Tag: Syria

  • US information indicates death of American who disappeared in Syria in 2017

    US information indicates death of American who disappeared in Syria in 2017

    American officials have found strong evidence that a man from the US who went missing in Syria seven years ago has passed away, according to his daughter.

    Maryam Kamalmaz talked to The Associated Press and said that she met with eight important American officials in Washington. They gave her a lot of information about her father, Majd, who is a therapist from Texas and is believed to be dead.

    The officials said they were very confident about her father’s death. She asked if other detained Americans had been rescued in similar situations, and they said no.

    “What else do I need. A lot of important people confirmed to us that he’s really gone. ” Maryam Kamalmaz said there was no way to avoid the truth.

    She said the officials told her that they think her father died many years ago, at the beginning of his time in captivity. In 2020, she was told by officials that they thought he died from a heart problem in 2017, but the family still had hope and US officials kept looking for him.

    She said that they didn’t confirm how trustworthy the information is until this meeting and the different levels of checking it had to go through.

    She did not explain what she learned about being smart.

    Representatives from the White House and the FBI, who look into kidnappings in other countries, did not respond right away to requests for comments on Saturday.

    Majd Kamalmaz went missing in February 2017, when he was 59 years old, while he was traveling in Syria to see an old family member. The FBI said that he was stopped at a checkpoint in Syria and nobody has heard from him since.

    Kamalmaz and other Americans have gone missing in Syria. One of them is Austin Tice, a journalist who disappeared in 2012 at a checkpoint near Damascus. Syria says they are not keeping any Americans as prisoners.

    In 2020, during the end of Donald Trump’s time as president, important officials went to Damascus to have a big meeting to try and get the Americans released. The meeting didn’t go well. The Syrians didn’t show any proof that the person is alive and made demands that US officials thought were not reasonable. US officials are still working to bring Tice back home.

  • Six Canadian kids brought home after being held captive in Syria

    Six Canadian kids brought home after being held captive in Syria

    Six kids from Canada have been brought back home from being held in northeastern Syria, but it’s still not known where their mom is.

    Global Affairs Canada said they are now focused on keeping the children’s information private and making sure they get the help they need to start a new life.

    Lawyer Lawrence Greenspon got a message from Global Affairs on Tuesday saying that the children are safe in Montreal and are getting help from a special clinic.

    He recently said that the mother of the children, who is from Quebec, was not allowed to come back to Canada because of security reasons.

    Greenspon said the woman left al-Roj detention camp, but no one knows where she went.

    The Canadians were in a place where they were being kept with other people from different countries after the fighting in the area was over and the militant group ISIS was removed.

    The Global Affairs statement thanked the Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria for working together despite difficult security conditions.

    We are thankful to the United States for helping bring Canadians back home and for their support during this time.

    In the past, Ottawa helped bring back Canadian women and children from Syria detention.

    But, many Canadian kids and their mothers who are not from Canada are still living in very bad situations. Some Canadian men are also being held in custody.

    A group of people from civil society went to Syrian prison camps last August. They want the Canadian government to help Canadian prisoners in the camps and bring them back to Canada quickly if they want to come back. Delegation members, such as Sen. (Simplify) Delegation members, like Sen. (Simplified) Kim Pate and Alex Neve, who used to work for Amnesty International Canada, asked the government to give temporary permits to allow non-Canadian moms and siblings of Canadian kids to come to Canada.

    The group said Canada is involved in a global human-rights problem by keeping thousands of foreign people in detention, and many of them are kids.

    Neve said on Tuesday that the six new people who came to Canada are safe now. But it’s terrible that their kids had to be separated from their mom.

    Neve, now a senior fellow at the University of Ottawa’s Graduate School of Public and International Affairs, said the government’s claim that her views are too extreme to allow her to come back home is really worrisome. It doesn’t follow the law or human rights standards.

    He said that the group of people helping others met with a family in Syria, and it was clear that they are all very close to each other- the children with their mother and each other- and they depend on each other for support.

  • “I condemn missile attacks by Iran in the strongest possible terms” – Joe Biden

    “I condemn missile attacks by Iran in the strongest possible terms” – Joe Biden

    US President Joe Biden commended American forces, stating they “helped Israel take down nearly all” drones and missiles launched by Iran on Sunday.

    In a statement, he noted that the US had deployed aircraft and warships to the region ahead of the unprecedented attack.

    “I condemn these attacks in the strongest possible terms,” he added.

    Israel reported that Iran launched hundreds of drones and missiles toward its territory, marking the first direct attack from Iranian soil.

    While the majority were intercepted, a small number of projectiles found their targets, including an IDF base in southern Israel. Reports indicate at least one casualty, identified as a young girl, who sustained injuries.

    Earlier, Iran issued a warning that Israel would face consequences for a strike on its consulate in Syria on April 1, resulting in the deaths of seven Iranian officers, including a senior commander. Israel has neither confirmed nor denied its involvement in the incident

    “I’ve just spoken with Prime Minister [Benjamin] Netanyahu to reaffirm America’s ironclad commitment to the security of Israel,” Mr Biden said shortly after the pair held a call.

    “I told him that Israel demonstrated a remarkable capacity to defend against and defeat even unprecedented attacks,” he added.

  • Iran’s foreign minister claims US gave Israel “green light” to assault Syria

    Iran’s foreign minister claims US gave Israel “green light” to assault Syria

    Iran’s foreign minister said that the United States allowed Israel to attack Iran’s consulate in Syria, which led to the deaths of seven Iranian military officials, including two generals.

    Hossein Amirabdollahian said that Iran will retaliate to the attack, which many people think Israel did. This shows that Israel is increasing its attacks on Iranian military officials. Iran supports groups that fight against Israel in Gaza and Lebanon.

    Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah repeated on Monday that his group supports Iran’s military action in response to the attack that killed General. Mohammad Reza Zahedi, a high-ranking military leader in the Iranian Revolutionary Guard’s Quds Force, increased worries about the war spreading to other parts of the Middle East.

    Since the fighting in Gaza started six months ago, there have been more conflicts between Israel and Lebanon’s Hezbollah. It was Hamas, the group in charge of Gaza, that attacked Israel in October. 7 is also supported by Iran and a group of fighters from Iraq who want to attack US military bases and locations in Syria and Iraq.

    Israel often attacks Iranian military leaders and supporters, but Zahedi’s death was the biggest loss for Tehran since a US drone killed Gen. Qassim Soleimani was killed in 2020 in Baghdad.

    “I want to say loudly from here in Damascus that America is responsible for what happened and should be held accountable,” Amirabdollahian said to reporters in Damascus when he met with the Syrian Foreign Minister, Faisal Mekdad, who also criticized the attack and Israel’s actions in Gaza. Amirabdollahian also talked with President Bashar Assad about Gaza and the situation in the region, according to a statement from Assad’s office.

    The foreign minister of Iran said that the US and two European countries did not criticize the attack on the new consular section, which he had just opened earlier that day.

    He said that not speaking out against the attack shows that the US allowed Israel to do this.

    The Biden government is saying they did not know about the airstrike before it happened. Washington is very important for Israel’s military support.

    Israel usually doesn’t admit when it attacks Iranian targets. They did not say anything about the strike in the Syrian capital. But, a spokesperson for the Pentagon named Sabrina Singh said the US believes Israel was responsible.

    At first, Iranian state media said Zahedi was in charge of the Quds Force in Lebanon and Syria until 2016 after the attacks.

    Then, in a speech to the public on Monday, the leader of Hezbollah, Hassan Nasrallah, said that Zahedi was an important person for the Lebanese group, and had worked there for three four-year periods.

    Nasrallah, Syria and other important friends of Iran have said they will continue to support Iran.

    Iran has the right to do it because it is natural. “It’s normal for the Islamic Republic to react to the attack on the consulate,” Nasrallah stated.

    Nasrallah said that Zahedi was involved until 2002, when he supervised Israel’s pullout from southern Lebanon and supported Hezbollah’s growth. During Zahedi’s second term, there was a lot of intense fighting in Syria. Iran and Russia supported Assad in the war against the opposing forces. Zahedi started his last job in 2020 and it ended when he was killed.

    Hezbollah fighters and Israeli soldiers have been fighting on the tense border between Lebanon and Israel since October. On the 8th day after the Hamas attack on southern Israel.

    The leader of Hezbollah said that when the fighting started, Zahedi tried to join their fighters on the front line, but he was not allowed to.

    On Monday, Israel bombed southern Lebanon and killed Ali Ahmad Hussein, a top commander of Hezbollah’s secret Radwan Force. Hezbollah said Hussein died, but didn’t say how or what he did for the group, which is how they usually tell people when their members die.

    Hussein was killed, he was a top fighter, before the Iranian foreign minister visited Syria.

    Israel sees Hezbollah as its biggest and most dangerous enemy right now. They think that Hezbollah has about 150,000 rockets and missiles, some of which are very accurate and can be aimed at any part of Israel. The group has many experienced fighters from the 12-year war in Syria, and they also have various military drones.

    In January, Israeli planes attacked and killed a top Hezbollah commander, Wissam al-Tawil, who had been fighting with the group for a long time and took part in some of its major battles.

    Hezbollah says it will stop shooting rockets when the fighting in Gaza stops and the war between Israel and Hamas is over. Israeli leaders want the Radwan Force to leave the border area so that many Israelis who had to leave can come back home.

    Washington and Paris are working hard to find a peaceful solution to stop the fighting between Lebanon and Israel. They want to avoid another big war between Hezbollah and Israel like the one in 2006.

    The chance of war spreading to Lebanon has made the political tension between Hezbollah and their rival, Lebanese Forces party, even worse.

    On Monday, things got worse when the Lebanese military said that a local leader of the Lebanese Forces was killed. He had been kidnapped the day before in northern Lebanon. The Lebanese Army caught three Syrians who are accused of kidnapping and killing Pascale Suleiman while they were trying to steal his car.

    The Lebanese Forces party questioned the army‘s findings and said they thought it was a political murder.

    In his speech, Nasrallah criticized members of the Christian party and other allies who accused Hezbollah of being involved in the kidnapping. Describing it as “unfounded” and harmful language.

  • Turkey and Syria’s recovery from the February 2023 earthquake: Challenges and achievements

    Turkey and Syria’s recovery from the February 2023 earthquake: Challenges and achievements

    In February 2023, a devastating earthquake struck Turkey and Syria, leaving behind a trail of destruction and heartbreak. As these two neighboring nations embark on the road to recovery, they face a multitude of challenges and have made significant achievements in rebuilding their shattered communities.

    The earthquake, with its epicenter in eastern Turkey, resulted in the loss of thousands of lives and widespread infrastructure damage. With limited resources and a complex geopolitical landscape, both countries are now navigating the daunting task of reconstruction.

    From mobilizing international aid to coordinating local efforts, Turkey and Syria are making strides toward rebuilding homes, schools, and essential utilities. Government agencies, non-profit organizations, and volunteers have come together to offer assistance and support to affected communities.

    However, the road to recovery is far from easy. Challenges such as funding constraints, bureaucratic hurdles, and ensuring the psychological well-being of survivors loom large.

    This article explores the challenges and achievements in Turkey and Syria’s recovery process after the February 2023 earthquake. From understanding the scale of the disaster to examining the innovative solutions implemented, we shed light on the arduous journey towards rebuilding and healing.

    Overview of the Damage Caused by the Earthquake

    The earthquake that struck Turkey and Syria in February 2023 left a devastating impact on both countries. With its epicenter in eastern Turkey, the quake resulted in the loss of thousands of lives and caused extensive damage to infrastructure, including homes, schools, and vital utilities.

    Photo by Doruk Aksel Anıl: Hatay Earthquake

    The affected regions were left in ruins, with entire communities displaced and struggling to cope with the aftermath of the disaster.

    The scale of the destruction was immense, with buildings reduced to rubble, roads and bridges collapsed, and essential services disrupted. The earthquake not only claimed lives but also shattered the social fabric of the affected regions, leaving survivors traumatized and in desperate need of support.

    Challenges in the Recovery Process

    The recovery process in Turkey and Syria has been fraught with numerous challenges. One of the primary hurdles faced by both countries is the lack of adequate funding. Rebuilding entire communities and infrastructure requires substantial financial resources, which are often limited in the aftermath of a disaster.

    Bureaucratic hurdles have also posed significant challenges. The coordination and implementation of recovery efforts involve multiple government agencies, non-profit organizations, and international stakeholders. Streamlining these processes and ensuring effective collaboration can be a complex task, further delaying the recovery process.

    Another critical aspect of the recovery process is addressing the psychological well-being of the survivors. The earthquake left many individuals traumatized, with deep emotional scars that require attention and support. Providing mental health services and counseling to the affected population is crucial in ensuring their long-term well-being and facilitating the healing process.

    Government Response and Initiatives for Recovery

    The governments of Turkey and Syria have taken active steps to address the challenges posed by the earthquake and facilitate the recovery process. Both countries have established dedicated government agencies responsible for coordinating and overseeing the rebuilding efforts.

    In Turkey, the Ministry of Environment and Urbanization has been at the forefront of the recovery process, working closely with local authorities and international organizations. The government has implemented strict building codes and regulations to ensure the construction of earthquake-resistant structures, aiming to minimize the impact of future disasters.

    Syria, despite facing political and economic challenges, has also made progress in its recovery efforts. The Syrian government has prioritized the rehabilitation of critical infrastructure, such as water and electricity networks, to restore essential services to the affected regions. Government-led initiatives have focused on providing temporary shelter, healthcare services, and education facilities to displaced communities.

    International Aid and Support for the Affected Regions

    The international community has played a crucial role in supporting Turkey and Syria’s recovery process. Various countries, non-governmental organizations, and international bodies have extended financial assistance, technical expertise, and humanitarian aid to the affected regions.

    International aid has been instrumental in addressing immediate needs, such as emergency medical assistance, food, and clean water. Additionally, foreign governments and organizations have partnered with local authorities to provide resources for long-term reconstruction, including funding for housing, infrastructure, and sustainable development projects.

    Collaboration between local and international stakeholders has been essential in leveraging expertise and resources to accelerate the recovery process. Non-profit organizations have been actively involved in providing on-ground support, including emergency relief, medical services, and psychological counseling to survivors.

    Infrastructure and Housing Reconstruction Efforts

    Rebuilding infrastructure and housing has been a significant focus of the recovery process in Turkey and Syria. Efforts have been made to restore damaged roads, bridges, and utilities, ensuring the efficient functioning of essential services. The construction of earthquake-resistant buildings has also been prioritized to mitigate future risks.

    In Turkey, the government has implemented innovative approaches to housing reconstruction, such as the use of prefabricated structures. Prefabricated housing offers a cost-effective and rapid solution to provide temporary shelter to displaced communities while permanent housing is being constructed.

    Syria, with its extensive urban damage, has faced unique challenges in rebuilding its cities. The government has worked closely with international experts to develop urban planning strategies that prioritize safety, accessibility, and sustainability. Efforts are underway to restore public spaces, revitalize neighborhoods, and create resilient communities.

    Economic Recovery and Rebuilding Local Businesses

    The earthquake’s impact on the local economy has been significant, with businesses and livelihoods disrupted in the affected regions. Economic recovery has been a crucial aspect of the overall recovery process in Turkey and Syria.

    Both countries have implemented measures to support local businesses and stimulate economic growth. In Turkey, the government has provided financial assistance and tax incentives to affected businesses, encouraging them to resume operations and contribute to the recovery efforts.

    Syria, despite the ongoing conflict, has also taken steps to rebuild its economy. The government has focused on creating an enabling environment for entrepreneurship and attracting investments to the affected regions. Efforts have been made to provide microfinance opportunities and vocational training to empower individuals and rebuild livelihoods.

    Rehabilitation of Healthcare and Education Systems

    The earthquake severely impacted healthcare and education systems in the affected regions. Hospitals and medical facilities were damaged, leaving communities without access to essential healthcare services. Schools and educational institutions were also destroyed or rendered unsafe, disrupting the education of thousands of children.

    Rehabilitating healthcare and education systems has been a top priority for Turkey and Syria. Both countries have worked towards restoring healthcare facilities, ensuring the availability of medical supplies, and training healthcare professionals to address the increased demand for services.

