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Lebanon sentences man to death in absentia over peacekeeper's killing

Lebanon sentences man to death in absentia over peacekeeper's killing

Arab News2 days ago
BEIRUT: A Lebanese court sentenced a man to death in absentia for killing an Irish United Nations peacekeeper, a judicial official said Tuesday, after Hezbollah members were accused of involvement in the 2022 incident.
Private Sean Rooney, 23, was killed and three others were wounded after a UN Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) convoy came under fire on December 14, 2022 in south Lebanon, long a stronghold of the Iran-backed militant group.
The judicial official, requesting anonymity as they were not authorized to brief the media, said Lebanon's military court issued its ruling in the case at around midnight on Monday.
The court 'imposed the death sentence... on the main defendant, Mohammad Ayyad,' the official said, adding that the ruling was issued in absentia.
A security source told AFP in December 2022 that Hezbollah had handed Ayyad over to the army that month.
But he was released from custody in November 2023 'for health reasons' and had not appeared at any trial session since, the official said Tuesday.
The military court also handed a combination of fines and lighter custodial sentences to four other people 'who handed themselves in to the court hours before the session' and acquitted a fifth, the official said.
Skirmishes occur occasionally between UNIFIL patrols and Hezbollah supporters, but they rarely escalate and are generally quickly contained by Lebanese authorities.
In June 2023 a judicial official told AFP that five Hezbollah members were accused of killing Rooney.
A Hezbollah official had denied members of the group were involved.
UNIFIL, which counts around 10,000 peacekeepers from nearly 50 countries, acts as a buffer between Lebanon and Israel and operates in the south near the border.
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With growing urgency, more US Jews urge Israel to ensure ample food deliveries to Gaza
With growing urgency, more US Jews urge Israel to ensure ample food deliveries to Gaza

Arab News

time11 minutes ago

  • Arab News

With growing urgency, more US Jews urge Israel to ensure ample food deliveries to Gaza

