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  • Israel may need $6m to move Istanbul consulate

    Israel may need $6m to move Istanbul consulate

    The future of Israel’s diplomatic presence in Istanbul has been thrown into uncertainty after the former consulate building failed a mandatory earthquake resilience inspection, forcing Israeli officials to evaluate multiple high-stakes options for reestablishing their mission.

    Multiple informed sources speaking to Middle East Eye have confirmed that the multi-story mixed-use plaza that hosted the consulate has been marked for demolition, with a full redevelopment of the site scheduled to unfold over the next several years. The building has operated at partial capacity since October 2023, when Israel withdrew all its diplomatic staff from Turkey over growing security risks.

    Early media reports claimed the consulate would remain closed indefinitely due to escalating political tensions between Ankara and Jerusalem, but new details reveal that structural and financial barriers — not diplomatic friction — are the primary driving force behind the current uncertainty. While the Israeli government owns portions of the existing building, integrating the strict security and operational specifications required for an Israeli diplomatic mission into the new redevelopment project has presented significant commercial hurdles and unexpected additional expenses.

    The structure in question is a multi-level plaza that hosts a wide range of private businesses and commercial office spaces across its floors, classified as a semi-skyscraper under Turkish building regulations, making its planned demolition an uncommon step. Beyond the structural safety issue, the site has already been targeted in a high-profile security incident: in April, two Turkish police officers were injured in an attack on the now-vacant consulate by individuals linked to the Islamic State group.

    “Israeli diplomatic facilities have very specific construction and security standards, and the private development leading the redevelopment will almost certainly not be able to meet these requirements because of how expensive they are,” one source familiar with the internal discussions explained. “If Israel wants to retain its consulate on the same plot, it will have to negotiate an agreement with the construction firm and allocate a separate budget to cover the extra costs.”

    Even though the Israeli government will retain ownership of its share of the land after redevelopment is complete, sources say a continued consulate presence at the site is highly unlikely. Relocating the entire consulate operation to a new building in Istanbul is also proving to be a prohibitively expensive option, however.

    Israeli diplomatic missions require extensive custom security upgrades, including high-level ballistic armor, reinforced structural elements, specialized secure communications cabling, 24/7 monitored surveillance camera systems, and a suite of other protective infrastructure. Independent estimates put the total cost of these upgrades for a new location at roughly $6 million, a figure that has sparked internal debate in Israel over whether the expenditure is justified when bilateral diplomatic relations between the two countries are effectively frozen.

    At this stage, Israeli officials have not finalized a path forward. “Israel is currently reviewing all possible options, and no final decision on the matter has been made,” a second official source told Middle East Eye. But a third insider with knowledge of the government’s budget situation noted that no funding has been allocated for a relocation, making a move to a new Istanbul site an unlikely outcome for now.

    The uncertainty over the consulate compound other strains on Turkish-Israeli bilateral ties: both countries currently have vacant chief-of-mission posts. Israel’s outgoing ambassador to Turkey, Irit Lillian, will retire from her post at the end of this month, while Turkey’s ambassador to Israel, Sakir Ozkan Torunlar, retired from his role last year and has yet to be replaced.

  • White House got $620m rare earths deal for firm tied to Trump Jr.

    White House got $620m rare earths deal for firm tied to Trump Jr.

    A groundbreaking ProPublica investigation has uncovered direct White House involvement in pushing through a $620 million Pentagon loan to a small North Carolina rare earth magnet startup connected to Donald Trump Jr., raising serious new questions about cronyism and ethical conflicts within the second Trump administration. When the historic loan was announced one year ago, top defense officials, company leaders, and representatives for the president’s eldest son moved quickly to dismiss public and congressional suspicions of political favoritism. Trump Jr.’s spokesperson stated he had no role in securing the deal, the Pentagon publicly insisted he did not influence the funding decision, and Vulcan Elements’ founder claimed the company received no preferential treatment because of its high-profile ties. But new interviews with multiple anonymous Pentagon officials and a review of internal Defense Department documents obtained by ProPublica tell a different story: the multi-hundred-million-dollar loan request for Vulcan was directly initiated by Peter Navarro, a senior White House trade advisor with close personal ties to Trump Jr.

