Hamas frees six hostages in Gaza in exchange for Palestinian detainees

Update Hamas frees six hostages in Gaza in exchange for Palestinian detainees
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Hamas militants present three newly-released Israeli hostages on stage in Nuseirat in the central Gaza Strip as part of the seventh hostage-prisoner release on Feb. 22, 2025. (AFP)
Update Hamas frees six hostages in Gaza in exchange for Palestinian detainees
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Hamas members release Avera Mengistu and Tal Shoham as part of the ceasefire deal in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip on Feb. 22, 2025. (Reuters)
Update Hamas frees six hostages in Gaza in exchange for Palestinian detainees
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Hamas fighters escort Red Cross vehicles ahead of the handover of Israeli hostages in Nuseirat, central Gaza Strip on Feb. 22, 2025. (AP)
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Hamas frees six hostages in Gaza in exchange for Palestinian detainees

Hamas frees six hostages in Gaza in exchange for Palestinian detainees
  • Releases came under first phase of a ceasefire deal which began on January 19

JERUSALEM: Hamas freed six hostages from Gaza on Saturday, the last living Israeli captives slated for release under the first phase of a fragile ceasefire accord, in exchange for hundreds of Palestinian prisoners and detainees.
Eliya Cohen, 27, Omer Shem Tov, 22, and Omer Wenkert, 23, all seized from the site of the Nova music festival in Hamas’ October 7, 2023 attack on southern Israel, were handed over to the Red Cross in Nuseirat, central Gaza, to be transported to Israeli forces.
Dozens of militants stood guard in a crowd that had gathered to watch the handover, as masked Hamas men armed with automatic rifles stood on each side of the three men, who appeared thin and pale, as they were made to wave from the stage.
Tal Shoham, 40 and Avera Mengistu, 39, were earlier released in Rafah in southern Gaza.
The Hamas-directed releases, which have included public ceremonies in which captives are taken on stage and some made to speak, have faced mounting criticism, including from the United Nations, which denounced the “parading of hostages.”
Hamas rejected the criticism on Saturday, describing the events as a solemn show of Palestinian unity. It later handed over a sixth hostage, Hisham Al-Sayed, 36, to the Red Cross in Gaza City with no public ceremony.
Al-Sayed and Mengistu have been held by Hamas since they entered Gaza of their own accord around a decade ago. Shoham was abducted from Kibbutz Be’eri along with his wife and two children, who were freed in a brief truce in November 2023.
The six are the last living hostages from a group of 33 due to be freed in the first stage of the three-phase ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas that took effect on January 19. Sixty-three more captives, less than half of whom are believed to be alive, remain in Gaza.
Shem Tov embraced his parents tightly, laughing and crying, “How I dreamt of this,” he said, in a video distributed by the Israeli military.
Shoham smiled, waved and gave a thumbs up to his friends who had gathered outside the hospital where he was taken.
“We’ve been waiting for Tal every day since October 7th,” said Yael Avner, 50, one of Shoham’s friends. “It’s a great relief just to see him there, himself just coming back home.”
Hundreds of Israelis gathered in the rain in what has become known as Hostages Square in Tel Aviv. Some lit candles under photos of the Bibas family, whose bodies were returned this week.
In return for the hostages, Israel is expected to release 602 Palestinian prisoners and detainees held in its jails.
They will include 445 Gazans rounded up by Israeli forces during the war, as well as dozens of convicts serving lengthy or life terms for attacks that killed dozens of Israelis in the Palestinian uprising two decades ago.
The fragile truce in the war between Israel and Hamas militants had been threatened by the misidentification of a body released on Thursday as that of Shiri Bibas, who was kidnapped with her two young sons and her husband in the Hamas 2023 attack.
However, late on Friday, Hamas handed over another body, which her family said had been confirmed to be hers.
“Last night, our Shiri was returned home,” her family said in a statement, which said she had been identified by Israel’s Institute of Forensic Medicine.
The Bibas family has been an emblem of the trauma suffered by Israel on that day. Her husband Yarden, seized and held separately from his family, was freed on February 1.
The Israeli military said intelligence assessments and forensic analysis of the bodies of 10-month-old Kfir Bibas and his four-year-old brother Ariel showed both had been killed deliberately by their captors, “in cold blood.”
Israel’s Army Radio, citing the forensic conclusions, said Bibas was likely slain with her children.
Hamas says the Bibas family was killed by an Israeli airstrike. A group called the Mujahideen Brigades said it was holding the family, which was confirmed by the Israeli military.
The ceasefire has brought a pause in the fighting, but prospects of a definitive end to the war remain unclear. Hamas has been at pains to demonstrate that it remains in control in Gaza despite heavy losses in the war.
The militant group triggered the conflict by its attack on Israeli communities that killed 1,200 and took 251 hostages, according to Israel.
The Israeli campaign has killed at least 48,000 people, the Palestinian health authorities say, and reduced much of the enclave to rubble, leaving some hundreds of thousands in makeshift shelters and dependent on aid trucks.
Both sides have said they intend to start talks on a second stage, which mediators say aims to agree the return of all remaining hostages and the full withdrawal of Israeli troops.


