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Israel pounded Gaza on Sunday as its war with Hamas raged into a fourth month, while top US diplomat Antony Blinken decried the “tragedy” of civilian deaths and warned the conflict threatened the wider region.

 

 

US Secretary of State Blinken, speaking in Qatar on the latest leg of his fourth Middle East tour since the start of the war, also said Palestinians displaced by the fighting must be allowed to “return home”.

 

 

The Qatar-based Al Jazeera network said two journalists working for it were killed when their car was struck in Rafah, in southern Gaza.

 

 

They were named as Mustafa Thuria, a video stringer who also worked for AFP and other media organisations, and Hamza Wael Dahdouh, the son of Al Jazeera’s Gaza bureau chief who had earlier lost his wife and two other children in an Israeli strike.

 

 

 

Al Jazeera said it condemned the killings and the “targeting” of journalists, while Blinken called the deaths an “unimaginable tragedy”.

 

 

“And that’s also been the case for… far too many innocent Palestinian men, women and children,” Blinken said.

 

 

AFP correspondents reported air strikes in Khan Yunis, the territory’s main southern city, and Rafah near the Egyptian border, where many displaced people have sought refuge.

 

 

The war, triggered by deadly Hamas attacks on Israel in early October, has displaced at least 85 percent of Gaza’s 2.4 million people, according to UN figures.

 

 

“Palestinian civilians must be able to return home as soon as conditions allow,” Blinken said. “They cannot, they must not be pressed to leave Gaza.”

 

 

Some Israeli ministers have recently spoken in favour of “encouraging” Gazans to leave and re-establishing Jewish settlements in the territory, although this is not official Israeli policy.

 

 

The Israeli army — which claims to have “dismantled” Hamas’s military leadership in northern Gaza — reported killing more “terrorists” in central Gaza, including in a drone strike in the Bureij refugee camp.

 

 

A military statement said troops had discovered an underground “weapons production site” in the besieged Gaza Strip’s north operated by Hamas.

– ‘Not a nightmare, reality’

The war started with Hamas’s unprecedented October 7 attack on Israel, which resulted in about 1,140 deaths, most of them civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.

 

The militants, considered a “terrorist” group by the United States and European Union, also took around 250 hostages, 132 of whom remain in captivity, according to Israel. At least 24 of them are believed to have been killed.

 

Israel has responded with relentless bombardment and ground invasion that have killed at least 22,835 people, most of them women and children, according to the Gaza health ministry.

 

 

“These three months have been like a quarter of a century,” said one Gaza resident, Nabil Fathi, 51. “I wake up thinking this is a passing nightmare, but it is a reality.

 

 

“Our home and my son’s home have been destroyed and we have 20 people martyred in our family. I don’t know where we will go even if I survive.”

 

 

German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock, speaking in Jerusalem after meetings with Israeli officials, said it was “increasingly clear that the Israeli army must do more to protect civilians in Gaza”.

 

 

“The suffering of many innocent people cannot go on like this,” she said, urging “less intensive” combat.

 

 

As war rages in Gaza, violence has also flared in the occupied West Bank and on Israel’s northern border, which has seen near-daily exchanges of fire between Israeli forces and Lebanon’s Iran-backed Hezbollah militants.

 

Hezbollah on Saturday said it had fired 62 rockets at an Israeli military base, days after it blamed Israel for a strike in Beirut that killed Hamas’s deputy leader Saleh al-Aruri.

 

 

The Israeli military said it had struck Hezbollah “military sites” in response.

 

 

Army chief Herzi Halevi said in a statement on Sunday that “Hezbollah decided to enter into this war… and we are increasing the price that they are paying”.

 

 

At Lebanon’s main airport in Beirut, hackers used the departure and arrivals screens to display an anti-Hezbollah message, according to media reports.

 

 

“Hassan Nasrallah, no one will support you if you drag the country into war,” said the message, addressing Hezbollah’s leader. A hardline Christian group whose emblem appeared onscreen has denied involvement.

Mediator Qatar ‘attentive’ to hostage families –

Blinken, on a whirlwind tour of the Middle East, warned of a “moment of profound tension in the region”.

 

 

“This is a conflict that could easily metastasize, causing even more insecurity and even more suffering,” he said.

 

Qatar, which helped mediate a one-week truce that saw dozens of hostages released, hosted over the weekend relatives of captives still held in Gaza, said Ruby Chen, the father of 19-year-old captive Itay Chen.

 

Qatari officials the families had met with “were attentive… and showed empathy to us”, the father told a news conference in Tel Aviv.

 

The release of more hostages “serves the bigger objective, as they see it, which is creating regional stability”, said Chen.

 

Blinken, who late Sunday arrived in the United Arab Emirates, earlier held talks in Jordan with King Abdullah II.

 

According to a royal statement, Abdullah warned of the Israel-Hamas war’s “catastrophic repercussions” and of the need to end “the tragic humanitarian crisis” in Gaza.

 

In the West Bank, occupied by Israel since 1967, deadly violence has surged in recent months to levels unseen in nearly two decades.