    According to one senior Pentagon official who was not cleared to speak publicly about the internal process, of the dozens of companies competing for Pentagon funding under the critical minerals initiative at the time, the Vulcan deal was the only one directly pushed forward by a top White House presidential aide. Two insiders involved in processing the loan confirmed that after receiving the request from the White House, defense leadership ordered staff to accelerate the review and approval process at an unprecedented pace. To meet the rushed timeline, Pentagon teams worked consecutive late nights, skipping downtime to push the massive loan through in just a matter of weeks, a stark departure from the months-long standard vetting process for comparable funding deals. One source directly involved summed up the internal directive: “The call came from the White House: We have to get this done.”

    This revelation marks the first time that a federal agency contract or funding award under the second Trump administration has been directly tied to intentional White House intervention, adding fuel to longstanding allegations that the administration has directed government benefits to companies tied to the Trump family’s personal business interests. The loan itself was framed as part of a critical national security initiative to reduce U.S. dependence on China’s dominant grip on the global rare earth supply chain, a sector that underpins everything from commercial semiconductors to advanced military systems including Tomahawk missile guidance systems and F-35 fighter jet engines.

    Roughly three months before the Pentagon made the loan public, Trump Jr.’s venture capital firm, 1789 Capital, acquired an undisclosed stake in Vulcan, a two-year-old startup founded by a Harvard Business School student that had raised less than $10 million in total private funding ahead of the deal. Following the loan announcement, Vulcan’s estimated valuation surged tenfold from roughly $200 million to $2 billion, delivering an immediate windfall to its early investors including 1789 Capital. The investigation also revealed that a second company tied to Trump Jr. — Florida-based drone parts manufacturer Unusual Machines, where he holds a board advisory role and millions in personal equity — is also currently under review for Pentagon funding, following a 2025 defense contract for the firm that already sparked cronyism allegations.

    Navarro, who served as Trump’s trade advisor during his first term and has built an extremely close personal relationship with Trump Jr. in recent years, has not responded to multiple requests for comment from ProPublica. Trump Jr. has previously stated he does not discuss his portfolio investments with administration officials and never spoke with Navarro about the Vulcan deal, claiming he had no knowledge of how the funding was approved. 1789 Capital has also denied any role in securing the loan. The White House issued a blanket defense of the process, stating in a formal statement that the administration “is working in the best interest of the American people,” adding that the entire team “is working together and with private industry to secure America’s critical mineral supply chain at Trump speed.” The Pentagon has repeatedly denied that political connections or outside affiliations play any role in its funding decisions.

    The national security context for the loan is broadly supported by policymakers across the aisle: China currently controls nearly all global processing capacity for rare earth elements, a position it has already used to restrict exports to pressure geopolitical rivals, leaving U.S. military supply chains potentially vulnerable. The Office of Strategic Capital, the Pentagon unit that approved the Vulcan loan, was originally created under the Biden administration to support private-sector development of domestic rare earth capacity, with an initial $1 billion in lending authority. After taking office for a second term, the Trump administration dramatically expanded the office’s authority to $200 billion in total lending, overhauled its operating structure, and replaced the original slow, open application process with a model that relies heavily on the personal networks of new leadership drawn from Wall Street to source deals.

    The Vulcan loan has drawn intense bipartisan criticism from ethics experts and congressional Democrats. Richard Painter, former chief White House ethics lawyer under the George W. Bush administration, called the intervention a clear abuse of power. “This is our money they’re spending,” Painter said. “This is corruption we pay for.” A group of Senate Democrats has demanded the Pentagon release a full accounting of Vulcan’s selection process, warning that the Trump family’s conflicts of interest could be “resulting in a waste of taxpayer dollars and a threat to national security.” The Pentagon’s response to the request did not address how Vulcan was selected, only addressing conflict of interest protocols for its own employees, not the president’s family. House Democrats attempted to subpoena Trump Jr. to testify about the deal earlier this year, but the effort was blocked by Republican lawmakers.

    For other companies seeking funding from the revamped Office of Strategic Capital, the incident has reinforced a widespread perception that access depends on personal connections to the Trump circle rather than open competition. Brodie Sutherland, CEO of Nevada-based tungsten miner Patriot Critical Minerals, told ProPublica his firm hired a lobbyist with existing ties to the office to secure a meeting, adding, “Whether you need someone on the inside track to get it across the line I don’t know. We’re hopeful you don’t need to be chums with Trump Jr. to get a project across.” Defense Department records show Patriot Critical Minerals was already rejected for a loan, though the agency did not provide a reason for the denial. Sutherland said he still holds out hope for future funding.

