Syrians begin fasting during first Ramadan without Assad family rule in decades

Residents gather for iftar, the fast-breaking meal, organized by the Turkish Humanitarian Relief Foundation (IHH), on the first day of Ramadan in the Jobar neighborhood, which was devastated by the Syrian war, in Damascus, Syria, on Saturday, March 1, 2025. (AP)
Residents gather for iftar, the fast-breaking meal, organized by the Turkish Humanitarian Relief Foundation (IHH), on the first day of Ramadan in the Jobar neighborhood, which was devastated by the Syrian war, in Damascus, Syria, on Saturday, March 1, 2025. (AP)
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Updated 02 March 2025
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Syrians begin fasting during first Ramadan without Assad family rule in decades

Syrians begin fasting during first Ramadan without Assad family rule in decades
  • Most countries around the world, including Saudi Arabia, Indonesia and Kuwait began observing Ramadan on Saturday, while a few other countries such as Malyasia and Japan, as well as some Shiite Muslims, will begin the fast on Sunday
  • Insurgents led by the Islamist Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham group, or HTS, overthrew President Bashar Assad’s secular government in early December ending the 54-year Assad family dynasty

DAMASCUS, Syria: Some restaurants and coffee shops in Syria were closed during the day Saturday while others opened as usual as observant Muslims began fasting during the holy month of Ramadan, the first since the fall of Assad family rule in the war-torn country.
Syria’s interim Ministry of Religious Endowments reportedly called for all restaurants, coffee shops and street food stands be closed during the day and that people must not eat or drink in public or face punishment. Those who violate the rule could get up to three months in jail. However, it did not appear that any official order had been issued by the government to that effect.




People pray at Umayyad Mosque, on the first day of the Muslim holy fasting month of Ramadan, in Damascus, Syria, March 1, 2025. (REUTERS)

Associated Press journalists who toured Damascus on Saturday said some coffee shops were opened but had their windows closed to that people can’t see who is inside.
Insurgents led by the Islamist Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham group, or HTS, overthrew President Bashar Assad’s secular government in early December ending the 54-year Assad family dynasty. Since then, Syria’s new Islamist government under former insurgent leader Ahmad Al-Sharaa, has been in control and many fear that the country could turn into an Daesh, although Al-Sharaa has so far promised to respect religious minorities.
Under Assad’s rule during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, when observant Muslims abstain from eating and drinking from sunrise to sunset, people were allowed to eat in public. This year, many people are abstaining from eating in public fearing reprisals.




A table is prepared for iftar, the fast-breaking meal, organized by the Turkish Humanitarian Relief Foundation (IHH), on the first day of Ramadan in the Jobar neighborhood, which was devastated by the Syrian war, in Damascus, Syria, on Saturday, March 1, 2025. (AP)

“Ramadan this year comes with a new flavor. This is the Ramadan of victory and liberation,” said interim Minister of Religious Affairs Hussam Hajj-Hussein in a televised statement.
Most countries around the world, including Saudi Arabia, Indonesia and Kuwait began observing Ramadan on Saturday, while a few other countries such as Malyasia and Japan, as well as some Shiite Muslims, will begin the fast on Sunday.
In many parts of the region, the holy month this year is bittersweet. Lebanese this year mark Ramadan after the 14-month Israel-Hezbollah war ended with a US-brokered ceasefire that went into effect in late November.




Residents walk in the market on the first day of Ramadan, the holy month for Muslims, in the old city of Damascus, Syria, Saturday March 1, 2025. (AP)