    In the education sector, efforts have been made to rebuild schools and provide temporary learning spaces for children. Access to quality education is seen as crucial for the long-term recovery and development of the affected regions. Innovative solutions, such as mobile classrooms and distance learning programs, have been implemented to ensure continued education.

    Environmental Impact and Conservation Efforts

    The earthquake’s impact extended beyond human lives and infrastructure, affecting the environment and natural resources. The destruction of ecosystems, soil erosion, and potential hazards posed by damaged infrastructure have raised concerns about the long-term environmental impact.

    To address these challenges, Turkey and Syria have focused on implementing sustainable and eco-friendly practices in the recovery process. Efforts have been made to restore and conserve natural habitats, promote reforestation, and mitigate the risks of future disasters through better land management and urban planning.

    Conservation organizations and environmental experts have collaborated with local authorities to develop strategies that balance the need for reconstruction with environmental preservation. The integration of green infrastructure and sustainable design principles in rebuilding efforts has been crucial in creating resilient and environmentally conscious communities.

    Achievements and Lessons Learned from the Recovery Process

    Despite the numerous challenges, Turkey and Syria have achieved significant milestones in their recovery process. The communities have shown resilience and strength, coming together to rebuild their lives and support each other in times of adversity.

    From the establishment of efficient coordination mechanisms to the implementation of innovative solutions, the recovery efforts have showcased the determination and resourcefulness of the affected regions. The international community’s support and collaboration have also played a vital role in accelerating the recovery process.

    The recovery process has provided valuable lessons for future disaster preparedness and response. The importance of early warning systems, robust infrastructure, and community engagement in disaster management has been emphasized. The need for stronger international cooperation and support in times of crisis has also been highlighted.

    As Turkey and Syria continue their journey towards recovery and healing, the challenges may persist, but the achievements attained thus far serve as a testament to the resilience of the human spirit and the power of unity in the face of adversity.

     

  • Six killed in drone attack at US base in Syria

    Six killed in drone attack at US base in Syria

    Right now there is a lot of tension in the Middle East. We are trying to give you updates from different places, and the latest one is from Syria.

    A drone attack at a big US military base killed at least six fighters from a group of Kurdish soldiers who are allies.

    The information is from a group called the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) that worked with the US and other countries to defeat the Islamic State group in eastern Syria. It was mentioned

    A military school at an oil field in the eastern part of the country was attacked by a drone sent from an area controlled by the Syrian government.

    The SDF said they have started looking into it and found that the militias supported by Iran were responsible for the terrorist act.

    A group in the UK said that seven SDF soldiers were killed and 18 were hurt in the 108th attack on US bases in the country since mid-October.

    The Islamic Resistance in Iraq, which is a group of Iraqi militias supported by Iran, said they were responsible for a drone attack on a US base in the al-Omar oil field. This was reported by the Iraqi media.

    It also said it attacked a US base in Jordan near Syria on January 28 using a drone. Three US soldiers were killed. In response, the US carried out air strikes on Iranian military sites in Syria and Iraq.

  • US approves plan to hit Iranian sites in Iraq and Syria – officials

    US approves plan to hit Iranian sites in Iraq and Syria – officials

    The US has given the okay for a bunch of attacks on Iranian targets in Syria and Iraq, according to officials who talked to the media.
    Officials say that the strikes will happen over a few days, and the weather will decide when they will happen.

    A drone attack killed three US soldiers near the Syrian border in Jordan on Sunday.

    The US said that a group backed by Iran was responsible for the attack.

    The Islamic Resistance in Iraq, made up of several armed groups supported by Iran, has claimed responsibility for the attack.

    Iran said they did not hurt 41 US soldiers at the military base.

    US officials have promised to do something about the drone attack, but President Joe Biden and other officials said the country does not want to start a big war with Iran.

    Several groups supported by Iran have been launching more attacks on American and Israeli-related targets since the start of the Israel-Hamas war on 7 October.

    The Iran-supported Houthis in Yemen have attacked ships in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden. This has led the US and its allies to launch strikes in response.

    According to a US defense official speaking to CBS, a drone was shot down in the Gulf of Aden and an unmanned sea drone was hit and destroyed in the Red Sea overnight.

    The three soldiers who died in the attack will be brought back to the United States and taken to a Air Force base in Delaware on Friday. The White House said that President Biden will go.

  • Turkey targets 29 locations in Syria and Iraq

    Turkey targets 29 locations in Syria and Iraq

    Today, we are mostly concerned about the violence in Yemen and Gaza, but there is also fighting happening in other nearby areas, even though it is not connected.

    After nine of its soldiers were killed at an Iraqi military post, Turkey’s defense ministry says it launched airstrikes on “terrorist targets” in Syria and Iraq all night.

    The report says that the attacks targeted 29 places like caves, bunkers, and oil sites that belonged to two groups the YPG and PKK which Turkey thinks are terrorist groups.

    Turkey has been fighting a long war against the PKK, a group seen as terrorists by many Western countries, like the US and the UK.

    More update on this story soon.

  • Talks follow downing of armed Turkish drone by US fighter plane in Syria

    Talks follow downing of armed Turkish drone by US fighter plane in Syria

    The highest-ranking diplomats from the US and Turkey talked on the phone after American soldiers in Syria shot down a Turkish drone with weapons.

    Washington said that the drone came too close to their soldiers on the ground in Syria, but Ankara only mentioned that the drone was lost during their operations.

    During the conversation between Nato allies, Hakan Fidan informed the US that Turkey will continue to focus on Kurdish groups.

    The US cooperates with Kurdish YPG forces in Syria. However, Turkey sees them as people who want to separate from their country and sees them as terrorists.

    Mr Fidan informed the US Secretary of State, Antony Blinken, that Turkey will firmly continue its efforts to fight against terrorism in Iraq and Syria.

    A spokesperson from the US State Department said that Mr. Blinken emphasized the importance of the US and Turkey working together and minimizing conflicts in their actions.

    On Thursday, the US military said that they shot down a Turkish drone with a US fighter jet. The drone was armed and was flying near American soldiers in Syria. The US gave warnings before taking action.

    A spokesperson for the Pentagon, Brigadier General Patrick Ryder, told reporters that American forces saw a few drones bombing an area in north-east Syria at 07:30 local time (04:30 GMT).

    According to Ryder, a few of the strikes happened about 1km away from the US troops, which made them find shelter in bunkers.

    Four hours later, the F-16 shot down the drone because the commanders believed it could be dangerous.

    “It’s unfortunate when two countries in the NATO alliance have a situation like this,” he told the reporters.

    This was the first time something like this happened between the two countries that are part of Nato.

    There are around 900 American soldiers in Syria fighting against a terrorist group called Islamic State (IS).

    Turkey is attacking Kurdish groups in Syria and Iraq because there was a bomb that hurt their interior ministry in Ankara.

    The PKK said that a group connected to them was responsible for the bombing at the interior ministry.

    The PKK is seen as a terrorist organization in Turkey, the European Union, United Kingdom, and United States.

    Turkey sees the PKK and the YPG as one group. But the US has been working with the YPG, a group that is part of the US-supported Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) and has been fighting against IS in Syria.

    Not long after Mr Blinken and Mr Fidan talked on the phone, Turkey announced that it had started attacking Kurdish targets in northern Syria again.

    The Turkish defense ministry said it attacked 15 places belonging to the Kurdish group with a lot of ammunition. These places included headquarters and shelters.

    The PKK started a fight against the Turkish government in 1984, asking for their own country for the Kurdish people inside Turkey.

    In the 1990s, the PKK changed its stance from wanting their own country to wanting more self-control for the Kurdish people. Over 40,000 people have passed away in the war.

    There was more fighting that started again after a two-year period without fighting ended in July 2015.

  • Drone strike kills dozens in Syria’s army ceremonial

    Drone strike kills dozens in Syria’s army ceremonial

    A drone attack happened in the city of Homs in Syria, targeting a military academy. Sadly, it resulted in the death of at least 89 individuals, according to the country’s health ministry.

    The drones that were carrying explosives attacked a graduation ceremony where families of the cadets were present. Unfortunately, women and children were among those who lost their lives.

    A group that watches over things in the UK said that 116 people have been killed.

    The Syrian army said that the attack was done by “terrorist groups supported by certain international forces”.

    The rebels and jihadists fighting against the government in the country’s civil war have not made any immediate statements or claims.

    They think that the drone attack came from areas controlled by the opposition in the north-west of Homs.

    Afterwards, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) said that 11 innocent people had been killed by the government’s attacks on different places in the opposition’s main area of Idlib province and Aleppo.

    Syria’s official news agency, Sana, reported that some flying machines with bombs attacked the Homs military school right after the graduation ended in the afternoon.

    The military says that they see this action as a very serious crime and they promise to respond strongly to these terrorist groups no matter where they are.

    In another report, the agency mentioned that 277 people got hurt in the strike, and among the dead, there were 31 women and five children, as stated by the health ministry.

    A person who aided in arranging the decorations informed Reuters news agency that after the event, individuals went to the outdoor area and were struck by explosions. We are not sure where it came from, and there were dead bodies all over the place.

    A very shocking video showed the consequences of the attack. Many people were hurt or killed, and their family members were desperate for assistance. This all happened inside a big, fenced area where parades are held. You can also hear the sound of guns in the distance.
    The SOHR said that Syria’s defense minister went to the graduation event but left a few minutes before the attack happened.

    Over 500,000 people have died because of the war that started when President Bashar al-Assad forcefully suppressed peaceful protests for democracy in 2011.

    Around 68 million individuals have been forced to leave their homes within their own country. Additionally, approximately six million individuals have sought refuge or asylum in other countries.

    The UN’s special representative for Syria, Geir Pedersen, said that the attack on the academy was very terrible and asked everyone involved in the conflict to be very careful and not to act without control.

    “He said that everyone should follow the rules of international law and make sure that civilians and civilian buildings are kept safe. ”

    Today’s events show that the current situation in Syria cannot continue and that, without a practical plan for politics. I’m scared that things will keep getting worse, especially when it comes to safety.

    On Thursday, there was another event in Syria. Turkish drones attacked a Kurdish-controlled area in north-eastern Syria, reportedly killing at least 10 people. This attack was in response to a bomb attack in Ankara that was carried out by Kurdish militants.

    The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) reported that 17 places were attacked. These locations included places connected to the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), a group of militias supported by the United States and led by Kurdish people. The attacks also targeted a power station in Qamishli, a water station near Hassakeh, and an oil field.

    According to a US official who spoke to Reuters, the US military destroyed a Turkish drone that had weapons and was flying close to their troops in Syria.

  • At least 89 people killed and hundreds more injured in drone attack on military college in Syria

    At least 89 people killed and hundreds more injured in drone attack on military college in Syria

    The number of people who died when a drone carrying bombs hit a graduation ceremony at a military college in the city of Homs, Syria, increased to 89 on Friday morning. Almost 300 others were injured.

    According to Syria’s state-run news agency, SANA, 5 kids and 31 women were killed.

    Nobody has come forward and said they are responsible for the attack that happened on Thursday. In a previous statement, the defense ministry accused “terrorist groups helped by famous international people. ”

    The ministry said in a statement that many soldiers were hurt, and some of the wounds were very serious. Families who were invited to the event, including women and children, were also hurt, as well as some college students who were graduating.

    The Syrian military said the attack was really big and promised to respond forcefully and strongly. They warned that the people who planned and carried out the attack will face serious consequences.

    The old city of Homs, previously famous as the main city of the Syrian revolution, experienced heavy fighting in 2012 between the government forces and the opposition fighters who wanted to remove President Bashar Al Assad from power. The city was taken over by the government in 2014, when the rebels gave up and left after being under attack for two years.

    The city is in the middle of Syria’s farm area and has always been an important place for trade and transportation. The road that goes through Homs connects the city of Damascus in the south to the city of Aleppo in the north.

    On Thursday, a group called the White Helmets, made up of around 3,000 volunteers who help save lives in Syria, said that the Syrian government forces carried out planned attacks on innocent people in the northwestern part of Syria. These attacks caused the deaths of at least 12 people and injured 49 others.

    According to the group, 49 people were hurt, including 12 kids and 11 ladies.

    Syria often bombs the area to fight against what they consider terrorists.

    Big weapons were fired at lots of places in northwest Syria, including cities, towns, and villages in Idlib and the Aleppo countryside. The White Helmets stated that the attacks specifically targeted places like markets, schools, public facilities, and humanitarian workers.

    On Wednesday, the group said that airstrikes hit a school in Sarmeen city in the eastern part of Idlib. One child died and six civilians were injured, including three girls (one of them being a baby) and two women.

    The White Helmets have said that there have been three days in a row of heavy bombing in Northwest Syria that has caused a lot of deaths.

    Meanwhile, on Thursday, at least 11 people were killed in another part of the country due to Turkish airstrikes. These airstrikes were aimed at areas in northeastern Syria that are under Kurdish control. This information was shared by Kurdish security forces in that region.

    On Thursday, the Turkish government started a series of attacks on our areas in northeastern Syria. They used more than 15 drones to enter our airspace and targeted several positions, buildings, and gas and oil stations. This caused people to die or get hurt. The Kurdish internal security force, Asayish, said that the aggression also impacted areas where regular people live.

    Turkey’s military has started a set of attacks by air on Kurdish targets in Syria and Iraq after a serious bombing in the Turkish capital on Sunday. The attack in Ankara was done by the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which has been fighting against the government for many years and is considered a terrorist group by Turkey, the United States, and the European Union.

  • Syria’s drug crisis overshadows Assad’s recovery

    Nearly five months after Arab nations offered an olive branch to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, there are signs that some of the initiative’s key architects may be increasingly skeptical about his commitment to the deal.

    Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman al-Safadi said this week that trafficking of the amphetamine Captagon from Syria to Jordan only increased after normalization talks led to Assad’s return to the Arab League. in May.

    Syria was expelled from the Arab League in 2011, following a brutal regime crackdown on opposition forces seeking to overthrow Assad.

    Jordan has been one of the biggest supporters of his rehabilitation, having been one of the main victims of Syria’s drug trade, but now feels the regime is unwilling or unable to calm down. suppress this trade.

    “Jordan is fighting on the border to make sure drugs do not enter the country,” Al-Monitor quoted the king as saying last week. “Bashar (al-Assad) doesn’t want conflict with Jordan… I don’t know if he’s in complete control.”

    One of the Arab states’ main demands of Syria in exchange for its recovery was that Assad help stop the trade in Captagon. Most of the global supply for the $57 billion Captagon industry is believed to come from Syria, with neighboring countries and the Gulf region being the main destinations.

    This trade turned Syria into a narco-state that allowed the Assad regime to replenish its coffers after years of war and sanctions, and gave it enormous leverage over the neighboring countries and was partly responsible for bringing them to the negotiating table with Assad.

    In another sign of Arab discontent with Assad, Saudi Arabia’s Asharq al-Awsat newspaper reported this month that the Arab ministerial committee responsible for overseeing the normalization of Syria- The Arabs suspended meetings with Damascus due to lack of response to the developed roadmap. normalization of Arab-Syrian relations.

    However, Arab League Deputy Secretary General Hossam Zaki denied this information. “They are not real,” Zaki told CNN on Friday.

    Emile Hokayem, director of regional security at the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) in London, said it was not surprising that Syria’s reintegration efforts were facing setbacks.

    “Nothing significant was achieved while Assad achieved a symbolic victory that limited Arab participation for years to come,” Hokayem told CNN, adding that it was difficult to see how the May decision “could be overturned and how the stick could be used to force them to comply.” .

    In an interview with Sky News Arabia last month, the Syrian leader sounded confident and said he would not rush to reconcile with his neighbors until they changed. He blamed the lack of progress in normalizing relations with Arab countries on poor Arab politics. Arabs, he said, were good at “optics” but not “execution.”

    Assad said the drug trade had gotten worse after the war and therefore responsibility for Syria’s Captagon problem belonged to “the countries that contributed to the chaos in Syria, not not the Syrian state”. He added that it was Syria, not its Arab neighbors, that had offered to resolve the drug crisis because it was “win-win”.

    Experts say that Syria’s recovery process has many shortcomings.

    “The problem is that there really is no accountability mechanism for the normalization initiative,” said HA Hellyer, a researcher at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

    “If Assad simply ignored the demands of the Arab countries, even though he initially appeared to take them seriously, there would be no process to punish him,” Hellyer told CNN. for any violation.” “It’s all quite ad hoc and arbitrary.”