  • Mandelson links to former head of Israel’s military intelligence directorate revealed

    Mandelson links to former head of Israel’s military intelligence directorate revealed

    New details have emerged of the full scope of security concerns that prompted the UK government’s official vetting body to reject security clearance for Peter Mandelson, the disgraced former British cabinet minister who was forced to step down as UK ambassador to the United States just months after taking the post.

    Mandelson’s short tenure in Washington ended in September 2024, when he resigned after public revelations of his long-standing close personal ties to deceased American financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Earlier this year, he was stripped of his lifetime peerage in the House of Lords over the scandal. The controversy has plagued Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s administration, which has faced relentless public and political scrutiny over its 2024 decision to appoint Mandelson to one of the UK’s most high-profile diplomatic postings, despite pre-existing concerns about his associations.

    It was already confirmed earlier this year that the United Kingdom Security Vetting (UKSV), the national agency responsible for assessing security clearance for senior public roles, had formally concluded Mandelson should be denied clearance. However, the permanent secretary at the UK Foreign Office overruled that finding and approved the clearance anyway, clearing the way for his appointment.

    In its latest reporting published Wednesday, The Guardian has exposed new, specific connections flagged by UKSV that raised red flags for vetters, including ties to senior figures across Israel, China, and Russia that created unacceptable national security risks.

    Among the Israeli connections flagged was a regular contact between Mandelson and Tamir Hayman, a former head of Israeli military intelligence. Hayman led the Israel Defense Forces’ Military Intelligence Directorate from 2018 to 2021, and currently serves as director of the Institute for National Security Studies (INNS), a leading Tel Aviv-based think tank. Hayman has previously publicly acknowledged that during his tenure as intelligence chief, Israeli officials pushed the United States to carry out the 2020 drone assassination of senior Iranian military commander Qassem Soleimani.

    UKSV’s assessment found Mandelson and Hayman communicated once every two months. The INNS pushed back on the characterization of the relationship in a statement to The Guardian, saying Hayman has “no personal connection or familiarity whatsoever” with Mandelson, and noting that Mandelson participated in the think tank’s external advisory framework before his ambassadorial appointment.

    Vetting officials also flagged a separate financial tie: Mandelson took out a £1 million loan from an unnamed business figure to purchase shares in Moon Active, an Israeli gaming firm best known for developing the globally popular mobile game Coin Master. Additional links to Israeli figures, connected through Mandelson’s relationship with Epstein, have also previously come to light. Reporting from Middle East Eye in February 2025 revealed that in 2013, Epstein asked former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak to assign Mandelson to lead the sale of Paz Oil Company, Israel’s largest fuel provider. That same year, Mandelson also reached out to Epstein to request that Epstein consult Barak for input on Israeli political consultant Asaf Eisin.

    Beyond Israeli connections, UKSV’s report also highlighted problematic associations with senior figures from both China and Russia that created security concerns. One Chinese figure flagged was Lan Fo’an, China’s current Minister of Finance, who reportedly held several meetings with Mandelson each year. Lan has also met separately with Prime Minister Keir Starmer and UK Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves over the past two years, a fact that has prompted new questions about whether Mandelson, while serving as ambassador, played any unreported role in arranging or facilitating those meetings.

    On the Russian side, UKSV reiterated long-documented concerns over Mandelson’s long-standing close friendship with sanctioned Russian billionaire Oleg Deripaska. Earlier this year, it was revealed that as far back as 2010, Mandelson asked Deripaska to help Epstein secure a Russian visa to visit Moscow, a connection that raised further red flags for vetters.

    The new revelations come as Starmer’s government faces growing parliamentary pressure to release all official documents related to Mandelson’s appointment. Earlier this month, Parliament’s Intelligence and Security Committee accused the government of intentionally withholding key relevant records, despite a formal parliamentary motion ordering the full release of the files. A new batch of documents related to the Mandelson appointment is scheduled to be declassified and released next month.

    In a statement issued Thursday, a government spokesperson reiterated that the administration is “committed to complying” with the parliamentary motion “in full.”

