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  • UK court allows Allianz to sue pro-Palestine activists

    UK court allows Allianz to sue pro-Palestine activists

    A landmark ruling from London’s Central London County Court has cleared the way for German insurance multinational Allianz to move forward with a high-stakes civil lawsuit against six pro-Palestine activists that could push the defendants into lifelong bankruptcy, even as criminal proceedings against the group remain pending.

    The group, dubbed the “Allianz6”, staged two separate office occupations at Allianz locations in Guildford and central London between 2024 and 2025 to protest the company’s former insurance coverage of Israeli arms manufacturer Elbit Systems. During the demonstrations, activists spray-painted the office interiors with water-soluble red paint, causing what Allianz claims is more than £79,000 in physical damage.

    Criminal charges of criminal damage, aggravated trespass, and obstruction were initially filed against the six activists, though those charges have since been narrowed to a single count of criminal damage. The criminal trials are currently scheduled to begin in October 2026 and January 2028, respectively.

    On Monday, Judge Alan Johns rejected the activists’ request to put the civil case on hold until after the criminal proceedings conclude. The ruling allows Allianz to pursue a total claim of £289,604 in damages plus additional legal fees, a figure that grew substantially after the company added £200,000 in symbolic “reputational damage and commercial embarrassment” damages earlier this year. The additional damages were tacked on after the activists asked Allianz to delay the civil suit to align with criminal proceedings.

    Activists argue the expanded claim amounts to an unfair “protest licence fee” designed to intimidate them out of exercising their right to political demonstration. One defendant, community worker Seren John-Wood, told Middle East Eye that the group targeted Allianz specifically because of its ties to Elbit Systems, which supplies roughly 85% of the drones used by the Israeli military. In a notable development, Allianz reportedly dropped its coverage of Elbit Systems late last year.

    John-Wood emphasized that Allianz’s push for an early civil trial is a deliberate strategic choice to avoid a jury trial, a right only available in UK criminal courts.

    “This attempt to move the case away from the criminal courts, where we are not able to access financial support for legal representation and have our cases heard by juries, is as appalling as it is unprecedented,” John-Wood said.

    The defendants, all ordinary members of the public, lack the financial resources to hire legal representation for the civil suit, where the burden of proof is far lower than in criminal court. By contrast, Allianz reported a $20.1 billion operating profit in 2025, highlighting the stark power imbalance between the corporate claimant and the individual defendants. If Allianz wins the civil suit, the damages would be seized from the activists’ personal savings and future earnings, a outcome that would almost certainly leave them facing permanent financial ruin.

    John-Wood argued that the ruling exposes a calculated effort to stifle pro-Palestine protest. “Allianz has seen that there is a groundswell of support for Palestine actions and there is a precedent for juries acquitting pro-Palestine activists,” she explained. “We took action and are prepared to face legal consequences in a criminal court as we believe we are not guilty. But this attempt to avoid a jury trial is unacceptable.”

    Fellow defendant and writer Renee Eshel echoed those concerns, framing the civil action as an intimidation tactic intended to silence opposition to Allianz’s past business practices. “Allianz ordering us to civil courts while our criminal cases are pending indicates they are using intimidatory fear tactics to bully us into submission and to deter future activists from exposing their complicity in war crimes through Israel’s genocide of the Palestinian people,” Eshel said.

  • UK: Sally Rooney and 100 others warn against ‘cruel’ terror sentences for Palestine activists

    UK: Sally Rooney and 100 others warn against ‘cruel’ terror sentences for Palestine activists

    Nearly 100 high-profile cultural, political and activist figures from across the globe have signed an open letter calling on a UK senior judge to abandon plans to apply a special terrorism designation to four climate and pro-Palestine activists ahead of their sentencing next week. The activists, already convicted of non-terrorism criminal damage charges for their action against an Israeli arms manufacturer’s UK facility, face drastically harsHER sentences if the terrorism connection is officially added to their charges.

    The four defendants – Charlotte Head, Samuel Corner, Leona Kamio and Fatema Zainab Rajwani – are part of the grassroots activist collective known as the Filton 25. Their protest action dates back to August 2024, when they entered the Bristol-based UK branch of Elbit Systems, an Israeli defense contractor that produces military technology for the Israeli military. Following their entry to the site, the group was charged with a series of offenses, including criminal damage; two additional co-defendants, Jordan Devlin and Zoe Rogers, were ultimately cleared of all charges in court proceedings.

    Last month, independent regional outlet Middle East Eye revealed a pivotal detail that had been kept hidden from the jury during the trial: prosecutors intend to request that Judge Jeremy Johnson, the presiding justice in the case, formally attach a “terrorism connection” to the activists’ convictions during the sentencing hearing scheduled for June 12. In a preliminary ruling issued in March 2025, Johnson already indicated he saw a plausible basis for the designation, arguing that the activists carried out their action to influence Israeli government policy by limiting its access to weaponry.

    Crucially, the four activists were never formally charged with terrorism offenses, nor were they tried under UK counterterrorism legislation. The jury that convicted them of criminal damage was never informed of the prosecution’s plan to seek a terrorism connection, and never delivered any guilty verdict related to terror activity. This procedural irregularity is at the heart of the signatories’ criticism.

    Prominent signatories to the letter span multiple creative and public fields: best-selling novelist Sally Rooney, climate activist Greta Thunberg, veteran actor Brian Cox, comedian Steve Coogan, actors Miriam Margolyes, Zoe Wanamaker and Zawe Ashton, musicians Charlotte Church and Kate Nash, and award-winning film directors Yorgos Lanthimos, Terry Gilliam and Ken Loach are among the high-profile backers of the plea.

