Houthis renege on new deal to prevent Red Sea oil spill disaster

This satellite image shows a close up view of the FSO Safer oil tanker off the port of Ras Isa. (File/AFP)
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Updated 07 February 2022
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Houthis renege on new deal to prevent Red Sea oil spill disaster

  • Houthis first said they supported new plan by UN officials to pump one million barrels of oil out of the vessel
  • They then backtracked and said the UN was guilty of “continued disregard of its obligations” over the tanker

AL-MUKALLA: The Iran-backed Houthi militia in Yemen on Sunday reneged on a deal to head off an environmental disaster in the Red Sea, only hours after reaching an agreement with the UN.

The Houthis first said they supported a new plan by UN officials to pump one million barrels of oil out of the decaying oil storage vessel Safer, which is moored off the port of Hodeidah.

But as the UN’s Yemen coordinator David Gressly hailed “constructive” talks on the plan, which is also supported by Yemen’s government, the Houthis backtracked. They said the UN was guilty of “continued disregard of its obligations” over the tanker and accused the UN mission of wasting funds allocated for maintaining the vessel.

The rusting storage tanker is more than 40 years old and has not been maintained since early 2015, when international experts fled as the Houthis took control of swaths of Yemen in a coup. 

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The Safer crisis erupted again as the top US military officer in the Middle East arrived in the UAE for defense talks after a series of Houthi missile attacks on Abu Dhabi.

Environmentalists have issued a series of warnings about the danger. The Safer has neither power nor a functioning fire-fighting system, and volatile gases are thought to be building up inside. “The risk of imminent catastrophe is very real,” Gressly said. “We need … action as soon as possible.”

Greenpeace said last week that the Safer posed a “grave threat.” An oil spill would prevent access to Yemen’s main ports of Hodeidah and Salif, affecting food aid supplies for up to 8.4 million people.
The environmental group said desalination plants on the coast could be affected, which would interrupt the drinking water supply for about 10 million people. Yemeni fisheries would probably shut down and ecosystems in the Red Sea would be destroyed, it said, with the impact reaching Saudi Arabia, Djibouti and Eritrea.

The Safer crisis erupted again as the top US military officer in the Middle East arrived in the UAE for defense talks after a series of Houthi missile attacks on Abu Dhabi.

Gen. Frank McKenzie, head of Central Command, said: “I think it’s a very worrisome time for the UAE. They’re looking for support. We’re here to help provide that support.” Last week the Pentagon deployed advanced F-22 fighter jets and the guided missile destroyer USS Cole to the UAE.

McKenzie blamed Iran for the attacks on Abu Dhabi. “Medium-range ballistic missiles that were fired from Yemen and entered the UAE were not invented, built, designed in Yemen,” he said. “All that happened somewhere else. So I think we certainly see the Iranian connection to this.” 


Four UAE soldiers killed, 9 injured on duty

Updated 6 sec ago
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Four UAE soldiers killed, 9 injured on duty

  • The soldiers died in “an accident while carrying out their duty in the country”

ABU DHABI: Four UAE Armed Forces soldiers were killed and nine others were injured in “an accident”, the country’s ministry of defense said Wednesday.  
The military statement, posted on the state news agency WAM, said the soldiers died in “an accident while carrying out their duty in the country” without mentioning further details.  
The injured were receiving the necessary medical care, the statement read.


Driven out of Iran, Afghan refugees tell of ordeal

Updated 44 min 32 sec ago
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Driven out of Iran, Afghan refugees tell of ordeal

  • Many entered Iran illegally or let their visas expire. Nearly 90 percent have been deported, with the rest returning voluntarily
  • These refugees in counterfeit Fendi or Dior T-shirts are registered by the Afghan authorities and examined by the International Organization for Migration (IOM)