In the Gaza Strip, a fragile ceasefire deal, which has paused over 15 months of war between Israel and Hamas, nears the end of its first phase, and many Palestinians ate their first iftar in the middle of the rubble where their houses used to be.
“This year, after the fall of the regime, there are many confirmations regarding the prohibition of publicly breaking the fast, with violators facing imprisonment,” said Damascus resident Munir Abdallah. “This is something new, good and respectable, meaning that the rituals of Ramadan should be fully observed in all their aspects.”
Ramadan is the ninth month of the Islamic lunar calendar; the month cycles through the seasons. The start of the month traditionally depends on the sighting of the crescent moon.
The actual start date may vary among Muslim communities due to declarations by multiple Islamic authorities around the globe on whether the crescent has been sighted or different methodologies used to determine the start of the month.
The fast breaking meal is known as iftar and usually family members and friends gather at sunset to have the main meal. Muslims eat a pre-dawn meal, called “suhoor,” to hydrate and nurture their bodies ahead of the daily fast.
The holy month is also a time when Islamic and charitable organizations frequently provide meals for those unable to afford their own.
In the Iraqi capital of Baghdad, Bashar al Mashhadani, imam of the Sheikh Abdulqadir al Gailani Mosque in Baghdad said the mosque was preparing to serve 1,000 free meals per day to people coming to break their fast.
Ramadan is followed by the Islamic holiday of Eid Al-Fitr, one of Islam’s most important feasts.


‘Where’s the gold?’: How the Assads sucked Syria dry

‘Where’s the gold?’: How the Assads sucked Syria dry
Updated 59 min 41 sec ago
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‘Where’s the gold?’: How the Assads sucked Syria dry

‘Where’s the gold?’: How the Assads sucked Syria dry
  • From a Bond villain lair in the rugged heights overlooking Damascus, the all-seeing eye of a notorious Syrian military unit gazed down on a city it bled dry

DAMASCUS:From a Bond villain lair in the rugged heights overlooking Damascus, the all-seeing eye of a notorious Syrian military unit gazed down on a city it bled dry.
Many of the bases of the elite Fourth Division formerly run by toppled president Bashar Assad’s feared younger brother Maher now lie looted.
But papers left strewn behind reveal how the man they called “The Master” and his cronies wallowed in immense wealth while some of their foot soldiers struggled to feed their families and even begged on the streets.
Piles of documents seen by AFP expose a vast economic empire that Maher Assad and his network of profiteers built by pillaging a country already impoverished by nearly 14 years of civil war.
Western governments long accused him and his entourage of turning Syria into a narco state, flooding the Middle East with captagon, an illegal stimulant used both as a party drug in the Gulf and to push migrant workers through punishingly long days in the gruelling heat.
But far beyond that $10-billion trade — whose vast scale was exposed in a 2022 AFP investigation — papers found in its abandoned posts show the Fourth Division had its fingers in many pies in Syria, an all-consuming “mafia” within the pariah state.

+ It expropriated homes and farms
+ Seized food, cars and electronics to sell on
+ Looted copper and metal from bombed-out buildings
+ Collected “fees” at roadblocks and checkpoints
+ Ran protection rackets, making firms pay for escorts of oil tankers, some from areas controlled by jihadists
+ Controlled the tobacco and metal trades


The center of this corrupt web was Maher Assad’s private offices, hidden in an underground labyrinth of tunnels — some big enough to drive a truck through — cut into a mountain above Damascus.
A masked guard took AFP through the tunnels with all the brisk efficiency of a tour guide — the sauna, the bedroom, what appeared to be cells and various “emergency” exit routes.
But at its heart, down a steep flight of 160 stairs, lay a series of vaults with iron-clad doors.
The guard said he had counted nine vaults behind one sealed-off room.
He said safes had been “broken open” by looters who entered the office just hours after the Assad brothers fled Syria on December 8 when Damascus fell to an Islamist-led offensive, ending the family’s five-decade rule.
Maher, 57, did not know of his brother’s plans to flee to Russia and escaped separately, taking a helicopter to the Iraqi border, according to a senior Iraqi security official and two other sources. He then made his way to Russia, they said, apparently via Iran.
The chaos of their fall is apparent in the underground complex. Safes and empty Rolex and Cartier watch boxes still lie scattered about, though it is not known if the vaults were emptied before the looters arrived.
“This is Maher Assad’s main office,” the guard said, “which has two floors above the ground but also tunnels containing locked rooms that can’t be opened.”
In one corridor, a shrink wrap machine — probably used for bundling cash — was abandoned next to a huge safe.