    The open letter argues that adding the terrorism designation at the sentencing stage, after the jury has already ruled on the actual charges brought against the activists, amounts to a deliberate bypass of the jury system that would constitute a severe miscarriage of justice with long-reaching ripple effects across UK law. It notes that this would be the first time a terrorism link has ever been applied in a UK criminal damage case, and that the risks to basic civil liberties and the right to peaceful protest in the country cannot be overstated.

    The letter also contextualizes the activists’ action, explaining that the group exhausted all standard advocacy channels to push for an end to UK arms exports to Israel before taking direct action to disable equipment at the Elbit facility. “The Filton activists acted to uphold international law and defend human life,” the letter reads. “To sentence them on the basis of a ‘terrorism connection’ would not only be unjust and cruel: it would gravely undermine the right to protest and the impartiality of the judicial system itself.”

    Most of the four defendants have already spent 18 months in pre-sentencing remand. In an independent comment released alongside the letter, Sally Rooney expanded on the gravity of the case, noting that “Protest that poses no threat to the public simply is not terrorism. These activists may have knowingly risked their freedom in taking action, but they now face the prospect of punishment for crimes they were never convicted of and did not commit. This is an obvious effort to undermine solidarity with Palestine, but what it really undermines is UK law.”

    The case comes after a series of prior legal proceedings: the four activists are facing retrial after the original jury threw out aggravated burglary charges, and the previous jury delivered not guilty verdicts for violent disorder against Rajwani, Devlin and Rogers, while failing to reach a verdict on the same charge for the other three defendants. All eyes now turn to the June 12 sentencing hearing, as the public figures’ intervention has drawn broad attention to what campaigners call a landmark test for UK protest rights.

  • In south Lebanon, Israeli drones use the sound of crying children to lure civilians

    In south Lebanon, Israeli drones use the sound of crying children to lure civilians

    Beneath the quiet, tense night skies of southern Lebanon’s Habboush village, the noise that split the stillness was no air strike. It was the agonized scream of a child crying out for rescue. Local paramedic Hashem quickly traced the sound to a hovering Israeli quadcopter circling above the community.

    Speaking with Middle East Eye, Hashem explained that this disturbing event is far from anomalous. For civilians who have chosen to remain in their ancestral southern Lebanese villages despite ongoing Israeli occupation and daily bombardment, such incidents have become a grim, daily reality.

    “This is not the first time these drones have flown over our homes and broadcast manipulated sounds,” he explained. “Just yesterday it was children screaming for help. Before that, we heard ambulance sirens. Other times they’ve played recitations from the Quran, or a woman’s desperate cries for assistance. We endure this almost every single day.”

    For holdout residents across south Lebanon, Israeli quadcopters are a constant, inescapable presence overhead. Beyond routine surveillance, issuing public warnings, and dropping targeted messages, the unmanned aerial vehicles have been repurposed to turn the cover of night into an active psychological battlefield.

    Local residents and first responders confirm that beyond open intimidation, Israeli forces deploy these fake distress sounds to draw civilians out of fortified shelters and homes. The tactic preys on basic human instincts: the urge to help someone in danger, natural curiosity, and raw fear. Hashem described his own automatic reaction to the night screams that matches exactly what Israeli planners anticipate.

    “When you hear those cries cut through the silent night, your first instinct is to rush outside and see what’s wrong,” he said. “That’s what I did yesterday. But I quickly realized the sound had to be coming from the drone—there’s no way children would be out in the village at that hour, especially around midnight.”

    Hashem outlined two core goals for the tactic. First, it aims to grind down remaining residents psychologically, spread pervasive fear, and force them to abandon their homes. But he also warned of a second, more immediate dangerous objective.

    “Most villages here are now empty of civilians, with only resistance fighters remaining in some areas,” he noted. “I believe the tactic is also meant to lure people out into the open so they can be identified and targeted.”

    This psychological warfare strategy is not a new innovation in Israel’s recent regional conflicts. Human rights groups, journalists, and residents in the Gaza Strip have long documented Israeli quadcopters fitted with loudspeakers broadcasting similar fake sounds of crying children, screaming women, and distress calls across residential neighborhoods and refugee camps, most often under cover of darkness.

    Gaza residents reported that the sounds frequently led them to believe nearby civilians were in crisis, only to discover the cries originated from small drones hovering meters above their communities. In Gaza, quadcopters have served far more purposes than surveillance alone. Throughout the ongoing conflict, doctors, local residents, and rights organizations have recorded their use over streets, family homes, and even hospital campuses, where they monitor civilian movement, issue coercive orders, intimidate populations, and in multiple documented cases, open fire on civilians.

    The use of loudspeaker-equipped drones forms part of a broader campaign of psychological manipulation: it confuses civilians, erases the line between real emergency and recorded fake sound, and undermines one of humanity’s most fundamental instincts—the drive to answer a call for help.

    Today, south Lebanese residents confirm this exact tactic has been imported to their communities, against the backdrop of a landscape already ravaged by war, where most towns lie partially destroyed or entirely deserted. Families are trapped between permanent displacement and temporary returns, and the conflict has fundamentally reshaped how local people experience daily life, sound, and movement through their own communities.