    According to Jordan, the Captagon trade is booming as smugglers use increasingly advanced technology to smuggle amphetamines out of Syria and into neighboring countries. “The Syrians have promised to cooperate with us to resolve this challenge, but the situation on the ground remains extremely difficult,” said Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman al-Safadi. “We are seeing an increase in activity and as a result we are doing what we need to do.”

    Safadi describes the Captagon trafficking operation as a “highly organized operation” in which drug traffickers “have access to very advanced technology,” including drones and goggles night. For every two or three arrests, two or three more people cross the border, Safadi explained.

    Jordan, which shares a 378 km border with Syria, views instability with its neighbor as detrimental to its national security.

    Gulf states and Jordan regularly report drug seizures with large quantities of drugs found in everything from construction signs to baklava shipments. This month, the United Arab Emirates said it had foiled a plot to smuggle 13 tons of Captagon – worth more than $1 billion – hidden in a shipment of doors and building decorative panels. Jordanian armed forces regularly shoot down drones coming from Syria and carrying irritants.

    Experts believe that the two parts of the Arab-Syrian normalization treaty did not meet people’s expectations. Assad may not have found a strong enough incentive to abandon his lucrative drug trade. And what he wants can be difficult to achieve. “What Assad has always wanted is not what the Arab countries can or will offer:
    unconditional political support, huge financial aid, as well as Arab pressure to lift Western sanctions,” Hokayem said.

    Arab countries are now at risk of falling into a state of deadlock.

    “Their mobility is limited,” Hokayem said. “Direct and direct coercion is not an option and some countries do not care enough to devote effort and political capital to Syria,” he said, adding that stubborn policies of Assad may even motivate “some countries.”

  • UN-Syria aid delivery agreement sparks alarm

    UN-Syria aid delivery agreement sparks alarm

    After weeks of deadlock, the UN reports that an agreement has been reached with Syria to reopen the only crossing for UN relief deliveries to the rebel-held northwest of the country.

    For 4.1 million aid-dependent individuals, the route from Turkey is a lifeline.

    Uncertainty about the agreement’s conditions has led relief organisations to express concern that Syria may now try to control how food and medicine are distributed.

    Syria had previously been denied any input into the procedure. It had vehemently protested the UN-approved activities through the Bab al-Hawa transit point, calling them a breach of its sovereignty, along with its ally Russia.

    “We are concerned that the removal of certainty and security provided by Security Council authorisation will impact on the ability of humanitarian organisations, and particularly Syrian NGOs, to operate effectively,” warned international assistance agency the International Rescue Committee.

    The agreement, according to the UN, would keep the bridge open for the ensuing six months. Following a disagreement between Russia and other security council members tasked with approving their continuation, operations had been terminated one month earlier.

    Since a devastating earthquake that killed more than 4,500 people and uprooted 50,000 families in north-western Syria in February, Bab al-Hawa has assumed an even greater role as a distribution point for relief.

    The UN reported that Syria has also consented to enable it to use two extra border crossings that had been opened with the Syrian government’s permission following the earthquake for an additional three months. The two crossings’ authorization was set to expire on Sunday.

  • Russian aircraft attack Syria, leaving nine dead and numerous injured

    Russian aircraft attack Syria, leaving nine dead and numerous injured

    Russian fighter planes blasted a city in Syria’s rebel-held Idlib region, killing nine civilians and injuring scores more, according to the local White Helmets emergency response organisation.

    The Jisr al-Shughur city attack on Sunday caused damage to a fruit and vegetable market. CNN quoted a witness as saying that the “missile had so much pressure and the sharpness hit the crowded market.”

    Ahmad Rahhal, a 26-year-old local journalist, said he arrived at the scene 30 minutes after the strike. “I saw tomato waggons on the ground and blood on the carpet.”

    The White Helmets said this was the second day of airstrikes in the area, coming ahead of the Muslim festival, Eid al-Adha, in the Muslim-majority country. The past four days have also seen artillery fire, the civil defense added.

    Sunday’s strike in Jisr al-Shughur stands as the most fatal in northwestern Syria so far in 2023.

    Russian military flights over the country have shown marked aggression in the past few months.

    In April, Russian pilots attempted to “dogfight” US jets over Syria, the US said. In military aviation, dogfighting is engaging in aerial combat, often at relatively close ranges.

    Earlier this month, the US deployed F-22 fighter jets to the Middle East over concerns about “unsafe and unprofessional behavior” by Russian aircraft.

  • Egypt requests Turkey to get its troops out of Syria

    Egypt requests Turkey to get its troops out of Syria

    Despite efforts by Ankara and Cairo to mend relations, Egypt’s foreign minister called on Turkey to remove its troops from Syria on Thursday. This was a sign of the ongoing tensions.

    “I said that the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Syria should be preserved. I also said that foreign forces should withdraw from the territory of Syria,” Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Choukri said. visiting Ankara on Thursday, about his exchanges with his Turkish counterpart during a joint press conference.

    “We are committed more than anyone” to the territorial integrity of Syria, replied Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu.

    “Our priority is the fight against terrorism. (…) Our presence there is important to prevent threats against us, but also to block efforts to break up Syria,” he said. he adds.

    Cairo and Ankara had been cold since Abdel Fattah al-Sisi came to power in 2013, after the overthrow of President Mohamed Morsi, who was close to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

    Turkey , however, has been seeking for months to normalize relations with several regional powers, including Egypt and Israel. But the Turkish military presence in Syria complicates these efforts.

    Egypt and other Arab countries have recently renewed contact with Damascus, causing consternation in Washington. But Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has conditioned the dialogue with his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan on the withdrawal of Turkish troops from Syria.

    The head of Egyptian diplomacy had visited Turkey at the end of February after the devastating earthquake which killed more than 50,000 people in Turkey and Syria.

    “We are opening new pages in our relations with Egypt,” Mr. Cavusoglu then welcomed during a press conference with Mr. Choukri in the port of Mersin, in southern Turkey, where a ship of humanitarian aid provided by Egypt landed.

    The Turkish and Egyptian presidents thus exchanged their first handshake at the end of November on the sidelines of the opening of the FIFA World Cup in Qatar.

  • Former student of a grammar school admits going to Syria to join ISIS

    Former student of a grammar school admits going to Syria to join ISIS

    A British man has admitted to going to Syria nine years ago to join the so-called Islamic State.

    In 2014, Shabazz Suleman, a 19-year-old resident of High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, vanished while traveling with his family to Turkey.

    The former grammar school student was detained on September 29, 2021, at Heathrow Airport and charged with a number of terrorism-related offenses.

    He was due to face trial at the Old Bailey on May 15, but on Friday he pleaded guilty to preparing acts of terrorism by travelling from the UK to Turkey in order to join IS in Syria in August 2014.

    Image of Shabazz Suleman, 18, via private messaging on Twitter. Shehryar Mirza says he went to school with Shabazz for seven years and sat next to him for two years. The friend, who is now studying in the US, has sent me a picture of Shabazz from when he was carrying out aid work on the Turkey/Syria border last summer (see below). He is not in contact with Shabazz at the moment but says that he had spoken about going back out there again. He said he was definitely against ISIS and sympathetic to the views of the Free Syrian Army, which has been fighting Assad and received Western funding. Shabazz, who was a member of the school's debating society, was planning to start a degree course at Queen Mary University in London. According to the friend: 'He was interested in debating and current affairs. Was quite quiet, but hardworking. He was interested in football and cricket, but didn't support teams.'
    Suleman feld across the Syrian border while on a family holiday in Turkey

    The defendant, now 27, was also charged with being a member of IS, a proscribed organisation, between 2014 and 2017, and receiving training in the use of firearms.

    Prosecutor Duncan Atkinson KC said his guilty plea addressed the two other charges which he asked to be left on the court file.

    Referring to the defendant’s basis of plea, Judge Mark Lucraft KC agreed and noted Suleman had gone to join IS ‘even if not becoming a member of it’.

    He ordered a pre-sentence report on the defendant’s dangerousness and adjourned sentencing to May 26.

    Remanding the defendant into custody, Judge Lucraft said: ‘This morning you have pleaded guilty to the preparation of terrorist acts. You will know a custodial sentence is inevitable.’

    Suleman, who wore a blue suit, with a white shirt and yellow tie, had entered his guilty plea in the dock of the Old Bailey.

    The prosecution had alleged that while attempting to travel to Syria, he had been held by Turkish forces before opting to be part of a prisoner swap with IS.

    On joining the terrorist group in Syria, he became active on social media and posted about his experiences in IS territory while engaged with members of the media.

    After the collapse of IS, he was taken captive by a faction of the Free Syrian Army (FSA) before being transferred to Turkey and then Pakistan.

    In an interview with The Times newspaper, he said he had become disillusioned with jihadism and chose to desert the terrorist group.

    Via encrypted messages he told the newspaper he went through ‘intense’ indoctrination by the group, adding: ‘I never thought I was being brainwashed until I saw the way they treat other Sunnis.’

    In October 2017, he was also interviewed by Sky News while in the hands of FSA, the court heard.

    Suleman arrived back in the UK on September 29 2021 and was arrested under the Terrorism Act 2000.

    In a police interview, Suleman denied choosing to join IS while held in Turkey and said he had changed his mind about going but was handed over anyway as part of a deal with IS.

    He also denied membership of the terrorist group, saying he never swore allegiance and was just a civilian.

    He claimed he had tried to leave IS territory from mid-2015 and did not handle guns.

    It can now be reported that Suleman’s defence team had tried unsuccessfully to get his earlier account in his Sky News interview ruled inadmissible.

    The defendant claimed he had been forced into doing it by the FSA and told to say he had fought with IS in battles.

    There was no accusation that the broadcaster was in any way complicit.

    The defendant also claimed FSA had beat him and caused him to fear for his life after witnessing others being waterboarded.

    However, Mr Atkinson, for the prosecution, had asserted that there was no evidence of duress or that Suleman had suffered ill treatment while being held by the FSA.

    He argued that the defendant had even told the interviewer that he had access to a phone and could speak to his family on a regular basis.

    In his ruling that the interview could be considered by a jury at trial, Judge Lucraft stated: ‘In my assessment, the defendant appears at ease throughout the whole of the interview process.

    ‘When this interview video recording is considered, the whole way it was conducted does not show any oppression or coercion on the part of the interviewer to what takes place.’

    The charges against him alleged that in August 2014, he engaged in preparation for acts of terrorism by travelling from the UK to Turkey in order to join the Islamic State in Syria, contrary to Section 5 of the Terrorism Act 2000.

    The second charge of membership of IS related to his time in Syria between August 1 2014 and June 1 2017 with weapons training in the nine months after his arrival in the country.

    In the course of the investigation, evidence was uncovered of messaging between the defendant and his friends and family, statements he gave to the media and his social media posts.

    The prosecution had asserted that the material revealed his activities and his extreme mindset.

  • Syria’s embassy in Tunisia will reopen

    After more than ten years, Syria will restore its diplomatic post in Tunisia.

    The choice was made in response to Tunisia’s president Kais Saied’s declaration that his nation will reopen its embassy in Damascus.

    Relations between Syria and Arab nations have lately improved. President Bashar al-Assad has met with Saudi Arabia and traveled to Oman and the United Arab Emirates.

    Later this week nine Arab countries are due to meet in Riyadh to discuss moves to end Damascus’s isolation since the start of Syria’s long civil war.

  • Syria’s coffers received billions thanks to a little-known medicine

    Syria’s coffers received billions thanks to a little-known medicine

    Analysts speculate that Syria may be using a highly addictive substance as a negotiating chip as it seeks to improve relations with its neighbors after more than a decade of isolation.

    Once the majority of the international community cut off Syria’s economy as a result of its harsh suppression of an uprising in 2011, Captagon, a narcotic that is comparatively unknown outside the Middle East, assisted Syria in becoming a narco-state.

    Fenethylline, often known as captagon, is a synthetic stimulant with effects similar to amphetamines. It is the target of an increasing number of drug busts in the Middle East.
    According to experts, Syria produces the vast majority of the world’s captagons, with the Gulf region serving as its main market.

    The growth of the industry has raised alarms in the international community. Last year, the US introduced the 2022 US Captagon Act, which linked the trade to the Syrian regime and called it a “transnational security threat.”

    After more than a decade of boycotting him, Syria’s Arab neighbors are now in talks to bring President Bashar al-Assad in from the cold. The Syrian leader has been received in some Arab capitals, but he is yet to be awarded the ultimate normalization with Saudi Arabia, one of Syria’s staunchest foes – and the biggest market for its drugs.

    Following the deadly February 6 earthquake that struck southern Turkey and northern Syria, Saudi relief planes landed for the first time in a decade at regime-controlled airports. And last month, Saudi state media reported Riyadh was in talks with Damascus to resume providing consular services between the two countries.

    Analysts say captagon is likely to be high on the agenda in attempts at normalization.

    Saudi media has been sounding the alarm lately over the rise in drug use. In September, Saudi authorities announced the largest seizure of illicit drugs in the country’s history after nearly 47 million amphetamine pills were hidden in a flour shipment and seized at a warehouse in the capital Riyadh. Millions more pills have been intercepted since. The UN says amphetamine seizures in the region refer predominantly to captagon.

    “Captagon has been touted as a ‘card’ in rapprochement talks between the Syrian regime and counterparts pursuing normalization,” said Caroline Rose, director of the New Lines Institute’s Project on the Captagon Trade in Washington, DC.

    “The regime has been leveraging its agency over the captagon trade, signaling to states considering normalization that they could reduce captagon trafficking as a goodwill gesture,” Rose told CNN.

    Exported by several actors, including Syrian smugglers, Lebanon’s Hezbollah and pro-Iranian Iraqi militias, “the captagon smuggling is worth more than Syria’s legal export,” said Vanda Felbab-Brown, a fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington DC and an expert on the topic. Hezbollah has denied ties to any drug trades.

    The United Kingdom, which last month imposed new sanctions on Syrians connected to the trade, said the Assad regime has benefited from the captagon trade to the tune of $57 billion. It described it as a “financial lifeline” for Assad that is “worth approximately three times the combined trade of the Mexican (drug) cartels.”

    Syrian state media regularly reports on captagon drug busts, saying that the interior ministry is cracking down on its trade as well as that of other narcotics.

    Salah Malkawi, a Jordanian analyst who follows the trade closely, says that despite Syria’s denial, it is impossible for the drug to cross borders without the involvement of several actors closely tied to Assad and his regime.

    “Commanders of militias, security agencies, military forces are involved in the drug smuggling operation,” Malkawi said. “The drugs cannot reach these areas without passing through dozens of barriers and checkpoints that fall under the Fourth Division, which is under the leadership of Maher al-Assad, the brother of the Syrian president.”

    “I’ve spoken to several (smugglers),” he said. “They have received military training … using war tactics … to carry out sophisticated raids.”

    The Syrian government didn’t respond to CNN’s request for comment.

    Jordan, which supported anti-regime groups at the start of the Syrian civil war, has in recent months also been on the road to rapprochement with Assad.

    Its foreign minister this year made his first visit to Damascus since the start of the Syrian civil war and has been sending humanitarian aid following the February 6 earthquake.

    Jordan has been directly impacted by Syria’s captagon trade due to the prevalence of its use in border regions in the northeast of the country, said Saud Al-Sharafat, a former brigadier general in the Jordanian General Intelligence Directorate, as well as founder of the Shorufat ِCenter for the Study of Globalization and Terrorism in Amman, Jordan.

    “There is also the high cost of securing the borders and the increase in pressure on the armed forces and security services,” Al-Sharafat told CNN.

    He welcomed the US Captagon Act as “the first serious international effort” to prevent the regime from expanding its use of the drug “to destabilize security in the region and the world.” Syria could potentially flood Europe and Western countries with the drug through Turkey and use it as a bargaining chip against them, he said.

    But even if agreements are reached between Syria and its neighbors over stopping exports of the drug, experts say it is unlikely that Assad will fully abandon the trade.

    “That’s asking the key trafficker to stop his business,” Felbab-Brown said. “It is very unlikely that the Assad regime would give up on its crucial revenue source.”

