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Two reporters, third person killed in rocket strike near Lebanon-Israel border – state media

Beirut (Reuters) – Two journalists working for a Lebanon-based TV channel and a third person were killed by a rocket strike near Lebanon’s border with Israel on Tuesday, the Lebanese state news agency reported.

The agency said the incident took place near the town of Tir Harfa, about a mile from the Israeli frontier.

Lebanon’s Al Mayadeen TV, which the two killed reporters were working for, said Israel had carried out the attack and deliberately targeted the journalists.

Israel’s military did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Fighting between Israel and Iran-backed Lebanese group Hezbollah broke out after Hezbollah’s Palestinian ally Hamas launched an attack on Israel on Oct. 7.

The border violence has escalated, raising Western fears of a widening war in the Middle East that could draw in both the United States and Iran.

It is the worst violence at the border since Israel and Hezbollah fought a war in 2006 and has so far killed more than 70 Hezbollah fighters, 13 Lebanese civilians, seven Israeli troops and three Israeli civilians.

Seized Galaxy Leader ship in Yemen’s Hodeidah port area -owner

London (Reuters) – The Galaxy Leader commercial ship was “illegally boarded by military personnel via a helicopter” on Nov. 19 and is now in the Hodeidah port area in Yemen, the vessel’s owner said on Monday.

“All communications were subsequently lost with the vessel,” Isle of Man registered Galaxy Maritime Ltd, owner of the pure car carrier Galaxy Leader, said in a statement.

“The company, as a shipping concern, will not be commenting further on the political or geopolitical situation.”

Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthis released video footage on Monday showing armed men dropping from a helicopter and seizing a cargo ship in the southern Red Sea.

The United States denounced the ship’s seizure as a breach of international law and demanded the immediate release of the vessels and its crew.

“The Houthi seizure of the motor vessel Galaxy Leader in the Red Sea is a flagrant violation of international law,” U.S. State Department spokeman Matthew Miller told a briefing. “We demand the immediate release of the ship and its crew and we will consult with our allies and U.N. partners as to appropriate next steps.”

The Bahamas-flagged Galaxy Leader’s crew is made up of nationals from Bulgaria, Ukraine, the Philippines, Mexico and Romania, Galaxy Maritime said. The vessel is chartered by Japan’s Nippon Yusen.

“Owners and managers believe the seizure of this vessel represents a gross violation of freedom of passage for the world fleet and a serious threat to international trade,” Galaxy Maritime said.

It added that the “key concern at this time is the safety and security of the 25 crew members currently being held by the perpetrators of this criminal act”.

Two ships divert course away from Red Sea area after vessel seized by Houthis

London (Reuters) – Two commercial ships that diverted their course in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden were connected to the same maritime group whose vessel was seized by Yemen’s Houthis, according to shipping data and British maritime security company Ambrey.

Israel on Sunday said the Houthis had seized a British-owned, Japanese-operated cargo ship in the southern Red Sea, describing the incident as an “Iranian act of terrorism” with consequences for international maritime security.

The Houthis, an ally of Tehran, confirmed that they had seized a ship in that area but described it as Israeli.

Japan’s top government spokesperson on Monday confirmed the capture of the Nippon Yusen-operated ship Galaxy Leader, adding that Japan was appealing to the Houthis while seeking the help of Saudi, Omani and Iranian authorities to work toward the swift release of the vessel and its crew.

Two other ships also listed as commercially managed by Ray Car Carriers, Glovis Star and Hermes Leader, diverted their sailing routes on Sunday, Ambrey said on Monday.

The Hermes Leader had set a course to sail south of Nishtun in Yemen when it diverted its journey.

“The vessel continued to sail back to where it had come from, providing a new AIS destination as Hambantota, Sri Lanka,” Ambrey said. “The vessel incurred a minimum four-day business disruption and sailed an additional 1,876 nautical miles.”

The Glovis Star drifted for a number of hours in the Red Sea before continuing its journey, AIS ship tracking data showed on Monday.

Isle of Man registered Galaxy Maritime Ltd, which is the registered owner of the Galaxy Leader, said in a statement on Monday that the vessel “was illegally boarded by military personnel via a helicopter” on Nov 19.