    Tarek Mazaani, a resident from the heavily destroyed southern town of Houla, has experienced this psychological pressure firsthand. His original home was reduced to rubble during the 2024 war. He relocated to Zawtar al-Sharqiya during a brief ceasefire, only to be displaced a second time when fighting resumed in March. In response to the displacement crisis, Mazaani founded the Gathering of the People of the Southern Border Towns, a grassroots organization advocating for residents’ right to return to their destroyed homes and demand the start of reconstruction work.

    According to Mazaani, on October 12, 2025, the Israeli military deployed quadcopters across multiple southern Lebanese villages to broadcast public warnings, ordering residents not to communicate with Mazaani and to boycott his organizing work. The broadcasts falsely labeled Mazaani as a Hezbollah member.

    Speaking to MEE from his third location of displacement—his refuge in Zawtar al-Sharqiya has also since been destroyed—Mazaani recalled the immediate aftermath of the broadcast. “When the Israeli army released those messages, I had to leave my safe house immediately out of concern for the lives of my neighbors in the residential complex,” he said. “I knew they could target me after those warnings, so I left my family behind and moved to another location to keep them safe.”

    The public warnings were eventually scaled back after Mazaani’s case gained international media attention, drew public solidarity from senior regional officials, and became a matter of widespread public concern. But for Mazaani, the damage extended far beyond threats to his own safety. Broadcasting his name and accusations across southern villages was as much a warning to the entire community as it was to him: any person advocating for the right to return, opposing forced displacement, or demanding reconstruction can be targeted, threatened, and socially isolated by Israeli forces.

    The firsthand testimonies of Hashem and Mazaani expose a little-documented layer of the ongoing conflict in south Lebanon. This is not only a war of air strikes, physical destruction, and mass displacement—it is also a deliberate campaign to control the psychological and sonic landscape of daily civilian life.

    This weaponization of sound puts ordinary civilians in an impossible, no-win position. Choosing to respond to a cry for help can mean walking directly into an Israeli trap. Choosing to ignore it can mean turning away from a real person in genuine danger. Trapped between these two terrible outcomes, fear builds steadily, community trust erodes, and simply staying in one’s home becomes a daily battle of nerves.

    In south Lebanon, where collective memory of decades of Israeli occupation intersects with new waves of displacement, these quadcopters are viewed as more than just advanced military hardware. For residents, they are a tangible extension of Israeli occupation control: perpetually hovering overhead, watching, disembodying false voices into communities, and forcing civilians to second-guess every sound and every movement in their own homes.

  • UK says there should be ‘no economic involvement in illegal settlements’ for first time

    UK says there should be ‘no economic involvement in illegal settlements’ for first time

    In a landmark shift in Middle East policy, the United Kingdom has announced a series of unprecedented measures targeting Israel’s illegal settlements in the occupied Palestinian West Bank, marking the first time the country has explicitly barred economic engagement in these unauthorized outposts. The new policy framework comes alongside coordinated fresh sanctions targeting networks that fund and facilitate violent attacks against Palestinian communities, rolled out in partnership with key allies including France, Norway, Canada, New Zealand and Australia.

    Under the new policy, the UK government will issue explicit guidance warning British businesses against all economic and financial activity within Israel’s illegal West Bank settlements. Officials clarified that the measure does not alter the UK’s longstanding commitment to normal trade with Israel within its 1967 pre-war borders, drawing a clear legal and geographic distinction between legitimate trade with Israel and prohibited activity in occupied territory. In total, the UK will impose sanctions on six entities and one individual linked to settler violence and expansion.

    Two of the sanctioned groups stand out as core enablers of illegal settlement activity: the Farms Association, which the UK says provides financial and logistical backing for settler farms and outposts tied to violence, intimidation and forced displacement of Palestinian residents; and Ari Artzenu, a hardline settler organization that actively promotes, funds and equips outposts linked to attacks on Palestinian communities.

    Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper is set to lay out the new measures before UK Parliament on Tuesday, framing the action as a targeted response to a growing threat to regional peace. “Today we are acting with our international partners to sanction those who support and sponsor violence against Palestinian communities in the West Bank,” Cooper is expected to state. “Settler expansion and violence is illegal and a fundamental threat to the viability of a two-state solution, and to long-term peace and security for Palestinians and Israelis. These measures show the UK is leading with our partners to target those who are fuelling this violence.”

    The new steps come against a backdrop of mounting pressure on the UK government to take stronger action, and fall short of the full import ban on goods originating from illegal settlements that more than 230 Members of Parliament have called for this week. The gap between legislative demands and executive action marks a notable political tension: while in opposition, the current ruling Labour Party explicitly supported a full import ban, with then-Shadow Foreign Secretary Lisa Nandy arguing in 2020 that such a move required “courage that so far ministers have not been willing to show.” According to reporting from Middle East Eye, government ministers privately acknowledge that a full ban would align with the UK’s existing legal position on the status of occupied Palestinian territories, even as they have stopped short of enacting one.

    The new guidance is already expected to have far-reaching ripple effects on UK domestic policy, particularly for local government pension funds. Over the past two years, dozens of UK local authorities have passed votes to divest from and boycott companies linked to Israeli occupation, war crimes or arms sales to Israel. Multiple major councils including Islington, Lewisham, Wandsworth and Caerphilly have already removed companies listed by the United Nations as operating in occupied Palestinian territories from their pension fund portfolios. However, the Labour government’s stance on local boycotts has been contradictory: earlier this year, Communities Secretary Steve Reed warned Labour-run local councils that they could face legal action for boycotting Israeli businesses, directing authorities to follow a 2016 national guidance that bans procurement boycotts against Israeli firms and businesses trading with Israel.