ISLAM QALA: At the border with Iran, streams of Afghan refugees return with children in their arms, their entire worldly possessions contained in a large bag.
Every day up to 3,000 Afghans — some who were born in Iran — arrive back in their home country after a failed attempt at a better life.
“Refugees face a lot of physical and mental torture,” Abdul Ghani Qazizada, responsible for registering the arrivals in the border town of Islam Qala, told AFP.
Many entered Iran illegally or let their visas expire. Nearly 90 percent have been deported, with the rest returning voluntarily.
The rate of expulsions has increased “in the last six months,” said Qazizada.
“They are warned there (in Iran) that they must leave within one week, or anyone above 18 must deposit 100 million toman ($2,375) in the bank,” he said.
“These are the people who return to Afghanistan voluntarily because of this problem.”
These refugees in counterfeit Fendi or Dior T-shirts are registered by the Afghan authorities and examined by the International Organization for Migration (IOM).
To rebuild their lives, they are given 2,000 Afghanis ($29) per person if they arrive with their family, but nothing if they are alone.
Ramazan Azizi, 36, waits, haggard, on a blue plastic chair to be registered with his wife and three children.
They entered Iran illegally in 2023, after paying $1,220 to a trafficker but have faced growing hostility toward Afghans, accused of increasing unemployment and prices but also crime in a country under international sanctions.
“The owners had to pay a fine because they rented their home to us. They threw our things out of the windows,” Azizi, a construction worker, told AFP.
“They (authorities) told us to pack up and we did, we were taken to a military camp to be deported.”
He said the family were crammed in with 2,000 to 3,000 other Afghans for six days.
“We were exhausted... without food or water,” he said, his little girl wearing a pink T-shirt with rabbits on it sat by his side.
Tears flow from Fazila Qaderi, 26, as she recounts the ordeal she and her husband endured in the Karaj camp near the capital Tehran.
The guards “beat us a lot for six or seven days with metal batons,” making no distinction between men or women.
“I saw an Afghan die, and they shouted at him ‘son of a bitch, go home!’,” she said, adding that her husband suffered broken bones.
“Yesterday I told (the guards): ‘kill me or send us back to Afghanistan’.”
They arrived in Iran four years ago, having paid a smuggler, as farm workers in the central-northern province of Qazvin.
Their new life had started well, until she was hospitalized for 12 days for a severe allergy and needed an operation.
“We gave $1,200 to the doctor for the surgery and they said they would do it the next day. When we went back, the security officials took us,” she explained.
“We had a three-room apartment full of belongings, we couldn’t take a single thing with us,” she continues. “We had paid 50 million toman to the owner in advance, we couldn’t take that back either,” nor the advance to the doctor.
Now they have no money to pay for the trip back to their home province of Takhar in northeastern Afghanistan.


Day laborer Abdul Basir, 29, said he was arrested at work and expelled from Iran, despite having a valid passport and visa.
“With a passport I ended up in the military camp (in Karaj) for 10 days,” he said. “What government can do that?“
With his hands and feet tied, he was taken away in a bus with 70 to 80 people standing, and once at the camp he was beaten to the point he couldn’t move.
He describes “broken hands and feet, people fainting, maybe even dead” and thirst and hunger.
“There were elderly Afghans, women and children,” he says, adding that people were taken away and not seen again.
He also claimed that security personnel tore up Afghan passports or valid Iranian residence permits.
He was deported back to Afghanistan without his Afghan passport, which he paid $340 for so he could flee unemployment in Herat province.
“Now, I don’t have any money to pay for the bus to go home,” he said.
The Afghan official at the border, Qazizada, said around 70 percent of the refugees were sent back without Iranian documents.
Afghan Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi asked Tehran on Thursday to “cooperate patiently with Afghan refugees, who have also contributed to the development of Iran.”
In his first press conference earlier in the week, Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian said Tehran was repatriating illegal nationals to their country “in a respectful manner.”
Iran has been a host country for 4.5 million Afghans fleeing decades of war and unemployment.
Iran’s spokesman for the parliamentary National Security Committee, Ebrahim Rezaei, earlier this month said police plan to “expel more than two million illegal citizens in the near future.”
Afghans represent more than 90 percent of foreign nationals and most enter without identity papers, according to the official IRNA news agency.
More than 700,000 undocumented Afghans have also left neighboring Pakistan following a crackdown which started in September last year.
In Iranian bakeries, signs prohibit the sale of bread to non-Iranians “under penalty of prosecution,” according to photos on social networks.
Fazila Qaderi confirms that she has not been able to buy bread for two months: “For them, an Afghan is worth less than a dog.”