When asked about the other two vessels diverting, a company spokesperson said it was not commenting further on “political issues”.

Houthi leadership last week said their forces would make further attacks on Israel and they could target Israeli ships in the Red Sea and the Bab al-Mandeb Strait.

U.S. maritime administration MARAD in an advisory said the Galaxy Leader had been hijacked approximately 50 miles west of the Houthi-controlled port of Hodeidah, adding that ships should “exercise caution when transiting this area.”

“We saw yesterday a new record – for the first time we saw (an) official announcement of pirates taking over a ship on the high seas, which I think is a major threat to international law and order,” Israeli President Isaac Herzog said in comments on Monday, referring to the Galaxy Leader.

Israeli Banks, Netanyahu Facilitating Funds to Hamas, Claims Former Saudi Intelligence Chief

Manama – Israel has been supporting Hamas and the Israeli banks allowed Qatari money to Hamas, without anybody accounting for that, claims Former Saudi Intelligence Chief Turki Al-Faisal at the IISS Manama Dialogue 2023.

During his speech, Al-Faisal claimed that Israel had been providing support to Hamas, a militant group operating in the Gaza Strip. He further alleged that neighboring Qatar had been sending financial aid to Gaza, with the funds flowing through an Israeli bank without adequate oversight or accountability.

Prince Al-Faisal said, “Israel has been supporting Hamas, and our neighboring Qatar has been sending money to Gaza. And it was Israeli bank that allowing that money to get to Hamas, without anybody accounting for that, where that money is going and who’s going to receive it”.

According to Al-Faisal, this lack of transparency raises concerns about the destination and recipients of the money.

The former Saudi intelligence chief’s allegations of Israeli support for Hamas, if proven true, would have significant implications for the regional dynamics and the prospects of peace in the Middle East.

Prince Al-Faisal also directed criticism towards Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, holding him responsible for the deteriorating situation in Gaza. He accused Netanyahu of arrogance and a failure to acknowledge the realities on the ground, suggesting that the Israeli leader’s actions had backfired.

“If you all are looking for someone to blame for what is happening in Gaza. We can equally say, Israel is to blame for that, and particularly Mr. Netanyahu, his arrogance and his blindness to reality. He thought he was outsmarting everybody. Alas he has been proven wrong”, he said.

Expressing his hopes for the Israeli public, Prince Al-Faisal urged them not to reelect Netanyahu or choose a leader who might be even more detrimental to the peace process.

Prince said, “I hope Israeli public will not put him back in office or choose someone even more awful than he, if there is election in Israel”.

The Israeli public will now face the decision to either reelect Benjamin Netanyahu or choose an alternative leader who can navigate the challenges of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and address the concerns raised by figures like Prince Al-Faisal.

The IISS Manama Dialogue, an annual security conference held in Bahrain, serves as a platform for policymakers, experts, and officials to discuss regional security challenges and explore potential solutions.

First images from Indian tunnel show workers trapped for nine days

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Silkyara (Reuters) – The first images emerged on Tuesday of 41 men trapped for more than a week in a highway tunnel in the Indian Himalayas, showing them standing in the confined space and communicating with rescue workers.

The men have been stuck in the 4.5-km (3-mile) tunnel in Uttarakhand state since it caved in early on Nov. 12 and are safe, authorities said, with access to light, oxygen, food, water and medicines.

They have not said what caused the cave-in, but the region is prone to landslides, earthquakes and floods. Efforts to bring out the 41 men have been slowed by snags in drilling through the debris in the mountainous terrain.

A 30-second video provided by authorities showed about a dozen of the trapped men standing in a semi-circle in front of the camera, wearing helmets and construction worker jackets over their clothes against the backdrop of the lights in the tunnel.

A rescue worker outside could be heard telling the men to present themselves before the camera one by one, to confirm their identities on the walkie-talkie gear that had been sent in.

The video was shot through a medical endoscopy camera that was pushed through a second, wider pipeline of 6 inches (15 cm) in diameter, drilled through the debris on Monday, authorities said.

In the clip, the trapped men appeared to be doing fine, answering that they were all right in response to queries about their well-being, said one official in the rescue control room who spoke to Reuters on condition of anonymity.

