Category: English

  • Two killed in training jet crash in southern Iran

    SHIRAZ — A training jet has crashed in southern Iran, killing two people onboard.

    Head of security department at governor office of Iran’s Fars province said on Wednesday that the jet had crashed earlier in the day at 14:45 local time in Firouzabad region, located some 100 kilometers to the south of the provincial capital of Shiraz.

    Vahid Sha’bani said that the pilot and copilot of the training jet had been martyred in the crash, adding that more details about the incident will be released later.

    IRNA, Dec 4, 2024

  • Israeli attacks on Lebanon kill 4,047, injure 16,593: health minister

    BEIRUT — Lebanese Health Minister Firas Abiad announced on Wednesday that 4,047 people have been killed and 16,593 others injured in Israeli attacks on Lebanon since October of last year.

    At a press conference in Beirut, Abiad said that 316 children were killed and 1,456 others injured, while 790 women were killed and 3,357 others injured in Israeli strikes across Lebanon.

    Abiad also revealed that 67 hospitals were targeted by Israeli strikes, 40 of which were directly hit and seven others forcibly closed.

    A ceasefire agreement between Lebanon and Israel took effect on Nov. 27, following a deadly conflict between the Lebanese armed group Hezbollah and Israel that began on Oct. 8, 2023. The confrontation has been regarded as the bloodiest since the last war between Lebanon and Israel in 2006.

    Under the agreement, both sides agreed to a 60-day cessation of hostilities, with Israel gradually withdrawing its forces from southern Lebanon and Hezbollah retreating north of the Litani River.

    Despite the truce, tensions remain high as both sides exchange accusations of ceasefire violations, raising concerns about the agreement’s durability.

    A source from Lebanese military intelligence, who required anonymity, told Xinhua on Wednesday that the Lebanese army had redeployed to four military sites west of the southern border town of Shebaa, which it abandoned about three months ago.

    The source added that with this redeployment, the Lebanese army is now positioned approximately 700 meters from the Israeli sites in the occupied Shebaa Farms.

    XINHUA

  • S. Korean defense chief offers resignation

    SEOUL — South Korea’s defense minister made an apology to citizens and said he has submitted resignation to President Yoon Suk-yeol, Yonhap news agency reported on Wednesday.

    XINHUA

  • 79 dead from “unknown disease” in southwestern DR Congo: official

    KINSHASA — At least 79 people died from “a disease of still unknown origin” that is raging in southwestern Democratic Republic of the Congo’s Kwango province, health authorities said in a statement early Wednesday.

    The statement said a specialized response team had been sent to the field to identify the nature of the disease, urging the public to avoid mass gatherings.

    The disease often causes symptoms including fever, headache, breathing difficulty, and anemia.

    Remy Saki, the province’s vice governor, was quoted by local media as saying that between 67 and 143 deaths had been recorded as of Tuesday.

    XINHUA

  • 6 dead, 2 injured in east China scaffold collapse

    JINAN — A scaffold collapse at a grain storage facility left six people dead and another two injured in Jinxiang County, Jining City of east China’s Shandong Province, at about 3 p.m. on Tuesday, according to local authorities.

    The cause of the accident is under investigation.

    XINHUA

  • Doctors urge medical evacuations from war-torn Gaza to east Jerusalem

    Women injured during Israeli bombardment arrive at the emergency ward at Al-Nassr hospital in Khan Yunis, on the southern Gaza Strip on July 23, 2024, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian militant group Hamas. (AFP)

    JERUSALEM — Medics and rights groups on Tuesday called for the immediate opening of a humanitarian corridor from Gaza to allow the urgent evacuation of patients to hospitals in east Jerusalem.

    Israel controls all points of departure from the Gaza Strip which has been battered by over a year of war between Israel and militants led by the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas.

    Rare medical evacuations have been organized by international organizations or foreign countries in coordination with Israeli authorities.

