
At Least 60 Dead in Fire at Shopping Mall in Iraq
At least 60 people have been confirmed dead following a devastating fire that broke out at a shopping mall in Kut, eastern Iraq, according to health authorities and police sources.
The blaze, which engulfed a five-story commercial building overnight, has left at least 11 individuals unaccounted for.
Footage widely shared across social media platforms showed flames rapidly consuming the structure as firefighting teams struggled through the night to bring the inferno under control.
A senior official from the Kut health department told Reuters that authorities had confirmed the identities of 59 victims, with one body so badly charred it could not be identified.
Local municipal official Ali Al-Mayahi also stated that recovery efforts are still underway, as several bodies remain trapped beneath the wreckage.
The cause of the fire remains under investigation. Iraq's official news agency (INA)
cited
the Governor of Wasit Province, Mohammed Jameel Al-Mayahi, who announced that relevant authorities are conducting a full inquiry. Preliminary findings are expected to be released to the public within 48 hours.
Al-Mayahi also confirmed that legal proceedings have commenced against the building and mall owner in connection with the incident.
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Al-Ahram Weekly
26 minutes ago
- Al-Ahram Weekly
Israeli forces abduct senior Gaza doctor, kill journalist near Red Cross field hospital - War on Gaza
Israeli forces abducted one of Gaza's most senior medical officials and killed multiple civilians, including a well-known journalist, in a deadly raid near a Red Cross field hospital in Rafah on Tuesday. According to local sources and Palestinian media outlets, a special unit of the Israeli army launched an operation near an International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) field hospital west of Khan Younis. Witnesses say Israeli commandos opened fire on civilians sitting outside a nearby cafeteria before targeting an ambulance escorting Dr. Marwan Shafiq Al-Hams, the director of field hospitals in Gaza and former head of the Mohammed Yousef Al-Najjar Hospital in Rafah. Among the victims of the gunfire was journalist Tamer al-Zaanin. Another journalist, Ibrahim Abu Sh'aiba, was wounded in the same incident. The ambulance driver accompanying Dr. Al-Hams also sustained injuries after Israeli forces fired on the vehicle. Dr. Al-Hams was forcibly taken by Israeli forces and transported to an interrogation centre in Rafah, according to Quds News Network and the Gaza Ministry of Health. Hamas condemns the raid In a statement, Hamas accused Israel of executing a deliberate campaign to dismantle Gaza's health infrastructure and intimidate medical personnel. "The fascist occupation's abduction of Dr. Marwan Al-Hams ... represents a deliberate escalation in the ongoing criminal targeting of the medical sector and its personnel through killing, detention, and terror," the group said. Hamas added that Israel bears full responsibility for Dr. Al-Hams' life and the safety of hundreds of detained medical professionals held in unknown or inhumane conditions. The group urged international institutions, including the ICRC and the World Health Organization (WHO), to condemn the attack and demand the immediate release of detained doctors and paramedics. Widespread outcry from health officials The Gaza Ministry of Health issued a scathing statement, calling the abduction of Al-Hams a direct attack on the humanitarian sector and a grave breach of international humanitarian law, including provisions safeguarding medical workers and infrastructure in times of war. "This unprecedented act represents a serious escalation and a direct attack on the voice of the sick, the hungry, and the suffering in the Gaza Strip," the Ministry said. It emphasized that the raid fits into a pattern of systemic targeting of medical facilities and personnel since the onset of Israel's genocidal war in October 2023. Al-Hams: A voice of medical resistance Dr Marwan Shafiq Al-Hams was not just an administrator. A trained emergency medicine specialist, he had emerged as a vocal figure in Gaza's medical community since the war began. As director of field hospitals, he became a key conduit between collapsing health facilities and the few remaining international aid networks still functioning in the Strip. Earlier this month, Al-Hams warned that 47 percent of essential medicines in Gaza had been fully depleted, and that fuel stocks were insufficient to keep health facilities operating for even a single day. Speaking to the BBC in June, he described the chaos inside Gaza's Nasser Medical Complex: "We originally had space for 25 beds," he said. "Now we have 42 patients hospitalized in the intensive care unit. They need blood, and we cannot find any." In May, Al-Hams participated in a legal and advocacy webinar titled: Starvation as a Weapon: International Legal Responsibilities and the Diplomatic Convoy to Confront Deliberate Famine in Gaza. His presentation drew a grim picture of Gaza's healthcare system, saying, 'Hospitals are overflowing with patients and the wounded, especially in intensive care and specialized units. There are no free beds — the only way a bed becomes available is if someone dies.' Health system under siege The raid marks only the latest in a long line of attacks on Gaza's healthcare infrastructure. A May 2025 report by Medical Aid for Palestinians (MAP) recorded over 1,400 healthcare workers killed since the war began. Israeli bombardment obliterated entire departments of hospitals, and over a third of Gaza's hospitals are no longer operational. 