    This latest policy announcement builds on a series of increasingly harsh UK measures against settlement activity and far-right Israeli figures in recent months. In May 2025, the Labour government imposed sanctions on multiple prominent hardline Israeli settlers in the West Bank, including Daniella Weiss, a veteran settler activist and leader of the extremist Nachala movement. Last June, the UK joined several allies in sanctioning two far-right Israeli cabinet ministers, National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, over their repeated incitement to violence against Palestinian communities in both the West Bank and Gaza.

    The new UK policy aligns with a landmark 2024 advisory opinion from the International Court of Justice, which ruled that Israel’s long-running occupation of Palestinian territory violates international law. The ICJ ruling explicitly clarified that it is illegal under international law for an occupying power to transfer its own civilian population into occupied territory, or to forcibly displace or deport local Palestinian populations.

    Data from leading Israeli human rights organization B’Tselem underscores the urgency of the crisis the new measures target: since October 7, 2023, Israel has displaced 59 entire Palestinian communities across the occupied West Bank, comprising more than 4,000 people who have been forcibly removed from their land.

    This coverage is sourced from independent reporting by Middle East Eye, which provides unmatched independent reporting and analysis on the Middle East, North Africa and broader global affairs.

  • Houthis re-enter the war with Israel, leaving Yemenis torn between pride and fear

    Houthis re-enter the war with Israel, leaving Yemenis torn between pride and fear

    On a tense Monday in the Middle East, Yemen’s Houthi movement (officially Ansar Allah) made two sweeping announcements that sent ripples across the region: the group had launched a volley of missiles toward Israel, and it was imposing a full ban on all Israeli-flagged or affiliated maritime traffic traversing the Red Sea. Israeli media later confirmed the attack, noting that all incoming projectiles had been successfully intercepted by Israeli air defenses.

    This formal declaration marks the Houthi’s official re-entry into open conflict against Israel, part of the Iran-aligned bloc known as the Axis of Resistance. The group has pledged to ramp up its operations until Israel halts military actions against Palestinian groups, Lebanese militant movement Hezbollah, and Iranian targets across the region.

    Hours after the Houthi statement, Esmail Qaani, commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ elite Quds Force, doubled down on the bloc’s unified posture. In a public address on Monday, Qaani announced that a new coordinated “security belt” of the Axis of Resistance would stretch from the Strait of Hormuz at the entrance of the Persian Gulf all the way to the Bab al-Mandab strait at the southern mouth of the Red Sea. He praised the Houthi’s latest actions as clear proof of deepening coordination among Iran-aligned groups, warning that the entire Resistance Front would respond collectively to any Israeli or American military moves in the region, and that additional factions would join the fight if escalation continues. “From the Strait of Hormuz to Bab al-Mandab and from the Persian Gulf to the Red Sea, a new security belt of the Resistance will be established,” Qaani said, adding that continued “aggression” from Israel and its allies would trigger a broader regional response.

    Iran had already issued a stark warning the prior week: if Israel does not end its ongoing regional military campaign, the bloc will escalate by closing the Bab al-Mandab strait, a critical global maritime chokepoint that borders southeastern Yemen and carries roughly 10% of global maritime trade and 12% of global oil shipments. As the group that already controls most of Yemen’s Red Sea coastline and has targeted Israeli, American, and British-affiliated shipping in the region since 2023, the Houthis are the only faction in the bloc with the capacity to enforce such a closure.

    The Houthi’s decision to re-escalate has exposed deep divisions within Yemeni society, where a decade of brutal civil war has already left millions grappling with humanitarian catastrophe and displacement. For some Yemenis, like 48-year-old Sanaa resident and independent food distributor Ahmed Al-Faqeeh, the move is a necessary and honorable stand in solidarity with co-religionists under attack across Palestine, Lebanon, and Iran.

    Al-Faqeeh, who has no affiliation with the Houthis or any other Yemeni political faction, says the ongoing violence against Palestinian and allied groups demands a unified response from all Muslims. “It isn’t in accordance with Islam or humanity to see our brothers being subjected to genocide and remain silent,” he told Middle East Eye in an interview. “All Muslim countries have a duty and must participate in this fight against the primary enemy of Muslims, Israel.” Al-Faqeeh has already taken personal action, boycotting all goods from companies linked to Israel, and says he is proud his country has chosen to take a public stand. Even after experiencing the 2025 Israeli air strikes on Sanaa that killed multiple senior government officials and civilians in retaliation for prior Houthi operations, Al-Faqeeh says past losses should not deter the group from continued action. He points to the 2023 Houthi Red Sea shipping campaign, which included the seizure of the Israeli-affiliated cargo ship Galaxy Leader and its 25-member crew (who were ultimately released in January 2025 via Omani mediation) as proof that Yemeni action has had an outsized impact that other regional nations have failed to match. Al-Faqeeh added that Yemen has held a consistent opposition to Israel since the 1973 October War, when the former People’s Democratic Republic of Yemen collaborated with Egypt to enforce a Red Sea naval blockade on Israel targeting oil and cargo shipments bound for the southern Israeli port of Eilat.

