs the region and the world,” he said.

The Israeli military published a video late on Tuesday that showed a damaged building in Gadera and said it was caused by an Iranian missile.

Israel continued its attacks in Lebanon throughout the day Tuesday and issued a new call to resident’s in the Lebanese capital to evacuate. “You are located near dangerous Hezbollah facilities, which the IDF (Israeli military) will act against with force in the near future,” military spokesman Avichay Adraee said on X.

Shortly after that message, Israel began striking south Beirut. “At least five Israeli strikes targeted Beirut’s southern suburbs,” a security source told AFP.

Lebanese health officials said that 55 people had been killed and 156 others injured in Israel strikes across the country on Tuesday.

Israel has not provided detailed information of its ground incursion into southern Lebanon and Hezbollah has denied that Israel troops had crossed the border.

The group said images released by Israel of the invasion are “very old and have no relationship to any current military action on the Lebanese border,” adding that the images are part of a “psychological and propaganda war” by their regional foe.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres condemned what he called “escalation after escalation”. And he reiterated that a suspension of hostilities was needed immediately. “This must stop. We absolutely need a ceasefire, ” he said.

Tensions have become inflamed since Israel killed Hezbollah’s longtime leader, Hassan Nasrallah, in a targeted airstrike on Friday.

Two weeks earlier, Israel carried out an unexpected attack involving exploding pagers used by the group, disrupting their command and communications systems. The shocking incident indicated that Israel was preparing for a ground invasion and left the Iran-backed group reeling.

In Lebanon, reactions to the latest escalation are divided. Hezbollah supporters have welcomed the confrontation, while many others oppose being dragged into a war not of their making. For Karine, a 37-year-old mathematics teacher, the country is being held hostage by Hezbollah.

 “I sympathize with the Palestinian cause. I even sympathize with Nasrallah’s supporters. But reason says you cannot drag the whole country into war due to the decisions of a few,” she told Arab News.

“Israel, while I consider it an abomination before God, has demonstrated incredible military might. We have been dealing with crisis after crisis since 2019, and we are not up for this fight. We are too exhausted.”

US Vice President Kamala Harris, the Democratic presidential candidate, said: “I’m clear-eyed Iran is a destabilizing, dangerous force in the Middle East”.

“I will always ensure Israel has the ability to defend itself against Iran and Iran-backed terrorist militias.”

 “I fully support President (Joe) Biden’s order for the US military to shoot down Iranian missiles targeting Israel,” Harris said. “Initial indications are that Israel, with our assistance, was able to defeat this attack.”

Harris is running against Donald Trump, the Republican nominee, for the White House in November elections. Trump has criticized the Biden administration for mishandling the situation and has urged Israel to “finish the problem” in Gaza.

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer expressed the UK’s “steadfast commitment” to the security of Israel and condemned the Iranian attack. The prime minister will work “alongside partners and do everything possible to push for de-escalation and push for a diplomatic solution,” a spokesman said.

In a letter late on Tuesday to the UN Security Council, Israel’s UN ambassador, Danny Danon, said the attack “demonstrates that the charm offensive conducted by Iran and its new president is a mirage and the decision-making in Iran lies with the Supreme Leader and the Revolutionary Guards.”

The Iranian president told reporters in New York last month: “We do not wish to be the cause of instability in the Middle East as its consequences would be irreversible”.

Iran’s US Ambassador Amir Saeid Iravani, in a letter to Guterres on Tuesday, said the IRGC actions were “in accordance with the inherent right to self-defense” in contrast to Israel consistently considering “civilians and civilian infrastructure as legitimate targets”.

The Security Council is set to hold an emergency meeting on Wednesday in the wake of the escalating situation in the region.

Old tensions in the Middle East exploded last year when Hamas militants surged across the Gaza border and attacked Israeli settlements, killing nearly 1,200 people and capturing around 200 others. Israel has since killed around 40,000 Palestinians in Gaza in an effort to eradicate Hamas and regain its hostages.