Advertisement · Scroll to continueA rescue mission is currently underway at the Silkyara tunnel in Uttarakhand to free 41 workers who are stuck inside following a landslide.

Rescuers are set on Tuesday to resume drilling horizontally through a 60-metre (195-ft) pile of debris to push through a pipe large enough for the trapped men to crawl out.

Drilling had been suspended on Friday after a machine snag and fears of a fresh collapse.

Authorities are simultaneously working on five other plans to pull out the workers, including drilling vertically from the top of the mountain.

Abhishek Sharma, a psychiatrist sent to the site by the state government, said he had asked the 41 men to walk within the 2-km (1.2-mile) area where they are confined, do light yoga exercises and talk regularly among themselves to keep occupied.

“Sleep is very important for them … and as of now they have been sleeping well and not reported any difficulties in sleeping,” Sharma told Reuters, adding that the men were in good spirits and keen to emerge soon.

Another doctor at the site, Prem Pokhriyal, said the men had been asked to avoid heavy workouts that could boost accumulation of carbon dioxide gas in the confined space as they breathe out.

The trapped men are low-wage workers, most of them from poor states in India’s north and east.

“He said he is doing fine,” Sunita Hembrom, the sister-in-law of one of the workers trapped in the tunnel, Surendra Kisko, told reporters after she spoke to him.

“He said, ‘Take care of yourselves, the children and parents. Just tell us what they are doing to get us out of here.'”

In Beijing, Arab and Muslim ministers urge end to Gaza war

Beijing (Reuters) – Arab and Muslim ministers called on Monday for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, as their delegation visited Beijing on the first leg of a tour to push for an end to hostilities and to allow humanitarian aid into the devastated Palestinian enclave.

The delegation, which is set to meet officials representing each of the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council, is also piling pressure on the West to reject Israel’s justification of its actions against Palestinians as self-defence.

The officials holding meetings with China’s top diplomat Wang Yi on Monday are from Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Egypt, Indonesia, Palestine and the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, among others.

“We are here to send a clear signal: that is we must immediately stop the fighting and the killings, we must immediately deliver humanitarian supplies to Gaza,” said Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud.

The extraordinary joint Islamic-Arab summit in Riyadh this month also urged the International Criminal Court to investigate “war crimes and crimes against humanity that Israel is committing” in the Palestinian territories.

Saudi Arabia has sought to press the United States and Israel for an end to hostilities in Gaza, and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the kingdom’s de facto ruler, gathered Arab and Muslim leaders to reinforce that message.

About 240 hostages were taken during Hamas’s deadly cross-border rampage into Israel on Oct. 7, which prompted Israel to invade the Gaza Strip with the intention of eradicating the Islamist militant group.

Gaza’s Hamas-run government said at least 13,000 Palestinians have been killed in Israeli bombardments since then, including at least 5,500 children.

Israeli ambassador to Beijing Irit Ben-Abba told foreign reporters at a briefing on Monday that she hoped there would not be “any statements from this visit about a ceasefire, now is not the time.”

She said that Israel hoped that the delegation would talk about hostages captured by Hamas “and call for their immediate release without preconditions,” adding that the parties involved should talk together about Egypt’s “role in facilitating humanitarian assistance.”

‘Brother And Friend’

China’s Wang said Beijing was a “good friend and brother of Arab and Muslim countries,” adding it has “always firmly supported the just cause of the Palestinian people to restore their legitimate national rights and interests.”

Since the start of hostilities, China’s foreign ministry has repeatedly stopped short of condemning Hamas, instead calling for de-escalation and for Israel and Palestine to pursue a “two-state solution” for an independent Palestine.

Since the end of China’s nearly three years of COVID lockdowns, Xi has launched a diplomatic push aimed at countering the United States and its allies, who he says seek to contain and suppress his country.

Beijing has deepened alliances with non-Western led multilateral groups such as the BRICS bloc of nations while strengthening ties with countries in the Middle East and the Global South.

On Monday, Wang added China will work to “quell the fighting in Gaza as soon as possible, alleviate the humanitarian crisis and promote an early, comprehensive, just and lasting settlement of the Palestinian issue.”

China’s special envoy on the Middle East, Zhai Jun, has engaged officials from Israel and the Palestinian Authority – which governs in the occupied West Bank – as well as the Arab League and EU in the last year to discuss a two-state solution and recognition for Palestine at the United Nations.