    But for many other Yemenis, who have already lived through 11 years of civil war that has killed an estimated 377,000 people and displaced more than 4.5 million, the prospect of dragging Yemen into a wider regional conflict is a nightmare they cannot bear. Ahmed Daghez, a 39-year-old bus driver who travels regularly between Houthi-held Sanaa and government-controlled Taiz, has seen the human cost of war firsthand: his childhood home in Taiz now sits in an active frontline conflict zone, and he has not been able to access it for years. “Eleven years of internal war is more than enough. The damage that has already occurred will take decades to rebuild, so we don’t need to be involved in a regional war that could have an even worse impact on us,” Daghez said. He still remembers the terror of the 2025 Israeli air strikes on Sanaa, and fears Israel could expand its attacks on Yemeni territory if the Houthis continue their campaign. “Wars bring nothing good; it is simply a source of misery. If the Houthis escalate further in this war, they could drag Yemen into a regional conflict that the country simply cannot afford,” he added.

    Critics of the Houthi move go further, arguing that the group is acting as a proxy for Iranian regional interests rather than prioritizing the well-being of the Yemeni people. Mohammed Ali, a veteran Yemeni journalist, argues that the Houthis’ decision to re-escalate directly follows Iran’s threat to close the Bab al-Mandab, and that all key strategic decisions are made in Tehran, not Sanaa. “As a Yemeni, I don’t feel the Houthis care about us; they only care about their own interests. Iran helped them seize control of northern Yemen, and now they must serve Iranian interests,” Ali said. “The decision-making power is not in the Houthis’ hands, but in Iran’s. This was clearly reflected in the recent threats made by Iran.” Ali notes that the Bab al-Mandab has become an increasingly critical energy shipping route in recent months, as exports through Iran-controlled Strait of Hormuz have dropped sharply amid ongoing regional tensions. He predicts that the Houthis will follow Iran’s lead and announce a temporary pause on Red Sea attacks in the coming days, pointing out that even after Iran announced a temporary halt to its own strikes against Israel on Monday morning, the Houthis launched another attack overnight. Late Monday, the Israeli military confirmed it had intercepted a suspicious aerial target originating from Yemen over the southern city of Eilat. Separately, Saudi Arabia announced Monday afternoon that a ballistic missile launched from Yemen had landed in an unpopulated area near the Saudi-Yemen border, after veering off course while en route to another country in the region.

  • Israeli produce contaminated by chemicals from army explosions in Gaza

    Israeli produce contaminated by chemicals from army explosions in Gaza

    A recent peer collaborative study has uncovered far-reaching environmental contamination stemming from ongoing Israeli military operations in Gaza, with dangerous “forever chemicals” spreading across agricultural lands and water sources in southern Israel, miles away from the conflict zone. The research was carried out by a cross-institutional team of specialists from four leading Israeli bodies: Hebrew University, the country’s Ministry of Health, the Volcani Institute, and the Southern Arava Agricultural Research Organisation.

    The investigation identified per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), a class of persistent synthetic industrial compounds, in potato samples harvested from dozens of cultivated fields located along Israel’s border with Gaza. Beyond agricultural produce, detectable levels of PFAS pollution were also recorded in soil and groundwater wells as far as 19 kilometers from the Gaza boundary. Research teams concluded that the chemical contaminants were most likely dispersed by wind currents after being released from military explosives detonated during Israel’s two-year military campaign in Gaza, laying bare the cross-border environmental fallout of the ongoing conflict.

    Widely nicknamed “forever chemicals” for their ability to resist breakdown in both natural ecosystems and the human body, PFAS pose well-documented severe long-term health risks. Multiple public health studies have linked prolonged exposure to certain PFAS compounds to irreversible damage to reproductive and immune system function, abnormal developmental outcomes for fetuses, and a significantly elevated risk of several aggressive forms of cancer. Prior to this new finding, national data already showed that PFAS contamination is a widespread issue across Israel: roughly 15% of the country’s drinking water wells and 70% of its agricultural water sources carry PFAS residues, forcing authorities to shut down a number of major public water wells in recent years.

    Beyond toxic chemical contamination, the conflict has also generated unprecedented carbon emissions that exacerbate the global climate crisis. Analysis published by the Social Science Research Network estimates that greenhouse gas emissions from the first 15 months of Israel’s military campaign in Gaza alone exceed the total annual emissions of more than 100 sovereign nations. When accounting for the full climate cost of the conflict – including emissions from the destruction of infrastructure, debris removal, and eventual post-conflict reconstruction – the total carbon footprint is projected to surpass 31 million tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent. That figure is higher than the entire 2023 annual emissions of countries including Costa Rica, Afghanistan, and Zimbabwe.

    Cumulatively, researchers calculate that the total climate impact of Israel’s recent military operations in Gaza, Lebanon, and earlier confrontations in Yemen and Iran equals the annual emissions output of 84 full-scale gas-fired power plants. This pattern of environmental harm tied to Israeli occupation and military action stretches back decades. Following the 1948 Nakba, when Zionist forces ethnically cleansed hundreds of Palestinian communities and destroyed hundreds of villages, the Jewish National Fund (JNF) planted extensive monoculture pine forests across the ruins of these displaced communities. A 2013 investigation by the Society for the Protection of Nature in Israel confirmed that these JNF projects caused catastrophic, long-lasting damage to native biodiversity in the region. In 2021, Palestinian agricultural officials told Middle East Eye that decades of environmental disruption have led to a sharp, steady decline in Palestinian agricultural output over the past ten years. Gaza’s already fragile environment and public health infrastructure have been disproportionately impacted by decades of Israeli occupation, military action, and climate change.

