Middle Eastern Headlines at 5:23 p.m. GMT
Israeli airstrike in the northern West Bank kills a Palestinian militant and wounds 5 other people
Israeli airstrike in the northern West Bank kills a Palestinian militant and wounds 5 other people
People have been fleeing in darkness after being told to leave areas east of Khan Younis.
The letters addressed to the prime minister appealed to the government to end ties with Israel.
The Israeli army Tuesday bombarded southern Gaza, killing at least eight and wounding dozens in Khan Younis, after ordering some 250,000 Palestinians in the area to evacuate early Monday. The shelling came after Israel released Mohammed Abu Selmia, the director of Shifa hospital – formerly Gaza's largest – who said that he and other detainees had been held in harsh conditions and tortured. Israeli forces carried out deadly strikes Tuesday on southern Gaza and battled militants after issuing an e
Palestinian detainees recount time in Israel’s prison service and react to their release by Israeli authorities. CNN’s Nada Bashir reports.
Jewish protesters campaigning against military service outside the Israeli supreme court have been washed out by security forces who sprayed the group with a crowd-control substance.
The protest highlighted the fault line in Israeli society between ultra-Orthodox Jews and other Israelis, many of whom believe that all Jewish citizens should serve in the military, especially during wartime.
Harrison Mann, military expert who quit over Gaza, says ruinous war in Lebanon would pull US into regional conflict
Several US military bases across Europe were put on a heightened state of alert over the weekend, with the level of force protection raised to its second-highest state amid concerns that a terrorist attack could target US military personnel or facilities, according to two US officials.
A large fire broke out at a suspected Russian air base in the city of Kursk, close to the border with Ukraine, on Tuesday.
The Israeli army has ordered a mass evacuation of Palestinians from the eastern half of Khan Younis. Monday’s order is a sign that Israeli troops could soon reinvade the southern Gaza city, which is currently filled with displaced civilians. Israel told people to move to Muwasi, a coastal area designated by the Israeli army as a safe zone and which has transformed into a crowded and unsanitary tent camp.
The deputy leader of the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah said Tuesday the only sure path to a cease-fire on the Lebanon-Israel border is a full cease-fire in Gaza. “If there is a cease-fire in Gaza, we will stop without any discussion,” Hezbollah’s deputy leader, Sheikh Naim Kassem, said in an interview with The Associated Press at the group’s political office in Beirut’s southern suburbs. Hezbollah's participation in the Israel-Hamas war has been as a “support front” for its ally, Hamas, Kassem said, and “if the war stops, this military support will no longer exist.”
Allegations of sexual abuse against a child by a Syrian man in Kayseri, Turkey, have sparked overnight riots that targeted Syrian businesses and cars in the city.
Liora Argamani succumbs to brain cancer three weeks after her daughter was freed from captivity in Gaza.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan accused opposition parties of stoking xenophobia and racism on Monday, a day after residents in a neighborhood in central Turkey set Syrian-owned shops on fire. The rioting erupted in the Melikgazi region of central Kayseri province late on Sunday, following reports that a Syrian refugee there had allegedly sexually harassed a 7-year-old Syrian girl. At least 67 people suspected of involvement in the violence were detained, Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya said on the social media platform X.
‘We are advancing to the end of the stage of eliminating the Hamas terrorist army,’ the Israeli leader tells group of military officials.
Patients have left a hospital and tent camps as Israel appears poised to launch another assault on the city.
Protesters clashed with police in Kenya's capital Nairobi Tuesday and some were arrested, AFP reporters saw, as calls for peaceful anti-government rallies descended into scattered incidents of violence and looting following last month's deadly demonstrations.Activists have stepped up their campaign against President William Ruto despite his decision last week to withdraw a controversial finance bill that triggered what he has branded "treasonous" protests by young Gen-Z Kenyans.The Kenya National Commission on Human Rights (KNCHR) said on Monday that 39 people had been killed and 361 injured during two weeks of demonstrations -- with the worst violence occurring last Tuesday -- and condemned the use of force against protesters as "excessive and disproportionate".By Tuesday afternoon, Nairobi's central business district -- the focus of previous rallies -- saw scattered confrontations between police lobbing tear gas and small groups of stone-throwing men on deserted roads."Goons have infiltrated," prominent Gen-Z protester Hanifa Adan posted on X, with a string of broken heart emojis.Several coffins, some covered with the national flag, were also placed on roads by protesters, Kenyan television showed, before they were removed by officers.Earlier, local politician John Kwenya told AFP that business owners shuttering their shops were "scared" of "goons"."This is economic sabotage," Kwenya, a member of the Nairobi city county assembly, said.Elsewhere in the country, local TV broadcast images of larger crowds marching in the coastal opposition stronghold Mombasa, as well as gatherings in Kisumu and Nakuru.At a peaceful march in Kisumu, demonstrator Allan Odhiambo, 26, told AFP he had lost hope in Ruto."We promised a peaceful protest and that is what we have done, but Ruto must go," he said, citing a slogan that has become a popular hashtag."Let him just pack (up) and go."- '#RutoMustGo' -Largely peaceful rallies against a raft of tax increases -- mostly led by young Kenyans on social media -- descended into deadly chaos on Tuesday last week when lawmakers passed the deeply unpopular legislation.After the announcement of the vote, crowds ransacked the partly ablaze parliament complex in central Nairobi as police fired live bullets at protesters.Ruto said in a television interview on Sunday that 19 people had died, but defended his decision to call in the armed forces to tackle the unrest and insisted he did not have "blood on my hands". In Nakuru, protesters marched peacefully on Tuesday, with some carrying pictures of three killed during last week's demonstrations."We want justice for innocent Kenyans killed by police during the protests that were peaceful," Mary Lynn Wangui told AFP."Ruto has not offered an apology," said the 24-year-old, as she waved a placard declaring: "RutoMustGo".It is the most serious crisis to confront the president since he took office in September 2022 following a deeply divisive election in a nation often considered a beacon of stability in a turbulent region. Ruto's appeal for dialogue and his decision to scrap the tax legislation has appeared not to have appeased his critics.One leaflet widely shared online declared both Tuesday and Thursday public holidays for an "OccupyEverywhere" movement and urged all Kenyans to stage sit-down protests on major roads in the country on those days.- 'Unwarranted violence' -The state-funded KNCHR said Monday that in the previous protests there had also been 32 cases of "enforced or involuntary disappearances" and 627 arrests of protesters. "The Commission continues to condemn in the strongest terms possible the unwarranted violence and force that was inflicted on protesters, medical personnel, lawyers, journalists and on safe spaces such as churches, medical emergency centres and ambulances," the KNCHR said.Kenya's cash-strapped government said previously that the tax increases were necessary to fill its coffers and service a public debt of some 10 trillion shillings ($78 billion), or about 70 percent of GDP.In Sunday's interview, Ruto warned that the government would have to borrow another $7.7 billion because of the decision to drop the finance bill.bur-rbu/amu/kjm
Rajavarothiyam Sampanthan, an ethnic Tamil leader and lawmaker who became the face of the minority group's campaign for autonomy in Sri Lanka after the end of a brutal quarter-century civil war, has died. A lawyer by profession, Sampanthan entered Parliament for the first time in 1977 as part of a coalition that won election after campaigning on a pledge to seek an independent state for Tamils, alleging continued marginalization by successive governments controlled by ethnic majority Sinhalese.
They were "shocked" and felt "they had not been told the truth," said Axios' Alex Thompson.
When Wu Cunsong and Chen Binghui founded their artificial intelligence startup two years ago in Hangzhou, China, they quickly ran into obstacles, including dearth of venture capital.