    At best, he may offer cosmetic solutions to the problem, experts say, promising tighter restrictions and tougher law enforcement at home on producers and traders, whom the regime denies it is involved with.

    Rose of the New Lines Institute said that the regime may maintain its captagon businesses as a form of long-term leverage against its neighbors, while maintaining “some level of plausible deniability with the trade, blaming opposition forces and non-state actors, while undertaking a wave of cosmetic seizures at home to shift the blame away from the government.”

    Nadeen Ebrahim contributed to this report.

    Israeli’s spy agency encouraged protests against government, leaked US report says

    A leaked US intelligence report about Israel has sparked outrage in Jerusalem. The report, produced by the CIA and sourced to signals intelligence, says that Israel’s main intelligence agency, the Mossad, had been encouraging protests against the country’s new government – “including several explicit calls to action.” The Israeli Prime Minister’s Office responded on the Mossad’s behalf Sunday morning, calling the report “mendacious and without any foundation whatsoever.” It added: “The Mossad and its senior officials did not – and do not – encourage agency personnel to join the demonstrations against the government, political demonstrations or any political activity.”

    • Background: Highly classified Pentagon documents leaked online in recent weeks have provided a rare window into how the US spies on allies and foes alike, deeply rattling US officials, who fear the revelations could jeopardize sensitive sources and compromise important foreign relationships. Some of the documents, which US officials say are authentic, expose the extent of US eavesdropping on key allies, including South Korea, Israel and Ukraine.
    • Why it matters: Israel has faced months of protests against a controversial plan by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s right-wing government to weaken the judiciary. The protests, which were supported by some elements of the military and security services, have slightly waned since Netanyahu announced a delay of the plan two weeks ago, but the country remains deeply divided on the matter.

    Saudi and Omani delegations arrive in Yemen for talks with Houthi leaders

    Delegations of Saudi and Omani negotiators arrived in Yemen’s capital Sana’a on Saturday for talks with Houthi leaders, according to the Houthi-run news agency Saba. The Saudi and Omani delegations will meet with the head of the Houthi Supreme Political Council, Mahdi Al-Mashat, to discuss “lifting the siege with all its repercussions, stopping the aggression, and restoring all the rightful rights of the Yemeni people, including the payment of salaries of all state employees from oil and gas revenues,” Saba reported, citing sources. Houthi officials also said 13 prisoners released by Saudi authorities as part of a prisoner swap had arrived at Sanaa International Airport on Saturday.

    • Background: The talks – involving top level officials – are part of ongoing efforts to negotiate a permanent ceasefire agreement between Saudi Arabia and the Iran-aligned Houthi movement who have been at war in Yemen since 2015. The discussions come following a surprise Chinese-brokered rapprochement between regional arch-rivals Saudi Arabia and Iran in March, which has raised hopes for an end to hostilities.
    • Why it matters: Yemen’s war is seen as the main proxy battle between Iran and Saudi Arabia. Since the Saudi-led war in the country started, the Houthis have launched hundreds of missiles on Saudi Arabia and, to a lesser degree, the United Arab Emirates. A ceasefire would bring calm to Saudi Arabia’s 1,300-kilometer (808-mile) border with Yemen as the kingdom focuses its effort on economic diversification.

    Controversial Israeli minister joins thousands of settlers marching to illegal outpost in occupied West Bank

    Israel’s far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir joined thousands of Israeli settlers marching to an illegal outpost in the occupied West Bank on Monday afternoon. The rally was organized by activist groups who want to legalize the outpost at Evyatar. A spokesperson for the Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas described the march as an “invasion of settler militias, led by ministers from the Israeli occupation government,” that “does not change the fact that it is Palestinian land,” according to the Palestinian News Agency WAFA.

    • Background: Israeli settlers left Evyatar in 2021 after a deal with the government of then-prime minister Naftali Bennett, which saw them leave on condition that the buildings would remain. Evyatar sits on a hilltop known locally as Jabal Subeih. The site is seen as strategic, a high point along a corridor linking Tel Aviv to the Jordan Valley.
    • Why it matters: With a new Israeli government now in power, the settlers are campaigning to legalize the outpost. The march comes after the United States last month summoned Israel’s ambassador in Washington over the Israeli parliament’s vote to roll back 2005 legislation that previously ordered the evacuation of four Israeli settlements established in the northern West Bank.

    Abu Dhabi technology company e& has agreed to take a 50.3% stake in a super app managed by Careem, Uber’s Middle East subsidiary, in a transaction valued at $400 million, Reuters cited the company as saying on Monday. The ride-hailing business will be separated from the Careem super app business and will be fully owned by Uber. The super app offers services outside its core ride-hailing business such as food delivery, bike rentals, digital payments and courier services.

    A video of an imam leading prayer in a mosque as a surprise furry guest abruptly joins his congregation went viral on social media, with many praising the Muslim prayer leader for keeping his cool as the cat climbs up his chest and rests on his shoulder.

    The clip of imam Walid Mehsas, which was captured at a mosque in Algeria, garnered millions of views and was picked up by international media channels.

    The video even triggered a cartoon drawing of the moment by artist Karim Saidi, which was also shared widely on social media, and started a debate about Islam’s position on cats. Unlike dogs, Islam considers cats to be clean enough to be allowed into mosques, and the felines can often be seen roaming around worshippers.

    Speaking in a video published on his official Facebook page, Mehsas on Saturday said the incident was spontaneous. He also urged worshipers to remember that Islam dictates mercy towards all animals, and denied rumors that the Algerian government rewarded him for his kindness to the animal.

  • US military kills top ISIL leader in raid on Syria: CENTCOM

    US military kills top ISIL leader in raid on Syria: CENTCOM

    US Central Command says Khalid Aydd Ahmed al-Jabouri was responsible for planning ISIL attacks in Europe.

    The US announced on Tuesday in a statement that a senior ISIL (ISIS) leader had been killed in Syria by US forces in a “unilateral strike.”

    The man was identified as Khalid Aydd Ahmad al-Jabouri by US Central Command (CENTCOM).

    Al-Jabouri “developed the leadership structure” for ISIS and “was responsible for planning ISIS attacks into Europe,” according to CENTCOM.”

    The organization’s capacity to plan external attacks will be temporarily disrupted by his death, it added.

    The raid that killed al-Jabouri happened on Monday.

    CENTCOM said no civilians were killed or injured in the raid.

    It gave no further details.

  • US unveils bombing raids in Syria over a death case in a drone strike

    US unveils bombing raids in Syria over a death case in a drone strike

    After an American was murdered by a drone believed to be from Iran, the US started an airstrike against Syria overnight.

    Yesterday, a self-destructing drone struck a maintenance building on a base, killing a US contractor and injuring five American service members.

    According to US intelligence analysts, the drone used in the incident near Hasaka at roughly 1:40 p.m. was “of Iranian origin,” the Pentagon reported.

    As ties between Washington and Tehran grow more heated, today’s airstrikes on sections of eastern Syria are thought to be retaliatory.

    With relations between Washington and Tehran increasingly tense, a new wave of reportedly retaliatory wave of airstrikes pelted parts of eastern Syrian today.

    It came after Iran-backed militants used rockets against another base hosting US personnel in Syria’s Conoco gas field this evening.

    Syrian opposition activist groups have said the targeted sites were used by groups affiliated with Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, or IRGC.

    US launches airstrikes in Syria after civilians killed in drone strike

    The three sites were in Deir Ez-Zor, a province that borders Iraq and is dotted by oil fields.

    The activist group Deir Ezzor 24 said the strikes killed four people and wounded a number of others.

    The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a group that monitors the war in Syria, put the death toll from US strikes even higher at 11 Iranian-backed fighters.

    They included six at an arms depot in the city of Deir el-Zour and five at military posts near Mayadeen and Boukamal.

    The head of the observatory, Rami Abdurrahman, said three rockets were fired earlier today at the al-Omar oil field in Deir el-Zour that houses US troops.

    Whether US warplanes carried out the attacks in Deir Ez-Zor is unclear.

    The retaliation was at the direction of US President Joe Biden, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said.

    In a statement, Austin said US intelligence determined the drone was of Iranian origin – though he offered no evidence for this.

    ‘The airstrikes were conducted in response to today’s attack as well as a series of recent attacks against coalition forces in Syria by groups affiliated with the IRGC,’ he said.

    A US defence official claimed the American strikes were conducted by F-15E fighter jets that struck three areas in the vicinity of Deir el-Zour.

    Iran uses proxy forces across the Middle East to counter the US, which has had troops in north-east Syria since 2015.

  • Dirty lingerie found in donations to Turkey-Syria earthquake victims

    Dirty lingerie found in donations to Turkey-Syria earthquake victims

    Among the “inappropriate” donations given to earthquake victims in Turkey and Syria, pole heels, filthy lingerie, and torn and damaged apparel were found.

    Volunteers are shown in videos posted to TikTok going through crates of help and taking stuff out, including 10-inch latex heels.

    Another video displayed lingerie being dragged out, a brown-stained towel, and a silver disco crop top.

    ‘Clothing collection drop-offs are not a place where you can empty your trash,’ a comment read.

    ‘Those people also have pride. Does your conscience not hurt at all? It is enough for God’s sake. Please, enough.’

    Volunteers working around the clock as part of the relief efforts have appealed for ‘dignity in charity’.

    Stripper shoes, ripped clothing and used lingerie amongst donations sent to Turkey and Syria earthquake survivors
    A pair of ripped old leggings donated to victims of the earthquakes
    Stripper shoes, ripped clothing and used lingerie amongst donations sent to Turkey and Syria earthquake survivors
    There were also boxes of 10-inch heels
    Stripper shoes, ripped clothing and used lingerie amongst donations sent to Turkey and Syria earthquake survivors
    Some blankets were stained or ripped

    Erim Metto, CEO of the Turkish Cypriot Community Association, based in London, told Metro.co.uk that a fifth of all donations were ‘inappropriate’ or ‘unusable’.

    ‘We were very clear about what donations we would accept. We did say we would not accept any inappropriate clothing,’ he said.

    ‘For example, no thin-layer clothing, dresses or high heels. When donations come through, we do a two-stage cycling system.

    ‘The first stage is removing any second-hand, no-good-for-anything donations.

    ‘Our volunteers filter these through and they are discarded – for example, hygiene products that are only half-full and have been used.

    Stripper shoes, ripped clothing and used lingerie amongst donations sent to Turkey and Syria earthquake survivors
    Hundreds of bags of donations were accepted by the TCCA (Picture: Turkish Cypriot Community Association)
    Stripper shoes, ripped clothing and used lingerie amongst donations sent to Turkey and Syria earthquake survivors
    Volunteers have been working around the clock to sift through it and pack it (Picture: Turkish Cypriot Community Association)

    ‘This is not appropriate. Such donations are thrown away.

    ‘Once we get through that first stage, anything that is again not appropriate for the location we are gathering donations for, but is still usable, we would package separately and give to Trade.’

    The sheer magnitude of the two earthquakes led to the deadliest natural disaster in the region in the last 100 years.

    According to Turkish authorities, more than 36,000 people have been killed, and the death toll continues to rise.

    Meanwhile, the Syrian government and the United Nations say more than 5,800 victims have been recorded across the border.

    Stripper shoes, ripped clothing and used lingerie amongst donations sent to Turkey and Syria earthquake survivors
    The TCCA stopped accepting donations because of the influx of clothes (Picture: Turkish Cypriot Community Association)

    The world has watched in horror as hundreds of thousands of people in the two countries have been left without shelter and warm clothes in as low as 0°C.

    Mr Metto, a filmmaker from Turkish-Cypriot descent, said donations were far higher than in the past.

    On the day the earthquakes took place, TCCA received more than 240 phone calls from people desperate to help.

    To put this in perspective, the association normally registers between 30 and 40 at the most.

    ‘We have done a lot of donation schemes in the past to help the homeless, people in Ukraine and we supported the community during Covid,’ the CEO said.

    Stripper shoes, ripped clothing and used lingerie amongst donations sent to Turkey and Syria earthquake survivors
    London mayor Sadiq Khan visited the TCCA earlier in the week (Picure: Turkish Cypriot Community Association)

    ‘But this time the donations were far higher than we expected. By Wednesday, we had already retracted our appeal for donations.’

    Most organisations have stressed that money is the best way to help the victims of the catastrophic event.

    What may be well-intentioned efforts to donate items such as clothing, becomes a logistical nightmare when having to be transported across the border.

    Mr Metto said a number of organisations have been collecting anything they can without a system of sifting through it.

    He said large lorries, which are independent from any official charities, have been transporting aid to Turkey and ‘dumping it on the side of the road’ because there are no available storage facilities.

    Source: Metro.co.uk

  • Celebrity tributes pour in for Christian Atsu

    Celebrity tributes pour in for Christian Atsu

    Tributes have started pouring in for former Black Stars player, Christian Atsu.

    Following the official announcement of the death of Ghanaian footballer Christian Atsu, a lot of people including celebrities have been paying tribute to him.

    The footballer was among thousands who lost their lives after an earthquake in Turkey and Syria happened on February 6, 2023.

    After his club, Hatayspor, confirmed his passing, Ghana’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs also released a statement to that effect.

    For the past two weeks, a lot of people had been waiting for positive news about Atsu’s miraculous escape from the disaster until the confirmation of his death. 

    His mortal remains arrived at the Kotaka International Airport on Sunday, February 19, 2023.

    In the meantime, some Ghanaian celebrities have taken to social media to mourn Ghana’s lost treasure. 

    See some of the reactions below: 

    https://twitter.com/ASAMOAH_GYAN3/status/1626891950455390210?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1626891950455390210%7Ctwgr%5E2aa54a608fa34d1a199a6137c8d465c0dc618529%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.myjoyonline.com%2Fcelebrities-mourn-christian-atsu%2F

    Source: Myjoyonline

  • Yemeni mother conceives after being pulled from Turkey-Syria earthquake rubble

    Yemeni mother conceives after being pulled from Turkey-Syria earthquake rubble

    After being rescued from her earthquake-damaged home in Turkey ten hours earlier, a Yemeni mother who had escaped the war in her homeland gave birth to a baby girl.

    When the quake struck Faten Al Yousifi’s flat in Malatya, Turkey, just after 4 a.m. on Monday, she was 39 weeks pregnant, had decorated her baby’s nursery, and was prepared to give birth.

    She was extracted from the wreckage by a family friend named Hisham and rescue workers after 10 hours of squatting, when she was bewildered, dehydrated, and worried about the safety of her unborn child.

    “I did not believe I was still alive,” Faten told the BBC via WhatsApp on Thursday.

    She was rushed to the hospital where the doctors carried out a Caesarean section to deliver her baby girl Loujain, meaning “silver” in Arabic.

    But then came tragedy. Hisham returned to rescue Faten’s husband, and was shocked to see a nearby building had collapsed on top of their flats.

    Faten’s husband, 29-year-old Burhan Al Alimi, had died. His body was recovered three days later. He was in his final year of chemical engineering studies at Inonu University in Malatya.

    Like any new mother, Faten is sleep deprived and trying to adjust to her newborn’s feeding and sleep routines.

    “The beginning was very difficult, especially with the circumstances,” she said.

    http://tigpost.co/always-welcome-turkey-families-take-in-earthquake-survivors/

    Still, she is grateful. “I thank everyone who helped me and stood with me,” she said. “I had a family when mine wasn’t there.”

    “We imagined a beautiful life for our daughter,” she added. “But God’s will is above everything, everywhere. No one knows where the end will be.”

    Since Loujain’s arrival, there has been an outpouring of love and support from fellow earthquake survivors in both Yemeni and Turkish communities.

    Faten has moved in with a friend in Kocaeli, closer to Istanbul. And Yemen’s ambassador to Turkey, Muhammad Tariq, has visited the baby.

    Yemeni Ambassador to Turkey visits Loujain's home
    Image caption,The Yemeni ambassador to Turkey, Muhammad Tariq, visits Loujain’s home

    Faten and her husband moved to Turkey after the Iranian-backed Houthis seized the capital, Sanaa, in late 2014.

    Since the Saudi-led bombing campaign in Yemen began in March 2015, the Yemeni community in Turkey has increased to more than 20,000.

    Yet even before the war, Yemenis were emigrating to Turkey for studies and work following the Arab Spring-inspired protests in 2011.

