France could recognize Palestinian state ‘in June’: Macron

France’s President Emmanuel Macron speaks in front of humanitarian aid destined to Gaza, at the Egyptian Red Crescent warehouse in Arish, Egypt, April 8, 2025. (Reuters)
France’s President Emmanuel Macron speaks in front of humanitarian aid destined to Gaza, at the Egyptian Red Crescent warehouse in Arish, Egypt, April 8, 2025. (Reuters)
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France could recognize Palestinian state ‘in June’: Macron

France’s President Emmanuel Macron speaks in front of humanitarian aid destined to Gaza.
  • “We must move toward recognition, and we will do so in the coming months,” Macron said
  • Formal recognition by Paris of a Palestinian state would mark a major policy switch and risk antagonizing Israel

PARIS: France plans to recognize a Palestinian state within months and could make the move at a UN conference in New York in June on settling the Israel-Palestinian conflict, President Emmanuel Macron said Wednesday.
“We must move toward recognition, and we will do so in the coming months,” Macron, who this week visited Egypt, told France 5 television.
“Our aim is to chair this conference with Saudi Arabia in June, where we could finalize this movement of mutual recognition (of a Palestinian state) by several parties,” he added.
“I will do it (...) because I believe that at some point it will be right and because I also want to participate in a collective dynamic, which must also allow all those who defend Palestine to recognize Israel in turn, which many of them do not do,” he added.
Such recognition would allow France “to be clear in our fight against those who deny Israel’s right to exist — which is the case with Iran — and to commit ourselves to collective security in the region,” he added.
France has long championed a two-state solution to the Israel-Palestinian conflict, including after the October 7, 2023 attack by Palestinian militants Hamas on Israel.
But formal recognition by Paris of a Palestinian state would mark a major policy switch and risk antagonizing Israel which insists such moves by foreign states are premature.
In Egypt, Macron held summit talks with President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi and Jordan’s King Abdullah II.


Israel’s Netanyahu meets new CIA chief in Jerusalem

Israel’s Netanyahu meets new CIA chief in Jerusalem
Updated 14 sec ago
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Israel’s Netanyahu meets new CIA chief in Jerusalem

Israel’s Netanyahu meets new CIA chief in Jerusalem
JERUSALEM: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met on Wednesday with CIA chief John Ratcliffe in Jerusalem, a statement from the premier’s office said.
“Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met Wednesday evening with the head of the American Central Intelligence Agency John Ratcliffe, along with the head of the Mossad, Dadi (David) Barnea,” the statement said, days before the US is due to hold nuclear talks with Iran and amid continued attempts to revive a Gaza ceasefire.
Netanyahu returned from Washington on Wednesday morning following a meeting in the White House where President Donald Trump made a shock announcement that the US was starting direct, high-level talks with Iran over its nuclear program this coming Saturday.
Following the announcement, however, Netanyahu said that “the military option” would become “inevitable” if talks between Washington and Tehran dragged on.
“We agree that Iran will not have nuclear weapons,” Netanyahu said in a video statement ahead of his return to Israel.
“This can be done in an agreement, but only if... they go in, blow up (Iran’s) facilities, dismantle all the equipment, under American supervision,” he said, adding that if talks drag on, “then the military option becomes inevitable.”
Also during their meeting, the two leaders said that new negotiations were in the works aimed at getting more hostages released from captivity in Gaza.
The United States, Qatar and Egypt brokered a fragile ceasefire whose first phase took effect on January 19.
The ceasefire lasted until March 18, with Israel resuming intense air strikes on Gaza.
The truce had allowed the return of 33 Israeli hostages, eight of whom were dead, in exchange for the release of some 1,800 Palestinians held in Israeli jails.

Palestinian survivor recounts Israeli attack in Gaza that killed 15 aid workers

Palestinian survivor recounts Israeli attack in Gaza that killed 15 aid workers
Updated 1 min 15 sec ago
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Palestinian survivor recounts Israeli attack in Gaza that killed 15 aid workers

Palestinian survivor recounts Israeli attack in Gaza that killed 15 aid workers
  • The incident has sparked international condemnation and renewed scrutiny over the risks facing aid workers in Gaza

