
Hajjah Women's Committee Holds Rallies in Solidarity with Palestinian People
The participants condemned the genocide committed by the Zionists in Gaza and their desecration of Al-Aqsa Mosque in full view of the world.
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Saba Yemen
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Al-Quds Brigades detonate minefield in Zionist vehicles east of Jabalia Camp
Gaza – Saba: Al-Quds Brigades, the military wing of the Islamic Jihad Movement in Palestine, announced on Tuesday the detonation of a minefield with "Thaqib" explosives along a route used by Zionist enemy vehicles and machinery east of the Jabalia refugee camp. In a brief statement received by the Yemeni News Agency (SABA), the Brigades stated that their fighters, upon returning from the combat lines, confirmed the successful detonation of the minefield with "Thaqib" explosives in a mandatory path for Zionist enemy vehicles and machinery east of Jabalia. The Brigades noted that their fighters observed helicopters landing to evacuate the dead and wounded from the area on 16/07/2025. Since October 7, 2023, Palestinian resistance factions have continued their heroic operations against the Zionist enemy as part of the ongoing "Al-Aqsa Flood" battle. Whatsapp Telegram Email Print


Saba Yemen
an hour ago
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Zionist occupation kills 50 Palestinians since dawn in Gaza
Gaza – Saba: Fifty Palestinians have been martyred and dozens more injured since dawn on Tuesday as a result of the ongoing Israeli army attacks on various areas of the Gaza Strip, which has been subjected to a genocidal campaign for nearly 22 months. According to medical, local, and media sources monitored by the Yemeni News Agency (Saba), the Israeli enemy army's shelling targeted tents housing displaced people, civilian gatherings, and people waiting for aid. In the northern Gaza Strip, five Palestinians were martyred and others were injured in an Israeli enemy shelling of al-Nasr neighborhood west of Gaza City. Three Palestinians were martyred and others were injured among those waiting for aid near Zikim area, which is controlled by Israeli enemy forces, northwest of the town of Beit Lahia in the northern Gaza Strip. Five Palestinians, including three children, were also martyred in an Israeli enemy airstrike on a group of civilians near Ali Ibn Abi Talib Mosque in al-Zeitoun neighborhood of Gaza City. Sixteen Palestinians, including women and children, were martyred and more than 25 others were injured in an Israeli enemy airstrike targeting tents housing displaced people in al-Shati refugee camp west of Gaza City. The bodies of the martyrs arrived at al-Shifa Hospital in western Gaza, "in dismembered limbs," after two artillery shells struck tents housing starving displaced people as they slept in Badr site area west of Gaza City. A young Palestinian man was killed in an Israeli attack on people waiting for aid east of Nabulsi Junction in western Gaza, and four Palestinians were killed when an Israeli drone dropped a bomb near al-Hurriya School, which houses displaced people in al-Zeitoun neighborhood east of the city. In the Northern Governorate, two Palestinian boys were martyred in an Israeli enemy airstrike targeting Bir al-Na'ja area. In the Central Governorate, in the central Gaza Strip, two Palestinians were martyred as a result of the intense Israeli enemy shelling of the city of Deir al-Balah, which coincided with a ground operation south of the city. Five starving Palestinians were martyred by Israeli army fire targeting people waiting for aid near the Netzarim axis. Two Palestinians were martyred in an Israeli shelling targeting the "Block 12" area of Bureij refugee camp. Eyewitnesses reported violent clashes between Palestinian resistance fighters and Israeli enemy forces advancing south of Deir al-Balah, according to Anadolu Agency. In the southern Gaza Strip, three Palestinians were martyred near Abu Hamid roundabout in an Israeli enemy shelling of the center of Khan Yunis, while two Palestinians waiting for aid were martyred near a distribution center west of Rafah. With American and European support, the Israeli enemy army has continued to commit genocidal crimes in the Gaza Strip since October 7, 2023. This has resulted in the deaths of 59,106 Palestinian civilians, the majority of whom are children and women, and the injury of 142,511 others. This remains a preliminary toll, with thousands of victims still buried under the rubble and on the streets, unable to be reached by ambulances and rescue crews. Whatsapp Telegram Email Print more of (International)


Yemen Online
7 hours ago
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Even amid the Gaza war, Yemen peace talks can be revived if the world were to seize the moment