50 children among hundreds of Lebanese killed in 2 days of Israeli strikes

Updated 25 September 2024
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50 children among hundreds of Lebanese killed in 2 days of Israeli strikes

  • Human remains seen on vehicles parked in front of building targeted on Tuesday
  • The sources identified the commander who was killed as Ibrahim Qubaisi

BEIRUT: The Israeli military resumed its attacks on the southern suburbs of Beirut on Tuesday, targeting a building in the Ghobeiry area a day after hundreds of airstrikes across various regions in Lebanon killed over 550 people, including 50 children.
Tuesday’s operation, which was intended to eliminate Abu Jawad Haraka, the commander of the Iran-backed Hezbollah’s missile unit, resulted in the deaths of two people and a further 11, including Iraqis, sustaining injuries, along with the destruction of part of a six-story residential building.
Israeli army radio announced that the airstrike was carried out by F-35 aircraft.
Images circulated from the site of the attack showed human remains on the vehicles parked in front of the targeted building, along with the significant destruction of property.
Further Israeli assaults targeted paramedics associated with the Islamic Health Organization, linked to Hezbollah in the Nabatieh area, as well as the Sajjad food supply establishment, which is also connected to Hezbollah, in Sarein in the Bekaa region.
Following a day of deadly strikes on southern Lebanon and the Bekaa Valley, Israeli Chief of Staff Herzi Halevi said that the Israeli military would “accelerate the offensive operation today,” and added that “we should not give Hezbollah a rest.”
Lebanon’s Health Minister Firas Abiad reported that hundreds of Israeli airstrikes across various regions of the country on Monday resulted in 558 fatalities, including 50 children.
It marked the most intense airstrikes against Lebanon since Hezbollah initiated operations on the southern front about a year ago.
A UNICEF official spoke of “children missing under rubble.”
The intensity in the fighting between Hezbollah and Israel escalated last week following explosions that targeted pagers and wireless devices used by Hezbollah members and civilian employees.
Hezbollah accused Israel of carrying out the attacks, which resulted in the deaths of 39 people and injuries to 2,931 others, according to the Lebanese Ministry of Health.
The Israeli airstrikes impacted residential areas in the southern regions up to Mount Hermon, as well as the western Bekaa and a significant portion of the villages and towns in central and eastern Bekaa.
The attacks also affected an area adjacent to the archaeological site in Baalbek.
Displaced people who managed to reach Beirut spread out along the roads with their belongings and at the front of mosques, while the Ministry of Education opened public schools to accommodate them.
The Masnaa Border Crossing witnessed severe traffic congestion due to the significant movement of displaced people from Lebanon to Syria, including both Lebanese citizens and Syrian workers.
Heavy traffic jams meanwhile continued on roads in south Beirut.
People remained trapped in their cars without food or water due to the chaos in organizing the flow of tens of thousands of cars, especially between Ghazieh and Sidon, and Sidon and Beirut.
Displaced people expressed concerns about the “absence of state institutions in resolving this tragedy.”
They also lamented the “lack of organizational support from Hezbollah during such critical times, leaving people to face their fate alone.”