    Muhammad Amer, president of the Yemeni Students Union in Turkey, said there were now more than 8,000 Yemeni students in the country.

    So far, he said eight Yemenis had been confirmed dead across Gaziantep, Hatay, Adiyaman, Diyarbakir, Malatya and Iskenderun.

    http://tigpost.co/turkey-syria-survivor-rescued-167-hours-after-earthquake/

    Yemeni doctor Mohammed Al-Ara’awi, who arrived Turkey before the war, said he lost his wife, 16-year-old son and young daughter.

    When the quake hit, he was in Adana city, but his family were in Hatay. After desperately trying to reach neighbours, he travelled to Hatay and was devastated to learn about his family trapped under the rubble.

    “Waiting on the rubble was like the Yemeni war that people lived through,” he said from Istanbul.

    Idris Aqlan, a 25-year-old student at Gaziantep University, was visiting Istanbul when the earthquake hit. He told the BBC that two Turkish friends died.

    “I lived through many difficult situations in Yemen because of the war, but this one was much more difficult,” he said.

    The sudden nature of the earthquake did not give people time to prepare, he explained. In war, he said, at least there is time to hide in cellars, in the desert, or in the mountains.

    Source: BBC

  • ‘Miracle’ baby Aya moved to a safe space amid kidnap fears

    ‘Miracle’ baby Aya moved to a safe space amid kidnap fears

    A health official has relocated an orphaned Syrian infant who was born during last week’s earthquake under the debris of her destroyed home to a “secure area.”

    According to a source who spoke to the BBC, the Afrin Health Directorate took the precautionary move to safeguard the girl, Aya, from potential kidnapping and adoption fraud.

    She was receiving medical care at a hospital in the area controlled by the opposition when there was a violent incident there on Monday.

    The manager allegedly received physical abuse from a male nurse and two armed guys.

    Dr. Ahmad Hajj Hassan, the director of the health department, refuted statements made on social media that Aya’s kidnapping attempt had failed.

    “The kidnap allegations were a misunderstanding. This was a wholly internal hospital-related issue and had no connection whatsoever with the baby,” he said.

    Thousands of people offered to adopt the baby last week, after her story was widely reported by local and international media.

    However, the health directorate is determined to prioritise her welfare and act cautiously with the adoption process, according to the source.

    Aya’s mother went into labour soon after their family home in the town of Jindayris was destroyed by the 7.8-magnitude earthquake that struck southern Turkey on 6 February.

    She died after giving birth to Aya, who was still connected by her umbilical cord when she was found by rescuers.

    Dramatic footage shared on social media showed a man carrying the baby, covered in dust, after she was pulled from debris.

    Aya’s father, four siblings and an aunt were also killed in the disaster.

    Khalil al-Suwadi, a distant relative who was there when she was pulled to safety, brought the baby to the hospital in Afrin.

    The paediatrician looking after her told the BBC last Thursday that Aya had arrived in “a bad state”. “She had bumps, bruises, she was cold and barely breathing,” he added.

    She responded to treatment and by the next day her condition had stabilised.

    The hospital’s manager said his wife was breastfeeding Aya alongside their own four-month daughter and that they would care for her until she was adopted.

    Jindaryis, about 8km (5 miles) from the Turkish border, was one of the worst-hit towns in Syria. Some 200 buildings there have completely collapsed.

    The White Helmets, whose volunteer first responders have been leading the search and rescue effort in opposition-held areas, say 517 bodies have been pulled from the rubble there.

    The deaths represent almost a quarter of the total reported by the White Helmets and opposition authorities across the region, where 90% of the 4.6 million population needed humanitarian assistance even before the disaster.

    Source: BBC

  • A look at the top 10 most devastating earthquakes in world history

    A look at the top 10 most devastating earthquakes in world history

    The recent 7.8 earthquake that hit Turkey and Syria which has caused havoc has led to a preview of similar past events which brought so much despair.

    Below is the list of top 10 earthquakes in an ascending order.

    Valdivia Earthquake (9.5)

    The Chilean coast was severely battered

    On May 22, 1960, the coast of Chile, parallel to the city of Valdivia was hit. About  1,000 to 6,000 people died with about 3,000 people injured.

    The main tsunami severely battered the Chilean coast, and raced across the Pacific Ocean and devastated Hilo, Hawaii. 

    Waves as high as 10.7 meters (35 feet) were recorded even 10,000 kilometers (6,200 mi) from the epicenter, and as far away as Japan and the Philippines.

    Great Alaska Earthquake (9.2)

    Many tried to outrun the tsunami

    On Good Friday, March 27, 1964, at 5:36 PM (local time, 3:36 UTC), the Prince William Sound region of Alaska experienced the Great Alaska earthquake.

    It lasted for about 4.5 minutes and was the strongest earthquake ever recorded in the United States.

    The Chenega village was demolished by a tsunami that reached a height of 27 feet (8.2 meters), killing 23 of the 68 inhabitants.

    Survivors climbed to high ground and outran the tsunami. It also brought up a significant underwater landslide. 30 people died when the docks and harbor in Port Valdez city collapsed.

    A total of 139 people are believed to have died: 15 as a result of the earthquake itself, 106 from the subsequent tsunami in Alaska, 5 from the tsunami in Oregon, and 13 from the tsunami in California.

    Sumatra Earthquake (9.1)

    Malaysia, Myanmar, Bangladesh, Maldives, Somalia, Thailand, India, and Sri Lanka were all affected

    The 2004 Sumatra Earthquake, also known as the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake, struck on December 26 and was one of the deadliest natural disasters in recent memory.

    The faulting during the earthquake lasted for between 8.3 and 10 minutes, which was a record for faulting duration. This energy is less than that of the Tsar Bomba, the greatest nuclear weapon ever detonated, but more than 1,500 times that of the Hiroshima atomic bomb.

    More over 200,000 people died, the majority on Sumatra, but also in smaller numbers in Malaysia, Myanmar, Bangladesh, Maldives, Somalia, Thailand, India, and Sri Lanka.

    Tōhoku Earthquake (9.1)

    There were over 15,000 deaths

    A significant underwater megathrust earthquake off the coast of Japan happened on March 11, 2011, on Friday at 14:46 local time (05:46 UTC).

    An enormous tsunami with waves as high as 40.5 meters (133 feet) was caused by the earthquake. It was one of the deadliest in recorded history; the waves inflicted major structural damage in northeastern Japan, traveling as far inland as 6 miles (10 km).

    Airports, highways, and railroads were destroyed, and 127,290 buildings completely, 272,788 partially, and 747,989 partially damaged. A dam gave way.

    In particular, the level 7 meltdowns at three reactors in the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant complex were brought on by the tsunami.

    On 10 March 2015, it was announced that the confirmed casualties were 15,894 deaths, 6,152 injured, and 2,562 people missing.

    Kamchatka, Russia Earthquake (9.0)

    The fatalities ranged between 10,000 to 15,000

    In the extreme east of Russia, off the shore of the Kamchatka Peninsula, a massive earthquake struck on November 4, 1952, at 16:58 GMT (04:58 local time).

    It generated a massive, deadly tsunami that swept across the whole Pacific Ocean, with waves as high as 15 meters (50 feet), which severely damaged the Kamchatka Peninsula and the Kuril Islands and resulted in the deaths of between 10,000 and 15,000 people.

     Maule(Chile) Earthquake (8.8)

    Damage done to houses by the 2010 earthquake with 8.8 magnitude in Concepcion city, Chile.

    The 2010 Chile earthquake, often referred to as the 2010 Maule Earthquake, struck the Maule Region of Chile on February 27, 2010, at 03:34 local time (06:34 UTC), roughly 3 kilometers (1.9 miles) off the coast of the Pelluhue commune.

    Three minutes or so passed during the prolonged shaking. Numerous cities, including the capital Santiago, saw building collapses that resulted in many fatalities.

    In January 2011, the authorities released the ultimate death toll of 525 deaths and 25 people still missing.

    Ecuador-Colombia Earthquake (8.8)

    Over 500 lives were affected

    On January 31, 1906, at 15:36 UTC, a large earthquake off the coast of Ecuador, close to Esmeraldas, occurred (a coastal city in northwestern Ecuador).

    It is reported that the destructive tsunami caused at least 500 casualties on the coast of Colombia.

    Rat Islands Earthquake (8.7) 

    No deaths were reported

    The 1965 Rat Islands Earthquake struck on February 4, 1965, at 05:01 UTC (19:01, February 3, in local time).

    Due to its remote location, it only created a tsunami on Shemya Island in Alaska that was above 10 meters (33 feet) in height. There were no deaths, according to reports.

    Assam-Tibet Earthquake (8.6) 

    Over 500 people died

    The Xizang-India border region experienced an earthquake on August 15, 1950, with the epicenter being close to Rima, Tibet. As a result of the earthquake, numerous structures were demolished, and between 1.500 and 3.000 people perished.

    Large landslides obstructed the Subansiri River after the earthquake. 8 days later, this natural barrier collapsed, unleashing a 7 m (23 ft) high wave that flooded several communities and claimed the lives of 536 people.

    Sumatra Earthquake (8.6)

    Ten individuals died

    A magnitude 8.6 underwater earthquake struck the Indian Ocean on April 11, 2012, at 15:38 local time, close to the Indonesian city of Aceh. Authorities responded to a tsunami alert but later discontinued it.

    The strongest documented strike-slip earthquake occurred during these extraordinarily powerful intraplate earthquakes.

    There were reports of tsunamis ranging in size from 10 cm to 0.8 meters (3.9 inches to 31.4 inches), however none of them were devastating because it happened so far away from populated areas. Ten fatalities and twelve injuries were recorded, the most of which were due to anxiety and/or heart attacks.

    Source: The Independent Ghana

  • UEFA to hold minute of silence for Turkey and Syria earthquake victims

    UEFA to hold minute of silence for Turkey and Syria earthquake victims

    Each of this week’s European matches will begin with a minute of silence in remembrance of those lost in the earthquakes that struck Turkey and Syria, according to UEFA.

    The United Nations’ humanitarian organization on the ground estimates that the death toll from last Monday’s high-magnitude earthquakes that slammed southern Turkey and northern Syria will likely double from the current total of over 33,000.

    In Syria, it is claimed that over five million people have been rendered homeless, while Turkey has reported that over a million people are using temporary shelters as a result of the tremors.

    The Champions League, Europa League, and Europa Conference League knockout stage matches this week will all feature tributes to the deaths, according to information released by UEFA.

    A minute’s silence will be observed before every fixture across UEFA’s club competitions this week, while a commemorative banner featuring the message, ‘We are together with you’, will be displayed in Turkish and Arabic.

    A statement released by European football’s governing body on Monday also confirmed black armbands could be worn at the discretion of teams and referees.

    Last week, UEFA confirmed it would donate €150,000 to the Turkish Football Federation and an additional €50,000 to the Bonyan Organization and Tiafi, both assisting in disaster relief.

    Trabzonspor are the only Turkish club in action in UEFA’s competitions this week, hosting Basel in the first leg of their Europa Conference League knockout round play-off tie.

    Istanbul Basaksehir and Sivasspor advanced to the last 16 of that competition as group winners, while Fenerbahce are into the same round in the Europa League.

    Hatayspor and Gaziantep, two clubs based in the region effected by the earthquake, have withdrawn from the Turkish Super Lig.

    Former Chelsea, Newcastle United and Everton winger Christian Atsu, who plays for Hatayspor, is still missing.

  • Turkey-Syria: Survivor rescued 167 hours after earthquake

    Turkey-Syria: Survivor rescued 167 hours after earthquake

    One week after the devastating earthquake hit Turkey, teams are still rushing to save victims that could be alive under the rubble — even as aid agencies and authorities warned the chances of finding survivors are becoming increasingly unlikely.

    After 167 hours, a man was rescued from the debris in Antakya, in southern Turkey’s Hatay province, video from CNN affiliate CNN Turk shows. The man is seen being hoisted up by rescue workers, who he then embraces and grasps hands with.

    Earlier Sunday, a 55-year-old woman was pulled from the rubble after 159 hours buried, while an 85-year-old woman was rescued after 152 hours trapped in what her nephew described as a cavity around 30-40 centimeters (11-16 inches) wide, according to CNN Turk.

    Two people — a 25-year-old Syrian man and a child — were also rescued in Hatay some 151 and 152 hours after the quake hit, local officials said Sunday.

    The man was rescued after response teams detected noises beneath the debris while conducting a sound survey in the ruins of an apartment building in Antakya, according to officials.

    The technology was also used by the teams to find the child, whose age was not disclosed.

    At least 41 people were rescued from under the rubble in Turkey between the 141st and 163rd hours after the quake hit, state-run news agency Anadolu reported Monday.

    https://www.youtube.com/shorts/5PSfdDj98cs

    Death toll: More than 36,000 people have been confirmed dead across Turkey and Syria, where relief efforts have been complicated by the long-running civil war. Rescue operations are over in rebel-held areas of northwest Syria, the White Helmets volunteer organization said Friday.

    Credit: CNN.com

  • First aid convoy reaches northern Syria

    First aid convoy reaches northern Syria

    The first relief convoy has reportedly entered the region from Turkey, arriving in opposition-held northwest Syria since the deadly earthquake on Monday.

    Officials said six lorries had gone through Idlib’s Bab al-Hawa crossing.

    Road damage and logistical difficulties caused a four-day pause in the delivery of life-saving aid to the area.

    Rescuers report that hundreds of families are trapped beneath the debris of collapsed buildings and that at least 16,000 people have been murdered.

    4.1 million people were already dependent on humanitarian aid before the earthquake, the majority of them were women and children.

    There are still aftershocks here and there’s a constant risk of more buildings collapsing. But most homes are already gone.

    A man comes up to me and tells me his brothers are buried in a building nearby and need help. This happens a lot here.

    The air is thick from fire smoke, people are burning wood to keep warm. Everything is coated in the dust and dirt of the collapsed and collapsing buildings.

    Helicopters flying overhead add to the post-apocalyptic feel. Those still trapped under buildings are enduring hell, but those that escaped aren’t faring much better.

  • Christian Atsu ‘plunged from ninth floor’ as building collapsed in earthquake

    Christian Atsu ‘plunged from ninth floor’ as building collapsed in earthquake

    When a terrible 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck Turkey and Syria, Christian Atsu, according to his agent, fell from the ninth floor of his apartment building.

    Atsu was rescued from beneath rubble on Tuesday when a rescue team heard his voice on one recovery mission.

    Now his agent has explained how 20 minutes after returning home from a poker night with team-mates, Atsu was sent plunging to the ground from the ninth floor.

    ‘The last I heard from him was at midnight on Sunday. Christian and his team-mates were playing poker until 3:30am at a friend’s apartment,’ Atsu’s agent, Nana Sechere, told the Mirror.

    ‘The journey back to his apartment was around half an hour. He returned at 4am and the earthquake started around 20 minutes later. I didn’t know anything until I received a call from a club official at 5am asking if I’d heard from Christian. He told me Christian’s building had been completely destroyed and that they couldn’t get hold of him.’

  • Over 11,000 dead in Turkey, Syria after Monday’s earthquake

    Over 11,000 dead in Turkey, Syria after Monday’s earthquake

    As of right now, it is known that around 11,000 people died in southern Turkey and northern Syria.

    Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the president of Turkey, is currently in the earthquake disaster area as criticism of the government’s reaction rises.

    Families in some severely damaged areas have complained that the poor pace of rescue operations has left them with little assistance in searching among the rubble for relatives.

    Erdogan recognized that the early response had been challenging, but he attributed delays to deteriorated roads and airports.

    In Antakya, Hatay province, a 64-year-old man claimed, “We survived the earthquake, but we will die here from hunger or cold.”

    Time is running out to save people, according to the White Helmets, who are leading attempts to rescue civilians in Syria’s rebel-held areas.

    Dramatic footage has emerged of rescues – one family of six were pulled alive from the rubble in the Syrian city of Idlib.

  • Bishops demand arrest of South Sudan assailants

    Bishops demand arrest of South Sudan assailants

    The government of South Sudan has been urged by Catholic bishops to apprehend and prosecute the assailants who murdered civilians on the eve of the historic visit of the Pope and two other prominent clerics.