There was never any shortage of bills to wrap.
One document retrieved from the papers that litter the Fourth Division’s Security Bureau farther down the hill show they had ready cash of $80 million, eight million euros and 41 billion Syrian pounds at their fingertips in June. That was a perfectly normal cash float, according to papers going back to 2021.
“This is only a small sample of the wealth that Maher and his associates gathered from their shady business deals,” said Carnegie Middle East Center scholar Kheder Khaddour.
Their real fortune is probably hidden “abroad, likely in Arab and African countries,” he said.
“The Fourth Division was a money-making machine,” Khaddour added, preying on a land where the UN says more than 90 percent of the population was living on a little more than $2 a day.


Western sanctions to squeeze the Assads and their cronies did little to impede Maher and his men.
Theirs was an “independent state” within the state, said Omar Shaaban, a former Fourth Division colonel who has signed a deal with the new Syrian authorities.
“It had all the means... It had everything,” he said.
While the US dollar was officially banned under Assad — with Syrians not even allowed to utter the word — Shaaban said many Fourth Division officers grew “wealthy and had safes full of money.”
“In dollars,” naturally, Shaaban added.
Maher’s cronies lived in sprawling villas, shipping luxury cars abroad while beyond their gates the country was mired in poverty and despair.
Weeks after the Assads’ fall, desperate people were still combing through Maher’s mansion built into a hill in Damascus’ Yaafour neighborhood next to the stables where his daughter rode her prize-winning horses.
“I want the gold. Where’s the gold?” a man asked AFP as he went through its ransacked rooms. But all that was left were old photographs of Maher, his wife and their three children strewn on the floor.


Maher was a shadowy, menacing figure in Assad’s Syria, branded “the butcher” by the opposition. His Fourth Division was the ousted regime’s iron fist, linked to a long list of atrocities.
But while his portrait was hung in all their bases, he was seldom seen in public.
Despite rights groups accusing him of ordering the 2011 massacre of protesters in Daraa — which helped ignite the civil war — and the United Nations linking him to the 2005 assassination of ex-Lebanese prime minister Rafic Hariri, he was “the invisible man,” one person close to the former ruling family told AFP.
“Few people would tell you that they know him,” the source said.
Yet Maher could be generous and good company, according to his sister-in-law Majd Al-Jadaan, a longtime opponent of the regime.
“However, when he gets angry, he completely loses control... This is what makes his personality terrifying,” she told Al-Arabiya TV.
“He knows how to destroy — he knows how to kill and then lie to appear innocent,” Jadaan told French TV early in the civil war, saying he was as ruthless as his father, Hafez.


One other name keeps cropping up alongside Maher’s when people in Damascus curse the crimes of the Fourth Division.
Ghassan Belal was the head of its powerful Security Bureau. Like his boss, he collected luxury cars and lived in a villa in the Yaafour district. Belal has also left Syria, according to security sources.
Inside his spacious offices in the bureau’s headquarters, you can piece together his lavish lifestyle bill by bill from the papers he left, including the cost of running his Cadillac.
Over the summer, Belal shipped two cars, a Lexus and a Mercedes, to Dubai, the $29,000 customs and other expenses charged to a credit card under another name.
A handwritten note showed that despite being sanctioned for human rights abuses, he paid his Netflix subscription using a “friend’s foreign credit card.”
Another list showed that mostly domestic expenses for his properties, including his main villa — which has since also been looted — amounted to $55,000 for just 10 days in August.
That same month, a Fourth Division soldier wrote to Belal begging for help because he was in “a terrible financial situation.” Belal gave him 500,000 Syrian pounds — $33. Another soldier who abandoned his post was caught begging on the street.


While thousands of the papers were burned as the regime fell, many of the classified documents survived the flames and have tales to tell.
Among prominent names mentioned as paying into Fourth Division funds are sanctioned businessmen Khaled Qaddour, Raif Quwatli and the Katerji brothers, who have been accused of generating hundreds of millions of dollars for Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard and the Yemeni Houthis through the sale of Iranian oil to Syria and China.
Quwatli operated checkpoints and crossings where goods were often confiscated or “taxed,” multiple sources said.
Qaddour — who was sanctioned by the United States for bankrolling Maher through captagon, cigarette and mobile phone smuggling — denied having any dealings with him when he tried to have his EU sanctions lifted in 2018.
But the Security Bureau’s revenue list showed he paid $6.5 million into its coffers in 2020 alone.