Syria’s northeast begins supplying oil to Damascus, oil ministry says

Syria’s northeast begins supplying oil to Damascus, oil ministry says
Updated 6 min 44 sec ago
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Syria’s northeast begins supplying oil to Damascus, oil ministry says

Syria’s northeast begins supplying oil to Damascus, oil ministry says
  • Suleiman said the oil was from fields in the provinces of Hasakah and Deir el-Zor
  • The United States issued a six-month sanctions exemption in January allowing some energy transactions

BEIRUT: Kurdish-led authorities in northeast Syrian Arab Republic have begun providing oil from local fields they manage to the central government in Damascus, Syrian oil ministry spokesman Ahmed Suleiman told Reuters on Saturday.
It was the first known delivery from Syria’s oil-rich northeast to the Islamist-run government installed after former leader Bashar Assad was toppled by rebels in December.
Suleiman said the oil was from fields in the provinces of Hasakah and Deir el-Zor but did not provide further details, including the amount provided or other terms of the deal.
Syria exported 380,000 barrels per day (bpd) in 2010, a year before protests against Assad’s rule spiralled into a nearly 14-year war that devastated the country’s economy and infrastructure — including its oil.
Oilfields changed hands multiple times, with the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces ultimately capturing the key northeast fields, although US and European sanctions made both legitimate exports and imports difficult.
The United States issued a six-month sanctions exemption in January allowing some energy transactions and the European Union is set to suspend its sanctions related to energy, transport and reconstruction.
In the interim, Syria is seeking to import oil via local intermediaries after its first post-Assad import tenders garnered little interest from major traders due to sanctions and financial risks, several trade sources told Reuters.
Internal oil trade is also a key part of talks between the semi-autonomous northeast region and the new authorities in Damascus, which want to bring all regions in Syria under centralized control.
Sources said the SDF would likely need to relinquish control of oil revenues as part of any settlement. SDF commander Mazloum Abdi said last month that his force was open to handing over responsibility for oil resources to the new administration, provided the wealth was distributed fairly to all provinces.


US says killed a senior member of Syria Al-Qaeda affiliate

US says killed a senior member of Syria Al-Qaeda affiliate
Updated 51 min 49 sec ago
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US says killed a senior member of Syria Al-Qaeda affiliate

US says killed a senior member of Syria Al-Qaeda affiliate

BEIRUT: The US military said Saturday it had killed a senior member of Al-Qaeda’s Syrian branch Hurras Al-Din, which announced its dissolution last month, in an air strike in the country’s northwest.
It is the latest US strike this year against the group in Syria. Along with its Western and Arab allies, the United States has emphasized that Syria must not serve as a base for “terrorist” groups after the toppling of president Bashar Assad in December.
On Friday, US Central Command (CENTCOM) forces “conducted a precision air strike in northwest Syria, killing Wasim Tahsin Bayraqdar, a senior leadership facilitator of the terrorist organization Hurras Al-Din,” the military said in a statement.
The northwest was the stronghold of interim president Ahmed Al-Sharaa’s Islamist Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham group before it led the rebel offensive that toppled Assad in December.
The British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights war monitor said a drone strike on a car killed Bayraqdar.
Last Sunday, CENTCOM said it killed “a senior finance and logistics official” in Hurras Al-Din.
That came after CENTCOM last month reported killing another senior Hurras Al-Din operative, Muhammad Salah Al-Zabir, in an air strike also in the northwest.
The US-based SITE Intelligence Group said Hurras Al-Din was founded in February 2018.
The group did not publicly confirm its allegiance to Al-Qaeda until its dissolution announcement in January.
Hurras Al-Din dissolved in line with orders from Sharaa, who has called on all armed group to disband.
The United States designated Hurras Al-Din as a “terrorist” organization in 2019.


