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Zionists kill thirsty children as Gaza martyrs top 58,000

Zionists kill thirsty children as Gaza martyrs top 58,000

Kuwait Times21 hours ago
GAZA: Gaza's civil defense agency said Zionist air strikes on Sunday killed 139 Palestinians, including at a market and a water distribution point, and injured 452 others, as talks for a ceasefire between the Zionist entity and Hamas stalled. At least 58,026 Palestinians, most of them civilians, have been killed in the Zionist offensive campaign in Gaza.
On the ground, civil defense agency spokesman Mahmud Bassal said eight children were among the 10 victims of a drone strike at a water point in the Nuseirat refugee camp, while 12 were killed when a market in Gaza City was hit. The Zionist military claimed it had been targeting a member of Hamas ally Islamic Jihad in Nuseirat but 'as a result of a technical error with the munition, the munition fell dozens of meters from the target,' a statement read.
Khaled Rayyan told AFP he was woken by the sound of two large explosions after a house was hit in Nuseirat. 'Our neighbor and his children
were under the rubble,' he said. Another resident, Mahmud Al-Shami, called on the negotiators to secure a deal. 'What happened to us has never happened in the entire history of humanity,' he said. 'Enough.'
UN agencies on Saturday warned that fuel shortages had reached 'critical levels', threatening to worsen conditions for Gaza's more than two million people. 'Only 150,000 litres of fuel have been allowed in over the past few days — an amount that covers less than one day's needs,' the head of the Palestinian NGOs Network in Gaza, Amjad Shawa, told AFP on Sunday. 'We require 275,000 litres of fuel per day to meet basic needs.'
The Handala — a former Norwegian trawler loaded with medical supplies, food and children's equipment — set sail from Italy, with the pro-Palestinian activists on board hoping to reach Gaza, despite the Zionist entity having recently detained and deported people aboard a previous vessel.
Delegations from the Zionist entity and Hamas have now spent a week trying to agree on a temporary truce to halt 21 months of devastating fighting in the Gaza Strip. But on Saturday, each side accused the other of blocking attempts to secure an agreement at the indirect talks in the Qatari capital, Doha.
Talks to seal a 60-day ceasefire and captive release were in the balance on Saturday after and Hamas accused each other of trying to block a deal. Hamas wants the complete withdrawal of Zionist forces from Gaza, but a Palestinian source with knowledge of the talks said the Zionist entity had presented plans to maintain troops in more than 40 percent of the territory. The source said the Zionist entity wanted to force hundreds of thousands of Palestinians into the south of Gaza 'in preparation for forcibly displacing them to Egypt or other countries'.
The Zionist campaign against Hamas has displaced almost the entire population of more than 2 million people, but Gazans say nowhere is safe in the coastal enclave. Early on Sunday morning, a missile hit a house in Gaza City where a family had moved to after receiving an evacuation order from their home in the southern outskirts. 'My aunt, her husband and the children, are gone. What is the fault of the children who died in an ugly bloody massacre at dawn?' said Anas Matar, standing in the rubble of the building. 'They came here, and they were hit. There is no safe place in Gaza,' he said. – Agencies
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Zionists meddle as 100 killed in Syria sectarian clashes
Zionists meddle as 100 killed in Syria sectarian clashes