Khaddour said the Security Bureau handled most of the division’s financial dealings and issued security cards for people it did business with to ease their movements.
A drug lord told Lebanese investigators in 2021 that he held a Fourth Division security card and that the Security Bureau had agreed to protect another dealer’s drug shipment for $2 million, according to a statement seen by AFP.
The US Treasury and several Syrian and Lebanese security figures have also cited Belal and the bureau as key players in the captagon trade.
AFP visited a captagon lab linked to the division in December in a villa in the Dimas area near Lebanon’s border, its rooms full of boxes and barrels of the caffeine, ethanol and paracetamol needed to make the drug.
Locals said they were not allowed to approach the villa, with shepherds banned from the surrounding hills.
A former Fourth Division officer who worked for Belal, and who asked not to be named, said the bureau enjoyed “so much immunity, no one could touch a member without Maher’s approval.”
“It was a mafia, and I knew I was working for a mafia,” he added.


The division’s unbridled greed haunted families for decades as a letter written by Adnan Deeb, a graveyard caretaker from Homs, shows.
His plea for the return of his family’s seized property was found among hundreds of damp and dirty documents at an abandoned checkpoint near Damascus.
When AFP tracked Deeb down, he told how the Fourth Division confiscated his family’s villa, and those of several of their neighbors in the village of Kafraya 10 years ago.
Despite not being allowed near them, Deeb said they still had to pay taxes on the properties, which were used as offices, warehouses and likely a jail.
“The Fourth Division Security Bureau here was a red line that no one dared to come close to,” the son of one of the owners told AFP.
They found hundreds of cars, motorcycles and hundreds of gallons of cooking oil in the properties after the regime fell.
“They left people in hunger while everything was available for them,” he said.
A woman with 25 family members — some living in a tent — repeatedly requested the Fourth Division give her back her home in a document found in another of the villas.


The Fourth Division controlled no part of the Syrian economy more than the metals market, with former colonel Shaaban saying “no one was permitted to move iron” without its approval.
It also had “exclusive” control of copper, he said.
When Assad’s forces took control of a Damascus suburb after a fierce battle with rebels, the Fourth Division swiftly sent its men to pull the copper and iron from destroyed homes, one of its officers recalled.
Fares Shehabi, former head of Syria’s Chamber of Industry said a metal plant managed by one of Maher Assad’s partners monopolized the market, with factories forced to buy exclusively from it.
Many “could no longer operate” under such pressure, Shehabi said.
Maher Assad and his “friends” controlled a big share of Syria’s economy, he said. But the ultimate beneficiary was always his brother Bashar, he argued. “It was one company. The (presidential) palace was always the reference.”
The former Fourth Division officer also insisted a share of profits and seized items always went to the president.


While little seems to be left of Fourth Division today other than its ransacked depots and headquarters, Syria expert Lars Hauch, of Conflict Mediation Solutions (CMS), warned its legacy could yet be highly toxic.
“The Fourth Division was a military actor, a security apparatus, an intelligence entity, an economic force, a political power, and a transnational criminal enterprise,” he said.
“An institution with a decades-long history, enormous financial capacity and close relations with elites doesn’t just vanish,” he added.
“While the top-level leadership fled the country, the committed and mostly Alawite core (from which the Assads come)... retreated to the coastal regions,” Hauch said.
Syria’s new leadership has repeatedly sought to reassure minorities they will not be harmed. But across the country, violence against Alawites has surged.
Hauch said caches of weapons may have been hidden away.
Add to that the division’s war chest of “billions of dollars,” and “you have what you need for a sustained insurgency... if Syria’s transition fails to achieve genuine inclusivity and transitional justice,” the analyst warned.