Turkiye probes opposition mayor’s ‘falsified’ university degree

Turkiye probes opposition mayor’s ‘falsified’ university degree
Updated 53 min ago
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Turkiye probes opposition mayor’s ‘falsified’ university degree

Turkiye probes opposition mayor’s ‘falsified’ university degree
  • Ekrem Imamoglu will be questioned Wednesday over ‘falsification of an official document’

ISTANBUL: Turkiye has begun investigating allegations that Istanbul’s opposition mayor Ekrem Imamoglu, already the subject of a clutch of other legal proceedings, falsely obtained his university degree, the official Anadolu news agency said Saturday.
Imamoglu, who Friday submitted his candidacy to stand for the social democratic Republican People’s Party (CHP) main opposition for the next presidential election, will be questioned Wednesday over “falsification of an official document,” Anadolu said.
The stakes are high for Imamoglu as constitutionally, any presidential candidate must have a higher education degree.
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has faced similar claims from opponents — which he denies.
Following allegations by a journalist, the Istanbul municipality last September published a photocopy of a business management diploma which Imamoglu received from Istanbul University in 1995.
The opposition mayor, who was last year re-elected having in 2019 won control of Turkiye’s largest city from Erdogan’s ruling Islamist-conservative Justice and Development Party (AKP), is the subject of a further five investigations, two of which were opened last month.
Regularly targeted by Erdogan, likewise a former mayor of Istanbul, Imamoglu was sentenced in December 2022 to a jail term of two years and seven months and banned from political activities for “insulting” members of Turkiye’s High Electoral Committee, a sentence he has appealed.
A vocal opponent of the president, Imamoglu denounced what he termed judicial “harassment” last month on leaving an Istanbul court where he had been questioned as part of an investigation opened after criticism of the city’s public prosecutor.


Iraq denies reports that it faces US sanctions if oil exports from Kurdistan not resumed, Iraqi official says

Iraq denies reports that it faces US sanctions if oil exports from Kurdistan not resumed, Iraqi official says
Updated 22 February 2025
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Iraq denies reports that it faces US sanctions if oil exports from Kurdistan not resumed, Iraqi official says

Iraq denies reports that it faces US sanctions if oil exports from Kurdistan not resumed, Iraqi official says
  • Iraq denies reports that it faces US sanctions if oil exports from Kurdistan not resumed, Iraqi official says

BAGHDAD: Iraq denied reports on Saturday that it would face US sanctions if oil exports from the Kurdistan region were not resumed, Farhad Alaaldin, a foreign affairs adviser to the Iraqi prime minister told Reuters.


Syria’s new president meets Chinese envoy for first time since Assad’s fall

Syria's de facto leader Ahmad al-Sharaa (R) and Chinese ambassador Shi Hongwei. (Supplied)
Syria's de facto leader Ahmad al-Sharaa (R) and Chinese ambassador Shi Hongwei. (Supplied)
Updated 22 February 2025
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Syria’s new president meets Chinese envoy for first time since Assad’s fall

Syria's de facto leader Ahmad al-Sharaa (R) and Chinese ambassador Shi Hongwei. (Supplied)
  • Syria’s state news agency SANA reported Sharaa’s meeting with Ambassador Shi Hongwei but gave no details of what was discussed

DAMASCUS: Syria’s new President Ahmed Al-Sharaa met China’s ambassador to Damascus in the first public engagement between the two countries since the overthrow of Bashar Assad in December, Syrian state media said on Friday.
China, which backed Assad, saw its embassy in Damascus looted after his fall, and Syria’s new Islamist rulers have installed some foreign fighters including Uyghurs, a mainly Muslim ethnic minority in China that Western rights groups say has been persecuted by Beijing, into the Syrian armed forces. Beijing has denied accusations of abuses against Uyghurs.
Syria’s state news agency SANA reported Sharaa’s meeting with Ambassador Shi Hongwei but gave no details of what was discussed.
The decision to give official roles, some at senior level, to several Islamist militants could alarm foreign governments and Syrian citizens fearful of the new administration’s intentions, despite its pledges not to export Islamic revolution and to rule with tolerance for Syria’s large minority groups.
In 2015, Chinese authorities said many Uyghurs who had fled to Turkiye via Southeast Asia planned to bring jihad back to China, saying some were involved in “terrorism activities.”
Chinese President Xi Jinping had vowed to support Assad against external interference. He offered the veteran Syrian leader a rare break from years of international isolation since the start of Syria’s civil war in 2011 when he accorded him and his wife a warm welcome during a visit to China in 2023.
Assad was toppled a year later in a swift offensive by a coalition of rebels led by the Sharaa-led Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham (HTS), a former Al-Qaeda affiliate, that ended 54 years of Assad family rule.