West Bank family wants justice for children killed in Israel strike

Batoul Ali Bsharat, 10, sister of Reda, 8, who was killed alongside his two cousins a day earlier in an Israeli airstrike, kisses his portrait set up in memoriam at the site of the strike in their town of Tammun in the occupied West Bank on January 9, 2025. (AFP)
Batoul Ali Bsharat, 10, sister of Reda, 8, who was killed alongside his two cousins a day earlier in an Israeli airstrike, kisses his portrait set up in memoriam at the site of the strike in their town of Tammun in the occupied West Bank on January 9, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 11 January 2025
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West Bank family wants justice for children killed in Israel strike

West Bank family wants justice for children killed in Israel strike
  • Israeli troops or settlers have killed at least 825 Palestinians in the territory, according to Health Ministry figures

TAMMUN, Plestinian Territories: Batoul Bsharat was playing with her eight-year-old brother Reda in their village in the occupied West Bank. Moments later, an Israeli drone strike killed him and two of their cousins.

“It was the first time in our lives that we played without arguing. It meant so much to me,” the 10-year-old said as she sat on the concrete ledge outside the family home in the northern village of Tammun where they had been playing on Wednesday.

At her feet, a crater no wider than two fists marked where the missile hit.

The wall behind her is pockmarked with shrapnel impacts, and streaks of blood still stain the ledge.

Besides Reda, Hamza, 10, and Adam, 23, were also killed.

The Israeli army said on Wednesday that it had struck “a terrorist cell” in Tammun but later promised an investigation into the civilian deaths.

Batoul puts on a brave face but is heartbroken at the loss of her younger brother.

“Just before he was martyred, he started kissing and hugging me,” she said.

“I miss my brother so much. He was the best thing in the world.”

Her cousin Obay, 16, brother of Adam, was the first to come out and find the bodies before Israeli soldiers came to take them away.

“I went outside and saw the three of them lying on the ground,” he said. “I tried to lift them, but the army came and didn’t allow us to get close.”

Obay said his elder brother had just returned from a pilgrimage to Makkah.

“Adam and I were like best friends. We had so many shared moments together. Now I can’t sleep,” he said, staring into the distance, bags under his eyes.

Obay said the soldiers made him lie on the ground while they searched the house and confiscated cellphones before leaving with the bodies on stretchers.

Later on Wednesday, the army returned the bodies, which were then laid to rest. On Thursday, Obay’s father, Khaireddin, and his brothers received condolences from neighbors.

Despite his pain, he said things could have been worse as the family home hosts many children.

“Usually, about six or seven kids are playing together, so if the missile had struck when they were all there, it could have been 10 children,” he said.

Khaireddin was at work at a quarry in the Jordan Valley when he heard the news. Adam had chosen to stay home and rest after his pilgrimage to Makkah.

He described his son as “an exceptional young man, respectful, well-mannered and upright,” who had “nothing to do with any resistance or armed groups.”

Khaireddin, like the rest of the Bsharat family, said he could not comprehend why his home had been targeted.

“We are a simple family, living ordinary lives. We have no affiliations with any sides or movements.”

Violence has soared in the West Bank since war broke out in Gaza with the Hamas attack of Oct. 7, 2023.

Israeli troops or settlers have killed at least 825 Palestinians in the territory, according to Health Ministry figures.

As the Israeli army has stepped up its raids on West Bank cities and refugee camps, it has also intensified its use of air strikes, which were once a rarity.

A day before the Bsharat home was hit, a similar strike had struck Tammun.

Khaireddin regrets that the army made “no apology or acknowledgment of their mistake.”

