Palestinian president meets British FM in Ramallah

Palestinian president meets British FM in Ramallah
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and British Foreign Secretary David Lammy (WAFA)
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Updated 13 January 2025
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Palestinian president meets British FM in Ramallah

Palestinian president meets British FM in Ramallah
  • Mahmoud Abbas briefed David Lammy on Israeli aggression in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem

LONDON: Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas received British Foreign Secretary David Lammy on Monday at the Palestinian Authority’s headquarters in Ramallah.

Abbas discussed with Lammy the need to implement UN Security Council Resolution 2735, which calls for a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip and a complete withdrawal of Israeli forces from the coastal enclave.

He highlighted the UK’s backing for the efforts to gain international recognition of the State of Palestine and its full membership in the UN, as part of the two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

He briefed Lammy on the latest Israeli aggressions in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem, the WAFA news agency reported.


UN races to feed one million Gazans after truce

UN races to feed one million Gazans after truce
Updated 10 sec ago
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UN races to feed one million Gazans after truce

UN races to feed one million Gazans after truce
Rome — ITA
Rome, Jan 19, 2025 : The UN’s World Food Programme said Sunday it was moving full throttle to get food to as many Gazans as possible after border crossings reopened as part of a long-awaited ceasefire deal.
“We’re trying to reach a million people within the shortest possible time,” the WFP’s Deputy Executive Director Carl Skau told AFP, as the Rome-based UN agency’s trucks began rolling into the strip.
“We’re moving in with wheat flour, ready to eat meals, and we will be working all fronts trying to restock the bakeries,” Skau said, adding the agency would attempt to provide nutritional supplements to the most malnourished.
An initial 42-day truce between Israel and Hamas is meant to enable a surge of sorely needed humanitarian aid into the Palestinian territory after 15 months of war.
“The agreement is for 600 trucks a day... All the crossings will be open,” Skau said.
The first WFP trucks entered Gaza through the Kerem Shalom crossing in the south and through the Zikim crossing in the north, the agency said in a statement, as it began trying to pull “the war-ravaged territory back from starvation.”
“We have 150 trucks lined up for every day for the next at least 20 days,” Skau said, adding that the WFP was “hopeful that the border crossings will be open and efficient.”
There needs to be “an environment inside (Gaza) that is secure enough for our teams to move around,” so that food “does not just get over the border but also gets into the hands of the people.”
“It seems so far that things have been working relatively well.... We need to now sustain that over several days over weeks,” he said.


Before the ceasefire came into effect, WFP was operating just five out of the 20 bakeries it partners with due to dwindling supplies of fuel and flour, as well as insecurity in northern Gaza.
“We’re hoping that we will be up and running on all those bakeries as soon as possible,” Skau said, stressing that it was “one of our top priorities” to get bread to “tens of thousands of people each day.”
“It also has a psychological effect to be able to put warm bread into the hands of the people.”
WFP also wants to “get the private sector and commercial goods in there as soon as possible,” he said.
That would mean the UN agency could replace ready meals with vouchers and cash for people to buy their own food “to bring back some dignity” and allow them “frankly to start rebuilding their lives.”
WFP said in a statement that it has enough food pre-positioned along the borders — and on its way to Gaza — to feed over a million people for three months.
Vast areas of Gaza have been devastated by Israel’s retaliatory assault on the territory after the October 7 Hamas attack last year sparked the war.
The attack, the deadliest in Israel’s history, resulted in the deaths of 1,210 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally of Israeli official figures.
Israel’s retaliatory campaign has killed at least 46,913 people, also mostly civilians, according to figures from the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry that the United Nations considers reliable.
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UN humanitarian agency ramps up efforts to provide aid to Gaza

UN humanitarian agency ramps up efforts to provide aid to Gaza
Updated 39 min 43 sec ago
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UN humanitarian agency ramps up efforts to provide aid to Gaza

UN humanitarian agency ramps up efforts to provide aid to Gaza
  • Organization to leverage opportunity for large-scale relief in enclave: official

GAZA: The UN’s humanitarian affairs agency said it has ratcheted up its preparations for providing aid to Gaza after the ceasefire between Israel and Hamas takes effect.