Kuwait Times

time14 hours ago

  • Kuwait Times

Zionists meddle as 100 killed in Syria sectarian clashes

DAMASCUS: Syrian government forces were advancing towards the southern city of Sweida on Monday amid clashes in the region between Druze fighters and Bedouin tribes that have killed nearly 100 people, according to a war monitor. As the violence escalated, the Zionist entity — which had previously warned that it would intervene in Syria to protect the Druze — said it struck 'several tanks' in the area, citing security concerns. The fighting underscores the challenges facing interim leader Ahmad Al-Sharaa, whose Islamist forces ousted president Bashar Al-Assad in December after nearly 14 years of civil war. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights war monitor raised its death toll to 99 killed since fighting erupted Sunday, including 60 Druze, four of them civilians, 18 Bedouin fighters, 14 security personnel and seven unidentified people in military uniforms. Syrian forces on Monday took control of the Druze village of Al-Mazraa, where Bedouin fighters were also located, an AFP correspondent said. A commander, Ezzeddine Al-Shamayer, told AFP the forces 'are heading toward Sweida' city. In a statement, the interior ministry declared that 'army and internal security forces have moved closer to the center' of Sweida. The Zionist entity, which has attacked Syria in the past months under the pretext of protecting the Druze, said it hit several tanks heading towards Sweida. The strikes were 'a clear warning to the Syrian regime — we will not allow harm to be done to the Druze in Syria', Zionist Defense Minister Israel Katz posted on X. Druze spiritual leaders called for calm and urged Damascus to intervene. But Sheikh Hikmat Al-Hijri, one of the three Druze spiritual leaders in Sweida, expressed his 'rejection of the entry' of general security forces into the province, demanding 'international protection'. Syria's pre-war Druze population was estimated at around 700,000, many of them concentrated in Sweida province. The Druze, followers of an esoteric religion that split from Shiite Islam, are mainly found in Syria, Lebanon and the Zionist entity. Following deadly clashes with government forces in April and May, local and religious leaders reached an agreement with Damascus under which Druze fighters have been providing security in the province since May. The streets of Sweida were deserted, with an AFP photographer reporting gunfire during funerals. 'We lived in a state of extreme terror — the shells were falling randomly,' said Abu Taym, a 51-year-old father in Sweida. 'Traffic on the streets is paralyzed, and most shops are closed.' 'We fear a repeat of the coastal scenario,' said Amal, 46, referring to the March massacres of over 1,700 mostly Alawite civilians in Syria's coast, where groups affiliated with the government were blamed for most of the killings. 'We are not against the state, but we are against surrendering our weapons without a state that treats everyone the same,' she added, noting that she and her family escaped Sweida to a nearby village. In a post on X, Syrian Defense Minister Murhaf Abu Qasra urged his troops to 'protect your fellow citizens' from 'outlaw gangs' and 'restore stability to Sweida'. The violence began Sunday when Bedouin gunmen abducted a Druze vegetable vendor on the highway to Damascus, prompting retaliatory kidnappings. Though hostages were later released, the fighting carried on Monday outside Sweida city, with mortar fire hitting villages and dozens wounded, according to the Suwayda 24 news outlet. In a Sunday post on X, Interior Minister Anas Khattab said 'the lack of state, military and security institutions is a major reason' for the ongoing tensions in Sweida. The latest bloodshed follows deadly violence in April and May, when clashes between Druze fighters and security forces in Druze-populated areas near Damascus and Sweida killed more than 100 people. The Observatory said members of Bedouin tribes had sided with security forces during earlier confrontations. Bedouin and Druze factions have a longstanding feud in Sweida, and violence occasionally erupts between the two sides. The wave of massacres in March targeting the Alawite community and the subsequent attacks on Druze areas, as well as a deadly attack on a Damascus church in June, have undermined confidence in the new Syrian authorities' ability to protect minorities. – AFP

Zionists kill thirsty children as Gaza martyrs top 58,000
Zionists kill thirsty children as Gaza martyrs top 58,000

Kuwait Times

time21 hours ago

  • Kuwait Times

Zionists kill thirsty children as Gaza martyrs top 58,000

GAZA: Gaza's civil defense agency said Zionist air strikes on Sunday killed 139 Palestinians, including at a market and a water distribution point, and injured 452 others, as talks for a ceasefire between the Zionist entity and Hamas stalled. At least 58,026 Palestinians, most of them civilians, have been killed in the Zionist offensive campaign in Gaza. On the ground, civil defense agency spokesman Mahmud Bassal said eight children were among the 10 victims of a drone strike at a water point in the Nuseirat refugee camp, while 12 were killed when a market in Gaza City was hit. The Zionist military claimed it had been targeting a member of Hamas ally Islamic Jihad in Nuseirat but 'as a result of a technical error with the munition, the munition fell dozens of meters from the target,' a statement read. Khaled Rayyan told AFP he was woken by the sound of two large explosions after a house was hit in Nuseirat. 'Our neighbor and his children were under the rubble,' he said. Another resident, Mahmud Al-Shami, called on the negotiators to secure a deal. 'What happened to us has never happened in the entire history of humanity,' he said. 'Enough.' UN agencies on Saturday warned that fuel shortages had reached 'critical levels', threatening to worsen conditions for Gaza's more than two million people. 'Only 150,000 litres of fuel have been allowed in over the past few days — an amount that covers less than one day's needs,' the head of the Palestinian NGOs Network in Gaza, Amjad Shawa, told AFP on Sunday. 'We require 275,000 litres of fuel per day to meet basic needs.' The Handala — a former Norwegian trawler loaded with medical supplies, food and children's equipment — set sail from Italy, with the pro-Palestinian activists on board hoping to reach Gaza, despite the Zionist entity having recently detained and deported people aboard a previous vessel. Delegations from the Zionist entity and Hamas have now spent a week trying to agree on a temporary truce to halt 21 months of devastating fighting in the Gaza Strip. But on Saturday, each side accused the other of blocking attempts to secure an agreement at the indirect talks in the Qatari capital, Doha. Talks to seal a 60-day ceasefire and captive release were in the balance on Saturday after and Hamas accused each other of trying to block a deal. Hamas wants the complete withdrawal of Zionist forces from Gaza, but a Palestinian source with knowledge of the talks said the Zionist entity had presented plans to maintain troops in more than 40 percent of the territory. The source said the Zionist entity wanted to force hundreds of thousands of Palestinians into the south of Gaza 'in preparation for forcibly displacing them to Egypt or other countries'. The Zionist campaign against Hamas has displaced almost the entire population of more than 2 million people, but Gazans say nowhere is safe in the coastal enclave. Early on Sunday morning, a missile hit a house in Gaza City where a family had moved to after receiving an evacuation order from their home in the southern outskirts. 'My aunt, her husband and the children, are gone. What is the fault of the children who died in an ugly bloody massacre at dawn?' said Anas Matar, standing in the rubble of the building. 'They came here, and they were hit. There is no safe place in Gaza,' he said. – Agencies