  • Hamas warns Gaza ceasefire risks collapse after string of Israeli assassinations

    Hamas warns Gaza ceasefire risks collapse after string of Israeli assassinations

    Tensions in the Gaza Strip have spiked sharply this week, as Hamas issued an urgent warning Thursday that the already fragile ceasefire brokered between the group and Israel faces imminent collapse following a dramatic escalation of Israeli air strikes across the enclave over the past month.

    The Palestinian militant group confirmed that a new wave of intensive bombardment targeting residential neighborhoods has claimed the lives of at least 20 civilians over just 48 hours, with casualties including women and children. The latest surge in violence came amid the Muslim religious holiday of Eid al-Adha, a period traditionally marked by community gatherings and celebration across the region.

    The deadliest single incident this week unfolded Wednesday night, when an Israeli warplane struck a multi-story residential building in central Gaza City. Local Palestinian media outlets reported the strike left at least 10 people dead, among them two minors and two adult women. Israeli state media confirmed the attack was intended to assassinate two senior Hamas commanders: Ezz al-Din Beik, head of Hamas’ northern Gaza brigade, and Imad Aslim, deputy commander of the group’s Gaza City brigade. As of Thursday evening, neither Hamas leadership nor independent Palestinian sources had verified that either of the two named targets were killed or present at the site of the strike.

    This deadly raid followed a targeted assassination just one day earlier, on the eve of Eid al-Adha, when Israeli forces bombed another private residence in Gaza City that killed Mohammed Odah, the newly appointed leader of Hamas’ armed wing, alongside five civilian bystanders. Hamas officially confirmed Odah’s death earlier this week, noting he had only stepped into the top role less than a fortnight prior, after his predecessor Izz ad-Din al-Haddad was killed in a similar Israeli air strike two weeks earlier.

    In its official statement released Thursday, Hamas called on the United States and other international powers that acted as guarantors for the original ceasefire agreement to uphold their commitments. “The US administration and the countries guaranteeing the agreement must assume their responsibilities by taking a clear stance condemning the occupation’s violations,” the statement read. Hamas emphasized that urgent intervention was required to force Israeli authorities to abide by the terms of the truce, warning that “the deal is at risk of collapse due to its ongoing crimes and repeated breaches.”

    Official data from Gaza’s Palestinian Ministry of Health underscores the scale of ongoing bloodshed since the October 2024 ceasefire brokered by the U.S. To date, Israeli operations have killed at least 906 Palestinians in Gaza and injured more than 2,700 others since the ceasefire took effect. Since the start of the latest conflict in October 2023, total Palestinian fatalities from Israeli attacks have surpassed 72,800, with thousands more still missing and presumed dead beneath the rubble of destroyed buildings across the enclave. Gaza’s Government Media Office reported earlier this week that Israeli forces have already carried out more than 3,000 separate violations of the ceasefire agreement. Beyond the near-daily air strikes and fatal incursions that have intensified in recent days, these violations include persistent blockades on humanitarian aid entering the Strip, restrictions on medical patients traveling abroad for life-saving treatment, and incremental territorial expansions of Israeli occupation across Gaza.
    Israeli public broadcaster Kan reported Wednesday that the latest wave of targeted assassinations against senior Hamas leaders was explicitly approved by the so-called “Board of Peace,” a body created with U.S. backing. An anonymous source from the board stated, “We consider the elimination of senior figures in the terrorist organisation’s military wing to be part of the process of disarming Hamas.” Kan also added that board representatives have requested permission from the Israel Defense Forces to deploy personnel into the Gaza Strip, a move that could be authorized within the coming days.

  • Former Yemen President Abd Rabbuh Mansour Hadi dies in Saudi Arabia aged 80

    Former Yemen President Abd Rabbuh Mansour Hadi dies in Saudi Arabia aged 80

    Veteran Yemeni political figure Abd Rabbuh Mansour Hadi, who led the country through years of devastating civil conflict as its former president, has passed away at the age of 80 in Riyadh, the capital of his host nation Saudi Arabia. Yemeni presidential sources confirmed to Agence France-Presse that Hadi’s death followed an unexpected acute health incident.

    Hadi had lived in Saudi Arabia since 2015, when he was forced to flee Yemen after Houthi fighters seized control of large swathes of territory, including the capital Sanaa, and advanced on his government’s stronghold. The long-running Yemeni conflict pits the Saudi-backed Hadi-era government against the Iran-aligned Houthi movement, which has controlled northern Yemen’s most populous regions since 2014. Hadi formally resigned from the presidency in 2022, transferring executive authority to a newly formed Presidential Leadership Council tasked with overseeing peace negotiations and wartime governance. Multiple regional reports indicate that after stepping down, Hadi remained confined to his Riyadh residence in what amounted to de facto house arrest for the final two years of his life.