Peace negotiations between the sides have not been fruitful with Israel allies blaming Netanyahu and Hamas of being an obstacles to a ceasefire and hostage-return deal.


Syria seeks international suppliers to print new currency notes

Syria seeks international suppliers to print new currency notes
Updated 14 min 3 sec ago
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Syria seeks international suppliers to print new currency notes

Syria seeks international suppliers to print new currency notes
  • Central bank governor Abdelkader Husrieh says Syria aims to complete the printing within three months

Syria has requested bids from international suppliers to print new currency notes as part of its efforts to boost the devalued pound, its central bank governor said on Wednesday.

Speaking on the sidelines of a summit for Arab central bank governors in Tunis, Abdelkader Husrieh said Syria would aim to complete the printing within three months.

According to sources and documents, Syria is planning to issue new banknotes, removing two zeroes from its currency in an attempt to restore public confidence in the severely devalued pound.

Husrieh said that the number of Syria’s correspondent banks has been growing following his recent visits to Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, although he did not provide a specific number.

He said that he will be attending an international banking conference in Frankfurt later this month where he hopes the number will expand further.

Syria’s pound has lost more than 99 percent of its value since 2011, with the exchange rate now about 11,000 pounds to the US dollar, compared with 50 before the war.


HRW accuses Israel forces of displacing south Syria residents

HRW accuses Israel forces of displacing south Syria residents
Updated 17 September 2025
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HRW accuses Israel forces of displacing south Syria residents

HRW accuses Israel forces of displacing south Syria residents
  • The report came as Syrian state media said Israeli forces seized several people in the south
  • Israel has also launched hundreds of air strikes on targets in Syria and carried out incursions deeper into the south

BEIRUT: Human Rights Watch accused Israeli forces Wednesday of forcibly displacing residents of southern Syria, which Israel has demanded be demilitarised in a new security deal Syria is seeking with its neighbor.

The statement quoted the Israeli military as saying it is operating in southern Syria “to protect the citizens of the State of Israel” and that its activities are “in accordance with international law.”

The report came as Syrian state media said Israeli forces seized several people in the south, and a day after Damascus said it was working with Washington to reach mutual “security understandings” with Israel.

“Israeli forces occupying parts of southern Syria since December 2024 have carried out a range of abuses against residents, including forced displacement, which is a war crime,” HRW said in a statement.

As Islamist-led forces toppled longtime ruler Bashar Assad on December 8, Israel deployed troops to a UN-patrolled buffer zone on the Golan Heights that has separated the countries’ forces since an armistice that followed the 1973 Arab-Israeli war.

Israel has also launched hundreds of air strikes on targets in Syria and carried out incursions deeper into the south despite opening talks with the interim authorities.

HRW said that “Israeli forces have seized and demolished homes, blocked residents from their property and livelihoods, and arbitrarily detained residents and transferred them to Israel.”

The New York-based watchdog said it interviewed residents, reviewed images and analyzed satellite imagery to corroborate accounts.

Early Wednesday, Syrian state television said Israeli forces seized four men from villages in and near the buffer zone in the southern province of Quneitra “during a raid and search operation... that targeted a number of homes.”

Earlier this month, state media said Israeli forces seized seven people in the same area, with the Israeli army saying it apprehended individuals “suspected of terrorist activity” and took them to Israel for further questioning.

On Tuesday, Syria announced a US- and Jordan-backed roadmap for restoring stability in the south after deadly sectarian violence in the Druze minority heartland of Sweida prompted Israeli military intervention in July.

A Syrian military official told AFP that heavy weapons had been withdrawn from the south in a process that began after the Sweida violence.