Muhannad Hadi, the agency’s humanitarian coordinator for the territory, said Saturday the United Nations and its partners are ready to leverage the opportunity for large-scale relief.
Hadi referenced in a statement the agreements reached on implementing humanitarian components in the first phase of the ceasefire, including the provision of supplies “including water, food, health and shelter to people across Gaza and the long-awaited release of hostages.”

HIGHLIGHTS

• In Gaza, people were celebrating, waving Palestinian flags in the street. In Israel, the ceasefire was met with guarded optimism.

• Hundreds of trucks waited at the Gaza border, poised to enter from Egypt as soon as they get the all-clear to deliver desperately needed aid.

• The war’s only previous truce, for one week in November 2023, also saw the release of hostages held by militants in exchange for Palestinian prisoners.

Meanwhile, thousands of Gazans carrying tents, clothes and their personal belongings were seen heading back to their homes, after more than 15 months of war that displaced the vast majority of the territory’s population, in many cases more than once.
In the northern area of Jabalia, hundreds of Gazans streamed down a sandy path, returning to an apocalyptic landscape dotted with piles of rubble and destroyed buildings.
And in the main southern city of Khan Yunis, people celebrated their pending homecoming.
“I’m very, very happy,” said Wafa Al-Habeel. “I want to go back and kiss the ground and the soil of Gaza. I am longing for Gaza City and longing for our loved ones.”
In Gaza, people were celebrating, waving Palestinian flags in the street.
In Israel, the ceasefire was met with guarded optimism. “I don’t trust our side or their side,” said taxi driver David Gutterman. “Always at the last moment something, a problem, can pop up, but all in all I’m really happy.”
Shai Zaik, an employee at Tel Aviv’s art museum, said he had “mixed feelings,” but was “full of hope” that the hostages would return.
Hundreds of trucks waited at the Gaza border, poised to enter from Egypt as soon as they get the all-clear to deliver desperately needed aid. Some trucks were loaded with prefabricated houses.
Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty said 600 trucks a day would enter Gaza, including 50 carrying fuel.
The war’s only previous truce, for one week in November 2023, also saw the release of hostages held by militants in exchange for Palestinian prisoners.
Hamas’s Oct. 7 attack resulted in the deaths of 1,210 people, according to an AFP tally of Israeli official figures.
Of the 251 people taken hostage, 94 are still in Gaza, including 34 the Israeli military says are dead.
Israel’s retaliatory campaign has destroyed much of Gaza, killing at least 46,899 people, most of them civilians, according to figures from the Hamas-run territory’s Health Ministry that the United Nations considers reliable.

 


Paramilitary attack near besieged Darfur kills 14

Paramilitary attack near besieged Darfur kills 14
Updated 19 January 2025
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Paramilitary attack near besieged Darfur kills 14

Paramilitary attack near besieged Darfur kills 14
  • Nearly all of Darfur is now controlled by the paramilitary troops, which has also taken over swathes of the neighboring Kordofan region and much of central Sudan

PORT SUDAN: A paramilitary attack on an area east of North Darfur’s besieged capital El-Fasher has killed 14 Sudanese civilians, activists said on Sunday.
The “treacherous attack” took place in an area “northeastern Um Kadadah in North Darfur state on Saturday,” said the local resistance committee. The group is one of hundreds of volunteer organizations that have coordinated aid across Sudan during 21 months of fighting between the regular army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces.
El-Fasher, a city of some 2 million people which has been under siege of the paramilitary troops since May, has seen some of the fiercest fighting of the war as the army battles to keep its last foothold in the vast Darfur region of western Sudan. Nearly all of Darfur is now controlled by the paramilitary troops, which has also taken over swathes of the neighboring Kordofan region and much of central Sudan. The regular army still controls the north and east, while the capital Khartoum and neighboring cities are a battleground between the warring parties.

HIGHLIGHTS

• Nearly all of Darfur is now controlled by the paramilitary troops, which has also taken over swathes of the neighboring Kordofan region and much of central Sudan.