“This is the current reality — there is no accountability. Who can we turn to for justice?“

 


A quarter of children in medical charity’s Gaza clinics malnourished

A quarter of children in medical charity’s Gaza clinics malnourished
Updated 44 min 36 sec ago
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A quarter of children in medical charity’s Gaza clinics malnourished

A quarter of children in medical charity’s Gaza clinics malnourished
  • Doctors Without Borders was among more than 100 aid and rights groups who warned this week that ‘mass starvation’ was spreading in Gaza

GENEVA: Doctors Without Borders charity said Friday that a quarter of all young children and pregnant or breastfeeding women screened at its clinics in Gaza last week were malnourished, blaming Israel’s “policy of starvation.”

The medical aid group known by its French acronym MSF said that “Israeli authorities’ deliberate use of starvation as a weapon in Gaza has reached unprecedented levels, with patients and health care workers themselves now fighting to survive.”

It said that its staff in the besieged and war-torn Palestinian territory were receiving growing numbers of malnourished patients.

“Across screenings of children aged six months to five years old and pregnant and breastfeeding women at MSF facilities last week, 25 percent were malnourished,” it said.

At the MSF clinic in Gaza City, it said that the number of people needing care for malnutrition had quadrupled since mid-May, while “rates of severe malnutrition in children under five have tripled in the last two weeks alone.”

“This is not just hunger,” the organization said. “It’s deliberate starvation, manufactured by the Israeli authorities.”

Warning that there is now “barely any food available in most of the strip,” MSF insisted “the weaponization of food to exert pressure on a civilian population must not be normalized.”

“Israeli authorities must allow food and aid supplies into Gaza at scale.”

MSF was among more than 100 aid and rights groups who warned this week that “mass starvation” was spreading in Gaza.

Israel has hit back at the growing international criticism that it was behind chronic food shortages in Gaza, instead accusing Hamas of deliberately creating a humanitarian crisis in the Palestinian territory.

An organization backed by the United States and Israel, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), began distributing aid in Gaza in late May as Israel eased a two-month total blockade, effectively sidelining the longstanding UN-led system.

The UN, which has refused to work with GHF over concerns it violates basic humanitarian principles, said this week that Israeli forces had killed more than 1,000 Palestinians trying to get food aid in Gaza since it started operations, most near GHF sites.

“These food distributions are not humanitarian aid, they are war crimes committed in broad daylight and presented to the world with compassionate language,” Mohammed Abu Mughaisib, MSF deputy medical coordinator in Gaza, said in the statement.

“Those who go to the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation’s food distributions know that they have the same chance of receiving a sack of flour as they do of leaving with a bullet in their head.”


Sudan war losses by the numbers

Sudan war losses by the numbers
Updated 25 July 2025
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Sudan war losses by the numbers

Sudan war losses by the numbers
  • The conflict between the Sudanese military and the Rapid Support Forces paramilitary group continues largely in the vast Darfur and Kordofan regions
  • Once known as a country with agricultural wealth and the breadbasket of the world, Sudan saw the widescale ruin of farming land

CAIRO: More than two years have passed since Sudan plunged into a civil war that has caused what aid organizations have described as one of the world’s worst displacement and hunger crises.

The conflict between the Sudanese military and the Rapid Support Forces paramilitary group continues largely in the vast Darfur and Kordofan regions. Some of the deadliest clashes have occurred in the capital, Khartoum, and surrounding areas, where the army has said it has regained control.

The war erupted in April 2023 in Khartoum before spreading across the country. Both sides have been accused of committing atrocities like ethnic cleansing, extrajudicial killings and sexual violence against civilians, including children. Meanwhile, many people across Sudan have been pushed to the brink of famine.

Here’s a look at the war by the numbers sourced from the United Nations, humanitarian organizations, health officials and human rights groups.

A collapsing health care system and damaged infrastructure created a breeding ground for diseases spreading in Sudan, affecting the health and well-being of millions, including already vulnerable communities. The North African country faces outbreaks of diseases including cholera, measles and malaria, and UNICEF warned that thousands of children younger than age 5 are likely to suffer from the deadliest form of malnutrition.