'Despite being protected under international law, Gaza's healthcare workers are being erased before the world's eyes,' MAP reported. Similarly, leading Gaza paediatrician Dr Hussam Abu Safiya remains held in Ofer Prison—infamous for its harsh conditions—in critical condition after over six months in Israeli detention, his lawyer said to media outlets in early July. Abu Safiya, director of Kamal Adwan Hospital in Beit Lahia, was abducted by Israeli forces in December as part of a wave of arrests targeting Gaza's health workers. Once weighing 100 kilograms, he has reportedly lost over 40 kilograms due to abuse, solitary confinement, and denial of medical care, according to his legal team. As of July 2025, over half of all functioning health facilities are located in areas under Israeli evacuation orders, making them virtually inaccessible to displaced populations. Mobile clinics and field hospitals, like the one Dr Al-Hams was visiting at the time of his abduction, have become some of the last lifelines. According to the United Nations (UN) Human Rights Office, Israel's ongoing attacks on medical institutions amount to a near-total collapse of Gaza's healthcare system. In a December 2024 report, the UN documented a consistent pattern of deadly strikes near hospitals and clinics, leaving patients—many of them critically ill children—without access to care. Journalism under fire The death of Tamer al-Zaanin has further underscored the deadly risks faced by media professionals in Gaza. According to the Palestinian Journalists Syndicate (PJS), at least 229 journalists have been killed since October 2023, making Gaza the most dangerous place on Earth for journalists today. International press freedom groups, including Reporters Without Borders (RSF), the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), and the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ), have compiled evidence indicating that the targeting of journalists is systematic. CPJ Program Director Carlos Martinez de la Serna said, 'Since the war in Gaza started, journalists have been paying the highest price – their lives – for their reporting. Without protection, equipment, international presence, communications, or food and water, they are still doing their crucial jobs to tell the world the truth.' Follow us on: Facebook Instagram Whatsapp Short link:


Al-Ahram Weekly
26 minutes ago
- Al-Ahram Weekly
AFP Journalists' Association warns its Gaza reporters face death by starvation
The journalists' association of Agence France-Presse (AFP) issued a stark and emotional statement on Monday, warning that the news agency's final remaining contributors inside the Gaza Strip are facing imminent death by starvation, as Israel's blockade on food and aid continues. The statement, posted on X, underscores the desperation gripping the Strip's last journalists amid a deepening famine. "Since AFP was founded in August 1944, we have lost journalists in conflicts, we have had wounded and prisoners in our ranks, but none of us can recall seeing a colleague die of hunger. We refuse to see them die." The association confirmed that, following the departure of its staff correspondents in 2024, its operations in Gaza have relied on a core team of ten freelance collaborators: one text reporter, three photographers, and six videographers. Despite the increasing risk to journalists in the Strip, these individuals have continued to risk their lives to document the humanitarian catastrophe. Now, they are on the brink of collapse. One, Bashar—AFP's chief freelance photographer in Gaza—posted a harrowing message on Facebook last Saturday: "I no longer have the strength to work for the media. My body is thin, and I can no longer work." 'We refuse to watch them die' The AFP statement paints a grim picture of life for these reporters. Bashar, 30, lives in the ruins of his home in Gaza City alongside his mother, siblings, and extended family. Their shelter is devoid of basic necessities—no beds, no electricity, and little food. On Sunday morning, Bashar reported that his eldest brother had "fallen, because of hunger." These journalists, though still paid monthly by AFP, face a brutal economic blockade. There is little or nothing to buy, and what remains comes at exorbitant prices. A collapsed banking system has made accessing their salaries nearly impossible, with informal currency exchange networks charging up to 40 percent in fees. There are no AFP vehicles or fuel left to support field work, and travelling by car risks Israeli airstrikes. Journalists now walk or use donkey carts to reach locations—if their physical strength allows. Ahlam, another contributor, continues to report from the south. 