    At least 21 civilians were killed on Thursday in Kajo-Keji county in Central Equatoria state by suspected cattle herders from Jonglei state.

    The following day, a joint ecumenical peace pilgrimage to South Sudan was launched by Pope Francis, Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby, and Moderator of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church of Scotland, Iain Greenshields.

    The death toll from the Kajo-Keji incident has risen to 27, with “countless numbers” injured, according to the UN peacekeeping Mission in South Sudan (Unmiss).

    Also 2,000 people, including 30 unaccompanied children, were forced to feel from their homes, Unmiss said.

    Among those killed were four volunteers from the South Sudan Red Cross Society, who were stationed in the area conducting Ebola awareness work following the recent outbreak of the deadly disease in neighbouring Uganda.

    The Red Cross says its volunteers in Kajo-Keji were taken from their homes and “callously killed.”

  • Turkey-Syria earthquake death toll exceeds 4,500

    Turkey-Syria earthquake death toll exceeds 4,500

    Rescue workers are having a harder time because of the freezing weather and snowfall in the devastated area.

    Following devastating earthquakes that claimed more than 4,600 lives and toppled buildings across southeast Turkey and northern Syria, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey has declared seven days of national mourning, and Syria has asked the UN for assistance.

    Authorities worry that the death toll from Monday’s magnitude 7.8 earthquake, which was followed by a magnitude 7.6 earthquake and several aftershocks, will rise as rescuers combed through piles of metal and concrete scattered across a region already troubled by Syria’s 12-year civil war and a refugee crisis in search of survivors.

    Rescuers continued their search through the chilly night and into Tuesday morning in an effort to extricate more survivors from the debris.

    Turkey’s Disaster and Emergency Management Authority (AFAD), gave the number of dead in Turkey at 3,381 on Tuesday morning, while 15,834 others were injured.

    In Syria, at least 1,300 people were killed, according to the Ministry of Health and the White Helmets rescue organisation on Monday evening.

    Freezing winter weather conditions and snowfall in the devastated region have added to the plight of many thousands of people left injured and homeless by the earthquake. Downed buildings and destroyed roads have hampered efforts to find survivors and get crucial aid into affected areas.

    Al Jazeera’s Sinem Koseoglu, reporting from Istanbul, said millions of people need help.

    “And their need is even more acute because it is winter and they are facing cold temperatures, snow and rain.”

    Ten cities in southern Turkey have been declared disaster areas, according to Al Jazeera’s Natasha Ghoneim, reporting from Istanbul. Freezing temperatures and snow have hampered rescue efforts, and more bad weather is expected to hit the region. Electricity supplies and natural gas have been cut off in many areas and the government is working to restore both services.

    “A full picture of the devastation is only starting to emerge – devastation that will likely become more evident as the sun rises” on Tuesday, Ghoneim said.

    Seismic activity continued to rattle the region on Monday, including another jolt nearly as powerful as the initial earthquake.

    The US Geological Survey measured the initial earthquake at 7.8, with a depth of 18km (11 miles). Hours later, a 7.6 magnitude temblor also struck. The second jolt caused a multistorey apartment building in the Turkish city of Sanliurfa to topple onto the street in a cloud of dust as bystanders screamed, according to video of the scene.

    Dramatic video footage aired on Turkish television showed buildings collapsing in real time. Visuals showed rescue workers pulling a child alive from a flattened building. The child was then reunited with distraught parents in snow-covered streets.

    More than 7,800 people have been rescued across 10 provinces, according to Orhan Tatar, an official with Turkey’s disaster management authority. Strained medical facilities have quickly filled with injured people, rescue workers said.

    The Syrian American Medical Society, which runs hospitals in northern Syria and southern Turkey, said in a statement that its facilities were “overwhelmed with patients filling the hallways” and called urgently for “trauma supplies and a comprehensive emergency response to save lives and treat the injured”.

    Governments and aid agencies have rushed to deploy personnel, funds and equipment to Turkey and Syria.

    Jordan is sending emergency aid to Syria and Turkey on the orders of King Abdullah II, while Egypt has pledged urgent humanitarian help to Turkey. Lebanon’s cash-strapped government is also sending Red Cross and Civil Defence first responders and firefighters to Turkey to help with its rescue efforts.

    The European Union has mobilised search and rescue teams, and the bloc’s Copernicus satellite system has been activated to provide emergency mapping services. At least 13 member countries have offered assistance. The United Kingdom and United States said they are also ready to send help to Syria, but Washington has ruled out dealing directly with the Syrian government.

    Germany’s foreign ministry said it is coordinating its aid response with EU partners and readying deliveries of emergency generators, tents, blankets and water treatment equipment.

    The US is coordinating immediate assistance to NATO-member Turkey, including teams to support search and rescue efforts. In California, nearly 100 Los Angeles County firefighters and structural engineers, along with six specially trained dogs, were being sent to Turkey to help with rescue efforts.

    Russian rescue teams from the Emergencies Ministry are preparing to fly to Syria, where the Russian military deployed in that country already has sent 10 units comprising 300 people to help clear debris and search for survivors. The Russian military has set up points to distribute humanitarian assistance. Russia also has offered help to Turkey, which has been accepted.

  • Christian Atsu’s most recent tweet

    Christian Atsu’s most recent tweet

    Millions across the world are praying for former Black Stars, Christian Atsu and sporting director for Hatayspor, Tanarsh Sowth, who are reportedly missing after Monday’s earthquake which hit Turkey and Syria.

    Prior to the unfortunate incident, Christian Atsu celebrated his team which recently tasted victory.

    On Sunday, February 5, Christian Atsu expressed excitement over being able to net a goal for his side, Hatayspor, in the game against Kasimpasa SK.

    Christian Atsu scored his first goal in the Turkish Superliga over the weekend when Hatayspor defeated Kasimpasa SK by a slim margin.

    Hatayspor eventually won 1-0 at the Yeni Hatay Stadium when Atsu came off the bench to score the game’s only goal.

    The 31-year-old forward replaced French forward Rayan Aabid in the 82nd minute in his third appearance of the season.

    Hatayspor moved out of the relegation zone and into the 14th spot on the standings thanks to an Atsu goal in stoppage time in the round of 23 match.

    The devastating news of Christian Atsu’s disappearance has left many shattered.

    Thousands of people have perished due to the natural disaster. Meanwhile, rescue efforts are ongoing to locate Christian Atsu and Taner Savut.

  • China, UK, EU several other countries pledge support to  Turkey, Syria

    China, UK, EU several other countries pledge support to Turkey, Syria

    Strong earthquakes and their aftershocks have wreaked havoc across Turkey and Syria.

    Following an earthquake disaster that has  left more than 1,800 people dead, dozens of nations and organisations have offered to help with rescue operations in southeast Turkey and northwest Syria.

    The international assistance that has been mobilised and offered since the Monday morning earthquake are listed below. It will be revised appropriately.

    Following an earthquake disaster that left more than 1,800 people dead, dozens of nations and organisations have offered to help with rescue operations in southeast Turkey and northwest Syria.

    The international assistance that has been mobilised and offered since the Monday morning earthquake is listed below. It will be revised appropriately.

    China

    China is willing to provide humanitarian emergency aid to earthquake-struck Turkey and Syria, the State Council’s foreign aid agency said.

    China expressed condolences and concern for the loss of life and property, and is in communications with both Turkey and Syria, a spokesperson from China International Development Cooperation Agency said.

    European Union

    Ten search-and-rescue teams from eight European Union countries have been mobilised to help first responders in Turkey, the European Commission said in a statement.

    The units come from Bulgaria, Croatia, the Czech Republic, France, Greece, the Netherlands, Poland and Romania. Italy and Hungary have also offered to send teams to Turkey, the Commission wrote.

    Germany

    A spokesperson for the German government said his country would contribute to the swift delivery of aid.

    Greece

    Kyriakos Mitsotakis, prime minister of Greece, offered condolences and support to Turkey, saying his country was mobilising its resources and will assist immediately.

    India

    The Indian government said two teams from its National Disaster Response Force comprising 100 personnel with specially trained canine squads and equipment were ready to be flown to the disaster area for search-and-rescue operations.

    Medical teams were also being readied, and relief material was being sent in coordination with the Turkish authorities.

    Iran

    Foreign ministry spokesperson Nasser Kanaani expressed “condolences and deep sympathy” to the quake-hit countries and expressed readiness to help the victims.

    Hailing Iran’s “good relationship” with both countries, Kanaani said: “If there is a need for the presence of relief and health institutions of the Islamic Republic of Iran in the earthquake-affected areas, we will fulfil our moral responsibility.”

    He described the offer of help as a “moral, human and Islamic responsibility”.

    Italy

    Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni said Italy’s Civil Protection was standing by to contribute support and provide first aid.

    Israel

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said all authorities had been instructed to make immediate preparations to provide medical and search-and-rescue assistance.

    Defence minister Yoav Gallant said Israel’s security forces are ready to provide any assistance needed, while foreign minister Eli Cohen added that a swift aid programme was being prepared.

    NATO

    Voicing full solidarity with Turkey, NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg said on Twitter: “I am in touch with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu, and NATO Allies are mobilizing support now.”

    Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC)

    “NRC is assessing the situation in order to provide direct support to those most affected across Syria. A massive scale up is needed and our organisation will be part of it,” said Carsten Hansen, Middle East regional director for NRC.

    Poland

    Poland will send rescue group HUSAR, consisting of 76 firefighters and eight rescue dogs, Interior and Administration Minister Mariusz Kamiński said.

    Qatar

    The emir of Qatar, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, expressed his condolences in a phone call with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

    State news agency QNA said the emir expressed Qatar’s support for the “sisterly” country “in mitigating the serious humanitarian repercussions left by the earthquake”.

    Spain

    Spanish urban rescue teams are preparing to travel to Turkey, Spain’s interior ministry said, and officials from the defence ministry and other departments were coordinating to send the crews immediately to Turkey.

    Russia

    Russian President Vladimir Putin expressed his condolences and offered assistance.

    “Please accept my deep condolences on the numerous human casualties and large-scale destruction … in your country,” Putin said.

    “We are ready to provide the necessary assistance in this regard,” he added.

    Ukraine

    President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Ukraine was ready to send support.

    On Twitter, Zelenskyy wrote: “I express my sincere condolences to President Erdogan, the Turkish people and the families of the victims of the earthquake in the southeast of Turkey.

    “I wish a speedy recovery to all the victims. We will stand by the Turkish people in this difficult time. Ready to provide the necessary assistance to overcome the consequences of the disaster.

    United Kingdom

    The UK says it will send search and rescue specialists and an emergency medical team to Turkey.

    Britain will send 76 search and rescue specialists, four search dogs and rescue equipment that will arrive in Turkey on Monday evening, the British foreign ministry said.

    “We stand ready to provide further support as needed,” James Cleverly, the UK’s foreign secretary, said in a statement.

    United States

    White House National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said the US is “profoundly concerned” about the incident.

    “I have been in touch with Turkish officials to relay that we stand ready to provide any & all needed assistance. We will continue to closely monitor the situation in coordination with Turkiye,” Sullivan said on Twitter, using Turkey’s official name.

    WHO

    The United Nations’ World Health Organization chief, Tedros Ghebreyesus, said emergency medical teams had been activated to provide essential health care for the injured and most vulnerable.

  • Death toll hits over 1300 in Turkey-Syria earthquake

    Death toll hits over 1300 in Turkey-Syria earthquake

     More than 1,300 people in Turkey and neighboring Syria have died due to a massive 7.8-magnitude earthquake on Monday.

    Turkey’s President Recep Erdogan says 912 people have been killed in Turkey alone, and 5,383 wounded, due to the earthquake.

    He says he can’t predict how much the death toll will rise by as search and rescue efforts continue.

    This is the country’s largest disaster since 1939, Erdogan tells reporters, adding that 2,818 buildings collapsed as a result.

    People were startled out of their beds by the earthquake, which also rattled buildings around the Middle East and was felt as far away as Egypt and Cyprus. A few hours later, a quake with a magnitude of 7.5 struck the same region, increasing the possibility of a fresh humanitarian crisis in an area that had been destroyed by years of war.

    The quake hit an area of Syria’s northwest that is divided between government-held territory and the country’s last remaining rebel-controlled enclave. Turkey is home to millions of refugees from the conflict.

    At least 248 people were killed in government-controlled areas and 700 were injured, according to the country’s health ministry. In opposition-held areas, members of the opposition emergency organization known as the White Helmets said the earthquake had killed at least 221 people and injured hundreds more.

    That takes the combined death toll across the two borders to at least 1,381, with fears it may still rise substantially.

    “We were shaken like a cradle. There were nine of us at home. Two sons of mine are still in the rubble, I’m waiting for them,” said a woman with a broken arm and wounds on her face, speaking to Reuters in an ambulance near the wreckage of a seven-story block where she had lived in Diyarbakir in southeast Turkey. 

    The U.S. Geological Survey said the first quake was centered about 20 miles from Gaziantep, Turkey, a major city and provincial capital, when it struck at 4:17 a.m. local time (8:17 p.m. ET Sunday).

  • Turkey, Syria earthquake: Find all answers to your quake questions

    Turkey, Syria earthquake: Find all answers to your quake questions

    A magnitude 7.8 earthquake that causes extensive damage claims more than 1,000 lives in both countries.

    More than 1,000 people have been killed, tens of thousands injured, and significant damage has been caused by an earthquake with a magnitude of 7.8 that had its epicentre in southeast Turkey close to the northern Syrian border.

    The earthquake toppled buildings and sent rescuers scurrying through the rubble in search of survivors, killing more than 1,300 people—at least 912 in Turkey, 320 in government-held parts of Syria, and at least 147 in opposition-held parts of Syria.

    The death toll was expected to rise, with experts warning that aftershocks could continue for days or weeks. Tremors were also felt in Cyprus, Egypt, and Lebanon.

    Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Twitter that “search and rescue teams were immediately dispatched” to the areas hit by the quake.

    Meanwhile, the Syrian Civil Defence, which operates in the opposition-held portions of northern Syria, declared a state of emergency and appealed for “the international community to support the rescue of civilians in Syria”.

    Where did the earthquake hit?

    The earthquake occurred at 4:17am (01:17 GMT), with its epicentre in Kahramanmaras in Gaziantep province, about 33km (20 miles) from the capital city of Gaziantep, which is home to more than two million people, including hundreds of thousands of Syrians who fled during the country’s war, which began in 2011.

    The US Geological Survey agency noted that the area contains many buildings constructed of brick masonry or brittle concrete, making them “extremely vulnerable to earthquake shaking”.

    Turkey quake
    A person is rescued from the wreckage of a building in Adana, Turkey [Eren Bozkurt/Anadolu Agency]

    The quake was about 50km (31 miles) from the border of northwest Syria, where about 1.7 million internally displaced Syrians live in a cluster of camps in areas controlled by opposition groups still fighting the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

    Several large government-controlled cities, including Aleppo, with a dense population of nearly 2 million, are located in the area.

    More than 40 aftershocks were felt in the wake of the initial quake, including one with a magnitude of 6.7.

    Those aftershocks stretched “a distance of about 100km to 200km (62 to 124 miles) all along a big fault line,” Chris Elders, professor at the School of Earth and Planetary Sciences at Curtin University in Perth, Australia, told Al Jazeera, referring to the East Anatolian Fault, which stretches across the southeastern portion of Turkey.

    What do we know about the casualties?

    The death toll was rising rapidly on Monday, with Turkey’s Disaster and Emergency Management agency saying at least 284 people were killed in seven Turkish provinces by 10:35am (07:35 GMT).

    Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Monday afternoon the death toll had soared to at least 912 people, with nearly 6,000 injured.

    Rescuers were digging through the rubble of levelled buildings in the city of Kahramanmaras and neighbouring Gaziantep. Crumbled buildings were also reported in Adiyaman, Malatya and Diyarbakir.

    The death toll in government-held areas of Syria climbed to 320, according to Syrian state media, with deaths reported in the cities of Aleppo, Hama, Latakia and Tartous.

    At least 147 people were killed and more than 230 injured in rebel-held parts of northwestern Syria on Monday, rescue workers said.

    “Large damage and local devastation has to be expected. Rescue forces are in the area right now and we will see the number rising over the next days,” Martin Mai, a professor of geophysics at King Abdullah University in Saudi Arabia, told Al Jazeera.