Israel has cut off all supplies to Gaza. Here’s what that means

Israel has cut off all supplies to Gaza. Here’s what that means
Updated 03 March 2025
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Israel has cut off all supplies to Gaza. Here’s what that means

Israel has cut off all supplies to Gaza. Here’s what that means
  • Israel is trying to pressure Hamas to agree to what it says is US proposal to extend ceasefire’s first phase
  • Shaky ceasefire which took effect on January 19 allowed average of 600 aid trucks to enter Gaza every day

Israel has cut off the entry of all food and other goods into Gaza in an echo of the siege it imposed in the earliest days of its war with Hamas. The United Nations and other humanitarian aid providers are sharply criticizing the decision and calling it a violation of international law.

“A tool of extortion,” Saudi Arabia’s foreign ministry said. “A reckless act of collective punishment,” Oxfam said. Key mediator Egypt accused Israel of using “starvation as a weapon.”

Hunger has been an issue throughout the war for Gaza’s over 2 million people, and some aid experts had warned of possible famine. Now there is concern about losing the progress that experts reported under the past six weeks of a ceasefire.

Israel is trying to pressure the Hamas militant group to agree to what Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government describes as a US proposal to extend the ceasefire’s first phase instead of beginning negotiations on the far more difficult second phase. In phase two,

Hamas would release the remaining living hostages in return for Israel’s withdrawal from Gaza and a lasting ceasefire.

Here’s a look at what Israel’s decision means and the reactions.

No word from the US

The ceasefire’s first phase ended early Sunday. Minutes later, Israel said it supported a new proposal to extend that phase through the Jewish holiday of Passover in mid-April. It called the proposal a US one from Mideast envoy Steve Witkoff. Israel also warned it could resume the war after the first phase if it believes negotiations are ineffective.

Negotiations on the second phase were meant to start a month ago, increasing the uncertainty around the fragile truce. Hamas has insisted that those talks begin.

Later Sunday, Israel announced the immediate cutoff of aid to Gaza.

The Trump administration has not issued a statement about Israel’s announcement or its decision to cut off aid. It’s also not clear when Witkoff will visit the Middle East again. He had been expected to visit last week.

The US under the Biden administration pressed Israel to allow more aid into Gaza, threatening to limit weapons support. Aid organizations repeatedly criticized Israeli restrictions on items entering the small coastal territory, while hundreds of trucks with aid at times waited to enter.

Israel says it has allowed in enough aid. It has blamed shortages on what it called the UN’s inability to distribute it, and accused Hamas militants of siphoning off aid.

For months before the ceasefire, some Palestinians reported limiting meals, searching through garbage and foraging for edible weeds as food supplies ran low.
600 trucks of aid a day

The ceasefire’s first phase took effect on Jan. 19 and allowed a surge of aid into Gaza. An average of 600 trucks with aid entered per day. Those daily 600 trucks of aid were meant to continue entering through all three phases of the ceasefire.

However, Hamas says less than 50 percent of the agreed-upon number of trucks carrying fuel, for generators and other uses, were allowed in. Hamas also says the entry of live animals and animal feed, key for food security, were denied entry.

Still, Palestinians in Gaza were able to stock up on some supplies. “The ceasefire brought some much-needed relief to Gaza, but it was far from enough to cover the immense needs,” the Norwegian Refugee Council said Sunday.

Israel’s announcement came hours after Muslims in Gaza marked the first breaking of the fast during the holy month of Ramadan, with long tables set for collective meals snaking through the rubble of war-destroyed buildings.

The sudden aid cutoff sent Palestinians hurrying to markets. Prices in Gaza “tripled immediately,” Mahmoud Shalabi, the Medical Aid for Palestinians’ deputy director of programs in northern Gaza, told The Associated Press.

Legal implications

Prominent in the immediate criticism of Israel’s aid cutoff were statements calling the decision a violation.

“International humanitarian law is clear: We must be allowed access to deliver vital lifesaving aid,” said the UN humanitarian chief, Tom Fletcher.

Hours after Israel’s announcement, five non-governmental groups asked Israel’s Supreme Court for an interim order barring the state from preventing aid from entering Gaza, claiming the move violates Israel’s obligations under international law and amounts to a war crime:

“These obligations cannot be condition on political considerations.”