Aside from the human toll, Sudan’s infrastructure has been badly hit. Once known as a country with agricultural wealth and the breadbasket of the world, Sudan saw the widescale ruin of farming land. Dozens of water and electricity facilities have been damaged, along with the presidential palace and ministry buildings.

More than 10 cultural sites, including the National Museum, have been attacked or destroyed, according to UNESCO. Many schools have been attacked or turned into shelters.

Death and injury figures are often based on hospital records, but tracking those who never reach medical facilities is difficult. However, estimates by humanitarian organizations, health officials, and rights groups suggest that tens of thousands have been wounded in Sudan’s war. Multiple attempts at peace talks have been made, but none seem to be bringing the war to an end as the conflict expands elsewhere in the country.


UK foreign minister calls situation in Gaza ‘indefensible’

UK foreign minister calls situation in Gaza ‘indefensible’
Updated 25 July 2025
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UK foreign minister calls situation in Gaza ‘indefensible’

UK foreign minister calls situation in Gaza ‘indefensible’
  • "The sight of children reaching for aid and losing their lives has caused consternation over much of the world. And that is why I repeat my call today for a ceasefire," Lammy said on Friday.

SYDNEY:  UK Foreign Minister David Lammy said on Friday the deteriorating situation in Gaza was “indefensible,” repeating calls for a ceasefire.

“The sight of children reaching for aid and losing their lives has caused consternation over much of the world. And that is why I repeat my call today for a ceasefire,” Lammy said in a joint news conference with the Australian defense minister in Sydney.

“The deteriorating situation we’ve seen in Gaza over the last few weeks is indefensible.”


Once a leading force, battered Tunisian party awaits elusive comeback

Once a leading force, battered Tunisian party awaits elusive comeback
Updated 25 July 2025
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Once a leading force, battered Tunisian party awaits elusive comeback

Once a leading force, battered Tunisian party awaits elusive comeback
  • Ennahdha, the Islamist-inspired movement still considered by some Tunisians as the country’s main opposition party, could still bounce back after a devastating government crackdown

TUNIS: The party that once dominated Tunisian politics has faded away since President Kais Saied staged a dramatic power grab, with its offices shuttered and leaders behind bars or in exile.

But observers say that Ennahdha, the Islamist-inspired movement still considered by some Tunisians as the country’s main opposition party, could still bounce back after a devastating government crackdown.

On July 25, 2021, Saied stunned the country when he suspended parliament and dissolved the government, a move critics denounced as a “coup” a decade after the Arab Spring revolt ushered in a democratic transition in the North African country.

Many of Saied’s critics have been prosecuted and jailed, including Ennahdha leader Rached Ghannouchi, 84, a former parliament speaker who was sentenced earlier this month to 14 years in prison for plotting against the state.

Ghannouchi, who was arrested in 2023, has racked up several prison terms, including a 22-year sentence handed in February on the same charge.

The crackdown over the past four years has seen around 150 Ennahdha figures imprisoned, prosecuted or living in exile, according to a party official.

“Some believe the movement is dead, but that is not the case,” said political scientist Slaheddine Jourchi.

Ennahdha has been “weakened to the point of clinical death” but remained the most prominent party in Tunisia’s “fragmented and fragile” opposition, Jourchi added.

‘Crimes against the country’

Riadh Chaibi, a party official and adviser to Ghannouchi, said that even after “shrinking” its political platform, Ennahdah was still a relevant opposition outlet.

“Despite repression, prosecutions and imprisonment” since 2021, “Ennahdha remains the country’s largest political movement,” Chaibi said.

He said the current government has been “weaponizing state institutions to eliminate political opponents,” but “once we’re free again, like we were in 2011, Ennahdha will regain its strength.”

Since 2011, when Ghannouchi returned from exile to lead the party, Ennahdha for years had a key role in Tunisian politics, holding the premiership and other senior roles.

