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Israel bombs Syria army HQ after warning Damascus to leave Druze alone

Israel bombed the Syrian army’s headquarters in Damascus on Wednesday after warning the Islamist-led government to leave the country’s Druze minority alone, as authorities announced a ceasefire in the community’s southern heartland after deadly sectarian clashes.Syrian government forces entered the majority-Druze city of Sweida on Tuesday with the stated aim of overseeing a ceasefire agreed with Druze community leaders following days of fighting with local Bedouin tribes.However, witnesses reported that the government forces joined with the Bedouin in attacking Druze fighters and civilians in a bloody rampage through the city.The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights war monitor said that the violence in Sweida province since Sunday had left more than 300 people dead, including government forces, local fighters and 27 Druze civilians killed in “summary executions… by members of the defence and interior ministries”.The Syrian presidency vowed to investigate the “heinous acts” in Sweida and to punish “all those proven to be involved”.On Wednesday, state media said a fresh ceasefire had been agreed, announcing “the deployment of security checkpoints” in Sweida city. A previous truce declared on Tuesday appeared to have had little effect on the ground.The fighting was the most serious outbreak of violence in Syria since government forces battled Druze fighters in Sweida province and near Damascus in April and May, leaving more than 100 people dead.The Islamist-led authorities have had strained relations with Syria’s patchwork of religious and ethnic minorities since they toppled longtime leader Bashar al-Assad in December.Israel, which has its own Druze community, has presented itself as a defender of the group, although some analysts say that is a pretext for pursuing its own military goal of keeping Syrian government forces as far from their shared frontier as possible.Following Assad’s fall, the Israeli military took control of the UN-monitored demilitarised zone in the Golan Heights and conducted hundreds of strikes on military targets in Syria.Syrian state TV reported several Israeli strikes on Wednesday near the army and defence ministry headquarters in central Damascus, with Israel’s army saying it had “struck the entrance of the Syrian regime’s military headquarters”.AFP images showed the side of a building in the defence complex in ruins after the strike as smoke billowed over the area.Israel said it had also struck a “military target” in the area of the presidential palace in Damascus.The Syrian health ministry said that at least one person was killed and 18 others wounded in the strikes on Damascus.- ‘Existential battle’ -Turkey, which has backed Syrian interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa’s administration, said “Israel’s attacks on Damascus… constitute an act of sabotage against Syria’s efforts to secure peace, stability and security”.Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz called on Damascus to “leave the Druze in Sweida alone”, later threatening to unleash “painful blows” to “eliminate the forces that attacked the Druze until their full withdrawal” from Syria’s south.Israel said it was sending more troops to the armistice line between the occupied Golan Heights and Syrian-controlled territory.A military official said some troops would be redeployed there from the Gaza Strip, where Israel’s war against Hamas was in its 22nd month.Dozens of people were crossing the heavily fortified Golan frontier, according to an AFP correspondent in Majdal Shams, a mainly Druze town in the Israeli-annexed area.A military statement said Israeli forces were “operating to prevent the infiltration” from Syrian territory and to “safely return the civilians who crossed the border” from the Israeli-controlled side.Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in February that southern Syria must be completely demilitarised, warning that Israel would not accept the presence of forces of the Islamist-led government near territory it controls.The head of the Druze community in Israel, Sheikh Mowafaq Tarif, called the situation “an existential battle for the Druze community”.- Abuses ‘must stop’ -Sporadic gunfire continued to ring out in Sweida on Wednesday, an AFP correspondent reported before the latest ceasefire was announced.The correspondent counted the bodies of around 30 combatants, some in plain clothes and some in military uniform.The Observatory, witnesses and Druze armed groups have said government forces took part in fighting alongside the Bedouin against the Druze.The Syrian defence ministry accused “outlaw groups” of attacking its forces inside the city, saying they are now “continuing to respond to the sources of fire”.The Bedouin and the Druze have been at loggerheads for decades, with the latest violence triggered by the kidnapping of a Druze vegetable merchant, the Observatory said.Since they toppled Assad in December, Syria’s Islamist authorities and their allies have been repeatedly accused of not doing enough to protect the country’s religious and ethnic minorities.The United States, a close ally of Israel, was “talking to both sides, all the relevant sides on this and hopefully we can bring it to a conclusion, but we’re very concerned”, according to Secretary of State Marco Rubio.France said that “the abuses targeting civilians, which we strongly condemn, must stop”, while the European Union urged “all external actors” to “fully respect Syria’s sovereignty”.burs/ami/smw