The health minister told a press conference that “the number of hospitals that received casualties on Monday reached 54,” noting that “four paramedics lost their lives.”
He mentioned “a significant number of remains that the security forces are working to identify.”
As the Israeli strikes on the neighborhoods of southern Beirut have intensified, an increasing number of people have decided to evacuate their homes, in contrast to the situation in 2006 when Hezbollah instructed residents to leave the area within hours of the onset of Israeli aggression.
Numerous neighborhoods have appeared deserted, with shops, restaurants, and gas stations closed, resulting in an almost complete lack of activity.
Meanwhile, both Arab and foreign airlines have suspended all flights to Beirut until further notice.
Minister of Education Abbas Halabi announced the death of Suzi Kojok, director of Kawthariyet El Seyad Intermediate Public School; Layali Ayach, a teacher at the Ansar Public High School, who was killed along with her husband and their two children; and Zeinab and Fatimah Hreibi, teachers at the Shoukin Public School.
Halabi said the victims had died “following the aggressive Israeli shelling that targeted their houses or killed them while they were carrying out their work at school.”
The state-owned Electricite du Liban announced the death of Farah Kojok, an engineer at the Zahrani thermal power plant who died along with her husband, children, father, mother and sister in an Israeli raid that targeted their home.
The Lebanese TV channel Al-Mayadeen announced the death of journalist Hadi Al-Sayed, who was killed in an Israeli raid that targeted his house in southern Lebanon.
The Israeli military again dropped leaflets over southern Lebanon, calling on people to avoid Hezbollah members, following voice messages telling residents to evacuate their houses.
The leaflets said that “whoever stays near Hezbollah members or weapons is putting their life at risk.”
In a series of strikes targeting Israeli outposts, Hezbollah retaliated while affirming that its firepower had not been affected by Israeli attacks.
The group announced that it had “bombarded the Eliakim military camp of the Israeli Northern Command, south of Haifa, with a barrage of Fadi-2 rockets.”
Hezbollah’s operations targeted “the Megiddo Military Airport, west of Afula, with a barrage of Fadi-1 missiles in the first round, and a barrage of Fadi-2 missiles in the second and third rounds.”
It also bombed “the explosive materials factory in the Zikhron area, 60 km from the border, with a barrage of Fadi-2 rockets.”
Hezbollah also targeted “the Amos base — the main logistical support and transportation hub for the northern region — with a salvo of Fadi-1 rockets, as well as the Ramat David base and airport with a salvo of Fadi-2 missiles.”
The group also targeted “the logistical warehouses of the 146th Division at the Naftali base with a rocket salvo, in addition to the Samson base and the Rosh Pina settlement with a rocket salvo.”
According to the Israeli side, Hezbollah’s strikes also reached Safad, while Israel called on “residents in Kiryat Shmona and its surroundings to stay near fortified areas.”
On the diplomatic front, Jean-Yves Le Drian, the French presidential envoy, met in Beirut several Lebanese officials, including Prime Minister Najib Mikati; Nabih Berri, parliamentary speaker; Gen. Joseph Aoun, commander of the Lebanese Armed Forces; Samir Geagea, head of the Lebanese Forces Party; and Gebran Bassil, head of the Free Patriotic Movement.
Le Drian said that “France stands by Lebanon in all circumstances,” and added he hoped that “diplomatic calls would lead to a resolution that halts the cycle of violence.”