RAFAH, Palestinian Territories: Gaza medic Mundhir Abed feared for his life as Israeli forces opened fire on a convoy of rescuers near Rafah last month, killing 15 of his colleagues in a brazen assault.
Abed, 45, was the only survivor of the attack on March 23, in which medics from the Palestine Red Crescent Society and Gaza’s civil defense agency were gunned down as they responded to urgent calls for help following an Israeli air strike.
“I was terrified they would kill me,” Abed, a medic from the Palestine Red Crescent Society, told AFP.
He had been in the first ambulance sent to the area after distress calls came in from residents. What followed, he said, was a sudden and violent ambush.
Still visibly shaken, Abed recalled being with driver Mustafa Al-Khawaja and paramedic Ezzedine Shaat — both now dead — as their ambulance, sirens blaring and lights flashing, drove toward the strike site.
“As soon as we reached the area, sudden and heavy gunfire from Israeli soldiers directly hit the vehicle,” he said.
“I dropped to the floor in the back of the vehicle to shield myself. Then I heard no more sounds from my colleagues — only the rattle of death.”
Abed said he panicked as the gunfire continued and was unable to use his phone. Then, he said, he heard voices speaking Hebrew.
“The vehicle door was opened, and there were armed Israeli special forces in full military gear. They pulled me out of the vehicle,” Abed said.
“They forced me to the ground, face down, stripped me completely, interrogated me, and beat me with their weapons on my back, chest and feet.”
He said he caught a glimpse of fellow paramedic Asaad Al-Mansoura.
“He was stripped of his clothes, kneeling, blindfolded,” Abed said. “After that I didn’t see him again and I don’t know his fate.”
Mansoura remains missing.
International condemnation
The incident has sparked international condemnation and renewed scrutiny over the risks facing aid workers in Gaza, where war has raged since Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attack on Israel triggered an Israeli military campaign.
A military official told journalists that troops were firing at “terrorists.”
Two hours after the initial attack, the Israeli military said its forces received a report about a convoy “moving in the dark in a suspicious way toward them” without headlights, prompting further fire from a distance.
“They thought they had an encounter with terrorists,” the official said.
But the Red Crescent released mobile phone footage recovered from one of the slain medics that appeared to contradict the army’s initial account. The video shows ambulances moving with headlights and emergency lights clearly switched on.
Abed said that when a second team from Gaza’s civil defense arrived to assist after the initial strike, they too came under fire.
After collecting his personal information, he said Israeli soldiers ordered him to assist them.

I saw Israeli tanks surrounding the area, and quadcopter drones flying overhead. The bombing was terrifying

Mundhir Abed, Palestinian medic

“One of them untied my hands, gave me a vest and a pair of pants, and ordered me to help them,” he recounted.
He was taken to a group of displaced civilians nearby.
“I saw Israeli tanks surrounding the area, and quadcopter drones flying overhead. The bombing was terrifying,” he said.
Soldiers ordered him to calm the civilians and separate them — men on one side, women and children on the other.
Muhammad Al-Mughayyir, head of logistics at the Gaza civil defense agency, said his team had rushed to the scene after receiving a distress call from Red Crescent staff whose vehicle had been struck.
Within 15 minutes, the civil defense agency lost contact with its own team.
It wasn’t until March 27 that the first body, of Anwar Al-Attar who led the civil defense unit, was found.
Search crews recovered the remaining bodies three days later. Some had been handcuffed and buried in the sand, according to the Red Crescent.
Israel’s army chief, Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir, has ordered an internal inquiry, the military said.
Whatever the outcome, Abed says he will never forget what he lived through.
“It’s a day I’ll never forget because of the torment I witnessed and lived through,” he said.


UN, US warn of increasing Daesh activity in Syria

The UN and US have warned that Daesh is increasing its activities in Syria. (File/AFP)
The UN and US have warned that Daesh is increasing its activities in Syria. (File/AFP)
Updated 13 min 14 sec ago
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UN, US warn of increasing Daesh activity in Syria

The UN and US have warned that Daesh is increasing its activities in Syria. (File/AFP)
  • Terror group could try to free fighters from prison camps: Experts
  • American troop numbers in the country have increased

LONDON: The UN and US have warned that Daesh is increasing its activities in Syria, raising fears that it could try to free thousands of fighters currently held in prison camps run by Syrian-Kurdish forces.

The US has sent troops to Syria in a bid to help stabilize the situation, nearly doubling the size of its presence in the country.

Up to 10,000 Daesh fighters, as well as 40,000 of their relatives, are incarcerated in the camps in northeast Syria.

“The crown jewel for the Islamic State (Daesh) is still the prisons and camps,” Colin Clarke, head of research for the Soufan Group, a global intelligence and security firm, told the New York Times.

“That’s where the experienced, battle-hardened fighters are,” he said. “In addition to whatever muscle they add to the group, if those prisons are open, the pure propaganda value” would serve Daesh’s recruitment efforts for months, Clarke added.

It is thought that the recent upheaval caused by the collapse of the Assad regime has provided Daesh with an opportunity to expand its operations in Syria.