20 people killed in aid point crush in southern Gaza

At least 20 people were killed in a chaotic crush at an aid centre in southern Gaza on Wednesday, with the site’s operator blaming “agitators” within the crowd and the territory’s civil defence agency attributing the panic to Israeli gunfire.It was the US- and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation’s (GHF) first acknowledgement of deaths at one of its aid centres after weeks of chaotic scenes and near-daily reports of Palestinians being killed nearby while waiting to collect rations. The latest deaths came as Hamas accused Israel of wanting to retain long-term military control of Gaza — a key sticking point in ongoing negotiations aiming to seal a deal for a 60-day ceasefire, the release of hostages and the unfettered flow of much-needed aid.A Palestinian source close to the negotiations told AFP there had been “no progress so far” in the indirect talks, which are now in their second week in Doha.In Gaza’s main southern city of Khan Yunis, the GHF said it understood that 19 of those killed on Wednesday “were trampled and one was stabbed amid a chaotic and dangerous surge”.It said the crush was “driven by agitators”, adding: “We have credible reason to believe that elements within the crowd — armed and affiliated with Hamas — deliberately fomented the unrest”.Gaza’s civil defence agency confirmed at least 20 people were killed in the incident, but blamed it on fire from Israeli troops.Agency spokesman Mahmud Bassal told AFP that thousands had gathered at the scene when “Israeli forces opened fire and used (tear) gas, causing panic and a stampede after aid centre guards closed the main gates in front of the hungry crowd”. The Israeli military did not immediately respond to a request for comment.- ‘Climbing on top of each other’ -AFP footage showed lifeless bodies being taken to Nasser Hospital in Khan Yunis, with some placed on the floor and others on already-bloodied beds. “They fired stun grenades at us and sprayed us with pepper spray,” said Abdullah Alian, who witnessed the crush.”When they saw people starting to die on the ground and people on top of each other suffocating, they opened the gate and people started climbing on top of each other.”Paramedic Ziad Farhat told AFP that after 21 months of devastating war, “there are not enough hospitals for the injured or the martyrs, and there is not enough land for the cemeteries”.”Enough of what is happening, enough of the tragedies that we are living,” he said.The GHF, an officially private effort, began operations on May 26 after Israel had blocked supplies from entering the Gaza Strip for more than two months, sparking warnings of imminent famine.On Tuesday, the UN said it had recorded 875 people killed in Gaza while trying to get food, including 674 “in the vicinity of GHF sites”, since late May.Last week, UN rights office spokeswoman Ravina Shamdasani told reporters that “most of the injuries are gunshot injuries”.The GHF has denied that fatal shootings have occurred in the immediate vicinity of its aid points, and the Israeli army has accused Hamas of firing at civilians, though witnesses have blamed the military.- ‘No progress’ -Hamas is seeking a full Israeli withdrawal from Gaza in the truce negotiations, and last week rejected an Israeli proposal that it said would have kept troops in more than 40 percent of the territory.Israeli public broadcaster Kan on Wednesday quoted a foreign official it did not identify as saying that work was ongoing to revise Israeli pullback maps.But Bassem Naim, a member of Hamas’s political bureau, told AFP: “(Israel) has not yet delivered any new or revised maps regarding military withdrawals”.”What is happening on the ground confirms (Israel’s) intentions and plans to maintain and prolong military control within the Gaza Strip for the long term,” he added. A Palestinian source close to the negotiations told AFP there had been “no progress so far”.”We hope the mediators will succeed in pressuring Israel to offer an acceptable withdrawal map that ensures an actual withdrawal — not merely a redeployment of Israeli military forces — and the entry of aid into the Strip,” the source said.Hamas’s attack on Israel on October 7, 2023 sparked the war in Gaza, and resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, most of them civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures.A total of 251 hostages were taken that day, of whom 49 are still being held, including 27 the Israeli military says are dead.Israel’s retaliatory campaign in Gaza has killed 58,573 Palestinians, mostly civilians, according to the health ministry in the Hamas-run territory.

Britain lifts ban on Pakistani airlines

Britain has lifted restrictions on Pakistani airlines, the UK embassy in Islamabad said on Wednesday, ending a five-year ban on the country’s beleaguered national carrier.Flag carrier Pakistan International Airlines was barred from flying to Britain in June 2020, a month after one of its aircraft plunged into a Karachi street, killing nearly 100 people.The disaster …

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