    This reporting was produced by Middle East Eye, an independent outlet providing specialized, in-depth coverage of the Middle East and North Africa region.

  • Why ICC prosecutor Karim Khan was suspended – and what could happen next

    Why ICC prosecutor Karim Khan was suspended – and what could happen next

    The International Criminal Court (ICC), the world’s only permanent tribunal prosecuting genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity, has entered an unprecedented period of crisis and uncertainty, after its governing body voted to suspend its chief prosecutor Karim Khan in a move critics decry as politically motivated, unlawful, and a threat to the court’s core integrity.

    Khan, a seasoned British barrister and former United Nations official elected as the ICC’s third chief prosecutor in 2021, has been at the center of escalating global pressure since his office moved forward with long-awaited arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former defense minister Yoav Gallant over alleged war crimes in the occupied Palestinian territories. The investigation into Palestinian war crimes was launched months before Khan took office by his predecessor Fatou Bensouda, who faced years of covert pressure, threats, and surveillance from Israeli intelligence agency Mossad in an unsuccessful bid to shut the probe down. That surveillance and pressure extended directly to Khan after he took office.

    Months after Khan formally applied for the Netanyahu-Gallant arrest warrants in May 2024, which the court issued that November, a former staff member brought sexual misconduct allegations against the prosecutor, which Khan has vehemently denied from the start. Following two stalled internal investigations, the Bureau of the Assembly of State Parties (ASP) – the ICC’s executive governing body – commissioned an independent external investigation through the United Nations Office of Internal Oversight Services (OIOS). The ASP then appointed a panel of independent judges to review the OIOS findings, which in March 2025 delivered a unanimous ruling clearing Khan of any wrongdoing, concluding no evidence of misconduct or breach of duty had been established.

    In a highly unconventional move that broke with the court’s own established procedures, a majority of the 21-member ASP Bureau voted Monday to disregard the independent judicial panel’s findings and move forward with Khan’s suspension. Even Ben Swanson, the former assistant secretary-general of OIOS who oversaw the investigation, submitted evidence to the ASP confirming that neither the final report nor underlying evidence met the standard of proof required to support a finding of misconduct. Khan’s legal team has called the suspension “unlawful, procedurally unfair and unsupported by evidence,” and has pledged to challenge the decision through all available legal channels.

    The suspension comes amid years of escalating public and covert pressure on Khan from major world powers opposed to the ICC’s Palestinian war crimes investigation. In an explosive interview with Middle East Eye last month, Khan detailed the extraordinary intimidation he has faced: U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham explicitly threatened sanctions if he moved forward with the warrants, while then-British Foreign Secretary David Cameron warned the UK would withdraw from the court and cut its funding (the UK is one of the ICC’s largest contributors) if the warrants were issued. Shortly after Donald Trump returned to the U.S. presidency in January 2025, the U.S. imposed sweeping sanctions on Khan, later expanding sanctions to include two of his deputy prosecutors, eight ICC judges, the U.N. Special Rapporteur on Palestine, and multiple Palestinian NGOs that provided evidence for the investigation. Russia also sanctioned Khan after he issued an arrest warrant for Russian President Vladimir Putin over the 2022 invasion of Ukraine.

    Khan has repeatedly argued that the misconduct allegations are a baseless, biased campaign to oust him over his commitment to pursuing the Palestinian war crimes investigation. He warned last month that the push to remove him has pushed the ICC into uncharted, dangerous territory, creating a precedent that allows political pressure to remove independently elected court officials on flimsy, unfounded grounds.

    “ If a process can be suborned, if it can be subverted, if it can be undermined, because state appointees and diplomats, for whatever reason, think they know better, then this is a template for getting rid of any elected official, now or in the future, on spurious or flimsy or fabricated or unfounded grounds,” Khan told MEE.

    Critics within the ICC membership have echoed these warnings. Norwegian Deputy Foreign Minister Andreas Kravik, speaking to MEE last week, emphasized that the ASP Bureau is bound to respect the court’s own established procedures for handling misconduct claims. “Otherwise, there will be at least a perception of politicisation of the process. And that would hurt the integrity of the court,” Kravik said. “That’s something that we cannot afford, especially in this time when the court is under real pressure by other states and where certain states are trying, at the best of their ability, to portray the court as a politicised entity not operating in conformity with core principles of international law.”

    Khan has been on formal leave for over a year, and his removal will now go to a full vote of all 125 ICC member states at a special ASP session the Bureau has pledged to convene shortly. Under ASP rules, a two-thirds majority of voting member states must first uphold the Bureau’s finding of serious misconduct, followed by a second vote requiring an absolute majority of at least 63 votes to remove Khan from office permanently.

    If the full ASP votes to remove Khan, the prosecutor has confirmed he will appeal the decision to the International Labour Organization Administrative Tribunal (ILOAT), the independent body that handles employment disputes for ICC staff. A former International Court of Justice judge, Abdul Koroma, issued a legal opinion last month warning that the ILOAT could order Khan’s reinstatement and order the ICC to pay up to €1.5 million in damages if his removal is found unlawful.

    In a statement following the suspension vote, the ASP Bureau defended its action, noting its assessment drew on the OIOS report, underlying evidence, judicial advice, and written submissions, and added that all materials would remain confidential to protect the privacy and rights of all parties involved.

    Today, both Khan’s future as chief prosecutor and the long-term integrity and legitimacy of the International Criminal Court hang in the balance, as the institution faces an unprecedented test of its ability to resist political pressure from major global powers and uphold its mandate to deliver impartial international justice.