Last year, the International Criminal Court said there was reason to believe Israel had used “starvation as a method of warfare” when it issued an arrest warrant for Netanyahu. The allegation is also central to South Africa’s case at the International Court of Justice accusing Israel of genocide.

On Sunday, Kenneth Roth, former head of Human Rights Watch, said Israel as an occupying power has an “absolute duty” to facilitate humanitarian aid under the Geneva Conventions, and called Israel’s decision “a resumption of the war-crime starvation strategy” that led to the ICC warrant.


Israel has cut off all supplies to Gaza. Here’s what that means

Israel has cut off all supplies to Gaza. Here’s what that means
Updated 03 March 2025
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Israel has cut off all supplies to Gaza. Here’s what that means

Israel has cut off all supplies to Gaza. Here’s what that means
  • Hunger has been an issue throughout the war for Gaza’s over 2 million people, and some aid experts had warned of possible famine

Israel has cut off the entry of all food and other goods into Gaza in an echo of the siege it imposed in the earliest days of its war with Hamas. The United Nations and other humanitarian aid providers are sharply criticizing the decision and calling it a violation of international law.
“A tool of extortion,” Saudi Arabia’s foreign ministry said. “A reckless act of collective punishment,” Oxfam said. Key mediator Egypt accused Israel of using “starvation as a weapon.”
Hunger has been an issue throughout the war for Gaza’s over 2 million people, and some aid experts had warned of possible famine. Now there is concern about losing the progress that experts reported under the past six weeks of a ceasefire.
Israel is trying to pressure the Hamas militant group to agree to what Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government describes as a US proposal to extend the ceasefire’s first phase instead of beginning negotiations on the far more difficult second phase. In phase two, Hamas would release the remaining living hostages in return for Israel’s withdrawal from Gaza and a lasting ceasefire.
Here’s a look at what Israel’s decision means and the reactions.
No word from the US
The ceasefire’s first phase ended early Sunday. Minutes later, Israel said it supported a new proposal to extend that phase through the Jewish holiday of Passover in mid-April. It called the proposal a US one from Mideast envoy Steve Witkoff. Israel also warned it could resume the war after the first phase if it believes negotiations are ineffective.
Negotiations on the second phase were meant to start a month ago, increasing the uncertainty around the fragile truce. Hamas has insisted that those talks begin.
Later Sunday, Israel announced the immediate cutoff of aid to Gaza.
The Trump administration has not issued a statement about Israel’s announcement or its decision to cut off aid. It’s also not clear when Witkoff will visit the Middle East again. He had been expected to visit last week.
The US under the Biden administration pressed Israel to allow more aid into Gaza, threatening to limit weapons support. Aid organizations repeatedly criticized Israeli restrictions on items entering the small coastal territory, while hundreds of trucks with aid at times waited to enter.
Israel says it has allowed in enough aid. It has blamed shortages on what it called the UN’s inability to distribute it, and accused Hamas militants of siphoning off aid.
For months before the ceasefire, some Palestinians reported limiting meals, searching through garbage and foraging for edible weeds as food supplies ran low.
600 trucks of aid a day
The ceasefire’s first phase took effect on Jan. 19 and allowed a surge of aid into Gaza. An average of 600 trucks with aid entered per day. Those daily 600 trucks of aid were meant to continue entering through all three phases of the ceasefire.
However, Hamas says less than 50 percent of the agreed-upon number of trucks carrying fuel, for generators and other uses, were allowed in. Hamas also says the entry of live animals and animal feed, key for food security, were denied entry.
Still, Palestinians in Gaza were able to stock up on some supplies. “The ceasefire brought some much-needed relief to Gaza, but it was far from enough to cover the immense needs,” the Norwegian Refugee Council said Sunday.
Israel’s announcement came hours after Muslims in Gaza marked the first breaking of the fast during the holy month of Ramadan, with long tables set for collective meals snaking through the rubble of war-destroyed buildings.
The sudden aid cutoff sent Palestinians hurrying to markets. Prices in Gaza “tripled immediately,” Mahmoud Shalabi, the Medical Aid for Palestinians’ deputy director of programs in northern Gaza, told The Associated Press.
Legal implications
Prominent in the immediate criticism of Israel’s aid cutoff were statements calling the decision a violation.
“International humanitarian law is clear: We must be allowed access to deliver vital lifesaving aid,” said the UN humanitarian chief, Tom Fletcher.
Hours after Israel’s announcement, five non-governmental groups asked Israel’s Supreme Court for an interim order barring the state from preventing aid from entering Gaza, claiming the move violates Israel’s obligations under international law and amounts to a war crime: “These obligations cannot be condition on political considerations.”
Last year, the International Criminal Court said there was reason to believe Israel had used “starvation as a method of warfare” when it issued an arrest warrant for Netanyahu. The allegation is also central to South Africa’s case at the International Court of Justice accusing Israel of genocide.
On Sunday, Kenneth Roth, former head of Human Rights Watch, said Israel as an occupying power has an “absolute duty” to facilitate humanitarian aid under the Geneva Conventions, and called Israel’s decision “a resumption of the war-crime starvation strategy” that led to the ICC warrant.