US intelligence experts fear that the group could now use this as a springboard to sow instability across the Middle East.

President Donald Trump, however, has voiced doubts about America’s need for a permanent military presence in Syria.

It was hoped that the successor government to the Assad regime would provide a dependable partner to the US, but the outbreak of sectarian violence in parts of Syria last month has raised concerns about how much control it has over the country.

Despite its defeat by 2020, Daesh, which at one point controlled a vast swathe of territory across Syria and Iraq, has continued to spread its propaganda, having shot to prominence for its violence and repression, as well as a series of terror attacks in Europe.

Last year, the group orchestrated high-profile attacks in Iran, Pakistan and Russia. A US Defense Department official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told the NYT that Daesh claimed 294 attacks in 2024, up from 121 the year before.

The committee established by the UN to monitor Daesh said it believed around 400 attacks were committed by the group last year.

Prison breaks are not unprecedented. In 2022, nearly 400 people escaped after Daesh attacked a facility in Hasaka, which required US intervention to repel.

A recent UN report revealed that Daesh fighters had escaped from Syria’s largest prison camp, Al-Hol, during the fall of the Assad regime.


Iraq, US sign deal on projects including power plants

Iraq, US sign deal on projects including power plants
Updated 09 April 2025
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Iraq, US sign deal on projects including power plants

Iraq, US sign deal on projects including power plants
  • Another MOU between Iraq’s Ministry of Electricity and US company UGT Renewables will establish solar energy project

DUBAI: Iraq and the United States signed on Wednesday a memorandum of understanding for projects in the Gulf country, including 24,000 megawatts of power plants, the Iraqi prime minister’s media office said.
Another MOU has been inked between Iraq’s Ministry of Electricity and US company UGT Renewables to establish an integrated solar energy project with a capacity of 3,000 MW, the media office said in a statement.
US President Donald Trump’s administration last month rescinded a sanctions waiver that since 2018 has allowed Iraq to pay Iran for electricity as Washington presses on with its “maximum pressure” campaign against Tehran.
Iraq, OPEC’s second-largest producer after Saudi Arabia, uses Iranian power imports to generate electricity and has been under pressure from the US to reduce its reliance on power and gas imports from Iran.


Sudan FM expresses disapproval at exclusion from UK conference for resolving country’s civil war

Sudan FM expresses disapproval at exclusion from UK conference for resolving country’s civil war
Updated 09 April 2025
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Sudan FM expresses disapproval at exclusion from UK conference for resolving country’s civil war

Sudan FM expresses disapproval at exclusion from UK conference for resolving country’s civil war
  • Rapid Support Forces, who are locked in a deadly struggle with the Sudanese Armed Forces, have also been excluded from the conference
  • UK, along with conference co-hosts Germany and France, is bringing together foreign ministers from nearly 20 countries

LONDON: Sudan’s Foreign Minister Ali Youssef has expressed his disapproval, via a letter to UK Foreign Secretary David Lammy, at his exclusion from a UK-hosted conference aimed at resolving the African country’s prolonged civil war.

The Rapid Support Forces, who are locked in a deadly struggle with the Sudanese Armed Forces, have also been excluded from the conference.

Instead, the UK, along with conference co-hosts Germany and France, is bringing together foreign ministers from nearly 20 countries, and organizations, in an attempt to establish a group that can drive the warring factions in Sudan closer towards peace.

The conference at Lancaster House in London on April 15 comes on the second anniversary of the start of a civil war that has led to the world’s biggest humanitarian crisis, but has been persistently left at the bottom of the global list of diplomatic priorities. Half of Sudan’s population are judged to be desperately short of food, with 11 million people internally displaced.

The initiative holds risks for Lammy, since it may require him to place pressure on some of the UK’s Middle Eastern allies to make good on their promises to no longer arm the warring parties.

A harsh spotlight is also very likely to fall in London on the impact of USAID cuts on the provision of humanitarian aid in Sudan as well as the withdrawal of funding by the US from academic groups that have been monitoring war crimes and the build-up of famine.

NGOs such as Human Rights Watch are also urging the ministerial conference to emphasize the importance of civilian protection, independent of a ceasefire.

At an event previewing the conference, Kate Ferguson, the co-director of the NGO Protection Approaches, said: “The conference comes at a critical moment for civilians in Sudan as areas of control under various armed forces rapidly evolve and civilians face an increasing spectrum of varied attack.”

She added: “A new vehicle is needed to take forward civilian protection. This is a moment here to create something new that is desperately needed — whether that is a coalition of conscience or a contact group.”

Ferguson added that “citizens were facing an unimaginable triple threat of armed conflict, identity-based atrocity crimes and humanitarian catastrophe.”