    But amid mounting casualties from the war, the East Jerusalem Hospitals Network and Physicians for Human Rights Israel (PHRI) called for the immediate reopening of the Gaza to east Jerusalem medical corridor, estimating that about 25,000 patients in Gaza were in need of urgent care.

    Fadi Atrash, the director of the Augusta Victoria Hospital in east Jerusalem, said the reopening of the evacuation corridor “is essential to allow us to continue to provide vital treatments in hospitals in east Jerusalem, where we have both the space and the medical expertise.”

    Prior to the war, patients in Gaza who were in need of medical care unavailable in the Palestinian territory could be evacuated to hospitals in the Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem or the occupied West Bank, and in some cases in Israel.

    But since the Gaza war broke out last year, that mechanism has been defunct.

    During an exceptional evacuation of about 200 patients from Gaza in early November, the World Health Organization said about 14,000 people were awaiting medical evacuations.

    Days later, Doctors Without Borders (MSF) said “Israeli authorities blocked, without explanation, the medical evacuation of eight children and their caretakers from Gaza who are in need of medical care, including a two-year-old with leg amputations, to the MSF hospital in Jordan.”

    “We strongly denounce this decision,” it said.

    On Tuesday, “31 patients and caregivers left Gaza” through the Kerem Shalom crossing between Gaza and Israel, COGAT, the Israeli Defense Ministry agency managing civil affairs in the Palestinian territories, said.

    It added that the patients were to be transferred to Jordan and the United States for treatment.

    World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said in a post on X that the 31 comprised 11 children with cancer awaiting treatment and 20 companions.

    “Thousands of patients across Gaza still need medical evacuations for life-saving medical care. We urge that all corridors be utilized for the safe transfer of patients outside the Gaza Strip,” he said.

    More than 105,000 people have been wounded in Gaza since the war erupted on October 7, 2023, according to figures from the territory’s health ministry which the United Nations deems reliable.

    Gaza’s health care system has largely been decimated by the war, with only a handful of medical facilities now able to provide care.

    AN-AFP

  • Russia’s UN envoy accuses Ukraine of aiding militants in Syria

    Russian Ambassador to the UN Vasily Nebenzya speaks during a UN Security Council meeting about Women and peace and security on December 03, 2024, at UN headquarters in New York City. (AFP)

    UNITED NATIONS, United States — Russia’s ambassador to the United Nations on Tuesday accused Ukrainian intelligence services of aiding militants fighting Syrian leader Bashar Assad’s government, saying some fighters were “openly flaunting” the association.

    Militants fighting with radical group Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham (HTS) “have not only not concealed the fact that they are supported by Ukraine, but they are also openly flaunting this,” Vassily Nebenzia told the Security Council, saying there was an “identifiable trail” showing Ukraine’s GUR was “providing weapons to fighters” in northwest Syria.

    AN-AFP

  • Roundup: Syrian military bolsters defenses in Hama amid rebel advances as Aleppo reels in humanitarian crisis

    DAMASCUS — The Syrian military has sent significant reinforcements to Hama, aiming to strengthen front-line defenses as rebel factions advance in central Syria. Meanwhile, Aleppo faces a deepening humanitarian crisis following its capture by rebel forces, according to reports from state media and activists.

    The Syrian Ministry of Defense announced Tuesday that additional troops have been deployed to the northern countryside of Hama, a critical battleground between government forces and Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), an al-Qaida-linked group, and its allies. The militants, who seized Aleppo last week, have intensified their offensive toward Hama in west-central Syria, escalating the conflict.

    Pro-government broadcaster Sham FM denied reports that HTS forces had entered Hama, stating that clashes were ongoing 8 km northeast of the city. The broadcaster added that reinforcements continued to pour into the area to repel the rebel advance.

    However, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based monitoring group, reported that HTS and allied factions were advancing from multiple directions, tightening their grip on the city.

    It also noted that Russian and Syrian airstrikes targeted rebel positions across Hama, southeastern Aleppo, and the Badia desert.

    In Deir el-Zour province, eastern Syria, heavy fighting erupted between government forces and the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), backed by the U.S.-led coalition.

