Connect with us
Friday,27-March-2026
Breaking News

International News

Israeli drone strike kills two in West Bank

Published

on

Ramallah, Jan 28: An Israeli drone strike killed two Palestinian men and wounded three others after targeting a vehicle in the Nour Shams refugee camp near Tulkarm in the occupied West Bank, Palestinian authorities and witnesses said.

The Ramallah-based Health Ministry said in a statement that two fatalities and three injuries were brought to Tulkarm Governmental Hospital following the strike. Witnesses and local sources told Media the attack ignited a fire at the scene, prompting ambulances and civil defence crews to respond.

The Palestinian Authority’s Tulkarm governor, Abdullah Kamil, identified the dead as Ihab Abu Atwi and Ramez Al-Damiri.

Meanwhile, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) and the Israel Security Agency (ISA) confirmed in a statement that the Israeli Air Force (IAF) killed two in Tulkarm.

“During a joint IDF and ISA activity, an IAF aircraft struck and eliminated Ihab Abu Atiwi, a who served as the head of Hamas in Tulkarm, and an additional,” the statement read.

It added that Abu Atiwi was involved in numerous shooting attacks, including an attack on an Israeli vehicle at the Ramin junction in the West Bank in July last year, in which three Israelis were injured.

The strike occurred amid an ongoing seven-day Israeli military offensive in Jenin, another northern West Bank city, where Palestinian security sources told Xinhua that airstrikes and home demolitions have displaced thousands of families.

Violence in the West Bank has surged since October 2023, with Palestinian health officials reporting over 800 Palestinians killed

International News

Targetting of Iranian school crime against humanity: Iran’s FM at UNHRC session

Published

on

Tehran, March 27: The brutal attack on Shajareh Tayyebeh Girl’s School in Iran’s Minab cannot be justified, covered up, and must not be met with silence and indifference, Iran’s Foreign Minister Seyyed Abbas Araghchi told the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) during an urgent debate held on Friday afternoon.

In his speech at the emergency session, the Iranian Foreign Minister stated that his country is in the midst of an “illegal war” right now which has been imposed on it by “two bullying” nuclear-armed regimes, the United States and Israel.

“This war of aggression is clearly unjustified and extremely brutal. They launched this aggression on February 28 while Iran and the United States were engaged in a diplomatic process to resolve alleged US concerns about Iran’s nuclear programme. For the second time in nine months, they have betrayed diplomacy by disrupting and destroying the negotiating table,” said Araghchi.

Among the most horrific manifestations of this aggression, he said, was the “calculated and staged attack” on the Shajareh Tayyebeh elementary school in the city of Minab in southern Iran, where more than 175 students and teachers were “massacred in a completely deliberate and brutal manner”.

“This brutal attack is merely the visible tip of a much larger iceberg; one that hides beneath its surface far worse atrocities, including the normalisation of the most egregious violations of human rights and humanitarian law, and the audacity to commit heinous crimes in a climate of complete impunity. At a time when the American and Israeli aggressors, as they claim, have the most advanced technologies and the most precise military and data systems, no one can believe that the attack on this school was anything other than a deliberate and premeditated act,” he stated.

Addressing the session virtually, Araghchi mentioned that the targetting of the Iranian school is a “war crime” and a “crime against humanity” that requires unequivocal and unconditional condemnation by all.

“This tragedy cannot be justified, cannot be covered up, and must not be met with silence and indifference. The attack on the Shajareh Tayyebeh school in Minab was neither a mere accident nor a miscalculation. The contradictory statements made by the United States to justify this crime cannot absolve them of their responsibility. Condemning such a brutal attack on an inherently civilian place, where the most innocent people are present and seeking knowledge, is not simply a legal obligation within the framework of human rights systems; it is a moral and human imperative. Our conscience will judge us far more profoundly than any court of law,” the Iranian Foreign Minister added.

He went on to add that the elementary school has not been the “only victim of the heinous crimes committed by the US and Israel” during the past 27 days of the war.

“Human rights and international humanitarian law have been widely and systematically violated by the aggressors in an unprecedented and extremely brutal manner. They have targetted civilians and civilian infrastructure with complete disregard for the laws of war and the fundamental principles of humanity and civility. More than 600 schools across Iran have been destroyed or damaged, resulting in the deaths or injuries of more than a 1000 students and teachers. The aggressors, who arrogantly shout ‘there is no mercy or respite’ and threaten Iran with attacks on vital infrastructure, have targetted hospitals, ambulances, medical workers, Red Crescent aid workers, refineries, water sources, and residential areas.”

He urged the United Nations to unequivocally condemn the “aggressors” highlighting that Iran has never sought war.