• The regular army still controls the north and east, while the capital Khartoum and neighboring cities are a battleground between the warring parties.

The war in Sudan began in April 2023, and has killed tens of thousands of people and uprooted more than 12 million, creating what the United Nations calls one of the worst humanitarian disasters in recent memory.
Both the army and the paramilitary have been accused of indiscriminately targeting medical facilities and civilians, as well as deliberately attacking residential areas.
Separately, another 12 people died in the past two days in South Sudan in attacks on citizens from northern neighbor Sudan, the country’s security forces reported, despite an overnight curfew.
Demonstrations sparked by reports that 29 South Sudanese had been killed during fighting in Sudan’s Al-Jazeera state led to the looting of businesses owned by Sudanese nationals in the capital Juba.
Police opened fire to disperse the crowd, killing three and wounding seven.
South Sudan security forces said Saturday that nine people — two South Sudanese and seven Sudanese — had been killed during protests Friday in the town of Aweil.
The world’s newest nation had imposed a curfew Friday night as protests spread to other towns.

 


Italy’s foreign minister to visit Israel, Palestine

Italy’s foreign minister to visit Israel, Palestine
Updated 54 min 12 sec ago
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Italy’s foreign minister to visit Israel, Palestine

Italy’s foreign minister to visit Israel, Palestine
  • Tajani will stress Italy’s “attention” to “post-war reconstruction in Gaza”

ROME: Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani will visit Israel and Palestinian territories now that a long-awaited ceasefire in Gaza has come into effect, his office said Sunday.
Tajani will travel Monday to “Israel and Palestine” to meet Israeli President Isaac Herzog, Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar and Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammed Mustafa, it said in a statement.
“The entry into force of the agreement offers a historic opportunity for the Israeli people, for the Palestinian people and for the entire region,” Tajani said.
“I will confirm to the Israeli and Palestinian authorities the Italian government’s commitment to alleviate the painful conditions of the civilian population that has suffered so much,” he said.
“Our humanitarian interventions will continue and be further strengthened,” he added.
Tajani will stress Italy’s “attention” to “post-war reconstruction in Gaza.”
He will also co-chair with Israel’s Saar a meeting with the business community “to illustrate investment opportunities between the two countries, within the framework of growth diplomacy initiatives.”
“Investments built with a presence not only in Israel but throughout the region will help stabilize the area,” Tajani said.
Meanwhile, UK foreign office said Britain “welcomes” the expected release of British-Israeli hostage Emily Damari after she was named as one of the three women to be released Sunday under a ceasefire deal.
“The UK government welcomes the reports that British national Emily Damari is on the list of hostages to be released by Hamas today. We stand ready to support her upon her release,” the foreign office said in a statement.

 


Kuwaiti first deputy prime minister affirms military cooperation with US forces

Kuwaiti first deputy prime minister affirms military cooperation with US forces
Updated 19 January 2025
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Kuwaiti first deputy prime minister affirms military cooperation with US forces

Kuwaiti first deputy prime minister affirms military cooperation with US forces
  • Sheikh Fahad Yusuf Saud Al-Sabah met with Lt. Gen. Patrick Frank, commander of US Army Central and Third Army
  • The Kuwait Army’s deputy chief and senior officers also joined the visit to Camp Buehring

LONDON: Kuwaiti First Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of Defense and Minister of Interior Sheikh Fahad Yusuf Saud Al-Sabah has visited Camp Buehring to reaffirm the strong military cooperation between his country and the US.

During his visit on Saturday, Sheikh Fahad met with Lt. Gen. Patrick Frank, commander of US Army Central and Third Army, and Karen Hideko Sasahara, US Ambassador to Kuwait.

Sheikh Fahad was briefed on the camp’s tasks and the troops’ preparedness. He also examined operational plans and missions and reaffirmed his commitment to strengthening the training and defense coordination partnership between Kuwait and the US.

Also joining the visit were Deputy Chief of Staff of the Kuwait Army Air Marshal Sheikh Sabah Jaber Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah and other senior officers.