    Born in 1944 in Abyan Governorate, in what was then the British-protected South Yemen, Hadi built a decades-long career spanning military and political office across both of Yemen’s pre-unification states. He held senior posts in the Marxist-Leninist People’s Democratic Republic of Yemen (South Yemen) and the northern Yemen Arab Republic before the two states unified in 1990. Following the 1994 Yemeni civil war, Hadi was appointed vice president, serving under longtime leader Ali Abdullah Saleh for 18 years. He assumed the presidency in 2012, after mass Arab Spring uprisings forced Saleh to step down after 33 years in power.

    Escalating political tensions between Hadi’s administration and the Ansar Allah movement, more widely known as the Houthis, ultimately boiled over into full-scale conflict in 2014. The Houthis quickly captured Sanaa, prompting Hadi’s escape into exile and leading to a Saudi-led military intervention that began in March 2015. By the time Hadi left office in 2022, the nearly eight-year conflict he oversaw had killed more than 370,000 people, according to United Nations estimates, and pushed Yemen into what the UN describes as the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.

    Regional media reports confirm Hadi will be laid to rest in Riyadh on Friday. Former Yemeni Foreign Minister Abdulmalik al-Mekhlafi, who served in Hadi’s cabinet, publicly offered his condolences on the social media platform X, arguing that the former president had been treated unfairly throughout his public life. “I believe that the man was not given his due justice as he deserved, neither during his period of rule nor even before it, as an image was formed around him in the media that was often far from his true reality,” al-Mekhlafi wrote, extending prayers to Hadi’s family and the Yemeni people.

    As of Thursday, the Houthi movement has not released an official statement on Hadi’s death. However, one senior Houthi spokesperson has publicly noted that Hadi’s death occurred in what he described as “mysterious circumstances,” leaving lingering questions about the circumstances of his passing among political observers.

  • Israeli spy Jonathan Pollard suggests Egypt and Turkey are next targets for war

    Israeli spy Jonathan Pollard suggests Egypt and Turkey are next targets for war

    A controversial convicted Israeli-American intelligence operative has sent shockwaves through Middle East geopolitics with a stark warning that Israel could soon be drawn into new armed conflicts with two of its once-cordial regional neighbors, Egypt and Turkey. Jonathan Pollard, who served 30 years in U.S. federal prison for stealing classified American national security documents and passing them to Israel before relocating to the Jewish state in 2015, shared his alarming forecast during a recent podcast interview with Israeli news outlet Arutz Sheva.

    In the discussion, Pollard argued that after the current conflict with Iran, Israel must turn its military preparedness toward what he frames as inevitable future confrontations. “I’m not so sure that we will have as easy a time with the Turks as we’ve had with the Iranians,” Pollard told hosts. “We have to be prepared for the next war, which will probably be against Turkey and Egypt. The storm is coming.”

    Beyond his war warning, Pollard also cautioned Israeli leadership against permitting the Turkish-backed transitional government in southern Syria to reassert control over territories currently held by Israeli occupation forces. Allowing that transition, he argued, would place Turkish military assets directly on Israel’s northern border, a development he frames as an unacceptable security risk.

    Pollard’s background adds layers of sensitivity to his comments. After being granted Israeli citizenship upon his 2015 arrival, he has become a close ally of far-right Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir, and has publicly supported extreme calls for the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians from occupied territories.

    The forecast comes against a rapidly shifting backdrop of regional relations. For decades, both Egypt and Turkey maintained largely functional, at times warm, diplomatic and economic ties with Israel. Turkey made history in 1949 as the first Muslim-majority nation to formally recognize Israeli statehood, and the two partners built deep security and trade connections for most of their modern coexistence. That dynamic began to fray in 2010, when Israeli commandos raided the Mavi Marmara, a Turkish-flagged aid ship bound for Gaza, killing 10 people on board. Since that incident, Ankara has grown increasingly vocal in its condemnation of Israel’s treatment of the Palestinian people.