Sirens sound in Tel Aviv after fresh air strikes reported in Lebanon

Updated 25 September 2024
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Sirens sound in Tel Aviv after fresh air strikes reported in Lebanon

  • The violence has spiralled in recent days and on Monday, Israel launched devastating strikes that resulted in the deadliest single-day toll since the end of Lebanon’s 1975-1990 civil war

Beirut, Lebanon: Israeli warplanes pounded villages in south Lebanon for a third day, Lebanese media reported Wednesday, while Israel said it intercepted a missile fired after sirens sounded early morning in Tel Aviv.
Lebanese officials said hundreds of thousands of civilians have fled their homes in the south this week to avoid fighting between Hezbollah and the Israeli military.
Lebanon’s official National News Agency said Israeli warplanes launched raids on multiple towns in the south from 5:00 am (0200 GMT), adding “casualties were reported” from other strikes overnight.
The United Nations Security Council said it will hold an emergency meeting on the crisis in New York Wednesday, while UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres warned the situation was critical.
Hundreds of thousands of people have been displaced since the latest round of fighting began Monday, officials said, some crossing the border to Syria to flee Israeli bombing.
Thuraya Harb, a 41-year-old housewife at a makeshift center for displaced families in Beirut, said her family fled “with nothing but the clothes on our backs.”
“I didn’t want to leave my home, but the children were scared,” the mother of four said.
Longtime foes Hezbollah and Israel have been locked in near-daily exchanges of cross-border fire since Palestinian militant group Hamas launched an unprecedented attack on Israel on October 7.
The Hamas attack sparked a war in Gaza that has drawn in Hezbollah and other Iran-backed militants from across the Middle East, including Yemen and Iraq.
Lebanon said Israeli strikes killed at least 558 people on Monday — the deadliest day of violence in the country since its 1975-90 civil war.
Lebanese Health Minister Firass Abiad said the “vast majority, if not all” of those killed were unarmed civilians in their homes.
Israel’s military said Wednesday it intercepted a missile fired from Lebanon after sirens sounded in Tel Aviv.
“Following the sirens that sounded in the Tel Aviv and Netanya areas, one surface-to-surface missile was identified crossing from Lebanon and was intercepted,” a military spokesman said.
Hezbollah claimed 18 attacks on Israel on Tuesday, while the Israeli military said the Iran-backed group fired about 300 rockets across the border.
Hezbollah also confirmed an Israeli claim that it had killed their rocket forces commander Ibrahim Kobeissi in the strike on the Lebanese capital.
Early Wednesday, a Lebanese security source said a new Israeli strike hit the Saadiyat area near Beirut, with a “warehouse” targeted.
At the UN General Assembly in New York, Secretary-General Guterres warned the situation in Lebanon was critical.
“We should all be alarmed by the escalation. Lebanon is at the brink,” he said, while cautioning against “the possibility of transforming Lebanon (into) another Gaza.”
US President Joe Biden warned against a full-blown war in Lebanon in his speech during the New York gathering.
“Full-scale war is not in anyone’s interest. Even though the situation has escalated, a diplomatic solution is still possible,” Biden said.
Lebanon’s foreign minister, also at the UN assembly, said the number of displaced Lebanese had soared to nearly 500,000 since Israel ramped up its military campaign.
A security official in neighboring Syria told AFP about 500 people had crossed the border to flee the bombing.
Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed to continue the withering air campaign.
“We will continue to hit Hezbollah... the one who has a missile in his living room and a rocket in his home will not have a home,” he said.
Iran, Hezbollah’s main backer, condemned the raids, with its president, Masoud Pezeshkian, saying its ally “cannot stand alone” against Israel.
“We must not allow Lebanon to become another Gaza at the hands of Israel,” he said.
A US official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Washington opposed an Israeli ground invasion targeting Hezbollah and had “concrete ideas” on how to de-escalate the crisis.
Israel’s ambassador to the UN, Danny Danon, said Israel was “not eager to start any ground invasion” in Lebanon.
Britain’s foreign ministry said Tuesday that it was sending military teams to Cyprus as it prepares “contingency plans” for its citizens in Lebanon, who it urged to immediately leave the country.
The war in Gaza began with Hamas’s October 7 attack on Israel, which resulted in the deaths of 1,205 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli official figures that include hostages killed in captivity.
Of the 251 hostages seized by militants, 97 are still held in Gaza, including 33 the Israeli military says are dead.
Israel’s retaliatory military offensive has killed at least 41,467 people in Gaza, most of them civilians, according to figures provided by the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry. The UN has described the figures as reliable.
In a statement addressed to the UN chief, Hamas urged “immediate action” to stop the war in Gaza.
Since the start of the Gaza war, clashes along the Lebanon-Israel border have forced tens of thousands of people on both sides to flee their homes.
The violence between Israel and Hezbollah escalated dramatically last week, when coordinated communications device blasts that the militants blamed on Israel killed 39 people and wounded almost 3,000.


Israeli military says missile intercepted as Tel Aviv sirens sound

Updated 25 September 2024
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Israeli military says missile intercepted as Tel Aviv sirens sound

  • The Israeli military has been conducting its heaviest air strikes of the war this week, targeting Hezbollah leaders and hitting hundreds of targets deep inside Lebanon

JERUSALEM: Warning sirens sounded in Israel’s economic capital Tel Aviv on Wednesday as a single surface-to-surface missile was intercepted by air defense systems after it was detected crossing from Lebanon, the Israeli military said.
There were no reports of damage or casualties and the military said there was no change to civil defense instructions for central Israel.
The warning sirens also sounded in other areas of central Israel, including the city of Netanya.
The Iranian-backed Hezbollah movement in Lebanon fired hundreds of missiles and rockets at Israel in recent days as months of conflict across the border with southern Lebanon has intensified sharply.
The Israeli military has been conducting its heaviest air strikes of the war this week, targeting Hezbollah leaders and hitting hundreds of targets deep inside Lebanon that have killed more than 500 of people and wounded more than 1,800.
On Tuesday, a
strike
in Beirut killed senior Hezbollah commander Ibrahim Qubaisi, who headed the group’s missile and rocket force.