‘Dad, you’re home’: Israeli hostage who died in Gaza laid to rest

‘Dad, you’re home’: Israeli hostage who died in Gaza laid to rest
Mourners wave Israeli flags as the car carrying the coffin of former Israeli hostage Oded Lifshitz passes by at the entrance of Kibbutz Nir Oz, where his funeral will take place, in southern Israel, on Tuesday, Feb. 25, 2025. (AP)
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‘Dad, you’re home’: Israeli hostage who died in Gaza laid to rest

‘Dad, you’re home’: Israeli hostage who died in Gaza laid to rest
  • More recently, Lifshitz, an Arabic speaker, had been actively involved for years with Road to Recovery, an organization which helps Palestinians receive medical treatment in Israel

NIR ‘OZ, Israel: Hundreds of people gathered on Tuesday at a small cemetery in a southern Israeli community to bid a final farewell to Oded Lifshitz, a kibbutz founder who died in captivity in Gaza.
Palestinian militant group Hamas returned Lifshitz’s body to Israel last week, part of an ongoing truce deal that has halted the Gaza war — triggered by Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attack in which the veteran journalist was abducted from his home.
“Dad, now you’re home,” said his son Arnon Lifshitz at the cemetery in Nir Oz.
Among the attendees at the funeral were lawmakers, activists, European diplomats and Israeli President Isaac Herzog, who asked for “forgiveness that the State of Israel did not protect you, your family and your kibbutz.”
“In the face of such inhuman cruelty, you were left to stand alone,” said the president.
Lifshitz, then aged 83, was taken hostage from his home on the kibbutz during Hamas’s 2023 attack. His wife, Yocheved Lifshitz, 85, was also seized but released by Hamas after 18 days.
Israeli officials said Oded Lifshitz was murdered by his captors from militant group Islamic Jihad, which has fought alongside Hamas in Gaza.
In addition to Lifshitz, the bodies of three other Nir Oz residents taken hostage and killed in captivity — Shiri Bibas and her two young sons — were returned last week.
The three members of the Bibas family will be buried on Wednesday.
At Lifshitz’s funeral, Hen Avigdori, whose wife and daughter were taken hostage from a neighboring kibbutz and released in the war’s first truce in November 2023, said that “it should have ended differently, he should be here with us.”
To Avigdori, seeing the row of graves “of people who were murdered here on October 7, and those who are waiting for their loved ones to be returned, is a difficult feeling.”
“This kibbutz has become a symbol of the neglect.”
Lifshitz had a long career with the now defunct, left-leaning newspaper Al Hamishmar, and was a long-time defender of Palestinian rights.
In 1972, he defended Bedouins who were expelled from the Sinai Peninsula by occupying Israeli authorities.
A decade later, during the Lebanese civil war and Israel’s invasion of Lebanon, he was one of the first journalists to report on the Sabra and Shatila massacres in which Israeli-backed Christian militias killed between 800 and 2,000 Palestinians in Beirut refugee camps.
More recently, Lifshitz, an Arabic speaker, had been actively involved for years with Road to Recovery, an organization which helps Palestinians receive medical treatment in Israel.
Shlomo Margalit, also one of the founders of Nir Oz and a friend of Lifshitz, said that “Oded was a man of peace.”
“All his life, he worked for the well-being of our neighbors.”
Yocheved Lifshitz said that in their 67 years together, she and Oded “fought... for social justice and peace.”
“Unfortunately, we received a terrible blow from those we had helped on the other side.”
Hamas and its militant allies took 251 people hostage during their October 2023 attack.
Of those, 62 are still being held hostages in Gaza, including 35 the Israeli military says are dead.
Bibas and her two sons, Kfir and Ariel, had become symbols of the ordeal suffered by the Israeli hostages.
Ariel was aged four at the time of the attack, while Kfir was the youngest hostage, just nine months old.
At the cemetery, one of Lifshitz’s grandsons Dekel Lifshitz told AFP that the cactus garden his late grandfather had cultivated on the kibbutz was a sign of his “determination.”
“It takes years to succeed in growing a garden like this, and it reminds me that he was always active.”


Low airplanes, series of blasts heard in Syrian capital, witnesses say

Low airplanes, series of blasts heard in Syrian capital, witnesses say
Updated 8 sec ago
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Low airplanes, series of blasts heard in Syrian capital, witnesses say

Low airplanes, series of blasts heard in Syrian capital, witnesses say

DAMASCUS: A series of blasts and the sound of airplanes flying low were heard over the Syrian capital, Damascus, late on Tuesday, residents of the city and Reuters reporters there said.