    A high-profile push to reset bilateral relations in September 2023, which marked the first face-to-face handshake between Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in years, collapsed just one month later following the October 7 Hamas attacks on Israel and the subsequent Israeli military campaign in Gaza that has drawn widespread accusations of genocide. Since the outbreak of the Gaza war, rhetorical hostilities between the two countries have escalated dramatically, with former Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett already labeling Turkey as the “next Iran” in public comments earlier this year.

    For Egypt, the 1979 Camp David peace treaty has anchored stable relations with Israel for 45 years, ending a decades-long pattern of open conflict between the two states. Even so, Egyptian leadership has grown increasingly critical of Israel’s military action in Gaza, straining what was once a reliably steady bilateral partnership.

    Pollard acknowledged that he holds out hope that open war will not break out between Israel and the two states, but couched that optimism in a grim warning. He noted that “hope was the last demon out of Pandora’s Box” – suggesting optimism alone will not insulate Israel from the coming regional storm he predicts.

    This reporting is based on independent analysis of original on-the-record comments from Pollard, contextualized against documented shifts in Middle East diplomatic relations.

  • US reinstates sanctions on UN’s Albanese after appeals court pauses ruling

    US reinstates sanctions on UN’s Albanese after appeals court pauses ruling

    A weeks-long pause on punitive measures against the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Palestine Francesca Albanese has come to an abrupt end, after a federal appeals court granted the US government’s request to temporarily suspend a lower court ruling that had blocked the sanctions on First Amendment grounds. The restoration of the sanctions was formally confirmed in an official notice published to the US Treasury Department’s website this Wednesday.

    The origins of the dispute stretch back to July 2024, when the Donald Trump administration first placed Albanese on the Specially Designated Nationals (SDN) list. The designation came just weeks after the independent UN expert released a sharply critical report that documented more than 60 companies—including major U.S.-based technology giants Google, Amazon and Microsoft—it accused of contributing to what Albanese framed as the shift of Israel’s occupation economy into a system enabling genocide in Palestinian territories. The report called on the International Criminal Court (ICC) and national judicial bodies around the world to open investigations and pursue criminal prosecutions against implicated company executives and corporate entities, a recommendation that directly prompted the Trump administration’s sanction action.

    Since the designation was first imposed, Albanese has faced sweeping restrictions: she is barred from entering the United States, all of her assets located within U.S. jurisdiction are frozen, and she has been cut off from the global financial system, unable to carry out even routine daily transactions, she told Middle East Eye in an earlier interview.

    In February 2025, Albanese’s family launched a legal challenge to the sanctions after the UN declined to waive her official diplomatic immunity, which prevented her from filing suit in her own name. The plaintiffs were her husband Massimiliano Cali, a senior World Bank economist, and the couple’s U.S.-born daughter, a U.S. citizen. They argued that the penalties were a direct punishment for Albanese’s public criticism of Israel’s military campaign in Gaza, and that the measures had unnecessarily disrupted the family’s ability to access basic financial services. On May 13, U.S. District Judge Richard Leon sided with the family, issuing a broad temporary injunction that blocked enforcement of the entire sanction designation.

    Leon ruled that the sanctions were highly likely to violate the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, as they explicitly targeted Albanese for the content of her protected speech. “Protecting the freedom of speech is always in the public interest,” Leon wrote in his opinion. He further noted that Albanese’s recommendations to the ICC carried no legally binding weight, and amounted to nothing more than the expression of an expert opinion, not actionable conduct that would justify punitive measures. Rejecting the federal government’s request to narrow the ruling to only apply to Albanese’s family members, Leon ordered the full designation set aside, opening a brief window where the sanctions were not in effect. Following that ruling, the State Department confirmed it had complied with the order by temporarily removing Albanese from the SDN list, but stressed the move did not represent a shift in policy, and that it would pursue an appeal to restore the designation.

    Last Friday, that appeal yielded an early victory for the government: a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit granted a temporary administrative stay of Leon’s injunction, clearing the way for the sanctions to be put back in place immediately. The appeals court emphasized that its procedural order was not a judgment on the underlying merits of the government’s appeal, but merely intended to preserve the status quo while the panel considers the broader request to keep the lower court ruling on hold throughout the duration of the appeals process. The court has not yet announced a timeline for ruling on the government’s full motion for a stay pending appeal.