Syria forces deploy in Damascus suburb after deadly unrest: state media

Syria forces deploy in Damascus suburb after deadly unrest: state media
Updated 03 March 2025
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Syria forces deploy in Damascus suburb after deadly unrest: state media

Syria forces deploy in Damascus suburb after deadly unrest: state media
  • Authorities vowed to arrest those involved in Friday’s killing of a defense ministry employee at a checkpoint
  • Another person was killed in clashes on Saturday and nine more wounded

DAMASCUS: The forces of Syria’s new authorities deployed Sunday in a Damascus suburb following deadly clashes with Druze gunmen, state media said amid tensions after Israeli demands to protect the minority group.
Jaramana, a mostly Druze and Christian suburb of the capital, saw a fatal shooting at a checkpoint on Friday, followed a day later by clashes between security forces and local gunmen tasked with protecting the area, according to a war monitor.
On Sunday local security chief Hossam Tahhan said that “our forces have begun deploying” in Jaramana to end the “chaos and illegal checkpoints by outlaw groups,” according to a statement on official news agency SANA.
He vowed to arrest those involved in Friday’s killing of a defense ministry employee at a checkpoint, saying the culprits had “refused” to hand themselves in.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitor said another person was killed in clashes on Saturday and nine more wounded.
Restoring and maintaining security across Syria remains one of the most pressing challenges for the new authorities after Bashar Assad’s December overthrow.
Adding to tensions, Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz on Saturday issued a warning to the new Islamist-led authorities not “to harm the Druze,” who also live in Lebanon, Israel and the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights.
Jaramana resident Salah Abdulrazak Al-Amed, 56, called the Israeli remarks “inflammatory and rash statements” that aimed to “polarize sections of the people.”
Issa Abdulhaq, 53, said that “Israel can declare whatever it wants... They are just talking to themselves.”
The Druze, who make up about three percent of Syria’s population, largely stayed on the sidelines of the country’s war.
Tahhan said there was “great cooperation” from Jaramana residents on bringing the suburb under the control of the new authorities.
Druze leaders in Jaramana had said in a statement that they would “withdraw protection from all offenders and outlaws,” pledging to hand over anyone proven responsible for the latest violence “to face justice.”
Jaramana was one of the first areas where residents, on the eve of Assad’s fall, toppled a statue of his father, former President Hafez Assad.


Outrage as Israel cuts off Gaza aid to pressure Hamas to accept new ceasefire proposal

Outrage as Israel cuts off Gaza aid to pressure Hamas to accept new ceasefire proposal
Updated 02 March 2025
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Outrage as Israel cuts off Gaza aid to pressure Hamas to accept new ceasefire proposal

Outrage as Israel cuts off Gaza aid to pressure Hamas to accept new ceasefire proposal
  • The International Criminal Court said there was reason to believe Israel had used “starvation as a method of warfare” when it issued an arrest warrant for Netanyahu last year
  • UN humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher called Israel’s decision “alarming,” noting that international humanitarian law makes clear that aid access must be allowed

TEL AVIV, Israel: Israel faced sharp criticism as it stopped the entry of all food and other supplies into Gaza on Sunday and warned of “additional consequences” for Hamas if a fragile ceasefire wasn’t extended.
Mediators Egypt and Qatar accused Israel of violating humanitarian law by using starvation as a weapon.
The ceasefire’s first phase saw a surge in humanitarian aid after months of growing hunger. Hamas accused Israel of trying to derail the next phase Sunday hours after its first phase had ended and called Israel’s decision to cut off aid “a war crime and a blatant attack” on a truce that took a year of negotiations before taking hold in January.