Iran’s Khamenei urges Muslim states to cut political ties with Israel for ‘limited period’

Dubai (Reuters) – Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei appealed to Muslim states with political ties with Israel to at least cut them for “a limited time”, state media reported on Sunday, weeks after he called for an Islamic oil and food embargo on Israel.

“Some Islamic governments have condemned Israeli crimes in assemblies while some have not. This is unacceptable,” Khamenei said before reiterating that the main task of Islamic governments should be to cut off Israel from energy and goods.

“Islamic governments should at least cut off political ties to Israel for a limited time,” Khamenei added.

During a joint summit between members of the Organisation for Islamic Cooperation and the Arab League in Saudi Arabia’s capital on Nov. 11, Muslim states did not agree to impose wide-ranging sanctions on Israel, as requested by Iran’s President Ebrahim Raisi.

Khamenei made his latest comments while attending an exhibition showcasing the “latest achievements” of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ Aerospace Force, including the Fattah 2, a new version of what is said to be Iran’s first hypersonic missile.

Iran unveiled what it said was its first domestically made hypersonic ballistic missile in June, and said it could bypass the most advanced anti-ballistic missile systems of the United States and Israel.

Jordan’s king says immediate ceasefire in Gaza needed to avert humanitarian catastrophe

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Amman (Reuters) – Jordan’s King Abdullah said on Sunday the international community should push for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza to stop a humanitarian catastrophe caused by what he termed Israel’s “ugly war against civilians”.

In remarks made during a meeting with European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen, the monarch said global powers should force Israel to comply with international law to protect civilians and ensure Israel heeds calls to allow uninterrupted flow of aid into the enclave.

Israel launched its offensive after the militant Hamas groups’ Oct. 7 rampage inside Israel.

But Abdullah said Israel was not acting in self-defence, as it maintains, by “indiscriminate strikes” that killed thousands of civilians risking a wider conflict that would fuel radicalism for years to come.

The monarch, who has lobbied Western leaders since the start of Israel’s military campaign, has criticized the West’s unwillingness so far to call for an end to hostilities, saying Palestinians lives appeared to matter less than Israelis.

“Gazan families being bombed out of their homes are victims of this collective punishment, with no place to take shelter. No hospital, no school and no U.N. building is safe any longer,” the monarch said in an op-ed last Tuesday published in the Washington Post.

Abdullah said only a sovereign Palestinian state on land that Israel had captured in the 1967 Arab-Israeli war, where Palestinians would live in dignity alongside Israel, would bring real peace.

“An Israeli leadership that is unwilling to take the path of peace on the basis of the two-state solution will not be able to provide its people the security they need,” the monarch said in the article.

Separately, Jordan’s Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi left on Sunday to China in the first leg of a tour by a ministerial delegation set up by the Arab-Islamic summit that also includes Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Indonesia, Turkey and Palestine, among others.

The delegation, who will meet senior officials representing the permanent members of the U.N. Security Council, will pile pressure on Western powers still resisting a call for an immediate ceasefire, officials said.

“The aim is to show the humanitarian catastrophe that the war is creating and to expose the brutal Israeli crimes against civilians and repeated attacks on civilian targets and hospitals,” said Sufain al Qudah, spokesperson of the Jordanian foreign ministry.

Jerusalem Christians rally round Armenian Church over land deal

Jerusalem (Reuters) – The heads of the Christian Churches in Jerusalem issued a rare joint appeal at the weekend, warning that a contested land deal could erase the centuries-old presence of the Armenian community within the Old City.

The ethnic Armenian community has its own district within the ancient city of Jerusalem under borders drawn by Ottoman rulers – the smallest of the four quarters, which also include highly distinct Muslim, Jewish and Christian neighbourhoods.

However Armenians say they risk being uprooted by a deal to lease about 25% of their area to developers who want to build a luxury hotel on the site.

The deal was signed by the head of the Armenian Church in Jerusalem in July 2021, but members of his community said the first they heard of it was when surveyors started work in the area this year.

He has told his congregation that he was misled and has started legal action to get the contract annulled. The priest who brokered the accord on his behalf was defrocked by the Church Synod in May and he has left Jerusalem.