 

An Israeli strike on Sunday killed seven Palestinians in the northern city of Jenin, the Ramallah-based Palestinian health ministry said, also reporting an eighth fatality by Israeli fire in a separate incident.

 

 

An Israeli border police officer was killed when a roadside bomb hit her vehicle during a raid on Jenin, and an Israeli civilian was killed in a separate shooting near Ramallah, Israeli officials said.

 

Later, Israeli police said that officers responding to a car-ramming attack at a West Bank checkpoint shot a Palestinian girl, with medics confirming the three-year-old child’s death.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

AFP

International News

Doku insists On League Victory Despite Everton Draw With Man City

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Jeremy Doku insisted Manchester “will keep on fighting” in the Premier League title race despite their “painful” draw with Everton on Monday.

 

City drew 3-3 with the Toffees at Hill Dickinson Stadium, with Doku scoring a 97th-minute equaliser, having also scored the opening goal.

Doku’s equaliser (96:49) is City’s third-latest goal on record (since 2006-07) in a Premier League game after John Stones’ strike against Arsenal in September 2024 (97:14) and Gabriel Jesus’ goal against Everton in February 2019 (96:52).

Doku has had a hand in six goals across his last five games for City in all competitions (four goals, two assists), as many as in his previous 22 games combined (one goal, five assists).

The Belgian also created the most chances in the match against Everton (four), completed the most dribbles (5/7) and won the most duels (14/19).

City avoided defeat in a Premier League game despite trailing by 2+ goals as late as the 82nd minute for the first time since March 2012 against Sunderland (3-3).

They went on to win the league title in 2011-12, and Doku believes City can still beat Arsenal to the trophy this season.

“First half, we played well and created a lot of chances. We know if we don’t score those chances, it is going to get difficult at the end,” said Doku.

“Obviously, they are at their own stadium, they create chances, and they are dangerous, and they scored two goals, but I think we gave them the game.

“Good that we came back because one point is not bad in games like this.

“We will see. It feels painful now. There is still a lot of games to go. We lost two points, but we know that one point can be important at the end.

“We will keep on fighting. We owe it to ourselves and to our fans.”

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Xenophobia: Nigerians Seeking Return From S A Will Bear The Cost – FG

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The Ministry of Foreign Affairs said Nigerians interested in repatriation from South Africa will be responsible for the cost of their return trip to Nigeria.

The ministry’s spokesperson, Kimiebi Ebienfa, stated this during a press briefing on Monday in Abuja.
The briefing came shortly after a closed-door meeting between the Ministry’s Permanent Secretary, Dunoma Ahmed, and the South African Acting High Commissioner, Lesoli Machele.

Mr Ebienfa said the process will be self-funded and not state-funded, as it is a voluntary decision that the Nigerian government will only facilitate and coordinate.

In the recent past, such reparations have been sponsored by Nigerian airline owners, particularly Allen Onyema, the CEO of Air Peace.

The Nigerian government, on Sunday, indicated its readiness to repatriate its citizens from South Africa due to xenophobic violence.

The effort primarily targets Nigerians who feel threatened by the xenophobic violence and tension in parts of South Africa, as the protests against black immigrants in the country continue. Two Nigerians were killed last month.

Since the announcement, about 130 Nigerians in South Africa have expressed a willingness to return home voluntarily.

Mr Ebienfa stated that the return of the Nigerians depends on their financial capacity, as they would be expected to fund their trip back home individually.

He said, “Those willing to leave are expected to approach the high commission and, given that their decision is voluntary, have the resources to fund their return to Nigeria.”
The government will not “provide an aircraft from Nigeria to convey them.”

He also noted that the speed of the repatriation process will be determined by the availability of funds.
“Yes, 130 as of this morning have registered, but actualisation would be required to have their flight ticket to move back to Nigeria.”

Mr Ebienfa also explained that Nigerians who have so far expressed interest are motivated either by concerns about threats to their lives or by fear of arrest by South African law enforcement agencies.

“There are two groups of Nigerians who want to come back. One group feels the country is not safe for them and wants to come. They have all their papers intact.

“Then there is also the second group that has travel document violations or resident permit violations. And instead of running away from law enforcement, they are appealing that the government facilitate their movement back to Nigeria,” he explained.

However, he noted that the process is still being worked out and that the government would step in to provide aircraft or other needed assistance if tensions rise and the situation becomes more volatile.

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Marcelino To Leave Villarreal At End Of Season

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Villarreal head coach Marcelino Garcia Toral will leave ​at the end of the ‌season despite securing a second consecutive Champions League qualification, the LaLiga ​club said on Monday (today). 
The ​60-year-old, who also managed the ⁠team between 2013 and ​2016 and guided them back ​to the Spanish top flight, has led Villarreal more than any other ​coach, overseeing 298 games ​across all competitions.

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Villarreal sit third in LaLiga ‌with ⁠four matches remaining, a position that guarantees them elite European football next season.
Marcelino, who ​rejoined Villarreal ​in ⁠2023, won the Copa del Rey with ​Valencia in 2019 and ​the ⁠Spanish Super Cup with Athletic Bilbao in 2021. He has ⁠been ​linked with English ​Premier League clubs.
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