    As a result of the stay, Albanese has been formally returned to the Treasury Department’s SDN list. The designation once again bars any U.S. person or entity from engaging in financial transactions with her, restores her exclusion from the global financial system, and extends a travel ban that bars Albanese and her immediate family members from entering the United States.

    In its appeal arguments, the Department of Justice has argued that as an Italian citizen who has not resided in the United States for roughly a decade, and whose critical speech took place outside U.S. borders, Albanese falls outside the protections of the U.S. Constitution. The government’s legal motion describes Leon’s injunction as “legally indefensible and grossly overbroad,” warning that if the ruling is allowed to stand, it will cause lasting damage to core U.S. national security and foreign policy interests.

    Albanese is not the only prominent figure to face U.S. sanctions over work investigating alleged international crimes in occupied Palestinian territories. Since the start of 2025, the Trump administration has already sanctioned ICC Chief Prosecutor Karim Khan, his deputy prosecutors, and eight ICC judges over the court’s investigations into war crimes committed in occupied Palestine and Afghanistan. Three Palestinian non-governmental organizations that have collaborated with the ICC to submit evidence of alleged crimes by Israeli officials have also been placed under U.S. sanctions.

  • Israel ‘added to UN blacklist’ for sexual violence in conflict zones

    Israel ‘added to UN blacklist’ for sexual violence in conflict zones

    In a landmark and deeply controversial decision that has upended Israel-UN relations, the United Nations has placed Israel on its global blacklist for conflict-related sexual violence, Israel’s ambassador to the UN confirmed Thursday. The inclusion, which Israel has furiously condemned as politically motivated and factually baseless, comes after a wave of documented allegations from human rights groups and independent media outlets that Israeli security forces have perpetrated rape and systematic sexual abuse against Palestinian people since the outbreak of the latest Gaza conflict in October 2023.

    The Jerusalem Post, the first Israeli outlet to break news of the listing, confirmed that the Israeli Prison Service (IPS) will formally enter the 2026 iteration of the blacklist, while other Israeli state bodies remain under active review for potential inclusion in future updates. In immediate retaliation for the UN’s action, Israel has frozen all official relations with the office of UN Secretary-General António Guterres, according to the Jerusalem Post report.

    Danny Danon, Israel’s permanent representative to the United Nations, issued a scathing rebuke of the decision, framing it as an unfounded moral attack that equates Israel with notorious terrorist groups. “The UN Secretary-General has put Israel on the same blacklist as Hamas, ISIS, and the most depraved terrorist organizations in the world,” Danon told the outlet. “This is a moral disgrace and a complete collapse of any credibility left to the UN.”

    The blacklist operates as a formal annex to the UN Secretary-General’s annual report on Conflict-Related Sexual Violence (CRSV), a mechanism created to flag state and non-state actors with credible evidence of systematic patterns of rape and other sexual abuses committed during armed conflict. The annual CRSV report is customarily published each August, and entities added to the list typically remain listed for a minimum of one year. The 2025 iteration of the list already included 63 actors drawn from both state and non-state groups, including Palestinian militant group Hamas.

    The allegations against Israeli personnel stretch back months, following the mass detentions of Palestinians in the aftermath of October 2023. Multiple accounts from released detainees, independent human rights investigators, and Israeli advocacy groups have documented a pattern of severe abuses against Palestinian people held in Israeli custody, including sexual violence, torture, deliberate starvation, and cruel, degrading treatment. According to available reporting, at least 100 Palestinian detainees have died in Israeli custody since the outbreak of the conflict, with nearly half of those deaths occurring in military detention facilities and the rest in institutions run by the IPS.

    Dozens of released Palestinian detainees have provided on-the-record testimonies detailing the sexual abuse they endured during their detention. In December 2023, two detainees held in separate Israeli facilities told independent outlet Middle East Eye that they had survived violent sexual assault at the hands of Israeli personnel. One detainee recalled being dragged to a secluded room, blindfolded, and assaulted for nearly an hour, during which he was kicked, beaten, and raped with an object. The second detainee reported being raped by trained military dogs.

    These testimonies align with broader findings from official UN investigations: a UN inquiry released last year formally accused Israel of using sexualized torture and rape as a deliberate method of war, designed to “destabilize, dominate, oppress and destroy the Palestinian people.” Prominent Israeli human rights organization B’Tselem has gone further, describing the entire Israeli prison system as a “network of torture camps” where detainees face repeated sexual violence, including organized gang assaults carried out by groups of prison guards and soldiers.