  • UK: Study shows Gaza a major reason for collapse in support for Labour

    UK: Study shows Gaza a major reason for collapse in support for Labour

    A newly released opinion study has uncovered a major political shift unfolding across the United Kingdom, rooted in widespread voter anger over the conflict in Gaza. The data confirms that more than 50 percent of former Labour Party voters who plan to back another centre or left-wing party in the next national general election point to Israel’s military campaign in Gaza as a key factor driving their decision to abandon Keir Starmer’s party.

    Commissioned jointly by the Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC) and Friends of the Earth, and carried out by leading UK pollster Opinium, the findings underscore how the Gaza crisis and the UK government’s ongoing alignment with Israel continue to reshape the country’s political landscape, contradicting a common narrative that public outrage over the conflict is limited to a small, sectarian, or Muslim-only base of opposition.

    The poll analyzed voting patterns from last month’s UK local elections, tracking how voters who supported Labour in the 2024 general election shifted their support in these local contests. Data shows that 40.7 percent of these defecting voters switched their allegiance to the left-wing Green Party, which saw historic gains across the country in last month’s ballots. Another 29.6 percent moved to the centrist Liberal Democrats, 11.1 percent backed the right-wing Reform UK, and 9.3 percent switched to the governing Conservative Party.

    Among all ex-Labour voters who shifted to other centre and left-wing parties, 53 percent confirmed that the current UK Labour government’s support for Israel was an influencing factor in their decision to switch. Broken down, 21 percent said the issue influenced their choice “a great deal,” while an additional 31 percent said it impacted their vote “somewhat.”

    The poll also highlighted clear generational divides in voter sentiment over the Gaza conflict. Two-thirds of voters aged 18 to 34 who left Labour cited Gaza as a motivating factor, compared to 54 percent of voters aged 35 to 49, 49 percent of 50 to 64-year-olds, and 43 percent of voters aged 65 and older. The strongest correlation between Gaza discontent and defection, though, was seen among voters who switched to the Green Party: two-thirds of these new Green voters said the Labour Party’s stance on Gaza pushed them to switch their support. For context, just 32 percent of ex-Labour voters who moved to the Liberal Democrats cited Gaza as a factor, compared to 44 percent of those who switched to the Scottish National Party, Plaid Cymru, or independent centre-left candidates.

    Led by Zack Polanski, the Green Party recorded dramatic gains in last month’s local elections, a surge that pollster Sir John Curtice noted came primarily at Labour’s expense. Curtice observed that the Greens inflicted far deeper damage on Labour’s vote share than right-wing challenger Reform UK in these contests.

    Further data from the election breakdown shows that candidates who signed PSC’s “Pledge for Palestine” — a commitment to advance Palestinian rights if elected — won 27 percent of the seats they contested, outperforming Labour candidates who won just 22 percent of seats they contested. Reform UK candidates won 30 percent of the seats they contested, while Liberal Democrat candidates took 21 percent, just one point behind Labour.

    This reporting comes from Middle East Eye, an outlet that provides independent, in-depth coverage of the Middle East, North Africa, and global affairs connected to the region.

  • Israel’s Ben Gvir calls for arresting Lebanese ‘women and youth’ to pressure Hezbollah

    Israel’s Ben Gvir calls for arresting Lebanese ‘women and youth’ to pressure Hezbollah

    Tensions across the Israel-Lebanon border have surged to new heights after a senior Israeli far-right minister publicly called for the abduction of Lebanese women and young people as a pressure tactic against the Hezbollah militant group, sparking fresh international condemnation over alleged violations of international humanitarian law.

    National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir laid out the extreme proposal during a closed-door Israeli security cabinet meeting on Tuesday, a gathering where top officials uniformly backed a plan to expand ongoing military operations against Hezbollah in southern Lebanon. In remarks confirming his stance after the meeting, Ben Gvir argued for unorthodox strategies to weaken the group. “Let’s start thinking outside the box about Hezbollah,” he said, adding: “Conquering territory and killing many terrorists, but also arresting their women and youth and holding them in Israeli prisons. That is what hurts them the most.”

    Ben Gvir’s proposal does not exist in a vacuum: records confirm that Israeli forces have already abducted dozens of unnamed Lebanese civilians since the 2024 cross-border war began, though the exact total remains undisclosed. These captives are among 1,316 people currently detained under Israel’s controversial 2002 “unlawful combatant” law, a statute originally crafted to enable indefinite, renewable detention of Lebanese individuals who fall outside Israeli formal jurisdiction. The law allows Israeli authorities to hold detainees without formal indictments, court-issued arrest warrants, or access to legal counsel. It also permits officials to withhold information about detainees’ whereabouts and conditions of detention, a practice leading global human rights organizations have labeled a blatant breach of binding international law. The current detainee population held under this law also includes hundreds of Palestinian people from Gaza and Syrian nationals.

    Escalation of hostilities remains at the top of the Israeli government’s agenda, even after the United States announced a ceasefire agreement for Lebanon in mid-April. According to official statements from the security cabinet meeting, Israeli leaders have formally pushed to expand military strikes and dramatically increase defense allocations for the campaign against Hezbollah. Development Minister Yitzhak Wasserlauf called on Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich to immediately unlock additional funding for military artillery and operations, a demand that received quick backing from Defense Minister Israel Katz. “The prime minister made an important decision to attack, and we must expand our armaments even further,” Katz said.