But by 2019, the year Saied was elected president, the party’s popularity had already begun waning, winning only a third of the 1.5 million votes it had in 2011.

Experts ascribed this trend to the party’s failure to improve living standards and address pressing socio-economic issues.

Ennahdha has also been accused of jihadist links, which it has repeatedly denied.

Saied, who religiously avoids mentioning either Ennahdha or Ghannouchi by name, has often referred to the party’s years in power as “the black decade” and accused it of committing “crimes against the country.”

Crowds of Tunisians, increasingly disillusioned as a political deadlock trumped Ennahdha’s promise of change, poured into the streets in celebration when Saied forced the party out of the halls of power in 2021.

Analyst Jourchi said Ennahdha’s rise to power was a “poorly prepared adventure,” and the party had “made many mistakes along the way.”

Left-wing politician Mongi Rahoui said it was “only natural that Ennahdha leaders and their governing partners be prosecuted for crimes they used their political position to commit.”

Today, the party’s activities have been reduced mostly to issuing statements online, often reacting to prison sentences handed down to critics of Saied.

‘Weathering repression’

But Ennahdha has weathered repression before, harshly suppressed under Tunisia’s autocratic presidents Habib Bourguiba and Zine El Abidine Ben Ali.

Party leaders were jailed or forced into exile, and Ghannouchi was sentenced to life in prison under Bourguiba but then freed — and later exiled — under Ben Ali.

Tunisian historian Abdellatif Hannachi said that the party “seems to be bending with the wind, waiting for changes that would allow it to return.”

It has been in “clear decline,” he added, but “that does not mean it’s disappearing.”

Ennahdha’s downfall was not an isolated case. Other opposition forces have also been crushed, and dozens of political, media and business figures are currently behind bars.

“This regime no longer distinguishes between Islamist and secular, progressive and conservative,” rights advocate Kamel Jendoubi, a former minister, recently said in a Facebook post.

Saied’s government “wants to silence everything that thinks, that criticizes, or resists,” Jendoubi argued.

The opposition, however, remains fractured, failing for example to come together in rallies planned for the anniversary this month of Saied’s power grab.


Hamas says French pledge to recognize State of Palestine ‘positive step’

Hamas says French pledge to recognize State of Palestine ‘positive step’
Updated 25 July 2025
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Hamas says French pledge to recognize State of Palestine ‘positive step’

Hamas says French pledge to recognize State of Palestine ‘positive step’

GAZA CITY, Palestinian Territories: Islamist militant group Hamas hailed France’s pledge on Thursday to recognize a State of Palestine as a “positive step” and urged all countries to do the same despite Israeli opposition.

“We consider this a positive step in the right direction toward doing justice to our oppressed Palestinian people and supporting their legitimate right to self-determination,” Hamas said in a statement, after French President Emmanuel Macron’s announcement that France would formally state its recognition in September.

“We call on all countries of the world — especially European nations and those that have not yet recognized the State of Palestine — to follow France’s lead,” Hamas added.

More than 30 former UK ambassadors and 20 former senior diplomats at the UN have also urged Prime Minister Keir Starmer to recognize a Palestinian state.

In a statement, the diplomats called on Starmer to seize the “moment to recognise Palestinian statehood unconditionally," warning that “the risks of inaction have profound, historic and catastrophic implications.”

Starvation has affected the 2 million residents of the Gaza Strip amid Israeli attacks and aid restrictions.

“(Israel) cannot be secure from threats in the future if the question of Palestine is not taken forward to a political settlement,” they said.

The statement added: “In the face of the current horror and impunity, words are not enough … a partial suspension of arms sales, delays on trade talks and limited sanctions are far from the full extent of the pressure the UK can bring to bear on Israel.”

Recognising a Palestinian state would be a “foundational first step toward breaking the deadly status quo,” the letter said. The UK has consistently stated it would recognize Palestine in conjunction with allies “at the point of maximum impact.”