  • Ailing Sinner crashes out of French Open, Sabalenka waits

    Ailing Sinner crashes out of French Open, Sabalenka waits

    The 2025 French Open delivered one of the most stunning upsets in modern Grand Slam tennis on Thursday, when men’s top seed Jannik Sinner saw his 30-match winning streak and title hopes collapse amid a sudden heat-related health crisis and a dramatic comeback from unseeded Argentinian Juan Manuel Cerundolo. The shocking exit has blown the men’s draw wide open, as the tour’s top competitor exited the tournament earlier than any other major since last year’s Roland Garros.

  • Italy on red alert as heatwave bakes Europe

    Italy on red alert as heatwave bakes Europe

    An unprecedented early-season heatwave, driven by a stationary high-pressure heat dome, has engulfed Western Europe, forcing governments across the continent to activate emergency heat protocols and leaving millions of residents and visitors grappling with sweltering conditions. Italy became the latest nation to roll out urgent safety measures Thursday, when civil protection authorities issued the country’s first red heat alert of 2024 for five major urban centers, including the capital Rome, as well as Florence, Bologna, Brescia and Turin.

    The alert, the highest level of heat warning in Italy’s national system, cautions that even otherwise healthy people engaging in outdoor activity face significant risks of adverse health impacts. For tourists flocking to Rome’s iconic landmarks, the 32-degree Celsius temperatures recorded Thursday have forced drastic adjustments to sightseeing plans. Spanish visitor Nana Martinez Garcia told reporters she and her travel companion have prioritized staying hydrated and sticking to shaded routes whenever possible. “We’re sweating a lot,” Garcia explained outside the Colosseum. “We’re drinking a lot of water so we can cool down.” Her friend Maria Angeles Mellinas Tello added that the pair seek out shade at every opportunity to avoid heat exhaustion. American tourist Josh Ren shared that he restructured his entire itinerary to beat the heat, waking before dawn to explore outdoor sites, then retreating to air-conditioned museums or restaurants during the midday peak when temperatures climb highest.

    Italy had avoided the most extreme temperatures earlier in the week, but the heat dome has shifted south, bringing soaring conditions to the Italian peninsula. The heatwave first shattered long-standing temperature records across Britain and France earlier this week, with both countries logging their hottest May temperatures in recorded history. Tragically, the extreme heat has already claimed lives: authorities have linked multiple fatalities in both Britain and France to the heatwave, most occurring in drowning incidents as people sought relief from sweltering conditions in open water.

    While the most intense heat has begun to ebb in Britain, France remained in the grip of extreme temperatures Thursday. In the southwestern Landes region, extreme heat forced a local school to close early for the week, after corridor temperatures spiked to 53 degrees Celsius on Tuesday, leaving multiple students ill. Landes official Florian Deygas confirmed that several pupils experienced severe heat-related illness, including one case of fainting and vomiting. National meteorological service Meteo France maintained an orange heat alert for Paris, where forecasters predicted temperatures would hit 34 degrees Celsius following the record-breaking heat that baked the country earlier that week.

    The ongoing heat has also disrupted major sporting events underway in the French capital. At the Roland Garros French Open tennis tournament, located on the outskirts of Paris, competing players have struggled to cope with oppressive court conditions, with one athlete collapsing mid-venue after finishing a grueling, multi-hour match. Tournament maintenance staff have adopted extraordinary measures to keep the clay courts manageable, spraying water between every set and fully flooding the surface after daily play concludes to rehydrate the layered clay. “We flood the courts, we soak them, so as to replenish with water the different layers that make up the clay,” explained head maintenance worker Philippe Vaillant.

    Further south, Spain has also rolled out heat alerts for regions in the country’s northeast and north, forecasting temperatures could climb as high as 37 degrees Celsius on Friday. National weather agency Aemet noted in a social media statement that current temperatures are “extraordinarily high” for the month of May, matching the extreme heat levels normally not seen until the height of summer. The agency forecasts a noticeable drop in temperatures across the country next week as the heat dome begins to break down.

    Climate scientists have repeatedly emphasized that human-caused climate change is amplifying the frequency and intensity of extreme weather events globally, including early-season heatwaves, droughts, and catastrophic flooding, a trend that is expected to continue without dramatic reductions in greenhouse gas emissions.