    Lebanese officials have already documented the staggering human cost of unrelenting Israeli strikes that have continued despite the purported ceasefire. Lebanese Defense Minister Michel Menassa confirmed this week that Israeli forces have carried out roughly 3,500 separate attacks and hundreds of controlled explosions across Lebanese territory since the 17 April ceasefire was announced. The ongoing violence has displaced more than 1.2 million Lebanese people nationwide, according to official data. Lebanon’s health ministry reports that at least 3,637 people have been killed by Israeli forces since the latest large-scale assault began in March, with more than 800 of those deaths occurring after the mid-April ceasefire announcement. For its part, Hezbollah’s cross-border strikes have killed 34 Israelis since March, the majority of them active-duty soldiers, including 18 fatalities in the period following the 17 April truce announcement.

    This report draws on independent on-the-ground reporting from Middle East Eye, a media organization specializing in original coverage of the Middle East, North Africa and adjacent regions.

  • Who is the Somali referee barred from entering the US for the World Cup?

    Who is the Somali referee barred from entering the US for the World Cup?

    For Omar Artan, a Somali referee who climbed from war-battered local neighbourhood pitches to the cusp of football’s grandest stage, the 2026 FIFA World Cup was supposed to be the crowning achievement of a remarkable career. It was set to be a moment of national pride: Artan, 34, would become the first Somali to ever serve in an on-pitch role at the World Cup finals, a beacon of hope for a young generation in a country fractured by decades of conflict. But that dream has been shattered, after U.S. border officials denied Artan entry into the country despite him holding a valid diplomatic passport and approved single-entry visa.

    Artan’s journey to the World Cup officiating panel is one of relentless grit against overwhelming odds. His playing career came to an early end following a leg injury, and he first picked up a referee’s whistle by accident: during a chaotic local match in Mogadishu, a dispute over the original official led both teams to ask Artan to step in. He accepted the role, and quickly carved out a space for himself in Somali football, honing his skills in informal and semi-organized fixtures at a time when the country’s football institutions operated with almost no structure or international support.

    A formative figure in Artan’s early career was Osman Jama Dirac, the former head of refereeing in Somalia, who provided not just technical coaching but also personal support to up-and-coming officials. “He was like a father to us,” Artan recalled of Dirac, who was killed in 2017, just as Artan was on the cusp of breaking into international officiating. “He was preparing me to become an international [referee]. He would have been proud to see a Somali reaching this level.”

    Artan earned his place on the FIFA listed referees roster in 2018, and steadily rose through the ranks of African continental football. In 2024, he made history as the first Somali to referee a match at the Africa Cup of Nations (Afcon), and by November of that year, the Confederation of African Football (CAF) named him the top male referee on the continent. He capped off this run by officiating the second leg of the 2025 African Champions League final, and in April 2026, FIFA included him in the 52-referee panel for the 2026 World Cup – a milestone celebrated by Somalia’s president Hassan Mohamud, who hailed Artan as “a symbol of inspiration for the new generation of Somalis.”

    In the months leading up to the tournament, Artan threw himself into rigorous preparation, training daily to meet the physical, mental and technical standards required of a World Cup referee. “Preparation for the World Cup is not small work… physically, mentally, and in knowledge,” he explained before departing. “In World Cup football you are dealing with world-class referees at the highest level. You have to reach that standard and stay there.”

    Artan traveled to the U.S. via Istanbul, Turkey, to attend the mandatory pre-tournament referee seminar hosted at FIFA’s Miami training hub – a requirement for all on-pitch officials, even those who would later officiate matches held in co-host nations Canada and Mexico. But upon his arrival in Miami, Artan ran into immigration barriers tied to a travel restriction policy first introduced by the Donald Trump administration, which lists Somalia as a restricted country.

    Artan told the New York Times he was held for questioning by border officials for 11 hours, with much of the interrogation focused on the Somali militant group al-Shabab. Ultimately, he was denied entry over unspecified “vetting concerns” and placed on a flight back to Turkey, where he currently remains, and is expected to return to Mogadishu this Wednesday.

    In a statement to the BBC, the U.S. State Department defended its process, noting it welcomes “legitimate travellers” to the World Cup and adjudicates each visa application individually “after rigorous review and thorough vetting,” with “national security and public safety” cited as core considerations.

    FIFA has confirmed it is unable to intervene in the case, as immigration and visa decisions fall exclusively under the authority of host nation governments. “FIFA is not involved in host country immigration processes, including visa adjudications, and has been informed by authorities that Mr Artan’s status will not be changed at present,” the global governing body said in a Monday statement. “A host government ultimately determines who receives a visa and who is admitted into their country.”

    The Somali government has launched diplomatic efforts to reverse the decision, but current indications suggest Artan will not take part in the 2026 tournament. Artan has responded to the setback with measured grace, expressing gratitude for the outpouring of support from the global football community and reaffirming his commitment to his refereeing career. “I would like to thank FIFA and CAF for all their support and I promise to keep my refereeing levels up as I concentrate on the future,” he told Reuters. “I wish my colleagues all the best success during the World Cup and I look forward to joining them again in future competitions.”

    Six referees from Africa will still take part in the 2026 World Cup, which kicks off Thursday and runs through July 19, representing Algeria, Egypt, Gabon, Mauritania, Morocco and South Africa. But for Artan and Somalia, what was set to be a groundbreaking, hope-filled milestone has been cut short by U.S. immigration policy.