“Iranians are a peaceful and noble nation, heirs to one of the richest civilizations in the world. However, they have shown complete and unwavering determination to defend themselves against ruthless aggressors who know no bounds in committing all kinds of crimes; a defense that will continue for as long as necessary,” Araghchi concluded.

The urgent debate has been convened following an official request submitted by Iran, China and Cuba. According to the UNHRC, the Minab school strike of February 28 will be discussed in the context of the “protection of children and educational institutions in international armed conflicts”, as outlined in the request. The programme of work for the ongoing 61st regular session of the Human Rights Council has been adjusted to include this urgent debate.

Continue Reading

International News

Human rights group calls Pakistani airstrikes on Kabul rehab centre ‘unlawful’, flags possible war crime

Published

on

New York, March 27: Human Rights Watch, a US-based advocacy group, on Friday termed the recent Pakistani airstrikes on a rehabilitation centre in Kabul as “an unlawful attack” and warned that the incident could amount to a possible war crime, raising serious concerns over civilian safety and adherence to international law.

On March 16, Pakistan launched airstrikes on the 2,000-bed Omid Addiction Treatment Hospital in Kabul that killed hundreds of civilians and injured several others.

The rights body called on the Pakistani authorities to conduct a swift and impartial investigation into the incident and ensure accountability for those responsible.

“The available evidence indicates that the Pakistani airstrike against a well-known Kabul medical facility, killing dozens of patients, was unlawful. Pakistani authorities need to carry out an impartial investigation to determine why it hit a drug treatment centre filled with civilians and who should be held to account,” said Patricia Gossman, senior associate Asia director at HRW.

Citing an employee at the facility, the HRW said that over 1,000 patients were at the rehabilitation centre in Kabul at the time of the attack, but the actual number is uncertain. The rights body added that an official with an international agency said that many patients were in the dining area to break the Ramadan fast.

The United Nations highlighted the “complete destruction of one block that housed adolescents receiving drug treatment”.

On March 17, Pakistan’s federal minister of information and broadcasting, Attaullah Tarar, posted on X, stating that Pakistan had carried out “precision airstrikes” on “technical support infrastructure and ammunition storage facilities,” but did not mention the Omid facility.

The HRW said that based on available information, there was no evidence that the Omid centre was being used for military purposes, making the attack “unlawfully indiscriminate”.

“In any case, the attack would appear to violate the prohibition against disproportionate attacks. Serious violations of the laws of war committed with criminal intent—that is, deliberately or recklessly—are war crimes,” it noted.

Pakistan, the rights body said, has an obligation under international law to investigate alleged “war crimes by its forces and bring those responsible for serious abuses to account. ”

Amid the escalating tensions between Pakistan and Afghanistan, the HRW cited the UN figures documenting at least 76 civilian deaths and 213 injuries from Pakistani airstrikes across Afghanistan.

“Concerned countries should press Pakistan to provide genuine accountability and ensure that failures in intelligence, target verification, and decision-making are identified and fixed so such strikes never happen again,” Gossman said.

Continue Reading

International News

Iran issues ‘ultimatum’ to Bahrain, UAE hotels hosting US troops: Report

Published

on

Tehran, March 27: Iran has issued an “ultimatum” to hotel owners in Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates, warning that hosting US military personnel could make their properties legitimate military targets, the semi-official Fars news agency reported.

Fars reported that US forces have taken refuge in regional hotels following Iranian missile strikes and joint operations with allied militant groups that targeted American military infrastructure across the Middle East. The warning covers any facility hosting foreign military personnel and takes effect immediately if such activity continues, Xinhua news agency reported.

The report also claimed US personnel have established a presence at civilian sites across the region, including a logistics base near Beirut’s old airport and advisory operations at Damascus’ Republic Palace, the Four Seasons, and Sheraton hotels. US Marines were reportedly moved this week to Djibouti International Airport via Istanbul and Sofia.

Earlier on Thursday, Iran’s Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi warned hotels in Gulf Arab countries against accepting US military personnel, accusing the soldiers of fleeing their bases and using civilian sites as cover.

“From the outset of this war, US soldiers fled military bases in the GCC (Gulf Cooperation Council) to hide in hotels and offices. They use GCC citizens as human shields,” Araghchi wrote on the social media platform X. He compared the situation to hotels in the United States, which he claimed deny bookings to officers who may endanger customers, and urged Gulf hotels to adopt the same practice.

On February 28, Israel and the United States launched joint attacks on Tehran and other Iranian cities, killing Iran’s then-Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, senior military commanders, and civilians. Iran retaliated with missile and drone strikes against Israel and US bases and tightened control of the Strait of Hormuz, blocking vessels affiliated with Israel and the United States.

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Advertisement

Trending