    According to the Observatory, U.S. warplanes conducted airstrikes near a military air base in Deir al-Zour, killing six soldiers from the Syrian army’s elite Republican Guard.

    Despite intense clashes and coalition airstrikes, the SDF has made only limited gains in capturing strategic villages, the Observatory said.

    In Aleppo, the humanitarian situation has reached a critical point. Essential services and infrastructure have collapsed since the province fell to rebel forces on Friday.

    Thousands of displaced residents from the predominantly Shiite towns of Nubl and Zahraa remain stranded in al-Safira, facing freezing temperatures and insufficient shelter.

    Sham FM reported that approximately 2,000 individuals are trapped without safe corridors to escape rebel-controlled areas. Key hospitals, including Zahi Azraq, al-Razi, and Ibn Rushd, have been severely damaged or rendered non-operational.

    “Medical staff are doing their utmost to respond to emergencies despite equipment shortages,” a source told Sham FM. Dozens of injured civilians remain stranded in Aleppo, unable to access secure evacuation routes.

    Adding to the turmoil, residents have reported home invasions by unidentified armed groups looting valuables under the pretext of inspections. Civil society organizations have urged residents to secure their homes and avoid interactions with armed factions. Communication blackouts and the shutdown of financial services have further paralyzed the city.

    Humanitarian agencies are racing against time to address shortages of food, medical supplies, and necessities. Efforts to restore water and electricity intermittently and distribute bread have provided some relief, but the overall situation remains dire.

    “The situation in Aleppo requires urgent intervention by the United Nations to avert a humanitarian catastrophe,” the Observatory stated, calling for global attention to the escalating conflicts in Deir el-Zour and Hama. It warned that the continued fighting could lead to further destabilization as rival factions vie for strategic territories.

    XINHUA

  • 1 killed as Israel launches fresh airstrike on S. Lebanon amid fragile truce

    BEIRUT — Israel on Tuesday launched an airstrike on the southern Lebanese town of Shebaa, killing one person, in what Lebanese media described as a violation of a newly-reached ceasefire with Hezbollah.

    The Lebanese National News Agency (NNA) reported that a missile fired by an Israeli drone killed a shepherd named Jamal Mohammad Saab. The NNA also said Israeli forces conducted heavy explosions in the area between the village of Mhaibib and the Wadi Saluki district and carried out drone strikes near Deir Siryan, a municipality in Marjeyoun, and the village of Beit Lif, all located in southern Lebanon.

    An Israeli Merkava tank reportedly crossed from the Tal Nahas area into the Deir Mimas-Burj al-Moulouk-Kfarkela triangle, stopping approximately 200 meters from a Lebanese army checkpoint in the village of Burj al-Muluk, according to the NNA.

    In response to escalating tensions, the Lebanese army deployed additional soldiers to the city of Tyre and surrounding areas as part of a broader redeployment effort in southern Lebanon, particularly in border villages, the NNA said. The Lebanese Defense Ministry also announced a call for new recruits to join combat units in the armed forces.

    Earlier on Tuesday, Israel warned it would expand its military operations to include targets linked to the Lebanese state if the ceasefire with Hezbollah collapses. The warning came after Hezbollah launched two mortars into a disputed border area on Monday, accusing Israel of repeated violations of the truce. Israel retaliated with airstrikes on more than 20 locations across Lebanon.

    The ceasefire, which took effect on Nov. 27, was intended to halt cross-border violence between Hezbollah and Israel that erupted on Oct. 8. However, tensions remain high, with both sides accusing each other of breaching the fragile agreement.

    XINHUA

  • 5.7-magnitude quake hits 13 km ESE of Pagudpud, Philippines

    NEW YORK — An earthquake with a magnitude of 5.7 jolted 13 km ESE of Pagudpud, Philippines at 18:54:45 GMT on Tuesday, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) said.

    The epicenter, with a depth of 70.0 km, was initially determined to be at 18.50 degrees north latitude and 120.90 degrees east longitude.

    XINHUA