Trucks carrying humanitarian aid line up on the Egyptian side of the Rafah border crossing with the Gaza Strip on March 2, 2025, after Israel suspended the entry of supplies into the Palestinian enclave. (AFP)

In the second phase, Hamas could release dozens of remaining hostages in return for an Israeli pullout from Gaza and a lasting ceasefire. Negotiations on the second phase were meant to start a month ago but haven’t begun.
Israel said Sunday that a new US proposal calls for extending the ceasefire’s first phase through Ramadan — the Muslim holy month that began over the weekend — and the Jewish Passover holiday, which ends on April 20.
Under that proposal, Hamas would release half the hostages on the first day and the rest when an agreement is reached on a permanent ceasefire, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said. The militants currently hold 59 hostages, 35 of them believed to be dead.
The US had no immediate comment. Netanyahu said Israel is fully coordinated with the Trump administration and the ceasefire will only continue as long as Hamas keeps releasing hostages.
Saying the ceasefire has saved countless lives, the International Committee of the Red Cross said that “any unraveling of the forward momentum created over the last six weeks risks plunging people back into despair.”
UN humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher called Israel’s decision “alarming,” noting that international humanitarian law makes clear that aid access must be allowed. Medical charity MSF accused Israel of using aid as a bargaining chip, calling that “unacceptable” and “outrageous.”
Five non-governmental groups asked Israel’s Supreme Court for an interim order barring the state from preventing aid from entering Gaza, claiming the move violates Israel’s obligations under international law: “These obligations cannot be condition on political considerations.”
The war has left most of Gaza’s population of over 2 million dependent on international aid. About 600 aid trucks had entered daily since the ceasefire began on Jan. 19, easing fears of famine raised by international experts.
But residents said prices shot up as word of the closure spread.
From the heavily destroyed Jabaliya urban refugee camp, Fayza Nassar said the closure would worsen dire conditions.
“There will be famine and chaos,” she said.
Hamas warned that any attempt to delay or cancel the ceasefire agreement would have “humanitarian consequences” for the hostages. The only way to free them is through the existing deal, the group said.
Families of hostages again pressed Israel’s government.
“Postponing the negotiation on the deal for everyone’s (release) can’t happen,” Lishay Miran-Lavi, wife of hostage Omri Miran, said in Tel Aviv. “Hostages don’t have time to wait for an ideal deal.”
Israel was accused of blocking aid throughout the war
Israel imposed a siege on Gaza in the war’s opening days and only eased it under US pressure. UN agencies and aid groups accused Israel of not facilitating enough aid during 15 months of war.
The International Criminal Court said there was reason to believe Israel had used “starvation as a method of warfare” when it issued an arrest warrant for Netanyahu last year. The allegation is also central to South Africa’s case at the International Court of Justice accusing Israel of genocide.
Israel has denied the accusations. It says it has allowed in enough aid and blamed shortages on what it called the UN’s inability to distribute it. It also accused Hamas of siphoning off aid — an allegation that Netanyahu repeated Sunday.
Kenneth Roth, former head of Human Rights Watch, said Israel as an occupying power has an “absolute duty” to facilitate humanitarian aid under the Geneva Conventions, and called Israel’s decision “a resumption of the war-crime starvation strategy” that led to the ICC warrant.
The war began when Hamas-led militants stormed into southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and taking 251 hostage.
Israel’s offensive has killed over 48,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry. It says more than half of those killed were women and children. It does not specify how many of the dead were combatants.
Israeli bombardment pounded large areas of Gaza to rubble and displaced some 90 percent of the population.