A year on, Lebanese maimed in Israel’s pager attacks on long road to recovery

A year on, Lebanese maimed in Israel’s pager attacks on long road to recovery
Updated 17 September 2025
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A year on, Lebanese maimed in Israel’s pager attacks on long road to recovery

A year on, Lebanese maimed in Israel’s pager attacks on long road to recovery
  • On September 17, 2024, thousands of pagers carried by members of Lebanese armed group Hezbollah exploded simultaneously, followed the next day by booby-trapped walkie-talkies
  • Thirty-nine people were killed and more than 3,400 wounded, including children and other civilians who were near the devices when they blew up but were not members of the Iran backed group

BEIRUT: Zainab Mustarah once spent her days running an events planning firm in Beirut. But for the last year, she has been in and out of surgery to save the remnants of her right hand and both eyes, maimed when Israel detonated booby-trapped pagers in Lebanon.

On September 17, 2024, thousands of pagers carried by members of Lebanese armed group Hezbollah exploded simultaneously, followed the next day by booby-trapped walkie-talkies.

Thirty-nine people were killed and more than 3,400 wounded, including children and other civilians who were near the devices when they blew up but were not members of the Iran-backed group.

Mustarah, now 27, was one of the wounded. She told Reuters she was working from home when the pager, which belonged to a relative, beeped as if receiving a message. It exploded without her touching it, leaving her conscious but with severe wounds to her face and hand.

’SHOCKING’ ATTACK

Her last year has been a flurry of 14 operations, including in Iran, with seven cosmetic reconstruction surgeries left to go. She lost the fingers on her right hand and 90 percent of her sight.

“I can no longer continue with interior design because my vision is 10 percent. God willing, next year we will see which university majors will suit my wounds, so I can continue,” she said.

The exploding pagers and walkie-talkies were the opening salvo of a devastating war between Israel and Hezbollah that left the group badly weakened and swathes of Lebanon in ruins.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu gave the green light for the attacks, his spokesperson said two months later.

A Reuters investigation found that Israel had concealed a small but potent charge of plastic explosive and a detonator into thousands of pagers procured by the group.

They were carried by fighters, but also by members of Hezbollah’s social services branches and medical services.

The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Volker Türk, said at the time that the explosions were “shocking, and their impact on civilians unacceptable.”

He said simultaneously targeting thousands of people without knowing precisely who was in possession of the targeted devices, or where they were, “violates international human rights law and, to the extent applicable, international humanitarian law.”

HOSPITAL STAFF WOUNDED

Mohammed Nasser Al-Din, 34, was the director of the medical equipment and engineering department at Al-Rasoul Al-Aazam Hospital, a Hezbollah-affiliated facility, at the time of the pager blasts. He said he had a pager to be easily reached for any maintenance needs there.

At the hospital on September 17 last year, he spoke by phone with his wife to check in on their son’s first day back at school.

Moments later, his pager exploded.

The blast cost him his left eye and left fingers and lodged shrapnel in his skull. He lay in a coma for two weeks and is still undergoing surgeries to his face.

He woke to learn of the killing of Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah in a barrage of Israeli strikes on Beirut’s southern suburbs, a turning point for the group and its supporters.

But Nasser Al-Din did not shed a tear — until his son saw the state he was in.

“The distress I felt was over how my son could accept that my condition was like this,” he said.

Elias Jrade, a Lebanese member of parliament and eye surgeon who conducted dozens of operations on those affected, said that some of the cases would have to receive lifelong treatment.

“There were children and women who would ask, what happened to us? And you can’t answer them,” he told Reuters.


Sudan’s ERR emergency networks win Norway rights prize

Sudan’s ERR emergency networks win Norway rights prize
Updated 17 September 2025
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Sudan’s ERR emergency networks win Norway rights prize

Sudan’s ERR emergency networks win Norway rights prize
  • The Rafto Foundation honored the ERRs “for their courageous work to preserve the most fundamental human right — the right to life”
  • The ERRs rose out of the resistance committees that organized pro-democracy protests during the revolution that ended the reign of dictator Omar Al Bashir in 2019

OSLO: Sudan’s Emergency Response Rooms (ERRs), networks of volunteers risking their lives to feed and help people facing war and famine in the country, were on Wednesday awarded Norway’s Rafto Prize for human rights work.