Hong Kong court hears appeals by jailed campaigners
Hong Kong court hears appeals by jailed campaigners

Kuwait Times

timea day ago

  • Kuwait Times

Hong Kong court hears appeals by jailed campaigners

HONG KONG: Pro-democracy lawmaker Leung Kwok-hung (front center in black), also known as "Long Hair", demonstrates with student protest leader Joshua Wong (left), League of Social Democrats chairman Avery Ng (second left), and pro-democracy lawmaker Nathan Law (front right) in Hong Kong.-- AFP HONG KONG: A Hong Kong court began hearing appeals on Monday from 12 democracy campaigners jailed for subversion last year during the city's largest national security trial. They were among 45 opposition figures, including some of Hong Kong's best-known democracy activists, who were sentenced in November over a 2020 informal primary election that authorities deemed a subversive plot. Critics including the United States, Britain and the European Union said the case showed how a Beijing-imposed national security law has eroded freedoms and quashed peaceful opposition in Hong Kong. Ex-lawmakers 'Long Hair' Leung Kwok-hung, Lam Cheuk-ting, Helena Wong and Raymond Chan are among those contesting their convictions and sentences in hearings that are scheduled to last 10 days. Owen Chow, a 28-year-old activist who was sentenced to seven years and nine months in jail—the harshest penalty among the dozen—has also lodged an appeal. Former district councilor Michael Pang withdrew his appeal application on Monday morning, leaving a total of 12 appellants. Some of them have already spent more than four years behind bars. The activists were accused of organizing or taking part in an unofficial primary election that aimed to improve the pro-democracy camp's chances of winning a majority in the legislature. They had hoped, once a majority was secured, to force the government to accede to demands such as universal suffrage by threatening to indiscriminately veto the budget—a plan that trial judges said would have caused a 'constitutional crisis'. Defense lawyer Erik Shum said that vetoing the budget was a form of 'check and balance' built into Hong Kong's mini-constitution that lawmakers could deploy as a last resort. 'In order to check the unpopular exercise of powers by the executive, one of the important measures is to tie the purse,' he told the court. Shum said lawmakers should not be answerable to the courts over how they vote because of the separation of powers.'Let politics remain in (the legislature) and let the public decide, not the judges.' Prosecutors also challenged the acquittal of lawyer Lawrence Lau, one of two people found not guilty in May 2024 from an original group of 47 accused. Lau's 'overall conduct' showed that he was party to the conspiracy and he should be tried again because the lower court made the wrong factual finding, the prosecution said. Lau, representing himself, said the trial court's findings should not be 'casually interfered' with. 'I have never advocated for the resignation of the chief executive, I have never advocated the indiscriminate vetoing of the financial budget,' Lau told the court, referring to core tenets of the alleged conspiracy. Beijing has remolded Hong Kong in its authoritarian image after imposing a sweeping national security law in 2020 following months of huge, and sometimes violent, pro-democracy demonstrations. Authorities arrested figures from a broad cross-section of the city's opposition in morning raids in 2021, the group later being dubbed the 'Hong Kong 47'. Aged between 27 and 69, they included democratically elected lawmakers and district councilors, as well as unionists, academics and others ranging from modest reformists to radical localists. Dozens of police officers were deployed outside the West Kowloon court building on Monday morning as people queued to attend the hearing. 'They made a sacrifice... I hope they understand that Hongkongers have not forgotten them,' said a public hospital worker in his thirties surnamed Chow. Amnesty International's China director Sarah Brooks said the appeal would be a 'pivotal test' for free expression in the Chinese finance hub. 'Only by overturning these convictions can Hong Kong's courts begin to restore the city's global standing as a place where rights are respected and where people are allowed to peacefully express their views without fear of arrest,' Brooks said. – AFP

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