'Every time I leave the tent to cover an event, conduct an interview, or document something, I don't know if I will come back alive… The biggest problem is the lack of food and water,' Ahlam said. The AFP journalists' association stated: "We see their situation worsening. They are young, and their strength is fading. Most no longer have the physical capacity to travel around the enclave to do their work. Their heartbreaking cries for help are now daily." On Sunday, Bashar wrote: "For the first time, I feel defeated." Later, he reportedly thanked one of his AFP contacts for "explaining what we live through every day between death and hunger," and added: "I wish Mr. Macron could help me get out of this hell." Gaza's descent into famine AFP's call comes amid dire warnings from humanitarian organizations about worsening famine conditions in Gaza. The United Nations (UN) Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said in a 17 July update that Gaza is experiencing "persistent famine risks," with people surviving on a single poor-quality meal per day—or none at all. Families are turning to fasting, rationing bread for children, begging, and even scavenging for scraps in dumps. The World Food Programme (WFP) estimates that around 500,000 people in Gaza are currently starving. "I met many of those families who told me that there are days that their children are not eating at all," WFP Deputy Executive Director Carl Skau stated, following a visit. He also noted that parents are trying to prevent children from playing to reduce their calorie expenditure. While aid convoys are technically allowed entry through the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), established in late May with US and Israeli backing, the flow of aid remains wholly inadequate. The WFP warns that humanitarian cargoes are often delayed at checkpoints for up to 20 hours and that the incoming food supplies are only a fraction of what is needed. Worse, militarized distribution has triggered deadly chaos: Israeli and American soldiers have killed nearly 1,000 starving Palestinians as they tried to access aid near distribution sites or along convoy routes. As fuel, medical supplies, and food dwindle, prices of basic goods have skyrocketed, and malnutrition-related deaths are rising rapidly. A broken aid system The GHF system—created to replace UN-led food distribution—has drawn fierce criticism from human rights organizations. Amnesty International released a report in early July accusing Israel and the US of deliberately weaponizing starvation to advance military objectives in Gaza. 'Israel has turned aid-seeking into a booby trap for desperate starved Palestinians,' the report said. Amnesty's secretary general, Agnès Callamard, said, 'This devastating daily loss of life is the consequence of their deliberate targeting by Israeli forces and the foreseeable consequence of irresponsible and lethal methods of distribution.' Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has reported an unprecedented surge in child malnutrition at its Gaza clinics, with 983 children enrolled in feeding programmes in Gaza City alone by early July—nearly four times the number in May. The UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) has also warned that Israel is starving Gaza's civilian population, including one million children. 'We are witnessing a real state of famine,' the Palestinian Health Ministry added. Press freedom under siege AFP's Gaza collaborators represent some of the last independent voices on the ground. With international press barred and local journalists facing lethal danger, the few who remain are vital to documenting the war's human toll. But these journalists are now being physically erased by hunger. According to the Palestinian Journalists Syndicate (PJS), at least 229 journalists have been killed since October 2023, making Gaza the most dangerous place on Earth for journalists today. Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) Program Director Carlos Martinez de la Serna stated that "Since the war in Gaza started, journalists have been paying the highest price – their lives – for their reporting. Without protection, equipment, international presence, communications, or food and water, they are still doing their crucial jobs to tell the world the truth." Even as AFP freelancers continue working, their ability to do so diminishes with each passing day. Their cameras are still, their batteries uncharged, their bodies wasting. 'Here, resisting is not a choice: it is a necessity,' Ahlam insisted. Follow us on: Facebook Instagram Whatsapp Short link:


Daily News Egypt
an hour ago
- Daily News Egypt
Famine kills more Gaza children as Israel tightens siege amid global outrage
In Gaza, children are now dying not from bombs, but from empty stomachs. On the 654th day of Israel's war, starvation has become an accelerating killer across the besieged enclave, as border crossings remain sealed and humanitarian aid is blocked. The Gaza Health Ministry reported that 19 people—including four-year-old Razan Abu Zahir, who spent half her life under bombardment—died of hunger in the past 24 hours. Razan joins at least 70 children who have succumbed to starvation since the conflict began. Alongside famine, Israeli airstrikes killed 27 Palestinians and wounded others, according to hospital officials. For the first time since the war began, Israeli forces—including engineering and armoured units from the Golani Brigade—launched a ground incursion into southern Deir al-Balah in central Gaza. Army Radio reported the operation could last weeks. The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) declared that starving civilians is a war crime that must never be used as a weapon. OCHA added that 88% of Gaza's territory is now under Israeli evacuation orders, affecting around 2.1 million people who have already been forcibly displaced multiple times. In apparent retaliation for OCHA's condemnation, Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa'ar refused to renew the visa of Jonathan Whittall, who heads OCHA's office in the occupied Palestinian territories, effectively expelling him. The siege has also crippled Gaza's health system. Hamas said Israeli forces abducted Dr. Marwan Al-Hams, director of field hospitals in Gaza, while he was visiting a Red Cross facility in Rafah. Soldiers reportedly fired on the ambulance carrying him, killing several civilians, including journalist Tamer Al-Za'anin. Hamas urged the international community, including the Red Cross and WHO, to condemn the attack and press for the release of detained medical staff. Meanwhile, Gaza Municipality warned of an imminent catastrophe after the shutdown of the city's main desalination plant and water pipelines, leaving large areas completely without water. The Gaza Health Ministry reported a total of 134 deaths (including four recovered bodies) and 1,155 injuries over the past 24 hours. Since 7 October 2023, the death toll has risen to 59,029, with 142,135 wounded. The blockade has drawn sharp criticism abroad. Belgium's King Philippe condemned the severe humanitarian violations in Gaza as 'a disgrace to humanity' and urged the UN Secretary-General to act immediately. Germany criticised the so-called 'Gaza Humanitarian Foundation,' saying its aid mechanisms fail to reach civilians, and called on Israel to comply with international humanitarian law and allow aid agencies to operate freely. UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer described the humanitarian situation as unbearable and renewed calls for an immediate ceasefire. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan warned that Gaza's people 'will not surrender' and said Israel will ultimately be undone by its own ambitions. Inside Israel, former Israeli army Chief of Staff Moshe Ya'alon broke ranks with the military establishment, warning that forced evacuations, demolitions, and starvation in Gaza amount to war crimes and violate Israel's moral values. 'These are breaches of everything we stand for,' he posted on X (formerly Twitter). The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) repeated its call to lift the blockade, revealing that food prices in Gaza have surged fortyfold. 'We have enough food outside Gaza to feed the entire population for over three months,' the agency said. 'Lift the siege and let the aid in—safely and at scale.' UN Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese compared Israel's deliberate starvation of two million civilians and killing of children to Nazi atrocities. Reflecting on the death of a disabled man from hunger, she wrote: 'Our generation was taught that Nazism was the ultimate evil—and it was. Today, a state is starving millions and shooting children for sport under the protection of democracies and dictatorships alike. This is the new abyss of brutality.' Meanwhile, Israeli Settlement Minister Orit Strook called for widening military operations even at the risk of Israeli hostages' lives. 'You can't win a war like this. We must fight a decisive battle, even if it endangers the captives,' she said in a radio interview. As the siege tightens, the humanitarian collapse is worsening. The UN warns that nearly all of Gaza is either under evacuation orders or Israeli military control, pushing millions into an ever-shrinking strip of land. UNRWA says children are 'withering before our eyes' from hunger and dehydration, while doctors can do little but watch them slip away.