Despite the legal challenge, bulldozers arrived last week and started tearing up a carpark, which covers some of the contested land. When protesters blocked the work, armed Israeli Jewish settlers turned up in a failed effort to disperse the demonstration.

“The provocations that are being used by the alleged developers to deploy incendiary tactics threaten to erase the Armenian presence in the area, weakening and endangering the Christian presence in the Holy Land,” the Christian leaders wrote, including the heads of the Greek Orthodox and Roman Catholic Churches.

The Armenian community says the investor behind the land lease deal is an Australian-Israeli businessman Danny Rubinstein, who owns a company registered in the United Arab Emirates – Xana Capital Group. A company sign was posted in the parking lot shortly after the surveyors turned up.

Rubinstein did not respond to a request for a comment about the project sent via his Linked-In account.

Parity

By tradition, Armenia was the first kingdom to convert to Christianity as a state religion in 301, and although its Church is much smaller than the Greek Orthodox and Catholic Churches, it has parity of rights at Jerusalem’s Holy Christian sites.

At the heart of their Quarter lies the ornately decorated St. James’s Cathedral, which dates to 420 A.D., strung with precious lamps and often infused with the haunting singing of its black-cowled monks.

The Quarter covers a sixth of walled Jerusalem and houses just 1,000 people, a fraction of the Old City’s 35,000-strong population.

Armenian locals say the land lease project would consume not just their carpark, the largest open space in the Old City, but also their community hall, the patriarch’s garden, the seminary and five family houses.

“The Armenians have been here since the 4th Century, but we now risk being uprooted,” said Hagop Djernazian, 23, a student, who is part of a group guarding the carpark night and day, with barbed wire strung out to try to keep out developers and settlers. “We are having to fight for our existence,” he said.

Daniel Seidemann, an activist Israeli lawyer who closely monitors the spread of Jewish settlers around Jerusalem, said the project was aimed at expanding the footprint of the Jewish Quarter across half the Old City.

Israel captured East Jerusalem, including the Old City, from Jordanian forces in a 1967 war. Israel regards the entire city as its eternal and undivided capital. Palestinians want East Jerusalem as the capital of a future state.

“We are aware of a plan to encircle the outside the Old City with settlement projects. We suspect this Armenia Quarter deal is meant to be a continuation of this plan inside the city walls,” Seidemann told Reuters.

“However, there is so much irregularity surrounding it that there is a good chance the courts will reject it.”

Saudi Arabia Condemns Israeli Bombing of UN-Run School in Gaza

Riyadh – Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs has strongly condemned and denounced the Israeli bombing of a United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine refugees (UNRWA) school in the Gaza Strip.

The Kingdom expressed its condemnation “in the strongest terms” towards the airstrike, according to a report by the Saudi Press Agency.

The head of UNRWA, Philippe Lazzarini, confirmed the strikes on UN-run schools in Gaza, including the Al-Fakhoura school, following reports by the Hamas-run health ministry that at least 50 people had been killed in Jabalia refugee camp.

Lazzarini, deeply disturbed by the events, witnessed the aftermath and shared his shock at the “horrifying images and footage of scores of people killed and injured” in one of UNRWA’s schools, which was serving as a shelter for thousands of displaced individuals.

Taking to X (formerly Twitter) on Saturday, Lazzarini emphasized that such attacks must not become commonplace and called for their immediate cessation. He stated, “These attacks cannot become commonplace, they must stop.”

In response to the announcement, Saudi Arabia’s foreign ministry reiterated the Kingdom’s absolute rejection of the deliberate targeting of civilians. The ministry demanded an immediate ceasefire, emphasizing the importance of protecting civilians and relief facilities, along with their workers.

Furthermore, the Saudi foreign ministry stressed the significance and necessity of activating international mechanisms for holding those responsible accountable in the face of ongoing Israeli violations of international humanitarian law and resolutions endorsed by the international community.

The condemnation by Saudi Arabia reflects the Kingdom’s commitment to upholding the principles of international law and safeguarding the rights and well-being of civilians in conflict zones. The international community continues to urge all parties involved to exercise restraint and work towards a peaceful resolution that ensures the protection of innocent lives and the provision of essential humanitarian assistance to those in need.