For most Jewish Americans, whatever their political persuasion, support for Israel has been a bedrock principle. Thus it's notable that a broad swath of US Jews — reacting to the humanitarian crisis in Gaza — have been urging the Israeli government to do more to ensure the delivery of food and medicine. There is no overwhelming consensus. On the left, some US Jews contend that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government is guilty of genocide. On the right, some conservative Jewish news outlets have suggested that the widely verified food crisis in Gaza is a hoax. What is clear is that the ranks of American Jews alarmed by the current conditions in Gaza have swelled and now include major organizations that customarily avoid critiques of Israeli policies. What are major Jewish organizations saying? The American Jewish Committee — a prominent advocacy group that strives to broadly represent Jews in the US and abroad — stressed in its statement that it 'stands with Israel in its justified war to eliminate the threat posed by Hamas.' 'At the same time, we feel immense sorrow for the grave toll this war has taken on Palestinian civilians, and we are deeply concerned about worsening food insecurity in Gaza,' said the AJC, urging Israel and other key parties 'to increase cooperation and coordination in order to ensure that humanitarian aid reaches Palestinian civilians in Gaza.' The Rabbinical Assembly, a New York-based organization representing rabbis of the Conservative Movement, sounded a similar note. 'Even as we believe Hamas could end this suffering immediately through the release of the hostages and care for its civilian population, the Israeli government must do everything in its power to ensure humanitarian aid reaches those in need,' the assembly said. 'The Jewish tradition calls upon us to ensure the provision of food, water, and medical supplies as a top priority. Rabbi Moshe Hauer, executive vice president of the Orthodox Union, told The Associated Press he and his colleagues 'are proud, sad, and angry. ' 'We remain proud of Israel and its army, the only moral fighting force in the region striving to abide by internationally accepted laws of war,' he said via email. 'We are genuinely sad about the mounting human costs which — as intended by Hamas — this war is inflicting on Israelis and innocent Palestinians. And we are angry at those who only ascribe to Israel the worst intentions and all responsibility while ignoring Hamas' inhumanity.' Of major nationwide organizations, perhaps the most vehement statement came from the Reform Jewish Movement, which represents the largest branch of Judaism in the US 'Hamas has repeatedly demonstrated its willingness to sacrifice the Palestinian people in its pursuit of Israel's destruction, but Israel must not sacrifice its own moral standing in return,' the Reform statement said. 'No one should be unaffected by the pervasive hunger experienced by thousands of Gazans,' it continued. 'Nor should we accept arguments that because Hamas is the primary reason many Gazans are either starving or on the verge of starving, that the Jewish State is not also culpable in this human disaster.' Rabbis share their thoughts Over the past few weeks, as images and reports of starvation and violence in Gaza dominated the news cycle, Rabbi Jon Roos felt a shift in how the Israel-Hamas war is discussed in Jewish circles. 'There was a real change in the tone of the conversation, but also in the depth and content of it,' said Roos, who leads Temple Sinai, a Reform synagogue in Washington, D.C. 'I felt it from members of the congregation. I've felt it in the Jewish communal world.' The clergy of Temple Sinai signed onto a letter with more than 1,000 Jewish clergy calling on the Israeli government to 'allow extensive humanitarian aid' to enter Gaza. It stated that 'we cannot condone the mass killings of civilians … or the use of starvation as a weapon of war.' Roos said the Jewish community can hold two truths at once: that Oct. 7 was deplorable and so is the situation in Gaza. 'One of the critical parts of Judaism is that we really value that ability to hold nuance and two truths, even if they're both incredibly challenging and self-critical,' Roos said. Rabbi Aaron Weininger in Minnetonka, Minnesota, also signed the clergy letter. He leads Adath Jeshurun, a Conservative Jewish congregation. 'Zionism is big enough and strong enough to care about the safety, wellbeing, and dignity of Israelis and Palestinians. Naming their suffering doesn't weaken Zionism nor does calling on members of the government not to occupy Gaza. Signing the letter honors Zionism as compassionate and just,' he wrote in an email. The response of his community has been largely positive, with some disagreement — 'both with the idea of publicly disagreeing with the Israeli government and with the characterization of suffering in Gaza,' he wrote. 'But taking moral stands and holding disagreement have always been part of what it means to be a faith community.' Voices of protest On Tuesday, more than two dozen rabbis were arrested in the office of the Senate majority leader, John Thune, R-S.D., while demanding action by Congress to provide food aid for Gaza. 'All life is sacred, but Palestinian lives are not treated as such, and that is a blot on our collective humanity,' said one of the protesters, Alissa Wise, who is founding director of Rabbis for Ceasefire. 'We are here to insist on the sanctity of life of every Palestinian, of every Israeli, of all of us.' Also arrested was a New York-based rabbi, Andrue Kahn. He is executive director of the American Council for Judaism, which rejects the concept of Zionism. In an email, Kahn said an increasing number of US Jews, including rabbis, are now more willing to speak out about Gaza's plight and demand policy changes from Israel. 'The horrors of starvation of so many people … has led to the dam bursting for many people, and the political spectrum of those speaking out has broadened,' he wrote. Defenders of Netanyahu's policies A Jewish member of Congress, Rep. Randy Fine, R-Fla., incurred criticism after suggesting in a post on X last week that the reports of a Gaza food crisis were false. 'Release the hostages. Until then, starve away. (This is all a lie anyway. It amazes me that the media continues to regurgitate Muslim terror propaganda.),' his post said. Two US-based Jewish news outlets also have depicted the food crisis as exaggerated. 'The reality is clear — food and medicine are entering Gaza, but Hamas seizes them for its own purposes. The international community's fixation on blaming Israel ignores this fundamental truth,' said an article in The Jewish Voice. Supplementing its news articles making similar points, the Jewish News Syndicate on Wednesday ran a column by Mitchell Bard, executive director of the American-Israeli Cooperative Enterprise. 'True supporters of Israel are not fair-weather friends who abandon their ally out of fear of what their friends will think of them or the need to feign moral superiority,' he wrote. 'Israelis are not children in need of a public scolding from the Diaspora. They need solidarity, not sanctimony.'

Iranian president says country is on brink of dire water crisis
Iranian president says country is on brink of dire water crisis

Al Arabiya

time11 minutes ago

  • Al Arabiya

Iranian president says country is on brink of dire water crisis

Iran's President Masoud Pezeshkian warned against excessive water consumption which he said was untenable for the country and could leave Tehran facing severe shortages by September, semi-official Tasnim news agency reported on Thursday. Faced with resource mismanagement and over-consumption, Iran has faced recurrent electricity, gas and water shortages during peak demand months. 'In Tehran, if we cannot manage and people do not cooperate in controlling consumption, there won't be any water in dams by September or October,' Pezeshkian said on Thursday. The country has faced drought conditions for the last five years according to the director of the Environmental Protection Organization Sheena Ansari and the Meteorological Organization recorded a 40 percent drop in rainfall over the last four months compared to a long-term average. 'Neglecting sustainable development has led to the fact that we are now facing numerous environmental problems like water stress,' Ansari told state media on Thursday. Excessive water consumption represents a major challenge for water management in Iran, with the head of Tehran province's water and wastewater company Mohsen Ardakani telling Mehr news agency that 70 percent of Tehran residents consume more than the standard 130 litres a day. Natural resource management has been a chronic challenge for authorities, whether it is natural gas consumption or water use, as solutions require major reforms, notably in the agricultural sector which represents as much as 80 percent of water consumption. On Wednesday, Pezeshkian rejected a government proposal to impose a day-off on Wednesdays or having a one-week holiday during the summer, saying that 'closing down is a cover-up and not a solution to the water shortage problem.' In the summer of 2021, protests took place against water shortages in southwestern Iran.

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