    “In the past, these earthquakes in Turkey have led to about 10,000 to 13,000 fatalities owing to building style construction and the sheer size of this event will have profound economic impact as well.”

    The famous Yeni Mosque, which dates back to the 13th century, partially collapsed in the province of Maltaya, where a 14-story building with 28 apartments also collapsed.

    Is the rescue effort going to work?

    Rescue efforts are being hampered by a winter blizzard that covered major roads in ice and snow.

    Aid workers warned of a particularly dire situation in northwest Syria.

    “Right now we have a crisis, in addition to very bad weather conditions and collapsed buildings, and unfortunately, damaged hospitals,” Mazen Kiwara, the Middle East Regional Director for the Syrian American Medical Society, told Al Jazeera.

    Syria
    Rescue workers are seen in Afrin, Syria [Ugur Yildirim/Getty Images]

    “We got initial information from our hospitals … The hospitals are overwhelmed from the number of casualties,” he said, adding that several hospitals had to be evacuated.

    There were “five to seven deaths in a fetal hospital in Afrin,” Kiwara added, “including one pregnant mother who passed away but our colleagues succeeded to get out her baby out alive. And he’s in a good condition right now.”

    Why was the earthquake so deadly?

    Curtin University’s Elders said the depth of the earthquake, at about 18km (11 miles) deep, made the incident particularly devastating.

    While that “sounds quite deep”, he said, however, “the energy that’s released by the earthquake will be felt quite close to the surface with much greater intensity than if it was deeper in the crust”.

    Naci Gorur, an earthquake expert with Turkey’s Academy of Sciences, urged local officials to immediately check the region’s dams for cracks to avert potentially catastrophic flooding.

    Turkey predominantly sits on the Anatolian Plate, with two major faults, the North Anatolian Fault, which runs between the Anatolian Plate and the Eurasian Plate to the north of Turkey’s land mass, and the East Anatolian Fault, which runs along the Arabian Plate to the southeast of Turkey’s territory.

    The geological location makes Turkey one of the world’s most active earthquake zones.

    In 1999, a magnitude 7.4 earthquake hit the Duzce region in northeastern Turkey, killing more than 17,000 people, including more than 1,000 in Istanbul, the country’s largest city.

    Monday’s quake was the highest magnitude since another magnitude 7.8 earthquake in Erzincan province in 1939, killing more than 30,000.

  • Powerful earthquake in south-east Turkey claims about 300 lives

    Powerful earthquake in south-east Turkey claims about 300 lives

    More than 300 people have been killed and numerous others are trapped after a strong earthquake struck a large area in southeast Turkey, close to the Syrian border.


    According to the US Geological Survey, the 7.8 magnitude earthquake occurred near the city of Gaziantep at 04:17 local time (01:17 GMT) and a depth of 17.9 kilometres (11 miles).

    More than 76 deaths have been reported in Turkey so far, and 10 cities have been affected, including Diyarbakir.

    According to state media, more than 230 people died in Syria.

    The Syrian health ministry said people had died in the provinces of Aleppo, Latakia, Hama and Tartus.

    There are fears the death toll will rise sharply in the coming hours.

    Many buildings have collapsed and rescue teams have been deployed to search for survivors under huge piles of rubble.

    Turkish Interior Minister Suleymon Soylu said 10 cities were affected: Gaziantep, Kahramanmaras, Hatay, Osmaniye, Adiyaman, Malatya, Sanliurfa, Adana, Diyarbakir and Kilis.

    In Malatya province, north-east of Gaziantep, at least 23 people were killed, local officials said. In Sanliurfa, to the east, there were 17 deaths. And more deaths were reported in Diyarbakir and Osmaniye.

    About 440 people were injured in Turkey and 639 in Syria.

    A BBC Turkish correspondent in Diyarbakir, reported that a shopping mall in the city collapsed.

    The tremor was also felt in Lebanon and Cyprus.

    “I was writing something and just all of a sudden the entire building started shaking and yes I didn’t really know what to feel,” Mohamad El Chamaa, a student in the Lebanese capital, Beirut, told the BBC.

    “I was right next to the window so I was just scared that they might shatter. It went on for four-five minutes and it was pretty horrific. It was mind-blowing,” he said.

    Rushdi Abualouf, a BBC producer in the Gaza Strip, said there was about 45 seconds of shaking in the house he was staying in.

    Turkey earthquake map

    Turkish seismologists estimated the strength of the quake to be 7.4 magnitude. They said that a second tremor hit the region just minutes later.

    Turkey lies in one of the world’s most active earthquake zones.

    In 1999, more than 17,000 people were killed after a powerful tremor rocked the north-west of the country.

    Rescue teams check a destroyed house in Diyarbakir, Turkey. Photo: 6 February 2023
    Image caption, In Diyarbakir north-east of Gaziantep a search is now under way for people trapped in damaged buildings
    Smashed cars under a destroyed building in Malatya, Turkey. Photo: 6 February 2023
    Image caption,In Malatya, also north-east of Gaziantep, cars were smashed by collapsed buildings
    People search for survivors after a building collapsed in Hama, Syria. Photo: 6 February 2023
    Image caption,In northern Syria, the quake flattened a number of buildings in the city of Hama
  • Stopping UN cross-border aid could make the cholera outbreak in Syria worse

    Stopping UN cross-border aid could make the cholera outbreak in Syria worse

    On Monday, the UN Security Council will vote to extend permission for the delivery of aid from Turkey.

    Humanitarian workers in the final pocket of Syria controlled by the opposition are concerned that if the UN is forced to halt aid deliveries from Turkey across the border, the cholera epidemic already ravaging the area will worsen.

    The four million residents of the region, who endure appalling conditions, are heavily reliant on the food and medical supplies that are transported across the border thanks to a 2014 UN Security Council resolution that permitted such shipments despite the Syrian government’s objections.

    The Security Council is due to vote on Monday, a day before the current authorisation expires, on renewing it for a further six months. Health workers in the zone, which comprises most of the province of Idlib and parts of Aleppo province in northwestern Syria, fear the consequences should Syria’s ally Russia veto it or place further restrictions on the programme.

    “The capabilities of the health sector are already very weak, and we suffer from an acute shortage of medicines, medical supplies and serums,” said Zuhair al-Qurat, the head of Idlib’s health directorate.

    “Stopping cross-border aid will have a multiplier effect on the cholera outbreak in the region,” he told Reuters.

    Though diplomats say Russia has indicated it will allow the authorisation’s renewal, uncertainty remains.

    Russia’s deputy UN ambassador Dmitry Polyanskiy told Reuters the implementation of the current resolution – adopted in July – was “far from our expectations” and a final decision would be made by Moscow on Monday.

    Catastrophic consequences

    Top UN officials, including aid chief Martin Griffiths, have warned that ending the operation would be “catastrophic”.

    Idlib has recorded more than 14,000 suspected cholera cases and Aleppo more than 11,000 since the outbreak began in September, making them the second and fourth worst-hit provinces in Syria respectively.

    They are particularly vulnerable because they rely on water from the Euphrates river to drink and irrigate crops, and because the health sector in opposition-held Syria has been battered by more than a decade of war.

    The UN authorisation allows agencies to bring in hygiene kits, chlorine tablets to disinfect water and equipment for eight cholera treatment centres with more than 200 beds. Non-governmental groups also truck safe drinking water to homes.

    Without it, international NGOs would not have international legal cover and could not keep up with the pace and quantities of aid needed, three aid workers told Reuters.

    That is in part because large donor countries trust that aid brought in through the UN will not be politicised, unfairly distributed or seized by hardline armed groups.

    The chlorine used to disinfect water presents a particular challenge. The chemical has been used in Syria as a weapon of war, prompting concerns among donors that would slow down its procurement for cholera treatment by humanitarian organisations other than the UN, the aid workers said.

    “These centres and health facilities would be suspended. Supplies … transhipped specifically for the cholera pandemic in the northwest would be interrupted – fluid, serums, injections, oral medications,” said Mohammad Jassim, the International Rescue Committee’s northwest Syria coordinator.

    Even if the resolution is renewed for another six months, health workers have already suffered from short-term renewals, leaving them unable to plan ahead, said Osama Abou el-Ezz, the head of the Syrian-American Medical Society (SAMS) in Aleppo.

    Source: Aljazeera.com
  • Turkey Kurdish raids: Operation Claw-Sword targets militant bases

    Turkey has launched air-raids on Kurdish targets in Iraq and Syria, a week after a bombing in Istanbul which it blames on Kurdish militants.

    The raids – dubbed Operation Claw-Sword – struck Kurdish bases which were being used to launch attacks on Turkey, the defence ministry said.

    A Syrian-Kurdish spokesperson said two villages populated with internally displaced people were hit.

    The banned Kurdish PKK group denies carrying out the Istanbul attack.

    As the air-raids began, the Turkish defence ministry tweeted that the “hour of reckoning” had arrived, alongside a picture of a fighter plane taking off and footage of an explosion.

    “Terrorists’ shelters, bunkers, caves, tunnels, and warehouses were successfully destroyed,” said Turkey’s Defence Minister Hulusi Akar.

    Kurdish-led forces in Syria vowed to retaliate and said the city of Kobane was hit as well as two densely populated villages.

    Unconfirmed reports say there are a number of casualties.

    It is not clear which targets were hit in Iraq.

    Middle East map showing Kurdish areas

    The raids come a week after a bombing on one of Istanbul’s busiest streets which killed six people and injured more than 80.

    Turkish authorities blamed the bombing on the Kurdish militant group the PKK, which Turkey, the EU and US regard as a terrorist organisation.

    However, the PKK said it would not “directly target civilians” and denied responsibility.

    Authorities have arrested dozens of people in connection with the attack including a Syrian woman who they say planted the bomb.

    Before the arrest, the Turkish justice minister said a bag had exploded near a bench after a woman sat there for forty minutes.

    Five people have also been charged in Bulgaria over the attack, according to the AFP news agency.

    Kurdish militants have been battling for decades to achieve Kurdish self-rule in south-east Turkey.

    In recent years, Turkey has conducted a number of cross-border operations targeting Kurdish groups based in northern Iraq and Syria, aiming to prevent attacks on Turkish territory.

    Source: BBC

  • Air strikes in Syria Two soldiers killed, three others injured in Israeli

    Syrian state media has reported that , an attack has targeted the Shayrat Airbase in the central province of Homs.

    Israeli air strikes in the central province of Homs killed two Syrian soldiers and injured three others.

    Syrian air defences responded to “hostile targets over southeastern Homs province,” intercepting “several of them,” according to the state-run news agency SANA.

    According to a military source, the strikes hit the Shayrat Airbase, causing casualties and damage. Syrian state television broadcast footage of air defences intercepting “Israeli aggression missiles.”

    The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which is based in London, said strong explosions were heard when four Israeli missiles hit the Shayrat Airbase in Homs. It said the missile attack targeted the positions of Iran-backed fighters in the area.

    The strikes occurred after Israeli warplanes were seen flying over neighbouring Lebanon, whose airspace Israel sometimes crosses to carry out attacks on Syria.

    Israel has carried out hundreds of strikes on targets inside government-controlled parts of Syria in recent years but rarely acknowledges or discusses such operations.

    Israel has acknowledged, however, that it targets bases of Iran-allied armed groups, such as Lebanon’s Hezbollah, which has sent thousands of fighters to support Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s forces.

    On Tuesday, air strikes in eastern Syria along the border with Iraq targeted Iran-backed fighters and inflicted casualties, Syrian opposition activists said. According to two paramilitary officers in Iraq, some of those killed in the attack were Iranian nationals. The US military said it was not behind the attack. Some Syrian opposition activists blamed Israel.

    An Israeli strike on Damascus International Airport and nearby military posts outside the Syrian capital on September 17 killed five soldiers.

  • Air strikes hit a pro-Iran convoy near the Iraqi border in Syria

    Despite Washington‘s denial, Iranian state television has accused the US of being behind the attacks.

    According to a Syrian war monitor, Iranian state television, and Iraqi paramilitary officers, air attacks have hit eastern Syria along the Iraqi border, killing Iran-backed fighters.

    The number of casualties has not been confirmed, but according to two Iraqi paramilitary officers, some of those killed in the attack late Tuesday were Iranian nationals. According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, at least 14 people were killed in the raids, the majority of whom were fighters.

    According to the Syrian Observatory, the attacks targeted a convoy of “fuel tankers and trucks loaded with weapons” for the fighters in Syria’s eastern province of Deir Az Zor.

    It is not yet clear who was behind the raid but the United States military has carried out similar attacks in the past.

    The US military has, however, so far denied involvement. Army Major Rachael L Jeffcoat said that “no US forces or US-led coalition (members) conducted an airstrike in al-Qaim, Iraq, on the border with Syria”.

    The convoy of 22 tanker trucks was travelling from Iran to Lebanon, an official in the Iraqi border guard said. Ten trucks were hit, of which four were “completely burnt”, after entering Syrian territory through the Al-Qaim – Abu Kamal border crossing.

    The Deir Ezzor 24, an activist collective, reported three air strikes targeting Iran-backed militias in the Syrian border town of Abu Kamal and nearby areas. It had no immediate word on casualties.

    Earlier, members of Iraqi paramilitary groups operating in the area said an air attack on a convoy carrying fuel across the Iraqi border into Syria killed at least 10 people late on Tuesday.

    Iranian state television Press TV claimed the convoy was carrying Iranian oil to Lebanon through Syria, but offered no casualty details. It also claimed that the convoy attack was carried out by US drones and helicopters, adding that the attack took place after eight of the trucks had crossed into Syria.

    Iran is a major supporter of Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad, sending thousands of fighters to help Syrian government troops in the country’s 11-year war against the country’s opposition.

    In August, the US military carried out air raids in Deir Az Zor targeting Iran-backed fighters after a rocket attack left several US soldiers lightly wounded. At least two fighters described by US Central Command as “suspected Iran-backed militants” were killed. The Pentagon said the strikes were a message to Iran.

  • Australia returns 17 women and children from a Syrian refugee camp

    An estimated 11,000 foreign children and women remain in the refugee camps of Roj and al-Hol in northeastern Syria.

    The Australian government has returned four Australian women and their 13 children from a Syrian refugee camp to the state of New South Wales, according to home affairs minister Clare O’Neil.

    The repatriation is part of a plan to bring back from Syria dozens of Australian women and children who are relatives of dead or imprisoned ISIL (ISIS) fighters and have been held at the al-Hol and Roj detention camps in Kurdish-controlled northeastern Syria for several years.

    Australia first repatriated eight children and grandchildren of two dead ISIL fighters from a Syrian refugee camp in 2019 but has held off repatriating any others until now.

    “The decision to repatriate these women and their children were informed by individual assessments following detailed work by national security agencies,” O’Neil said in a statement on Saturday.

    The women and children left the Roj refugee camp in northern Syria on Thursday afternoon and crossed the border into Iraq to board a flight home, the Sydney Morning Herald and state broadcaster ABC reported on Friday.

    O’Neil said at all times the focus has been on the safety and security of “all Australians” as well as those involved in the repatriation, with the government having “carefully considered the range of security, community and welfare factors in making the decision to repatriate”.

    The repatriation followed similar moves by the United States, Italy, Germany, France, the Netherlands, Belgium, the United Kingdom, and Canada, O’Neil said.

    She said allegations of illegal activity would continue to be investigated by state and federal law enforcement authorities.

    “Any identified offences may lead to law enforcement action being taken,” O’Neil said, adding that New South Wales was providing “extensive support services” to assist the group to reintegrate into Australia.

    Opposition party leader Peter Dutton has labelled the move as not in the country’s best interest, saying the women have mixed with “people who hate our country, hate our way of life”.

    In a statement on Saturday attributed to the repatriated women, the group said they were “deeply thankful” to be back in Australia and they expressed regret for the “troubles and hurt” caused by their actions, particularly to their families.

    Asking for privacy and space to reconnect with their loved ones, the women expressed hope that “all Australian children and their mothers will soon be repatriated from the camps in Syria”.

    Human Rights Watch researcher Sophie McNeill said the repatriation was a “long overdue step”.

    “For years, the Australian government has abandoned its nationals to horrific conditions in locked camps in northeast Syria,” McNeill said.