 


Israel spy chief says pager bombs ‘turned the tables’ on Hezbollah

Israel spy chief says pager bombs ‘turned the tables’ on Hezbollah
Updated 26 min 3 sec ago
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Israel spy chief says pager bombs ‘turned the tables’ on Hezbollah

Israel spy chief says pager bombs ‘turned the tables’ on Hezbollah
  • The bombs detonated all across Lebanon, including in shops and homes, and were called a violation of international law by the United Nation’s human rights chief Volker Turk

JERUSALEM: In a rare acknowledgement of the agency’s covert operations, Israel’s spy chief declared on Tuesday that last year’s “pager operation” against Hezbollah “turned the tables” on the Lebanese militant group in its war with Israel.
“This operation marked a turning point in the north, during which we turned the tables on our enemies,” said David Barnea, head of Mossad, speaking at a conference in Tel Aviv.
“A direct line can be drawn from the pager operation to the elimination of (Hassan) Nasrallah and the ceasefire agreement. Hezbollah suffered a devastating blow that shattered the organization’s spirit,” he added, referring to Israel’s assassination of the Hezbollah leader.
On September 17 and 18, an Israeli operation detonated hundreds of pagers and walkie-talkies used by Hezbollah. Lebanese authorities reported that the attack killed 39 people and wounded thousands.
The bombs detonated all across Lebanon, including in shops and homes, and were called a violation of international law by the United Nation’s human rights chief Volker Turk.
Just days later, on September 27, Israel assassinated Nasrallah in a massive air strike on southern Beirut, which was swiftly followed by an Israeli ground offensive against Hezbollah strongholds in southern Lebanon.
By late November, Israel and Hezbollah reached a ceasefire agreement, bringing more than a year of hostilities to an end.
However, Israel continues to hold five “strategic military positions” along the border inside Lebanese territory.
In a rare disclosure of Mossad’s tactics, Barnea provided new details of the pager operation.
Saying his agency had “devised an unconventional method to strike,” Barnea revealed that the groundwork for the operation began in 2022, with the first shipment of 500 pagers reaching Lebanon weeks before Hamas attacked Israel on October 7, 2023.
“When the operation was finally launched, ten times that number of beepers were detonated than we had in the start of the war and twice the amount of radios,” he stated, adding that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu personally approved the mission.
“The day thousands of pagers exploded in the hands of Hezbollah operatives will be remembered as the moment that changed the course of the war,” Barnea declared. “It was a day when deception in warfare proved more powerful than brute force.”
In a symbolic gesture earlier this month, Netanyahu presented US President Donald Trump with a golden pager, commemorating the operation’s impact on Hezbollah.


Two killed in Israeli strike on eastern Lebanon: state media

Picture taken from southern Lebanese region of Marjayoun, shows smoke rising from reported home demolitions by Israeli troops.
Picture taken from southern Lebanese region of Marjayoun, shows smoke rising from reported home demolitions by Israeli troops.
Updated 18 min 30 sec ago
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Two killed in Israeli strike on eastern Lebanon: state media

Picture taken from southern Lebanese region of Marjayoun, shows smoke rising from reported home demolitions by Israeli troops.
  • “An enemy drone carried out an air strike on the town of Shaara... near the eastern Lebanon mountain range, killing two people and wounding two” others: NNA

BEIRUT: Lebanese state media said that an Israeli air strike on Tuesday killed at least two people in the country’s east, where the military said it targeted Hezbollah militants.
“An enemy drone carried out an air strike on the town of Shaara... near the eastern Lebanon mountain range, killing two people and wounding two” others, said the state-run National News Agency.
Israel’s said that it “struck Hezbollah terrorists” who “were identified operating within a Hezbollah production and storage facility for strategic weapons.”
Lebanese militant group Hezbollah and Israel fought a war last year that ended in a late November ceasefire, which has largely held despite mutual accusations of violations.
The Israeli military statement said that the activity in the site targeted on Tuesday “constitutes a blatant violation of the ceasefire understandings.”
Hezbollah was left weakened by a year of hostilities, including the two months of all-out war, in which its leadership was decimated.
Under the November 27 truce agreement, Israeli forces were to withdraw from southern Lebanon while Hezbollah was to remove its military infrastructure from the area. Troops remain in five points deemed “strategic” by the Israeli military.