Before the Hamas militant group attacked Israel on October 7, 2023, negotiations to end Yemen's long-standing civil war were more productive than they had been for years. At the very least, there was a horizon for starting a political process. The Houthi rebel group, which took the capital Sanaa in 2014, continued to hold large swathes of the country even after a seven-year campaign by the internationally recognised government and its regional allies to dislodge them. The government, based in the port city of Aden, was the weaker party, but still standing. But the prolonged stalemate was finally growing tiresome enough that both parties were rumoured to be close to a 'roadmap' to making their ceasefire permanent and ending the war. The Hamas attack, despite taking place more than 2,000km from Yemeni soil, along with Israel's brutal and ongoing war of revenge in Gaza, changed all of that. The Houthis have dropped peace talks and instead taken to firing at commercial ships in the Red Sea, ostensibly in solidarity with the Palestinian cause. Punitive air strikes on Yemeni cities by Israel, the US and UK have dealt much damage but failed to cripple the Houthis. What hasn't killed them may even have made them stronger. Emboldened by their perception of invincibility, the Houthis continue to rule with extremism and repression. In the absence of any momentum towards a resolution, the government in Aden risks becoming inert, increasingly paralysed by internal disagreements. Its Presidential Leadership Council – an executive committee comprised of often-competing factions – has been unable to tackle an economic crisis in government-held areas. In May, the prime minister, Ahmed Awad bin Mubarak, resigned after complaining of being blocked by the PLC from carrying out his official duties. Hoping to signal that it takes economic issues seriously, the Council chose the Minister of Finance to replace him. But in the absence of deeper constitutional reform that prevents obstacles of the sort faced by Mr bin Mubarak, it is unlikely to make a difference. This state of affairs has not merely put the prospect of a Yemeni peace on ice but degraded it. The international community has seemingly become indifferent to that reality. Western powers, in particular, have come to treat Houthi actions as a mere extension of the Gaza conflict, behaving as though the Houthi threat will diminish in the event of a deal between Israel and Hamas. In the absence of any momentum towards a resolution, the government in Aden risks becoming inert, increasingly paralysed by internal disagreements. Its Presidential Leadership Council – an executive committee comprised of often-competing factions – has been unable to tackle an economic crisis in government-held areas. In May, the prime minister, Ahmed Awad bin Mubarak, resigned after complaining of being blocked by the PLC from carrying out his official duties. Hoping to signal that it takes economic issues seriously, the Council chose the Minister of Finance to replace him. But in the absence of deeper constitutional reform that prevents obstacles of the sort faced by Mr bin Mubarak, it is unlikely to make a difference. This state of affairs has not merely put the prospect of a Yemeni peace on ice but degraded it. The international community has seemingly become indifferent to that reality. Western powers, in particular, have come to treat Houthi actions as a mere extension of the Gaza conflict, behaving as though the Houthi threat will diminish in the event of a deal between Israel and Hamas. This approach is both short-sighted and wrong. There is a chance to revive Yemen's peace talks, as the UN's special envoy to Yemen, Hans Grundberg, reminded everyone during a visit to the country this month. The level of fighting within the country has subsided, Mr Grundberg noted, and the calm provides space for confidence-building measures between the two sides, if others can prod them along. It helps that the Houthis' main backer, Iran, appears to be growing weary of regional conflict, even if the rebels themselves are not. Tehran's security apparatus was badly wounded in its recent war with Israel and has seen its influence both in Syria and Lebanon much diminished. That offers some leverage with which to remind the Houthis that they are not, in fact, invincible, but rather deeply dependent on a network of alliances that is much weaker than it was when they took power. 'The opportunity for peace still exists,' Mr Grundberg told reporters in Aden, 'but it requires courage, compromise and a genuine commitment to the Yemeni people's future.' This may feel like a lot to ask for in a region trying to quell several outbursts of conflict at once, but it is the very least that millions of Yemenis deserve.