Already one of the world’s poorest countries, Sudan has been ravaged by a deadly war since April 2023 between the regular army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), each side led by generals vying for power.

The conflict has killed tens of thousands of people and driven more than 14 million from their homes, according to figures from the United Nations.

The UN has called it “the world’s worst humanitarian crisis,” where famine has spread in parts of the country and cholera has affected large areas.

The Rafto Foundation honored the ERRs “for their courageous work to preserve the most fundamental human right — the right to life.”

Shortly after the first shots of the conflict rang out, a surge of solidarity emerged in the country that has no functioning state, infrastructure or basic services.

Despite meagre resources, neighborhood volunteers quickly set up self-funded “community kitchens” to feed their neighbors, at times going door-to-door.

The movement also provides civilians with health care and evacuation help.

- ‘Innovative aid efforts’ -

The ERRs rose out of the resistance committees that organized pro-democracy protests during the revolution that ended the reign of dictator Omar Al-Bashir in 2019.

The movement now counts thousands of volunteers.

The ERRs “save lives and maintain human dignity in a place of misery and despair,” the Rafto Foundation said.

“Their innovative mutual aid efforts through citizen participation contribute to developing a civil society and is essential to building a better future,” it added.

With communications cut frequently and few journalists on the ground, the volunteers also play a key role in documenting attacks on civilians.

Regarded with suspicion by the two rival camps, some volunteers have been killed, raped, beaten or had their aid pillaged, according to witness accounts to AFP.

The Rafto Foundation, citing media reports, said more than 100 volunteers had been killed since the beginning of the conflict.

It urged the two sides to agree to “a ceasefire and an end to the fighting in Sudan and for protection of civilian lives for Sudan.”

“We call on the Rapid Support Forces and the Sudanese Armed Forces to respect international humanitarian law and protect humanitarian relief workers,” it added.

First awarded in 1987 and named after Norwegian historian and human rights activist Thorolf Rafto, the prize comes with $20,000.

It has previously been given to four people — Aung San Suu Kyi, Jose Ramos-Horta, Kim Dae-Jung and Shirin Ebadi — who went on to win the Nobel Peace Prize, also awarded in Norway.

The winner of that prize will be announced on October 10 in Oslo.


Saudi Arabia, China and Qatar condemn Israeli ground assault in Gaza

Saudi Arabia, China and Qatar condemn Israeli ground assault in Gaza
Updated 58 min 4 sec ago
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Saudi Arabia, China and Qatar condemn Israeli ground assault in Gaza

Saudi Arabia, China and Qatar condemn Israeli ground assault in Gaza
  • Saudi Arabia criticized the international community for failing to stop the escalation
  • Qatar reiterated its support for the establishment of an independent Palestinian state
  • China condemned harm to civilians and violation of international law

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia, China and Qatar condemned on Wednesday Israel’s expanded military operations in Gaza, warning the assault violates international law and threatens regional stability.

Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, in a statement, denounced what it called the “continued perpetration of crimes” by Israeli occupation forces and criticized the international community for failing to take effective measures to stop the escalation.

The Kingdom reaffirmed its rejection of actions that undermine international humanitarian law and called for urgent international efforts to end the violence and ensure the protection of civilians in Gaza.

Qatar’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs also condemned the Israeli ground operation “in the strongest terms,” calling it an extension of the war against the Palestinian people and a “blatant violation of international law.”

It warned that Israel’s actions undermine prospects for peace through policies of “settlement, aggression and racism,” and urged decisive international action to ensure compliance with international resolutions.

Qatar reiterated its support for the Palestinian cause and the establishment of an independent Palestinian state on the 1967 borders, with East Jerusalem as its capital.

In Beijing, Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Lin Jian said China also “firmly opposes Israel’s escalation of military operations in Gaza and condemns all acts that harm civilians and violate international law,” in reference to the bombardment of Gaza City.