    “Australia can play a leadership role in counterterrorism through these orderly repatriations of its nationals, most of them children who never chose to live under ISIS,” she said.

    In a statement congratulating Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese for his “strong leadership” on the repatriation plan, the humanitarian organisation Save the Children said that an estimated 11,000 foreign children and women remain in the Roj and al-Hol camps.

    “The risks to children have only become greater due to increasing violence and an outbreak of cholera across the region,” the organisation said in a statement.

     

     

  • Lafarge, a cement company, has pleaded guilty to helping ISIS

    Lafarge, a French cement company, has pled guilty in the United States to aid the Islamic State and other terrorist organisations.

    The company agreed to pay a $777.8 million (£687.2 million) penalty for payments made to keep a factory operational in Syria after the crisis broke out in 2011.

    Prosecutors said it was the first time a firm in the United States pled guilty to aiding terrorists.

    Lafarge said it “deeply regretted” the events and “accepted responsibility for the individual executives involved”.

    The cement manufacturer, which was bought by Switzerland’s Holcim in 2015, said their behaviour had been in “flagrant violation” of Lafarge’s code of conduct.

    The firm opened its plant in Jalabiya near the Turkish border in 2010 following a $680m investment.

    US prosecutors said that Lafarge’s Syrian subsidiary had paid Islamic State and another terror group, al Nusra Front, the equivalent of $5.92m to protect staff at the plant as the country’s civil war intensified. Executives likened the arrangements to pay “taxes”, they said.

    Lafarge eventually evacuated the plant in September 2014, when Islamic State took control of the town and the factory. But before its departure, the deals helped the company do $70.3m in sales, prosecutors said.

    Lafarge had previously admitted bribes were paid after an internal investigation. But US Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco said on Tuesday that the company’s actions “reflect corporate crime that has reached a new low and a very dark place.”

    “Business with terrorists cannot be business as usual,” she added.

    In a statement, Lafarge’s new owner Holcim said none of the conduct involved Holcim, “which has never operated in Syria”.

    It added that former Lafarge executives involved in the bribery had concealed it from Holcim, as well as external auditors.

    Eric Olsen, who ran Lafarge and Holcim until 2017, stepped down from his role following an investigation into Lafarge’s activities in Syria.

    At the time, Mr Olsen said he had not been involved in any wrongdoing and was standing down to bring “serenity” to the company.

    The Department of Justice said that senior executives at Lafarge were involved in the arrangements and aware they risked running afoul of authorities.

    Logo on a plant of French cement company Lafarge on 7 April 2014 in Paris
    IMAGE SOURCE, AFP Image caption, The dealings with armed groups took place before Lafarge merged with Holcim

    Executives had attempted to require Islamic State not to include the name “Lafarge” on documents memorializing and implementing their agreements and many involved in the scheme also used personal email addresses, rather than their corporate email addresses, to carry out the conspiracy, the Department said.

    Lafarge executives also backdated the termination agreement to Aug. 18, 2014, a date shortly after the United Nations Security Council had issued a resolution calling on member states to prohibit doing business with Islamic State, to falsely suggest that negotiations with Islamic State had not occurred after the UN resolution, the Department said.

    The dealings by Lafarge were eventually made public in 2016 on a website run by a Syrian opposition group.

    Breon Peace, US Attorney for the Eastern District of New York – where the case was brought – said the conduct “by a Western corporation was appalling and has no precedent or justification”.

    “The defendants paid millions of dollars [to Islamic State], a terrorist group that otherwise operated on a shoestring budget, millions of dollars that [Islamic State] could use to recruit members, wage war against governments, and conduct brutal terrorist attacks worldwide, including against U.S. citizens,” he said at a press conference announcing the guilty plea.

    Lafarge also faces charges of complicity in crimes against humanity in France over its activities in Syria, but the company denies the claims.

     

     

  • Boat sinks off the coast of Syria, killing dozens of people

    The health minister reported that 71 migrants’ bodies had been discovered when the boat they were on capsized off the coast of Syria.

    Twenty survivors are receiving medical care in a hospital in Tartus, Syria.

    Officials said Lebanese, Syrian and Palestinian nationals – including women and children – were believed to be among the 120-150 people who were on board when the boat sank on Thursday.

    It is not clear what caused the accident. A rescue attempt is ongoing.

    Officials added that the vessel had departed from Minyeh, a city near the Lebanese port city of Tripoli.

    The boat is believed to have been heading to Europe when it sank.

    Tartus, where survivors have been transported, is about 30 miles (50 km) north of Tripoli.

    Victims’ families mourn in Tripoli

    In a small dark room in a poor neighborhood in Tripoli, northern Lebanon, a family mourns.

    Mustafa Mesto, 35, died with his two daughters and son, while his wife and her father are still in critical condition in a hospital in Syria.

    Mustafa, was a Lebanese taxi driver, married to a Syrian Kurd who fled the war the country’s vicious civil war. One family fleeing devastation in two countries. They had hoped to reach Italy, dreaming of a better life.

    But now their families, like those of others who lost their lives on this boat, are in shock.

    Mustafa’s mother, Adla, sits in the middle of a big room filled with grieving relatives. She wails out loud, blaming the Lebanese government for her son’s fate.

    “He ran away from poverty and the terrible conditions they left us in. These politicians could not care less about our lives. Nothing will bring him back to me, nothing will bring his little children back to me.”

    Lebanon hosts an estimated 1.5 million Syrian refugees, and almost 14,000 from other countries, according to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). It hosts the largest number of refugees per capita in the world.

    However, the country is facing a severe economic crisis, fuelled by Covid-19 and the 2020 Beirut port explosion, with more than 80% of the population struggling to afford food and medicine.

    The situation is having a severe impact on the country’s migrant population, many of whom are choosing to flee elsewhere, including to Europe.

    Earlier this month, six people, including children, were killed when a boat carrying migrants from Lebanon to Europe sank off the coast of Turkey. The country’s coast guard said 73 migrants from four boats had been rescued.

  • Tunisia releases opposition leader after questioning

    After spending the entire night being interrogated by counter-terrorism police, the leader of the largest party in the now-disbanded Tunisian parliament has been freed by the authorities.

    Rached Ghannouchi has been accused of complicity in smuggling jihadists to Syria and Iraq, charges he has denied.

    According to his lawyer, he will again be questioned later on Wednesday.

    His Ennadha party has denounced his interrogation and that of the former prime minister, Ali Laarayedh, as a flagrant violation of human rights.

    The Tunisian president, Kais Saied, has brooked no opposition to his rule since dissolving parliament last year.

    Source: BBC

  • Canadian spy, Shamima Begum smuggled school girl to Syria

    A Canadian intelligence agent helped Shamima Begum get into Syria after she escaped the UK and joined the Islamic State.

    According to documents obtained by the BBC, he claimed to have smuggled other Britons to fight for IS and given Canada Ms. Begum’s passport information.

    The loss of Ms. Begum’s citizenship is being contested by her attorneys on the grounds that she was a victim of trafficking.

    Canada and the UK declined to respond to questions about security.

    Ms Begum was 15 when she and two other east London schoolgirls – Kadiza Sultana, 16, and 15-year-old Amira Abase – traveled to Syria to join the IS group in 2015.

    At the main Istanbul bus station, the girls met Mohammed Al Rasheed, who would facilitate their journey to IS-controlled Syria.

    A senior intelligence officer, at an agency that is part of the global coalition against IS, has confirmed to the BBC that Rasheed was providing information to Canadian intelligence while smuggling people to IS.

    He told authorities that he had gathered information on the people he helped into Syria because he was passing it to the Canadian embassy in Jordan.

    Rasheed, who was arrested in Turkey within days of smuggling Ms Begum to IS, told authorities he had shared a photo of the passport the British schoolgirl was using.

    The Metropolitan Police were searching for her, although by the time Canada received her passport details, Ms Begum was already in Syria.

    The dossier shows that Ms Begum was moved to Syria through a substantial IS people-smuggling network that was controlled from the group’s de-facto capital in Raqqa.

    Rasheed was in charge of the Turkish side of this network and facilitated the travel of British men, women, and children to IS for at least eight months before he helped Ms Begum and her two friends.

    Ms Begum told the BBC’s forthcoming I’m Not A Monster podcast: “He organized the entire trip from Turkey to Syria… I don’t think anyone would have been able to make it to Syria without the help of smugglers.

    He had helped a lot of people come in… We were just doing everything he was telling us to do because he knew everything, we didn’t know anything.”

    Rasheed kept information about the people he helped, often photographing their ID documents or secretly filming them on his phone.

    One recording shows Ms Begum and her friends getting out of a taxi and into a waiting car not far from the Syrian border.

  • Explosion at fuel depot on Lebanon-Syria border injures 10

    An explosion inside a fuel warehouse on the Lebanese-Syrian border injured at least 10 people on Sunday, the Lebanese Red Cross said.

    Three were treated at the site in the border town of al-Qasr, while the seven others were transferred to local hospitals, George Kettneh, the secretary-general of the Lebanese Red Cross, told dpa.

    Footage online purportedly showed flames of fire rising from the warehouse amid successive blasts reportedly caused by exploding gas cylinders.
    The initial explosion was powerful and triggered a massive fire, local residents said.

    The blaze was later brought under control, Bilal Rad, a civil defence official, said. “The search is ongoing for any injured,” he told the online edition of the Lebanese newspaper Annahar.

    Local media reported the explosion had been caused by a short electrical failure.
    The Lebanese army said the warehouse was located on the Syrian side of the border and that the privately owned facility was used to store fuel and gas.

    “The warehouse is far from the army checkpoint in the area,” the army said in a brief statement, adding there were no casualties among military personnel.
    The area is controlled by the Iran-allied Lebanese Hezbollah movement and is a hub for smuggling activities into neighbouring Syria.

    In August, a cataclysmic explosion hit the Beirut port, killing more than 190 people, injuring 6,000 others and leaving some 300,000 more homeless. That blast was caused by tons of ammonium nitrate, which had been inadequately stored at the port.

    Source: GNA

  • ICRC warns of dire humanitarian crisis in northeast Syria

    The International Committee of the Red Cross warned Thursday of a worsening crisis in northeast Syria, where water cuts, food shortages and depleted health services are proving as dangerous as coronavirus.

    Home to sprawling displacement camps hosting tens of thousands of people, including families of Islamic State group members, the Kurdish-held northeast has been hard hit by nine years of war.

    A COVID-19 outbreak, which the United Nations says has infected six people and killed one in the region, has only added to a litany of challenges in the area, the ICRC said.

    “For millions of people in northeast Syria, consequences of fighting, shortages of water, food and medicine, a lack of electricity, the economic downturn with job losses and price hikes are as much of a worry as coronavirus,” said Karim Mahmoud, ICRC office head in the city of Hasakeh.

    Fabrizio Carboni, ICRC’s regional director, said “there’s a risk that profound crises will worsen, hidden in plain sight, while the world’s attention is on” the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Under pressure from Russia, the UN Security Council in January reduced the number of border crossings authorised to deliver humanitarian aid to northern Syria from four to two, both on the Turkish frontier.

    The Yarubiya entry point on the Iraqi border, used mainly to deliver UN-funded medical aid to the northeast, was one of those scrapped, causing an aid shortage.

    Only one out of 16 hospitals is fully functioning, while eight are partially operational and seven are out of commission, the ICRC said.

    Over 50 percent of the local population in northeast Syria is believed to be food insecure, which means they consume less than 2,100 calories a day, the World Food Programme says.

    That high proportion was “due to the heavy fighting that took place in this part of Syria over the past few years,” said WFP spokeswoman Jessica Lawson.

    Kurdish-led fighters for years battled IS, before Turkey and its Syrian proxies seized Kurdish areas on the Syrian side of the border last year.

    “Many households were displaced a number of times and frequently most of their belongings have been destroyed or looted, heavily affecting livelihoods in the area,” Lawson said.

    Source: france24.com

  • Syria strikes kill 14 Iranian

    Overnight strikes on positions held by Iranian-backed militias and their allies in eastern Syria killed 14 fighters, a war monitor said on Tuesday.

    It was not immediately clear who carried out the strikes in the desert near the town of Mayadin, which came minutes after Syrian air defences intercepted Israeli strikes over the north of the country, the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

    A spokesman for the US-led coalition battling the Islamic State group said it was not responsible for the strikes.

    Observatory head Rami Abdul Rahman said it was “likely” that Israel mounted the operation, which killed several Iraqi as well as Iranian fighters.

    State media did not report the strikes.

    Iranian-backed militias and their allies command a significant presence in eastern Syria south of the Euphrates Valley. The region lies close to the Iraqi border.

    Israel has launched hundreds of strikes in Syria since the start of the civil war in 2011, targeting government troops, allied Iranian forces and Hezbollah fighters.

    It rarely confirms details of its operations in Syria but says Iran’s presence in support of President Bashar al-Assad is a threat and that it will continue its strikes.

    An Israeli diplomatic official, who asked that their name be withheld, did not comment on the strikes but said “Iran was only country still shipping missiles and missiles technologies to their proxies in the region” amid the global health crisis.

    Just before midnight on Monday, Syrian air defences intercepted Israeli missiles targeting a research facility in Aleppo province, state media said.

    State news agency SANA said the intercepted missiles targeted several “military depots” in the Al-Safira area southeast of Aleppo, Syria’s government-held second city.

    On Friday, Israeli forces hit a missile depot in central Syria used by Lebanese Shiite militant group Hezbollah, another Iran ally, hours after Israeli helicopters fired missiles at other targets in southern Syria.

    Commenting on the apparent intensification of Israeli raids, Yoram Schweitzer of Israel’s Institute for National Security Studies told AFP the Jewish state might be reacting to increased hostile action from Iran and Hezbollah.

    It is also possible that Israel is trying to apply added pressure as its rivals endure the fallout of the coronavirus crisis, he said.

    “I don’t know which one of the two it is, but might be a combination of the two,” Schweitzer said.

    Source: france24.com

  • Syria reports first coronavirus death as fears grow that virus could spread

    Syria’s health ministry said on Sunday that a woman who died after being rushed to hospital for emergency treatment was found to have been infected by Coronavirus in the country’s first officially reported death from the disease.

    Syria also said its confirmed cases rose to nine from an earlier five cases, but medics and witnesses say there are many more. Officials deny a cover-up but have imposed a lockdown and draconian measures including a nationwide night curfew to stem the pandemic.

    The moves to shut businesses, schools, universities, mosques and most government offices, as well as stop public transport, have spread fear among war-weary residents.

    Several cities saw panic buying, with residents saying they saw food shortages and a surge in demand that pushed up prices ahead of the start of the curfew.

    The United Nations says the country is at high risk of a major outbreak because of a fragile health system devastated by a nine-year war and lack of sufficient equipment to detect the virus, alongside large numbers of vulnerable people.

    The World Health Organisation has warned that the country has a limited capacity to deal with a rapid spread of the virus.

    On Sunday, the army announced an end to a call-up of army reserves. It has already ended conscription in what military defectors said was an attempt to prevent the spread of the virus among the rank and file.

    The government also banned movement of people between governates. Security forces manned checkpoints around provincial cities and only allowed army vehicles and essential services to pass, witnesses said.

    Opposition figures and independent politicians point to Damascus’ strong ties with Iran, the worst affected country in the region, as a source of possible contagion.

    They say the virus is also being transmitted by members of Iranian-backed militias who are fighting alongside the Syrian army, as well as Shi’ite pilgrims who visit shrines in Syria.

    Western intelligence sources say Iran’s proxy Shi’ite militias continue to cross the Qaim border crossing between Iraq and Syria, where they have a strong presence across the country.

    Senior Syrian army officers have in recent days taken leave of absence and been ordered not to mingle with the Iranian-backed militias, military defectors say.

    Syrian officials said Damascus airport has halted commercial flights, and the government has also ordered the closure of its main border crossings with neighbouring states.

    Thousands of Shi’ite pilgrims have been arriving in Syria to visit the Sayeda Zainab shrine in Damascus, a neighbourhood that also houses the main headquarters of the Iranian-backed militias.

    Iraqi health officials confirmed on Sunday that returning Shi’ite pilgrims from Syria have tested positive for the coronavirus, raising concern that such travel could be a source for a wider spread of the disease.

    Source: reuters.com