Former Iraqi PM returns to Baghdad despite security threats

Former Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa Al-Kadhimi. (File/AFP)
Former Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa Al-Kadhimi. (File/AFP)
Updated 25 February 2025
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Former Iraqi PM returns to Baghdad despite security threats

Former Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa Al-Kadhimi. (File/AFP)
  • Al-Kadhimi left Iraq after his term as prime minister ended in 2022 and has been living in London and the UAE
  • Iraq is set to hold parliamentary elections later this year, raising possibility that Al-Kadhimi might be preparing to attempt political come-back

BAGHDAD: Former Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa Al-Kadhimi, known for promoting the rule of law, returned to Baghdad Tuesday for the first time in more than two years despite ongoing security threats.
In 2021, he survived an assassination attempt in which two armed drones targeted his residence in Baghdad’s Green Zone area. The attack came at a time of tensions sparked by the refusal of Iran-backed militias to accept parliamentary election results.
Al-Kadhimi left Iraq after his term as prime minister ended in 2022 and has been living in London and the United Arab Emirates.
The former prime minister did not immediately make any public statements upon his return.
Three officials with his office who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly said security threats against the former prime minister were still present. They said he had returned at the invitation of current Iraqi political leaders who hoped he could use his connections to help them confront a worsening economic crisis that threatens the country’s stability.
Al-Kadhimi has good relations with the United States and Saudi Arabia. Iraq is currently looking to strengthen ties with both countries.
He was Iraq’s former intelligence chief before becoming prime minister in 2020 following mass anti-government protests that toppled the previous cabinet.
Iraq is also set to hold parliamentary elections later this year, raising the possibility that Al-Kadhimi might be preparing to attempt a political come-back.


Iran rules out ‘direct talks’ with US on nuclear issue

Iran rules out ‘direct talks’ with US on nuclear issue
Updated 25 February 2025
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Iran rules out ‘direct talks’ with US on nuclear issue

Iran rules out ‘direct talks’ with US on nuclear issue
  • Lavrov arrived in Tehran on Tuesday for talks with Araghchi and other senior officials on a range of topics including bilateral relations, regional developments and the 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and major powers

TEHRAN: Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi on Tuesday dismissed the possibility of direct negotiations with the US on his country’s nuclear program.
His remarks came a day after Washington announced fresh sanctions on Tehran targeting more than 30 vessels and people, including the head of the national oil company, accused of involvement in brokering the sale and shipment of Iranian oil.
The sanctions were the latest to be imposed since US President Donald Trump reinstated his “maximum pressure” policy toward Iran, reprising his approach during his first term.

HIGHLIGHT

Lavrov arrived in Tehran for talks with senior officials on a range of topics including bilateral relations, regional developments and the 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and major powers.

“There will be no possibility of direct talks between us and the US on the nuclear issue as long as the maximum pressure is applied in this way,” Araghchi said during a joint press conference with his visiting Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov.
“Regarding the nuclear negotiations, the position of the Islamic Republic of Iran is very clear. We will not negotiate under pressure, threat or sanctions.”
Lavrov arrived in Tehran on Tuesday for talks with Araghchi and other senior officials on a range of topics including bilateral relations, regional developments and the 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and major powers.
During Trump’s first term, which ended in 2021, Washington withdrew from the landmark deal that had imposed curbs on Iran’s nuclear program in return for sanctions relief.
On Monday, Iran held a new round of talks with Germany, France and Britain about its nuclear program after reviving engagement with the trio, known as the E3, late last year.
Araghchi said he had briefed Lavrov about the latest discussions.
“On the nuclear issue, we will move forward with the cooperation and coordination of our friends in Russia and China,” he added.
With Russia too facing sanctions over its war in Ukraine, Moscow and Tehran have stepped up their cooperation in recent years.
Ukraine and its Western allies have accused Iran of supplying Russia with weapons for use in the war — allegations Iran has repeatedly denied.
Araghchi said Iran and Russia’s positions on Syria remain “very close.”
“Iran wants peace, stability, preservation of territorial integrity and unity, and the progress of Syria based on the will of the people,” he said.
Lavrov, for his part, said “we will do our utmost to ensure that the situation calms down and does not pose a threat either to the Syrian people ... or to the people of neighboring states.”